Jam


RRP: £19.99
Our Price: £32.00 (subject to change)

Editorial
Amazon.co.uk Review

With Jam, the TV follow-up to his Radio 1 series Blue Jam, Chris Morris focuses more on unease more than the satire of Brass Eye. Indeed, it's a moot point whether Jam can actually be categorised as comedy at all. Each sketch is steeped in a heavy brine of dark, ambient music (including Bark Psychosis, David Sylvian and Brian Eno), grainy imagery, fast-cut editing and slo-motion. Its mirthless, Kafka-esque scenarios feel like an attempt to morph into some new species of post-comedy that is more like the stuff of nightmares. The credits, in which Morris stalks the moving camera, uttering Lear-esque words of foreboding immediately announce that this "sketch show" is a galaxy apart from The Two Ronnies.

The appalled look on actor Kevin Eldon's face in the opening sketch of the series, as a young couple invite him to endure being buggered by a mutual acquaintance ("I need a break"), sets the tone. Rape, chemotherapy, wanton urination--as a naked "Robert Kilroy-Silk" goes insane in a sketch full of detestation for the oleaginous TV presenter--and recurring sketches involving callously authoritarian NHS doctors, all go to make up these annals of the bizarre and perverse.

Ultimately, Jam doesn't quite work, not on TV anyway. The repetition of the same, small cast over and over, broken up too briefly by Morris' own appearances (as a "country gentleman" living outside his house, for instance), coupled with the gruelling treatment of the sketch material makes for a psyche-probing, jaw-dropping experience--but in parts also a nullifying and strangely predictable one. Morris's "failures" are far more interesting than most people's successes. --David Stubbs


Editorial
Special Features

Disc 1:
All 6 episodes of the Jam TV series, plus the following extras:
  • Miniaturised viewing option for programme 1
  • Moving miniaturised viewing option for programme 2 (pong version)
  • Programme 6 speeded up and then slowed again to original duration
  • Lava Lamp viewing option
  • Programme 4 FFWD version
  • 1st 19 seconds of programme 5
  • Original Test shoot material
  • London/Tokyo jam exhibition competition
  • Selected scenes retaining original audience sound
  • Adam & Joe's Goitre
  • Undeleted Scenes
  • View all six programmes at once.....and many many more, plus hidden extras

Disc 2:

  • All 6 episodes of the Jam TV series


Editorial
Synopsis

JAM is yet another disturbing dark comedy series from Chris Morris, the twisted genius behind the BRASSEYE and THE DAY TODAY. Spread over two discs, JAM avoids Morris's trademark satire in favour of a disorientating mixture of bizarre sketches and electronic music which probe the darker regions of the soul.


POP PERFECTION
Review date: 2007-04-21 Rating: 10 out of 10

A brilliant collection from the best pop - punk - mod band of all-time.
Paul Weller is a genius and Bruce Foxton was the best bass player of his generation - and I aint just saying that coz he came to my wedding.



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Reviews


Genius...
Review date: 2007-04-07 Rating: 10 out of 10

The Day Today focuses mainly on news reports, while Brass Eye is a balance of news reports and basically sketches, now Jam is totally made up of sketches. Each one of these programmes is a classic in it's own right, and sadly Jam is often overlooked due to the sheer infamy of the previous two shows.

Jam, as previously stated, is a series of fairly extreme sketches using only about 5 actors. Although at first this can be very slightly annoying seeing an actor who just played a pervert, suddenly playing the serious character in the next sketch; it ultimately works to it's advantage as particular actor's tend to play certain characters and you find yourself anticipating more and more what the said actor will do next.

There are 6 episodes, each roughly 23 minutes long, there is a disk 2 which features the original 6 episodes but in slightly different shades of colour, and many of the special features consist of either written text explaining that your disk has it missing, or is simply unwatchable because it is so tiny that you can't see it. In simpler terms, Chris Morris has created a satire on dvd's themselves with pracitcally all special features being completely pointless. In an amusing way, of course..


The humour is alot less blatant, than the intellectual humour of the previous two shows, however that doesnt stop some of the sketches being absolutely hilarious. Favourites include the boy not returning home from school sketch, the man who has his funeral while in his prime, any of the GP visit ones, and the man who lives outside one. But yeah their all brilliant and guarenteed to make you laugh!

However if humour involving dead children, disabilities, murder etc is not to your palate, then steer clear to avoid any offence.

For everyone else, enjoy..


genuinely unique; there really is nothing like it
Review date: 2007-02-16 Rating: 10 out of 10

there are some extraordinarily borderline elements to this quietly disturbing piece of work which occupies a genre all on its own; Brass Eye was sufficiently left of centre to warrant some psychiatric inquiry but this Jam thing is clearly in the realm of a lengthy admission to a mental health ward; doctor examining his own knee rather than his patient's - what's that about? Breughelesque entertainment; it's like being stabbed slowly but without physical injury yet with all the expected trauma...

Chris Morris rules in Hades


classic comedy from Morris
Review date: 2007-02-11 Rating: 10 out of 10

After having had this show recommended to me, i went out and bought it. It doesn't let you down. the sketches are just the warped fantastical merriment that I savour. Stand out performer has to be David Cann as the bizzare Doctor. perhaps the most disturbing thing on this disc has to be the House for Sex Sketch: the ending is utterly ghaslty! The only beef I have with this show is the music; compared to the radio show, it feels uninspired.

Brilliant! But don't watch it you're depressed...
Review date: 2007-02-03 Rating: 10 out of 10

I rented this from Amazonj recently, being an avid Chris Morris fan, and I'm definitely going to buy it! At first I wasn't sure though, I've been under alot of stress at work recently, worrying, sleepless nights etc. and I was hoping for something to cheer me up, So it took me a couple of viewings to warm to it, on the first viewing, there were only a few sketches that made me laugh: Killroy losing his mind, the bloke who's car has been shrunk, "F***ING NODDY?!", but sketches like the one with the plumber, the really dark ones, made me feel kind of depressed, and I had to put some Fawlty Towers on to lighten things up.

On the second viewing however, I discovered more comedy genius that had me in tears, the lizards in the TV was hilarious! o on the whole, I highly recommend it, but if you're unhappy, its unlikely to cheer you up.


Product Details/Specifications


Actor(s):
Julia Davis
Chris Morris
Amelia Bullmore
Mark Heap
Kevin Eldon

Creators:
Amelia Bullmore (Primary Contributor)
Chris Morris (Primary Contributor)

Recording label: 2 Entertain Video
Manufacturer: 2 Entertain Video
EAN: 5014138069919
Binding: DVD
Number of items: 1
Format: PAL,
Release date: 2003-04-28
Number of discs: 2
Audience rating: Suitable for 18 years and over
Region code: 2
Running time: 300 minutes
Theatrical release date: 2000
Language: English (Original Language)

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