Mr. Jolly Lives Next Door

Mr. Jolly Lives Next Door

Mr. Jolly Lives Next Door
Directed by Stephen Frears
Produced by Elaine Taylor
Written by Adrian Edmondson
Rik Mayall
Rowland Rivron
Starring Rik Mayall
Adrian Edmondson
Peter Richardson
Nicholas Parsons
Peter Cook
Release dates
5 March 1988

Mr. Jolly Lives Next Door is a 1987 comedy film made for British television as part of The Comic Strip Presents... series and was originally broadcast on Channel 4 on 5 March 1988.[1] It was released on VHS in the late 1980s, and became available on DVD when the entire Comic Strip Presents... series was released as a box set in the UK in June 2005. It has also been repeated occasionally on the Paramount Comedy Channel.

Plot

It features Rik Mayall and Adrian Edmondson as the (unnamed) proprietors of an escort agency, Dreamytime Escorts. Mayall's character is devious, low-minded, calculating and stupid; Edmondson's merely very stupid.

Unusually, rather than providing businessmen with female companionship, the activities of their escort agency essentially involve the pair swooping on unsuspecting foreigners who call them, and forcing them to take part in a drinking binge at their expense. The two are alcohol-obsessed; when their home-brewed beer (which takes all of two days to brew and has a head made from washing-up liquid) isn't available, they steal from the delivery lorries pulling up at the off-licence downstairs: Edmondson's character dives out of the window into a large builders' bucket and is hauled back up with the stolen exploding tonic water by Mayall.

Their next-door neighbour is the eponymous Mr. Jolly, a psychopathic contract killer played by Peter Cook. Jolly's modus operandi is to hack his victims to death with a meat cleaver while playing classic Tom Jones tunes from the 1960s to drown their cries.

Heimi Henderson, who owns the off-licence downstairs, has refused demands for protection money by Mr. Lovebucket, an effete gangster played by Peter Richardson whose abiding love is his Citroën DS car.

Mayall and Edmonson intercept a request intended for Mr. Jolly to "take out" the radio presenter and game show host Nicholas Parsons, who appears as himself. Parsons is due to open Henderson's off-licence, and Lovebucket wants to put a stop to it. Misinterpreting the request, they spend an evening with Parsons, who stays in their company because he believes them to be competition winners, the real ones having been pushed off the road by the Dreamytime Escorts' van in an earlier scene. The two are confronted the following morning by Lovebucket, who wants to know what they've done with the money provided with the contract (they have, of course, used to buy one thousand five hundred seventy four gin and tonics (large ones)). Lovebucket insists that they complete the contract.

The two return to Parsons's house armed with a gun, chainsaw and grenades but fail to kill him as he leaves via helicopter to the off-licence to open it. They then chase after the helicopter with Lovebucket and his gang pursuing them and ends up crashing their van into a skip. Parsons reaches the off-licence but can't find Henderson so he goes upstairs and meets Mr. Jolly and is killed by him.

Mayall and Edmonson got into their office and start packing their suitcases to go and live in Rio but seen into Jolly's office and watch him talking to Lovebucket. Some of the gang members go into their office only to find it empty as the two escaped through the window and go into the off-licence where they are told by Henderson that Parsons is opening it much to their excitement. Shortly after Henderson overhears the two talking about killing Parsons causing Mayall to shoot him dead, but tricks Edmonson into thinking he did it. Edmonson decides to have a drink but ends up taking a bottle of explosive tonic water from one of the shelves causing an explosion in the off-licence.

But it is revealed during the credits that the two survived and are walking along a canal where Mayall knocks Edmonson into it before walking off with Edmonson swimming after him.

Cast

Production Information

References

  1. "The New York Times". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  2. 1 2 Flickr.com
  3. "About Little Fluffy Toys Ltd « Little Fluffy Toys Ltd". Littlefluffytoys.com. 11 September 2010. Archived from the original on 12 August 2010. Retrieved 1 January 2011.
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