Fawlty Towers Complete Series: DVD Cover
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Fawlty Towers Complete Series

DVD - 3 Disc Set - Remastered / Special Edition Learn more

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  • DVD Release Date: 10/20/2009
  • Rating: Not Rated
  • Sales Rank: 2,193
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  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Scenes
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Features

Exclusive Commentary by John Cleese; 2009 Extended Interviews - Includes Exclusive Interview with Connie Booth; Accompanying booklet; Interviews with John Cleese, Prunella Scales and Andrew Sachs; ; Series 1 Director's Commentary by John Howard Davies; Series 2 Director's Commentary by Bob Spiers; Artist Profiles; Outtakes; Torquay Tourist Guide (Short Documentary Film); Cheap Tatty Review

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Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Fawlty Towers: Fatty Owls - Series 1
1. Scene 1 [6:10]
2. Scene 2 [5:36]
3. Scene 3 [5:09]
4. Scene 4 [4:23]
5. Scene 5 [4:48]
6. Scene 6 [4:09]
1. Scene 1 [6:52]
2. Scene 2 [5:01]
3. Scene 3 [5:03]
4. Scene 4 [3:28]
5. Scene 5 [4:31]
6. Scene 6 [3:13]
1. Scene 1 [7:10]
2. Scene 2 [3:33]
3. Scene 3 [5:22]
4. Scene 4 [4:33]
5. Scene 5 [6:22]
6. Scene 6 [6:14]
1. Scene 1 [4:57]
2. Scene 2 [4:18]
3. Scene 3 [6:34]
4. Scene 4 [6:19]
5. Scene 5 [3:50]
6. Scene 6 [2:42]
1. Scene 1 [4:24]
2. Scene 2 [4:09]
3. Scene 3 [5:57]
4. Scene 4 [5:01]
5. Scene 5 [4:39]
6. Scene 6 [4:23]
1. Scene 1 [4:08]
2. Scene 2 [7:34]
3. Scene 3 [4:57]
4. Scene 4 [3:34]
5. Scene 5 [2:44]
6. Scene 6 [8:13]
Disc #2 -- Fawlty Towers: Watery Fowls - Series 2
1. Scene 1 [5:17]
2. Scene 2 [3:05]
3. Scene 3 [7:36]
4. Scene 4 [5:56]
5. Scene 5 [6:10]
6. Scene 6 [3:15]
1. Scene 1 [4:59]
2. Scene 2 [4:26]
3. Scene 3 [3:45]
4. Scene 4 [5:48]
5. Scene 5 [9:41]
6. Scene 6 [7:33]
1. Scene 1 [5:34]
2. Scene 2 [5:31]
3. Scene 3 [6:30]
4. Scene 4 [3:50]
5. Scene 5 [4:19]
6. Scene 6 [6:15]
1. Scene 1 [5:34]
2. Scene 2 [5:31]
3. Scene 3 [6:30]
4. Scene 4 [3:50]
5. Scene 5 [4:19]
6. Scene 6 [6:15]
1. Scene 1 [4:59]
2. Scene 2 [4:17]
3. Scene 3 [4:48]
4. Scene 4 [6:22]
5. Scene 5 [5:38]
6. Scene 6 [5:27]
1. Scene 1 [4:33]
2. Scene 2 [3:25]
3. Scene 3 [8:15]
4. Scene 4 [3:56]
5. Scene 5 [4:41]
6. Scene 6 [4:15]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

While working with Monty Python, John Cleese stayed at a hotel in the British coastal resort town of Torquay whose manager was "wonderfully rude," meaning that when Cleese asked him what time the next bus out of town was, the manager threw the bus schedule at him and told Cleese to look it up himself. This manager also threw Eric Idle's suitcase into the street, believing it was a bomb after Idle left it unattended for a moment, and repeatedly chided the table manners of American Pythoner Terry Gilliam. This "wonderfully rude" character left such an impression on Cleese that he sat down with his wife and writing partner Connie Booth and created Fawlty Towers, a comedy about the world's most obnoxious hotel manager, in a seaside resort town in Britain. The show only ran for 12 episodes on the BBC, two six episode stints in 1975 and 1979, and Fawlty Towers has become one of the most widely recognized and admired British TV programs of all time. The British Film Institute recently ranked it as the best British TV program ever. Cleese starred as Basil Fawlty, the overbearing, xenophobic, cosmically rude hotel manager, Prunella Scales played his faithful gossipy wife Sybil, and Andrew Sachs played the dimwitted, endearing Spanish waiter Manuel, whose poor grasp of generally everything -- including English -- causes Basil interminable grief. Fawlty Towers combined the best of Britcoms: a dry wit, a healthy sense of absurdism, and a streak of bawdy humor and bodily function jokes that normally make American TV producers cringe. Fawlty Towers's legacy is very sturdy today on all sides of the Atlantic, and should be a welcome sight for anyone whose grown weary of the repetitive state of sitcoms today. Pete Segall, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

  • Viewer Rating:

There should have been more than twelve!by clemmy

Reader Rating:
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June 06, 2009: I love Basil, and now I can't say the spice any other way. He and Sybil are funny and incredibly abrasive. Polly can actually keep up with Basil, but Manuel is hopelessly lost with his rat-like hamster. The major is classic, especially in the Germans episode when he thinks the moose is talking to him even though it's Manuel practicing his English. My absolute favorite episode would have to be the Gourmet Dinner when Basil beats up on his car with a tree branch. I also loved the Kipper and the Corpse. Too bad there are only twelve episodes.

This review was written about the DVD edition.

So funnyby klarchermi

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April 06, 2009: This was a gift for my husband. Anyone who is a fan of John Cleese and or Monty Python will really enjoy this.

This review was written about the DVD edition.