THE OFFICE!!! is coming back
#2
Posted 25 August 2008 - 01:59 PM
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#3
Posted 25 August 2008 - 09:05 PM
Major Differences:
1) The UK version makes use of its premise, that the show is the product of a documentary. As such, characters cannot keep secrets from one another. When Tim makes his feelings known to Dawn, everone in the office knows immediately and they comment on it. When David Brent loses his job as manager, he parlays his minor tv celebrity into a series of appearances at shady clubs, doing "reality celeb" spots on dating shows, etc. Another key point of the format is that there are exactly two camera teams, no more, so there is not unlimited coverage of every moment like you get on the American version. This sells the "reality" aspect of the show much better. Tim also significantly removes his wire mic so we can't hear what he says to Dawn. That is a strong dramatic moment absent from the American version, which essentially only uses the "reality" premise to allow the characters to speak directly to the camera in the Interview room and frequently to flash the camera with sarcastic eyes. One key plot element in the Christmas special is that the BBC offers Dawn the airfare and accommodations to fly back from Florida to revisit Wernham Hogg. So again the Heisenberg principle is at play: first Tim's feelings for Dawn are made public by the BBC; later David uses his BBC status to eke out a meagre celebrity career; finally the BBC itself is responsible for terminating Dawn's engagement and getting her together with Tim. This is all fantastically clever. In the American version, we have to assume that the documentary being filmed is screened on Mars, because noone at Dunder-Mifflin has ever seen it. If they had, then Dwight's relationship with Angela would never have reamined a secret, to mention only one of many office secrets.
2) The UK Office has basically only four characters: Tim, Dawn, David, and Gareth. Everyone else is a glorified extra. The US Office on the other hand is the strongest comedy ensemble on tv today. It may be my favourite comedy ensemble of all time, and I include the cast of TAXI. As much as I feel the first difference I cited makes the UK version more clever, I feel this distinction makes the US version more durable. And yes, funnier.
So there. I have compared the two without favoring either. Certainly I have not said that the original UK show is superior.
#4
Posted 26 August 2008 - 05:31 AM
Thank you for being brave enough to point out that they are both good but different. The knee jerk response is always, "The American version is crap! Ricky Gervais RULES!"
Much like the classic, "I hate X and love Y!" why can't you just like both?
Buy the New LittleHorse CD, Strangers in the Valley!
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#5
Posted 29 August 2008 - 05:19 PM
For the same reason you cant love both the unaltered version and the new digitally remastered version of the original trilogy (except image that everyone in the remastered version had [insert different cultural group] accents and told jokes which only people who knew extensively about [insert different cultural group] would understand.)
-Jimmy McTavern, 1938.
#6
Posted 30 August 2008 - 12:04 AM
I don't think, either, that the original Office was loaded with jokes that only Brits would get. They're just different jokes. And yeah, self-referential stuff that made the original one more clever, while the remake is funnier has a better ensemble.
#7
Posted 02 September 2008 - 07:04 PM
This post has been edited by Dr Lecter: 02 September 2008 - 07:04 PM
#8
Posted 02 September 2008 - 09:46 PM
I seem to recall the guy who plays Dwight, whose name I am too lazy too look up, saying in and interview that the show's comedic goal was to make people so uncomfortable that they wanted to change the channel, but to be funny enough that they weren't quite able to. That balance is a bit off for me.
#13
Posted 15 September 2008 - 09:25 PM
It has to be said, they achieved that first goal beyond all imagination. The second one however has me scratching my head, surely that would require it to contain comedy?
#14
Posted 23 September 2008 - 08:50 AM
#15
Posted 06 October 2008 - 10:22 PM
The American Office is a lot more lighthearted. What can I say? I prefer accidentally-on-purpose kidnappings of pizza delivery boys and "That's what she said"s during court proceedings to the gone-through-horror-and-out-the-other-side humor that the British Office relies upon.
But I do miss Gareth.