Vic Reeves

  • You've just added this product to the cart:

    Surrealissimo: The Trial of Salvador Dali (2002)

    0 out of 5

    Surrealissimo: The Trial of Salvador Dali (2002)

    A comic drama about the weird and wonderful world of Salvador Dali and the Surrealists. This film charts Dali’s meteoric rise from obscurity to the world’s most publicised artist.

    PKR 350
  • You've just added this product to the cart:

    Eric & Ernie (2011)

    0 out of 5

    Eric & Ernie (2011)

    Single drama telling the story of Eric Morecambe and Ernie Wise’s formative years, from child stars to national treasures. ‘Big head, short legs’ is Eric Bartholomew’s first impression of Ernie Wiseman, but their friendship endures and, encouraged by his well-meaning but determined mother Sadie, Eric became the funny man to Ernie’s ‘feed’. After a successful stint in children’s variety, they work their way up the ladder of live performance, but after a disastrous television debut in the series Running Wild, Morecambe and Wise learn to trust their own instincts and just make people laugh.

    PKR 350
  • You've just added this product to the cart:

    Monkey Trousers

    0 out of 5

    Monkey Trousers

    Monkey Trousers was a short-lived comedy series on ITV in 2005, featuring Alistair McGowan, John Thomson, Ronni Ancona, Mackenzie Crook, Griff Rhys Jones, Neil Morrissey, Vic Reeves, Bob Mortimer, Marc Wootton and Steve Coogan. It was directed by David Kerr and produced by Bob Mortimer and Vic Reeves’ production company, Pett Productions.

    It succeeded The All Star Comedy Show, which was written by Reeves and Mortimer, and produced by Coogan.

    Sketches of the show included the moronic, yet fearless ‘Croc Botherer’, Roy the eerie, lonely toy-shopkeeper, Alistair the hopeless estate agent, who replies to every question with “I don’t know”, the swearing chef, and the ‘Geordie Astronauts’.

    A DVD of the series was released on 4 July 2005.

    PKR 900
  • You've just added this product to the cart:

    Vic and Bob's Big Night Out

    0 out of 5

    Vic and Bob’s Big Night Out

    Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer provide songs, sketches and silliness in buckets.

    PKR 450
  • You've just added this product to the cart:

    Painting Birds with Jim and Nancy Moir

    0 out of 5

    Painting Birds with Jim and Nancy Moir

    Comedic ornithological series, Painting Birds with Jim and Nancy Moir will follow prolific artist Jim and his wife Nancy as they explore some of Britain’s best beauty spots, joined along the way by a few famous friends. Their challenge? Create an original piece of bird art celebrating the unique species native to that region over the course of a weekend. Accompanied in each episode by local twitchers, artists and conservation experts, Jim, and Nancy will be guided through forest and fen as they venture through wild countryside and local bird sanctuaries to gather inspiration. They’ll spend meditative weekends sketching and painting their feathery subjects, tackling everything from grouse to goshawks and bitterns to bearded tits.

    PKR 600
  • You've just added this product to the cart:

    The Ministry of Curious Stuff

    0 out of 5

    The Ministry of Curious Stuff

    Hop aboard as Vic Reeves and his extraordinarily weird and wonderful team of fact-finders take you on a fascinating voyage of discovery!

    PKR 600
  • You've just added this product to the cart:

    Hebburn

    0 out of 5

    Hebburn

    PKR 600
  • You've just added this product to the cart:

    The Smell of Reeves and Mortimer

    0 out of 5

    The Smell of Reeves and Mortimer

    The Smell of Reeves and Mortimer was a BBC TV sketch show written by and starring double act Vic Reeves & Bob Mortimer. Its first series appeared in 1993 following the duo’s move to the BBC after parting company with Channel 4. The show marked a continuation of Reeves & Mortimer’s bizarre, anarchic and frequently silly comedy that they had first explored on Channel 4’s Vic Reeves Big Night Out, with a number of important differences.

    Firstly, Mortimer was now Reeves’s partner as opposed to his assistant on the previous programme. As well as getting his name in the title, he shared the trademark prop-strewn desk with Reeves.

    With virtually all of the Vic Reeves Big Night Out characters consigned to the past, a whole range of new characters appeared. The show also featured pre-recorded sketches and a lavish studio set, laden with columns and pillars and in the centre the enormous letters R&M, from which the duo emerged at the start of each show.

    The show would usually close with the song “Let’s Have A Little Bit More,” which saw the duo enthusing about the smells of things, from “Pol Pot’s Dungarees” to “Lulu’s Hairdos.”

    PKR 200
  • You've just added this product to the cart:

    Brainiac: Science Abuse

    0 out of 5

    Brainiac: Science Abuse

    Brainiac: Science Abuse is a British reality show that aired on Sky One from 13 November 2003 to 30 March 2008. During each episode of the show, numerous experiments are carried out to verify whether common conceptions are true or simply to create impressive explosions. The show centres on the three core branches of science for the key stages in British education: chemistry, physics and to a lesser extent, biology. The experimenters on the show are referred to as “Brainiacs”, and each episode usually finishes with the destruction of a caravan.

    The show is produced by Granada Productions and is broadcast in Ireland and the United Kingdom on Sky Digital.

    The original presenters were Richard Hammond and Jon Tickle, then joined in the second series by Charlotte Hudson. Hammond left after the fourth, and was replaced by Vic Reeves and Hudson left after the fifth, and was replaced by Thaila Zucchi.

    In July 2008, after the sixth series had finished, Sky announced they had cancelled the show due to the sixth series’ low ratings.

    PKR 300PKR 700
  • You've just added this product to the cart:

    Vic Reeves Big Night Out

    0 out of 5

    Vic Reeves Big Night Out

    Vic Reeves Big Night Out was a cult British comedy stage show and later TV series which ran on Channel 4 for two series in 1990 and 1991, as well as a New Year special. It marked the beginnings of the collaboration between Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer and started their Vic and Bob comedy double act.

    The show was later acknowledged as a seminal force in British comedy throughout the 1990s and which continues to the present day.

    Arguably the most surreal of the pair’s work, Vic Reeves Big Night Out was effectively a parody of the variety shows which dominated the early years of television, but which were, by the early 1990s, falling from grace. Vic, introduced by Patrick Allen as “Britain’s Top Light Entertainer and Singer”, would sit behind a cluttered desk talking nonsense and introducing the various segments and surreal guests on the show. Vic Reeves Big Night Out is notable as the only time in their career where Vic solely took the role of host, while Bob was consigned to the back stage, appearing every few minutes as either himself or as a strange character. The two received equal billing in the series credits.

    On 3 October 2007, the first episode was re-broadcast on More4 as part of Channel 4 at 25, a season of classic Channel 4 programmes shown to celebrate the channel’s 25th birthday.

    PKR 400PKR 600
  • You've just added this product to the cart:

    Bang, Bang, It's Reeves and Mortimer

    0 out of 5

    Bang, Bang, It’s Reeves and Mortimer

    Bang, Bang, It’s Reeves and Mortimer is a British comedy television series, the third by comedy double act Vic & Bob and their second in a sketch show format. Directed by Mark Mylod and produced by Alan Marke, it was first aired in 1999 on BBC2. While maintaining certain elements from The Smell of Reeves and Mortimer, the show was very different in many ways.

    As with the previous sketch show, a song kicked off the proceedings, and once again the duo sat at their trademark desk. However, the desk was almost completely bare, and had a transparent front, through which the moving form of a naked man could be seen. The studio set was different too, the huge R&M letters replaced with large representations of the pair behind warped glass. The duo’s humour had evolved too, their chat at the desk seemed more improvised, but also more obtuse.

    There were also changes in the double-act dynamic. Vic’s character was frequently unhinged and waved guns and large blunt objects around with relish, while Bob played a slightly baffled innocent most of the time. As usual, however, they would tend to fall out very easily, which would result in one of their trademark slapstick fights, which grew more absurd, violent and freeform as the series progressed. One memorable instance involved Vic’s head becoming grotesquely mutated after a spin in a tumble dryer. Bob then gleefully set about the hunchbacked, pathetic Vic with a baseball bat.

    PKR 200
  • You've just added this product to the cart:

    House of Fools

    0 out of 5

    House of Fools

    Surreal sitcom with Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer. A series of anarchic affairs featuring the uninvited lodgers and guests that cause chaos and disruption in their home.

    PKR 200
Select your currency

DVD Planet Store now offers "International Delivery" to AU, US, UK, CA and others. — Read more