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American version of Red Dwarf

Posted: 2004-05-13 05:45am
by Anhaga
I just watched the unaired pilot for this abomination.
Awful.

Posted: 2004-05-13 05:54am
by InnerBrat
Where did you get ahold of it?

And which one is it? The one with Terry Farrell or with a male cat? Is Bob Llewellyn in it?

Posted: 2004-05-13 05:54am
by Faram
NOOOOOO!

No american series ever would inplement the multifunction port that Kryten has :)

Or the way he adjusts temperature ;)

Posted: 2004-05-13 06:01am
by Anhaga
InnerBrat wrote:Where did you get ahold of it?

And which one is it? The one with Terry Farrell or with a male cat? Is Bob Llewellyn in it?
BearShare

Yes- Bob Llewellyn is in it.
The cat is male.

It was just awful. Awful.
They didn't even use the proper 'Red Dwarf' theme.

It's cold outside- there's no kind of atmosphere
I'm all alone, more or less
Let me fly, far away from here
Fun, fun, fun, In the sun, sun, sun...

Posted: 2004-05-13 07:03am
by Keevan_Colton
I've just read the scripts for both pilots (they made two) I mean, they had Rimmer insulting HIMSELF! That doesnt work...Rimmer is there for other people to insult!

Posted: 2004-05-13 07:06am
by 2000AD
American ... Red Dwarf ? :wtf:

There are some things that should never be remade.

Posted: 2004-05-13 07:12am
by Admiral Valdemar
There are few American imitations of British comedies (read: zero) that actually work. The humour barrier is simply too hard to break down given how insulting British humour can be to people.

Posted: 2004-05-13 08:05am
by InnerBrat
Admiral Valdemar wrote:There are few American imitations of British comedies (read: zero) that actually work. The humour barrier is simply too hard to break down given how insulting British humour can be to people.
Oh I don't know. Queer of Folk is quite popular over there, IINM. That and Who's the Boss seem to have been more successful than the British originals...

Posted: 2004-05-13 08:28am
by wautd
bah, unfortunatly i only saw a handfull episodes of red drafs when it was broadcasted here (it came at a retarted hour) :(

What i'll always remember is when Rimmer is about to die (emotional music at background), looks Death himself in the eyes and kicks him in the nuts before running away. I mean COMON! 8)

Posted: 2004-05-13 08:32am
by Stuart Mackey
BURN THE HERITICS!!!
Death to the INFIDELS!

Posted: 2004-05-13 09:51am
by Montcalm
It must be some obsession from the American entertainment industry in remaking successful (Insert Nation's name here) series or movies,thinking they'll do it better when in fact it suck,example this Red Dwarf which i never saw,in in the movies there are The Visitors with Jean Reno(you better watch the original french movie which is funnier) and that is all for my ranting.

Posted: 2004-05-13 09:56am
by Peregrin Toker
Isn't Red Dwarf so British that it's impossible to make an American version of it?

Posted: 2004-05-13 11:17am
by Jon
Why the fuck do the US have to remake all of our classics, can't they get around our fantastic humour or something? It makes me sick.

US Version of Red Dwarf MY ARSE! We have to put up with putrid shows like Friends- if that's humour then give me a spoon and I'll gladly eat my own ass.

Idiots, fools, bastards!

Posted: 2004-05-13 12:11pm
by Rye
For fuck's sake, they wouldn't touch hallowed ground like python I'm sure, they should leave Red Dwarf the fuck alone, or broadcast the originals, if the american public don't like it en masse because it's not packaged for what's popular at the moment, too bad.

Godless, I hate the arrogance behind such a move. :finger:

Posted: 2004-05-13 12:13pm
by Sharp-kun
Scum, absolute scum... :evil:

Posted: 2004-05-13 12:48pm
by Admiral Valdemar
InnerBrat wrote:
Admiral Valdemar wrote:There are few American imitations of British comedies (read: zero) that actually work. The humour barrier is simply too hard to break down given how insulting British humour can be to people.
Oh I don't know. Queer of Folk is quite popular over there, IINM. That and Who's the Boss seem to have been more successful than the British originals...
The former is a drama though and the latter is so great I've not heard of it. :P

Posted: 2004-05-13 01:09pm
by Exmoor Cat
It seems the FCC takes on bad taste, so lets complain about this.

Posted: 2004-05-13 01:25pm
by wautd
I hope they keep their dirty claws of Blackadder :x

Posted: 2004-05-13 01:27pm
by Exmoor Cat
oooh the thought alone sends shivers down my spine.

Posted: 2004-05-13 01:28pm
by Admiral Valdemar
wautd wrote:I hope they keep their dirty claws of Blackadder :x
How, exactly, could the US simulate a millenia of history with barely two centuries of past?

Posted: 2004-05-13 01:31pm
by Tsyroc
I thought the FOX Dr. Who movie was alright. :oops:

Posted: 2004-05-13 01:33pm
by Admiral Valdemar
Tsyroc wrote:I thought the FOX Dr. Who movie was alright. :oops:
UGH!

Not even McGann could save that.

Posted: 2004-05-13 02:23pm
by InnerBrat
Admiral Valdemar wrote:The former is a drama though
Hmmm... the british version was not really a drama. It wasn't laugh-out-loud funny, but it wasn't very dramatic.
and the latter is so great I've not heard of it. :P
You've never heard of The Upper Hand? Guess you're too young...

People, don't forget these are years old, let's not get up into arms about it now.

I mean, it predates DS9, for smegs sakes! (hence Terry Farrell)

Posted: 2004-05-13 02:33pm
by Dartzap
Tsyroc wrote:I thought the FOX Dr. Who movie was alright. :oops:
You shall be exterminated!!!!

Posted: 2004-05-13 05:13pm
by Bob the Gunslinger
InnerBrat wrote:
Admiral Valdemar wrote:There are few American imitations of British comedies (read: zero) that actually work. The humour barrier is simply too hard to break down given how insulting British humour can be to people.
Oh I don't know. Queer of Folk is quite popular over there, IINM. That and Who's the Boss seem to have been more successful than the British originals...
Who's the Boss was BRITISH???

I simply refuse to believe anyone could ever say "AAn-geluh, MO-nuh, Sa-MAN-thuh" without Tony Danza's charmingly imbecilic accent. No British accents!

And the american version of Whose Line Is It Anyway" was pretty good, mostly since it kept the same performers. (Although Clive Anderson was 10 times the man Drew Carrey thinks he is, and 100 times funnier.)