MovieChat Forums > Fawlty Towers (1975) Discussion > A Touch of Class = not very good

A Touch of Class = not very good


Having watched every episode of Fawlty Towers countless times over the years, one thing has always been evident to me - the very first episode, A Touch of Class (the Lord Melbury one), is more ragged and has far fewer laughs than the later episodes. It is, in fact, rather poor... the performances haven't found their feet (Connie Booth, in particular, is pretty bad and not at all funny), and there are only a scattering of laughs.

As we all know, the show quickly became brilliant as Cleese and Booth found their feet. Does anyone know if this episode was the first to be written? Alongside the wonderful episodes which were to follow it's mediocrity is, frankly, quite glaring.

reply

It is good but any audience response to new characters is bound to be a bit muted I suppose.

reply

Just my $0.02, but I consider A Touch of Class to be one of the best. In fact it still shocks me that it's the first episode.

------

Wait a minute... who am I here?

reply

All the episodes are good, but this one has to be one of my very favorite. The final line by Mr Wareing slays me EVERY TIME: "A gin and orange, a lemon squash, and a scotch and water PLEASE!!!!" And the Lord Melbury character in incredibly good.

reply

Like all FT when you rewatch it as I have (many times) it becomes funnier and it is so clever how it sets the characters of the hotel staff.

reply

[deleted]

I love ATOC, it would make my top five easily. The performances are a lot more nuanced and less histrionic.

reply

“YOU BASTARD!!!”



------

Wait a minute... who am I here?

reply

[deleted]

Did the Duke of Buckley really get his head shot off by a golf ball ?

And seriously, why the hell didnt Sybil serve the family in the bar when Basil was talking to Melbury about his coins. Ive always liked this episode to be honest.

reply

And seriously, why the hell didnt Sybil serve the family in the bar when Basil was talking to Melbury about his coins.
Basically because she was as bad (if not worse) than he was.

Let Zygons Be Zygons.

reply

She's worse. Basil is just vocal about it.

reply

It's pretty funny. Basil is getting all his coins into a case, which must be taking a certain amount of time, and meanwhile, Sybil just continues to ignore the family and their order. She'll die before she lets Basil get out from under one of her orders.

reply

If you think this episode has its flaws because the characters weren't properly fleshed out yet, just look at the unaired pilot of Blackadder (the other greatest comedy series of all time), or the entire first series, and then compare it to the second series as an example of a masterpiece show not finding its feet yet. Even the pilot episode of Seinfeld is dreadfully generic (as is much of the first season) and almost unrecognizable to the show it would become. By comparison Fawlty Towers was remarkably quick to find its feet.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a5NWNHS3eM4




OCJOC

reply

[deleted]

I actually agree it's more ragged than later episodes. Prunella Scales doesn't seem to have Sybil's character quite down yet and Connie Booth plays things more straight than she would later on. (Her banter with Robin Ellis seems mostly rote, for instance.) But there are just wonderful touches, like the slow pause and then saying "Go away" into the phone before hanging up, that indicate where the show was going. Apart from that, it feels clunkier than later episodes and doesn't have the natural manic grace of "Gourmet Night" or "The Germans."

reply

Yeah, it's a bit boring.

reply

The first episode is my favorite episode.

'I'M TALKING TO LORD MELBURY!!!'

reply