DVD Review: NOT GOING OUT 3
In the final episode of 'Not Going Outs' third season, now out on DVD, the BBC1 sitcom lands a special guest star to play the lead characters long lost father: Bobby Ball. It speaks a great deal about a programme that its creators would look to seventies teatime stalwarts Cannon and Ball as inspiration, let alone as a choice of guest star. Perhaps it is a comfort to some that this brand of bland, old-fashioned comedy still has a place in our television schedules amongst edgier, more modern fare like 'Peep Show' or 'The Office'. Such comforts do not make sitting through a whole season of cheap puns and cheeky put-downs while a BBC audience politely chuckles any more entertaining or any less exhausting. At best, its a mixed bag. The show has a 'Seinfeld'-y premise - a bunch of mates get into capers - and stars Lee Mack and Tim Vine, ostensibly playing versions of their stand up personas (as with many US sitcoms, they share their characters names). Mack is the cheeky northerner, Vine the posh bloke with the penchant for one-liners. On a stage each are a master of their craft. Within the confines of BBC1 primetime and its conventional three-wall multi-camera studio-audience setup, the humour is toned down, the madcap situations more implausible, the hit rate considerably lower and the groan rate considerably higher. Occasionally theyll strike gold with some rather deft wordplay - He had a tough life - he had to go down the mine at 11. 11? Thats a lie in! - but for every decent line of dialogue, theres ten lame ones, e.g., You know that expression be yourself? Well, dont. The studio audience laugh, irritatingly obediently, even at such toe-curlingly vapid writing and hammy delivery. Thats not to say it wont please anyone - broad humour is broad for a reason, and the BBC has made an unusual U-turn in cancelling the show only to commission a fourth season, signalling that there must be a willing audience out there. But sitcoms of this genus seem almost unpalatable in a comedy landscape where shows like 'Peep Show' and 'The Inbetweeners' rule the roost. And Graham Linehans excellent 'The IT Crowd' has proved that the old-school studio format can still work if the characters are strong, the plotlines clever and the jokes funny - a formula severely lacking here. 'Not Going Out' has a wealth of writing talent behind it who, like Mack and Vine, are wonderful, well-respected stand-ups, among them Simon Evans, Milton Jones and Andrew Collins. But they cannot bring to life a show which brings no spark to a tired old format, and which offers no unique reason why any potential viewer should not indeed go out, instead of watching this rubbish.