Bill
Dir: Richard Bracewell
2015
****
I’m a bit old for the television show Horrible Histories but I had
always been curious about the show as it would often win comedy awards in
adult categories. I do know Simon Farnaby however, so I watched Bill – the
Horrible Histories movie - because of him, knowing the sort of thing to expect.
I enjoyed it a lot. There were a few kids TV shows like it when I was young that
I can think of but none quite as funny or grown up. I remember as a child being
talked down to by television, even though very little went above me, and I know
I’m not alone in feeling this. I’d watch all the popular TV shows but I would
also watch Monty Python and the Goodies and old re-runs of silly 70s comedies.
I’m guessing Laurence Rickard and Ben Willbond had a similar experience growing
up and the result is Horrible Histories, Yonderland and now Bill. The Bill of
the title is of course William Shakespeare. Shakespeare is
an integral part of growing up in the UK as you have to
read and study at least two of his works before you sit your final exams and
many a film adaptation or TV version exists. You have to watch them all, it’s a
sort of unwritten law. If you’re lucky you get to read Macbeth at school, if
you’re unlucky – like me – you get Twelfth Night or one of the other
‘comedies’ that see a girl dressed as a boy and a fool get
his comeuppance. I personally think there is a lot to the theory that the
work of Shakespeare as we know it is actually the works of two different
writers but that is another matter. The truth is, school kills Shakespeare for
most British kids, as it is over analysed, dissected and rammed down our
throats at a young age. Many only appreciate Shakespeare when they go back and
read it as adults, generally down to a realisation that they’ve reached a
certain age and are embarrassed to admit they’ve read very few of the
classic novels that they read should have read by now. Bill makes Shakespeare
fun for kids, which is great for a bit of after school relief, but I’m not sure
it will help them pass any exams. That’s fine though, kids need a bit of silly,
and Bill is certainly that. However, it doesn’t rest on the same jokes you’d
expect to find in kids shows/films. I think it was Akira Kurosawa who said that
there are only seven stories and that every story, film, or whatever can be
traced back to one of them. In the case of kids themes, I think there are only
two, maybe three. Growing up in the late 70s and early 80s, most British made
kids television saw different programs with different characters and TV
personalities go through the same plot-lines, tell the same jokes and rip
off the same slap-stick skits from the Three Stooges. The kids these days don’t
know how lucky they are to have programs like Horrible Histories or films like
Bill. That said, it is all just a sugar-free version of Monty Python. I like it
and enjoyed it but I’m not sure how less Pythonesque it could be. To be honest
though, that didn’t bother me at all, fair play to them, their jokes were their
own and they came thick and fast. They’re all brilliant writers and brilliant
performers. As they put it themselves, Bill is "a hundred different brands of idiocy, really... We staunchly defends the idiocy." And I for one
really support that when it comes to kids TV/film. As for the historical
element, I think the team said it well when they pointed out
that "We're playing with history, just as Shakespeare did, for the
entertainment of the audience." It’s great fun, the sort of thing I want
my kids to watch and the sort of thing I’d enjoy watching with them.
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