EDITION: U.S.
JimBroadbent
Review: Black Adder Remastered, Fawlty Towers Remastered
by Nick Zaino, posted Oct 21st 2009 3:03PM
When I was a kid, I remember seeing episodes of a couple of strange British shows on my local PBS affiliate in Rochester, NY. I never caught them regularly, not even sure when they aired, but I remember one of them was a peculiar little period piece with some funny gags, and a storyline I never completely grasped. I learned later this first show was the classic Blackadder series with Rowan Atkinson, and the reason the storylines never made sense from show to show is that there are four seasons of the show, all taking place in a different historical period. I saw them out of order, and mostly caught the first season.
Watching the new Black Adder Remastered - The Ultimate Edition DVD set from BBC America (video and audio both remastered), it's clear the best way to watch Blackadder is to at least watch each series in order. And if you can watch the whole run in order, so much the better. From the first series set in the Dark Ages to the last set in World War I (Blackadder Goes Forth), Atkinson's character, Blackadder, remains a scheming coward. But he changes, too.
TV Squad Hot Topics
Most Popular Articles
From Our Partners
- 'Game of Thrones': 'Blackwater' will blow your mind
- 'Mad Men' Season 5 - 'The Other Woman': Peggy and Joan get offers they can't refuse
- 'Girls': It might have been the crack
- 'American Idol' to 'The Vampire Diaries': The top-rated TV shows on each network for 2011-12
- 'Fifty Shades of Grey' on 'Food Network Star' Giada De Laurentiis' summer reading list
- More From Zap2it
- Mad Men Recap: A Woman's Worth
- The Idol (Less) Rich: For Jessica Sanchez, No Guaranteed Album Deal, Likely Smaller Payday
- What to Watch: The TVLine-Up for Sunday
- Eye on Emmy: Homeland's Damian Lewis Talks About Playing No Ordinary Anti-Hero
- New Spoiler Alert!: Revenge Death(s)! Smash Bloodbath! Grey's Anatomy's Sad Farewell!
- More From TVLine
- TV Review: Hatfields & McCoys Turns the Macho Code Inside Out
- Michael Haneke's Amour Wins Cannes' Palme d'Or
- Listen to the Winning Song From Eurovision 2012
- Robert Pattinson Is Not Playing Finnick in The Hunger Games Sequel
- Sunday Reads: Jonathan Franzen, D'Angelo, and Moonrise Kingdom Prep
- More from Vulture
