Going Over the Top | Blackadder Goes Forth | BBC Comedy Greats

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  • Опубликовано: 6 фев 2020
  • The orders have come in and Blackadder and his squadron are to go over the trenches, this is the end of the line. Subscribe: bit.ly/BBCComedyGreats
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Комментарии • 3,4 тыс.

  • @BBCComedyGreats
    @BBCComedyGreats  4 года назад +895

    I have a cunning plan, let's watch more Blackadder here : ruclips.net/p/PLZwyeleffqk5r8Ze_qSF9nKi_9hfjH0qO

    • @deesplaylists6941
      @deesplaylists6941 4 года назад +15

      I'd rather see the entire episodes. 😏😏😏😏😏

    • @jimbehr2291
      @jimbehr2291 4 года назад +29

      I have a cunning plan.....stop cutting off the end of the scenes.

    • @RumblePirate
      @RumblePirate 4 года назад +1

      Too good

    • @deesplaylists6941
      @deesplaylists6941 4 года назад +9

      @@RumblePirate im not gonna pay to see a 30 year old TV show that was free when it first aired as a kid. I don't think so.

    • @deesplaylists6941
      @deesplaylists6941 4 года назад +1

      @@jimbehr2291 it was uploaded years ago lol. By a flunky.

  • @RamblinRick_
    @RamblinRick_ 4 года назад +8763

    I've read the script for this episode. The last two lines are stage directions. They read:
    They go over the top.
    They don't get very far.

    • @Crytekx
      @Crytekx 4 года назад +699

      you've made a sad ending sound funny

    • @charlottebruce979
      @charlottebruce979 4 года назад +352

      And lots more didn't either.

    • @nathanaelraynard2641
      @nathanaelraynard2641 4 года назад +255

      That's pretty sad

    • @amiqai
      @amiqai 4 года назад +433

      @@Crytekx how? it just nullifies any possibility of them surviving when the script itself has said that they don't get any far. It's saddening in the very least to say.

    • @aidanblackett8930
      @aidanblackett8930 4 года назад +306

      @@amiqai I think it's the delivery he finds comedic, I mean it is very much a Blackadder punch line of an ending.
      Edited for punctuation.

  • @joemoe974
    @joemoe974 4 года назад +6289

    It's extraordinary to listen to the audience initially very heartily laughing at all the clever banter going back and forth, but as the scene goes on you hear the laughter begin to diminish and become a bit nervous as they realize that all of these characters are saying their last words and last goodbyes to each other.
    It transitions from comedy to tragedy before the audience quite realizes it.
    An amazingly poignant ending to an extraordinary series.

    • @nelsonclub7722
      @nelsonclub7722 4 года назад +81

      Sad though that is - the laughter is canned - no live filming in front of an audience

    • @joemoe974
      @joemoe974 4 года назад +137

      @@nelsonclub7722 I thought some episodes were done in studio but others were done with an audience? I also thought that some episodes were shown to audiences after they were recorded? Wow, well if that's true then the producers must have sensed it was an episode that would morph from comedy to tragedy and so they added the laughter in a way to reflect that. Interesting!

    • @nelsonclub7722
      @nelsonclub7722 4 года назад +132

      @@joemoe974 I've just checked - you are right - I apologise - your previous comment stands - emotional and poignant as you say

    • @joemoe974
      @joemoe974 4 года назад +21

      @@nelsonclub7722 No problem, it's all good!

    • @BBCComedyGreats
      @BBCComedyGreats  4 года назад +456

      It's even more impactful that we all know the big push is coming, from the very first moment in the series, and yet we're still willing for blackadder to find a way out.

  • @fraserwebster8761
    @fraserwebster8761 2 года назад +3835

    My favourite part of this is Captain Darling. You go through the six episodes loving Blackadder and hating Darling, then with two minutes to go you realise they’re exactly the same. Both trying to avoid their almost certain fate, all that separates them is one chose scheming and one chose bootlicking, but both had the same aim. The slow escalation in his 3 unfulfilled wishes also rips your heart out. Back to his old job, back to his loved hobby, back to marrying the woman he loves. All ripped away for totally pointless reasons. What a show.

    • @Srokaldinho
      @Srokaldinho 2 года назад +82

      The life that could have been...

    • @matty6848
      @matty6848 2 года назад +108

      I know it’s crazy isn’t it how quickly you find sympathy for him in this position. Real tear jerker.

    • @commandermccluck
      @commandermccluck 2 года назад +153

      Full credit too Tim Mcinnery on that.
      He took a few short lines and turned Darling's character completely on it's head, from an almost uncaring bootlicker to a defeated man, scared out of his wits, desperately hoping for one last way out.

    • @LordZontar
      @LordZontar Год назад +178

      The most poignant aspect of the scene, aside from the "Marry Doris..." line is how Blackadder doesn't insult or mock or demean Darling but accords him his dignity as an officer and a man. In that moment they are friends. No more room for petty jealousies and antagonism.

    • @alainmulaire9471
      @alainmulaire9471 Год назад +6

      very well said Fraser

  • @jackwood4420
    @jackwood4420 2 года назад +1476

    The moment George says he's scared, that he's the last of his friends alive, is absolutely heartbreaking.

    • @LordZontar
      @LordZontar Год назад +106

      "After all, I'm the last of the tiddly-winking leapfroggers from the golden summer of 1914. I don't want to die. Not... very keen on dying at all, sir."

    • @donaldmccleary9015
      @donaldmccleary9015 9 месяцев назад +8

      Hits you in the guts like a sucker punch

    • @GravesRWFiA
      @GravesRWFiA 9 месяцев назад +23

      between that and Darling, finally he and blackadder are at peace, he's seen how mad it all is and blackadder shows compassion, he doesn't taunt him.

    • @southerncomfort7490
      @southerncomfort7490 9 месяцев назад

      I remember looking at a book at University on the 'stacks' library shelves (ie behind the scenes). It was called the 'The Balliol Book War Memorial Book' published in 1924. This book has two volumes. The work had a page devoted to all of the Balliol students who had been killed in the Great War. There are 264 pages. In 1914 there were 381 members of this Oxford College. On one page you can find Herbert Asquith, son of the Prime Minister, who was killed on the Somme. One person who very nearly was in it was Harold MacMillan. He was very seriously injured at the Battle of Loos in 1915. If it had not been to persistent nagging by his mother over his medical attention, he would almost certainly have died.
      Lord Denning's eldest brother, "the best of us all", was also killed on the first day of the battle of the Somme, leading his troops into battle and a Second-Lieutenant. Twenty-One Thousand British troops died that day.
      It truly marked the sweeping away of the very best of a generation.

    • @idcgaming518
      @idcgaming518 Месяц назад +2

      ​​@@GravesRWFiA blackadder may be a coward, but he is not heartless. That has, throughout every era we see in the various series' runs, a consistent fact about him.

  • @raffae4303
    @raffae4303 4 года назад +4502

    "Who would've noticed another mad man around here?" Really captures the reality of war

    • @nikhilmakwana9522
      @nikhilmakwana9522 4 года назад +94

      @New King no you dolt, he means the point of the effect war has on people. No matter what pesky reason politicians have for waging wars, it's the soldiers who go mad

    • @nikhilmakwana9522
      @nikhilmakwana9522 4 года назад +34

      Lol, how does the mention of the term politicians make it political? If I specifically mentioned the Korean or Vietnam war, then fine I would agree with you
      He literally said even after trying to behave mentally unstable, he wasn't discharged and he went on to say how it wouldn't be possible to distinguish him because everyone is going through enormous mental pain which makes them go mad.
      Comedy can be understood serious when done for the sake of sarcasm or satire. Not necessarily always, but art is open to interpretations

    • @nikhilmakwana9522
      @nikhilmakwana9522 4 года назад +21

      @New King New King New King did you fall and hit your head? Rather than being emotionally charged and trying to protect the idea of a soldier, try to read what the person is writing first.
      I told the horror of war makes a person mentally unstable. And if you think there is only one interpretation of art then there is no point of continuing this argument. Art can have varied interpretations, including the one by the artist, whether the joke has a deeper meaning depends on how the viewer sees it.
      And I don't know how easier to understand I have to make my ' politician ' point for you to get it
      PS : just because a person becomes a soldier, that doesn't mean they can't be mad

    • @PhilipDK5800
      @PhilipDK5800 4 года назад +46

      @New King A war unrelated to politics? You may as well mention a fried egg without a pan.

    • @PhilipDK5800
      @PhilipDK5800 4 года назад +19

      @New King It applies to ancient wars as well ;)

  • @hoilst
    @hoilst 3 года назад +4214

    Darling gets the darkest line ever committed to television - "The Great War: 1914...to 1917!" That's absolutely brutal.

    • @wppb50
      @wppb50 3 года назад +176

      And the gap before the laugh hits there--it can take a second.

    • @cosmiceyness
      @cosmiceyness 3 года назад +123

      man when i heard that, i just felt really sad

    • @pumpkin91ful
      @pumpkin91ful 3 года назад +29

      Sorry i don't get the meaning behind It, PS i'm not english,i'm italian.

    • @alcherist4762
      @alcherist4762 3 года назад +252

      @@pumpkin91ful its because the war went on for another 1-2 years, its like saying "we survived world war 2: 1939 to 1943"

    • @randolphsavage9760
      @randolphsavage9760 3 года назад +148

      @@alcherist4762 Also implies that many more will die after them before its finally over.

  • @keeperofthecheese
    @keeperofthecheese 2 года назад +2757

    That line "I'm... scared sir" changes everything. Masterpiece.

    • @commandermccluck
      @commandermccluck 2 года назад +163

      That line is the moment you can feel all the humour vanish from the scene and be replaced by a steadily growing sense of dread, as both the audience and the characters realise there's no way out of this fate.

    • @ericbrett3095
      @ericbrett3095 Год назад +66

      Notice the laugh track stopped after that line with the exception of how are you feeling Darling.

    • @aDifferentJT
      @aDifferentJT Год назад +53

      Yes, and then they make you think that they might get out of it when the guns stop and the cheers, and then he says 1914-1917 and you realise it’s not.

    • @marxel4444
      @marxel4444 Год назад +15

      That reminds me so much of
      World in conflict
      "Im scared sir.."
      "I know thomas, i know. but we are doing the right thing...people will remember us for it.."
      as a whole company lures an enemy into a killing ground just to hold them in place for a tactical nuke to wipe it all out.

    • @Mugruncher
      @Mugruncher 11 месяцев назад +20

      First time I saw that it hit like a knife to the gut
      Still does

  • @gezzarandom
    @gezzarandom 2 года назад +2771

    When Blackadder says, “Well I’m afraid it’ll have to wait.” Look at Darling’s reaction at that exact moment, you can just see his heart sink knowing this is it. Brilliantly acted by Tim McInnerny.

    • @IanHardmanPhotography
      @IanHardmanPhotography Год назад +148

      I've never noticed that until now. He listens, even if he looks like he is too concerned about going over the top, he's still listening and you see his last hope dashed away. Wow, that's truly something.

    • @the_best_of_times
      @the_best_of_times Год назад +58

      I've been watching this episode since 1989 on TV, VHS, disc and now on demand and I never caught that 'ad lib? from McInnery. Pure class. Thanks for pointing it out.

    • @johnmcnatty1710
      @johnmcnatty1710 Год назад +34

      all the clowning around leading up to that one poignant moment , saying so much about the horrific waste of lives , “ going over the top” to charge at machine guns because “ one more good push should do it “

    • @LD-bv1pm
      @LD-bv1pm Год назад +27

      Never noticed that. The acting throughout this scene was top notch but that was brilliantly done.

    • @evrbody
      @evrbody Год назад +43

      You can imagine him saying to himself: "Goodbye, Doris".

  • @monsider
    @monsider 4 года назад +4082

    As soon as he said, "1917" ... my heart broke.

    • @agenttheater5
      @agenttheater5 4 года назад +333

      I genuinely thought that the war ended in 1917 for years - when I first heard it I thought they were so close, just a few more weeks or months.....somehow finding out they were still a whole year away from the end made this scene hurt even more

    • @marilynmalone1381
      @marilynmalone1381 4 года назад +95

      Too bad they weren't in Russia in october 1917 and could have stopped enduring the war

    • @naamadossantossilva4736
      @naamadossantossilva4736 4 года назад +59

      @@agenttheater5 It ended in December,so they had almost two years of war ahead of them

    • @enlg3750
      @enlg3750 4 года назад +62

      @@marilynmalone1381 well I won't personally be too hostile to Bolsheviks but 1917 is far from the end of it in Russia...

    • @thiagodeandrade7081
      @thiagodeandrade7081 4 года назад +26

      Yes, but, although the Russian Army was been dismantly by them with peasant soldiers going home to seize the lands and all, a peace treaty with Germany had to wait until early 1918. By then there was the whole Civil War + foreign intervention + famine + White/Red terror things going on.

  • @WillRock07
    @WillRock07 3 года назад +3113

    "I'm scared sir"
    The moment you realised this ending was going to hit different.

    • @HRHooChicken
      @HRHooChicken 2 года назад +105

      To see him all positive and merry through the series for him to then be serious for a second is really heartbreaking. It represents all those positive young lads that volunteered with their pals who thought they’d be home in a few months. They didn’t realise the horror of what they signed up for.

    • @johnp7304
      @johnp7304 2 года назад +2

      No, it's when you realized it was fucking pointless my friend.

    • @gurugurukuma
      @gurugurukuma 2 года назад +6

      and sad to hear that 1 of the female audiences laughed at this line.

    • @kaushiksaha8416
      @kaushiksaha8416 2 года назад +17

      @@gurugurukuma
      The laughter actually comes from a machine, which has recorded laughter sounds stored in it. A technician presses a button at pre-detemined cues to get laughter.

    • @gurugurukuma
      @gurugurukuma 2 года назад +28

      @@kaushiksaha8416 have you watched "Blackadder A Whole Rotten Saga"? There were live audiences while they are filming this.

  • @ray.shoesmith
    @ray.shoesmith Год назад +2399

    What hits home to me about this is the fact that despite spending the entire show trying to come up with ways to avoid becoming part of the slaughter, when their time came Blackadder, Darling, George and Baldrick went forth with no hesitation. A powerful salute to the men who really did hop the bags in the Great War.

    • @gardenstate732
      @gardenstate732 Год назад +43

      without a wimper

    • @gorillaguerillaDK
      @gorillaguerillaDK Год назад +75

      You know, in most places of the frontline, if all the soldiers had spend the entire war, just staying put, exactly where they started out, the "only" difference it would have made, was a lot of saved lives….
      In most of the attacks during WW1, it would have made better sense to stay put, and let the enemy come to you, rather than "going over" - but the way the Generals were thinking wouldn’t allow for that!
      Millions of soldiers slaughtered in a back and forth!
      Insane!
      And add to this how both the allied and the Germans would execute their own for "cowardice" when their nerves couldn’t take it anymore!
      There was very rarely anything heroic about their deaths, unless you wanna call cattle going into a slaughter house heroic!
      It was F sad, and luckily today, in most countries, Officers who think like these Generals did, rarely make it up the ranks!
      I’m F happy that I was born fifty years after WW1 ended, so I could get to serve my country knowing that this line of thinking were now frowned upon!

    • @sammencia7945
      @sammencia7945 Год назад

      Killed all the European men with honor. Poppy shaming from women bs.
      British men didn't even have the right to vote.
      Total bollocks.

    • @modernmajorgeneral4669
      @modernmajorgeneral4669 Год назад +27

      @@gorillaguerillaDK While it is true that the defending side in a battlefield like the ones found on the western front in WW1 would have an advantage, the generals in WW1 were sort of inbetween a rock and a hard spot. You see, it would be preferable for the generals to simply "wait out" a war, but political pressure and the fact that no one wants a war to go on for decades meant that the commanders had to find a way to break the stalemate. It doesn't help that, at the time Blackadder takes place and during most of the war, there wasn't really any way to flank the enemy.

    • @arandompasserby7940
      @arandompasserby7940 Год назад

      Yeah, too bad World War 1 was a completely pointless d!ck-waving exercise by the waning Empires and Kingdoms of Europe. And the outcome was pretty abysmal anyway - nobody won and it just paved the way for a second, even larger conflict later on.

  • @Maclabhruinn
    @Maclabhruinn Год назад +2685

    First shown on TV in 1989 ... 33 years later, still one of the most poignant and powerful scenes on televison, ever.

    • @marcellogenesi6390
      @marcellogenesi6390 Год назад +70

      Sadly programs like this could not be made today, not enough diversity, and lack of quotas, in the cast.

    • @jonathancooper4914
      @jonathancooper4914 Год назад +27

      There’s no way anything like this could be made now or in the foreseeable future.

    • @rphb5870
      @rphb5870 Год назад +4

      that properly needs to be explained, because I think just about any random youtube video have more debt then this.

    • @tomshearman886
      @tomshearman886 Год назад +1

      @@rphb5870 how do you mean

    • @rphb5870
      @rphb5870 Год назад +1

      @@tomshearman886 I don't understand what is so impactful of that scene

  • @TheLordSheogorath
    @TheLordSheogorath 3 года назад +4833

    When I realised George is actually saying he is the last one of his friends who enlisted that is alive, that just broke my heart. He was such a jolly, purehearted young man. Like many other who sadly lost their lives.

    • @jeremytung1632
      @jeremytung1632 2 года назад +116

      It’s a miracle anybody survived.

    • @DembaraLemoon
      @DembaraLemoon 2 года назад +10

      Yea, you realize he is a patriotic idiot who insists on touting the line, but at the end is not totally ignorant and not able to fool himself.

    • @SCP--ck5ip
      @SCP--ck5ip 2 года назад +31

      That's the reality of war

    • @abnormal3542
      @abnormal3542 2 года назад +79

      He survived to become a doctor though

    • @btf1287
      @btf1287 2 года назад +46

      It was the finest european stock there ever was.
      The ones that survived to WW2 were broken, resentful and insane.

  • @Howlrunner82
    @Howlrunner82 4 года назад +2889

    He tried to avoid it the whole series...and in the end he did his duty without any hesitation

    • @Matvo
      @Matvo 4 года назад +107

      The trick is to bind the soldiers into groups. This way nobody can break the oath, because everyone of the comrads would see the treason and shoot.

    • @fotakatos
      @fotakatos 4 года назад +251

      You make it sound like he had some epiphany and suddenly changed his ways or recognised some higher value in running straight into machine gun fire. He did not. He gave up but he did so with dignity.

    • @snarkymatt585
      @snarkymatt585 4 года назад +181

      As much as he wanted out of the war and schemed ways to achieve that Blackadder was a British officer and behaved accordingly when his time ran out. Blackadder goes fourth was a good place to end the Blackadder series as WW1 saw a fair proportion of the young male British aristocracy wiped out. The death and casualty rate among the British aristocracy that provided the bulk of the officers was in proportion far greater than those of the general population providing enlisted and conscripted men. Captain Blackadder I dare say was the last of his line.

    • @_Galexo
      @_Galexo 4 года назад +47

      @@snarkymatt585 Ah maybe he was the last of his name but I seem to recall a fellow how resembels him quite stunningly. Atkinson was his name I believe

    • @snarkymatt585
      @snarkymatt585 4 года назад +28

      @@_Galexo yes that Atkinson chap does strike a remarkable resemblance to the Blackadders, maybe he has a bastard connection to the family somewhere lol.
      It does seem I was mistaken with the Blackadder line ending with Captain Blackadder in France, I forgot about this chap... ruclips.net/video/nMCkZKQU8MA/видео.html

  • @R.J._Lewis
    @R.J._Lewis Год назад +818

    Everytime I see this it strikes me how good a soldier Blackadder was in the end. He held everyone together, he accepted that he would have to perform his mission and do his duty, and he was the first man in the line to step forward when the company had to advance the one pace. He is the best example of real bravery I've seen on film: he knew it was stupid and pointless, he knew he might die, but he did the job he signed up for regardless, when the time came.
    Also, the joke Darling unintentionally makes about 1914-1917 is one of the darkest ones I've ever heard.

    • @Kyriakos703
      @Kyriakos703 10 месяцев назад +27

      not might. Would. They were the first heading over the wall. Just glorified moving targets. Their death was certain.

    • @Alex-mj5dv
      @Alex-mj5dv 10 месяцев назад +3

      That’s gallows humour for you!

    • @null8036
      @null8036 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@Kyriakos703 Their death was certain but they have done what they could, bullsht aside war is raging that time if no troops deployed then it's basically surrender. someone need to defend their land or attack other land for reasons.

    • @Werrf1
      @Werrf1 9 месяцев назад +7

      @@Kyriakos703 It wasn't. Overall casualties for the British forces in WWI were around 16%. Even on the infamous first day of the Somme, the casualty rate was around 25%, of which around 1/3rd were killed.
      Not trying to defend the stupidity or lessen the horror, just trying to keep things real.

    • @southerncomfort7490
      @southerncomfort7490 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@Werrf1 Just to put that in perspective, the British, on the first day of the Battle of the Somme, had 21,000 men killed. That was just the first day. Certainly something to think about.

  • @mrmarkgor6604
    @mrmarkgor6604 Год назад +689

    WWI veterans described this scene as the most accurate of the series. Captain Darling's desire to see it through, go back to his old job, keep wicket for his local club and marry Doris, summed up what most veterans hoped for.

    • @wavavoom
      @wavavoom 11 месяцев назад +24

      The youngest WW1 veteran would have been 89 years old when this episode first aired

    • @danielthompson6207
      @danielthompson6207 10 месяцев назад +41

      ​@@wavavoomYes, and a good number of them would live to see it. If you watch interviews with elderly WW1 veterans, you'll notice that many were still sharp as tacks in their old age.

    • @sidscrote7570
      @sidscrote7570 10 месяцев назад

      "Bugger".

    • @paulallen8109
      @paulallen8109 7 месяцев назад +12

      @@danielthompson6207 Cecil Lewis certainly was. Last living British ace of WWI. Flew in the RFC, trained Chinese pilots after the war and established an early airline, worked as a famous playwright, won an *Oscar* in 1938 for Best Writing, Screenplay, was one of the five people founding the BBC, then re-inlisted in WWII and flew missions in the Mediterranean (in his mid 40's), kept writing novels and scripts after the war, worked as a journalist at Daily Mail between 1956 and 1966. Retired to Corfu to keep writing books well into his 90's. His last published novel "So Long Ago, So Far Away" in 1996. He finally died in 1997 aged 98, two months short of his 99th birthday.
      In his last interviews he was an old man but still had the mindset of somebody in his 20's.

    • @Jonesyb90
      @Jonesyb90 6 месяцев назад +7

      @@paulallen8109 lied about his age to join the RFC as well, how far our country and society has fallen in just over 100 years.

  • @edbezant1105
    @edbezant1105 4 года назад +2794

    A fine detail I didn't pick up on for years was Baldrick pointing out the splinter and his plan. During WW1, men would often deliberately injure their hands on splinters on the ladders, so they'd be unable to handle their rifle and then be unable to fight. The tragic irony of this is that throughout the series Baldrick's cunning plans are ridiculed for being awful, but in this case his plan would have saved them all.

    • @brainflash1
      @brainflash1 4 года назад +390

      They wouldn't have gone through with it though. By that point, not even Blackadder was selfish enough to take the easy way out and let the rest die in No-Man's-Land. Remember it wouldn't have just been his company that went over the top. Besides, High command would've seen through their ruse immediately and had them all shot.

    • @sidecarbod1441
      @sidecarbod1441 4 года назад +337

      You might have a point with regards to the splinter but I always thought that the splinter thing was to show how Baldrick really had no idea what was going to happen to him, he was worried about getting a splinter but he was about to face the enemies machine guns.

    • @-Markus-
      @-Markus- 4 года назад +203

      Hey, your right! Baldricks sees the splinter and then tells adder he has a cunning and subtle plan! Definitely a nod to the historic scenario you pointed out! Thanks for sharing, ive always found that line odd as it had no context to the scene as I didnt know about it :)

    • @agenttheater5
      @agenttheater5 4 года назад +31

      @@brainflash1 Melchett might have been fooled - and if they all just stab their hand with the splinter, pull its out and pass it on they might be able to save them all....

    • @tompurcell1499
      @tompurcell1499 4 года назад +32

      Wow! I had no idea. It did seem to me that the splinter comment immediately followed by what would have been Baldrick's best (and only decent) cunning plan, was somewhat incongruous. It makes sense now, unlike the wholesale slaughter of millions of people.
      I've often said that the protagonists in WW1 were pointing their guns in the wrong direction. They should have done what the Russians did: wipe out the parasitic scum that made up the European (so-called) aristocracy.

  • @Atomicrow
    @Atomicrow 4 года назад +1970

    When George admitted he's scared, you know there's no hope for any of them.
    Despite being such an optimistic idiot with a heart of gold, always seeing the light in every situation that he's put in, this time he can't beat around the bush. He knows deep down that when he goes over the top, he's not going back and that terrifies him.

    • @flanplan5903
      @flanplan5903 3 года назад +128

      I don’t really think George is an idiot as he is very much a naive young guy in his early 20’s with his whole life ahead of him, and initially (like many other people of his age) signed up for the war since he thought it would be glorious...only to realize it isn’t. I think the slip up here hints that maybe the overtly cheerful personality and idiocy was to hide the broken and insecure young man that he was inside, by hiding behind a wall of humor and cheerfulness to try and convey a sense of strength and to make people happy.

    • @paladinoestetica1915
      @paladinoestetica1915 3 года назад +26

      I feel sorry for the real soldiers, it really was a life of boredom, sit in a trench for 3yrs only to die going over the top

    • @Boltenstein1
      @Boltenstein1 3 года назад +41

      I used to see young soldiers training to go to Iraq or Afghanistan, full of the joys of life, looking forward to doing "some real soldiering" Sadly many did not come back, and others came back very much changed. Before the first Gulf war, we had a big group of us who would meet up most nights in the local pub, within 6 months of getting back, the group had split up. War is hell, and let no one tell you otherwise.

    • @zacmumblethunder7466
      @zacmumblethunder7466 3 года назад +4

      @@flanplan5903 Maybe trying to make himself happy by pretending to be.

    • @mistressmozart
      @mistressmozart 3 года назад +20

      some fantastic acting from Hugh Laurie in that scene. you really see it in his expression

  • @JasonAFlintham
    @JasonAFlintham Год назад +256

    “Made a note in my diary on the way over here. Simply says…………..bugger.”
    Just one of so so many moments in this scene that’s initially played for laughs but then breaks your heart once you let it sink in.

  • @isaaclawrence1586
    @isaaclawrence1586 Год назад +214

    My favourite part of this is actually Blackadder's reaction to Baldrick's announcement of his 'cunning plan'. Throughout the series he's always been pissed off and cynical about Baldrick's continuous stupidity, but here he's almost saying 'Go on then Baldrick. For old times sake.'

    • @Szentatyaisten
      @Szentatyaisten 11 месяцев назад +28

      exactly, he shoots his silly ideas down in a hilarious and brutal way, but in their last moment, he is just gentle. I remember watching this the first time and still not believing what is about to happen, not until the piano starts playing. Hit me like a ton of bricks.

    • @andrewleah1983
      @andrewleah1983 3 месяца назад +2

      I guarantee you that this idea is the best one ever (which is part of the joke/drama).

  • @Damar158
    @Damar158 4 года назад +3353

    I love how the audience goes quiet at Darling revealing he has someone back home he wanted to marry and now won't ever have the chance.

    • @roxannemaund3285
      @roxannemaund3285 4 года назад +99

      Best television ever.

    • @jimbehr2291
      @jimbehr2291 4 года назад +87

      Doris.....bugger.

    • @starwarsroo2448
      @starwarsroo2448 4 года назад +84

      For just a short piece of dialogue, it's as sad as it is funny, well played really

    • @LordZontar
      @LordZontar 4 года назад +40

      "Marry Doris..."

    • @Cloud-wj2jb
      @Cloud-wj2jb 4 года назад +12

      You know the audience is fake right-

  • @nelsonchereta816
    @nelsonchereta816 3 года назад +1368

    "How are you feeling, Darling?" Through the season Darling was just treated as a joke. But here in the final scene you're reminded that he was just an ordinary man trying his damnedest to survive in a situation where death surrounded him. Also love that Blackadder's final line is, "Good luck everyone." He did everything he could think of to save his own life. And when all his efforts failed, he went over the top with his men.

    • @xhagast
      @xhagast 2 года назад +3

      He was a dead man anyway, why not die like a man, since die he must? Many reasons but he might still make it.

    • @fairsaa7975
      @fairsaa7975 2 года назад +22

      @@xhagast They all died chief, that was what made it the end.

    • @Saucy-ws6jc
      @Saucy-ws6jc 2 года назад +10

      @@fairsaa7975 There was a stand alone episode called Blackadder Back And Forth which has an opening scene set on New Years Eve 1999 with a number of the characters here. This means they either had sex with women during the war and died in this scene or they survived and had children after the war. Their children had children which would be the characters in back and forth.

    •  Год назад +22

      @@Saucy-ws6jc my Great-Great-Grandfather died on the 2nd day of the Somme, Kings Liverpool Rifles.
      His son, my Great-Grandfather, was conceived weeks before before he enlisted, and was born weeks before he died.
      It's more than likely the same thing with Blackadder.

    • @apropercuppa8612
      @apropercuppa8612 Год назад +3

      @ My Mum's Great-Uncle was in 'B' Coy, 19 Bn, King's Liverpool Rifles. He was wounded near Ypres before dying of his wounds some time later. Buried in Lijssenthoek Cemetery. Funnily enough, the Liverpools merged with the Manchester Regiment to make the King's Own Regiment - the Manchester Regiment, my Dad's relative was a Lt-Col in, who took part in the ceremony with handing over the Regiment.

  • @cantona1968ify
    @cantona1968ify 2 года назад +742

    Quite simply the most gut wrenching and heartbreaking scene ever recorded in a comedy episode, quite possibly ever written for television. 'who would have noticed another madman around here'- WOW, what a line, devastating in it's brutal honest description of war and those empowered to make judgements.

    • @robertballasty395
      @robertballasty395 Год назад +4

      Well, this is probably in top two. There's also the scene in MASH where they all learn of Henry's death.
      That might be the yardstick for comedy. Previous to MASH, if an actor got sick or died or had an opportunity (that the producers would let them leave for) - the role got recast with no mention or the character got written out with little explanation and someone brought in to play a similar character. Just keep the formula of the show going.
      Later, perhaps it was partly the individual impact of some actors on roles? That they couldn't simply be recast or 'cloned'.
      The shows would at least acknowledge the character was gone and the dynamic was changing a bit. 'Good Times' and 'Archie Bunker's Place' come to mind.
      The best comedies had their jokes but had the clear understanding that some topics couldn't be wiped away with jokes. Humor was the buffer to keep the grim horror of war at bay, but war/consequences couldn't be completely ignored.

    • @alexcope8142
      @alexcope8142 Год назад

      War is the answer according to US Marines

    • @thepoet9253
      @thepoet9253 11 месяцев назад

      Top three. The scene where Will's father leaves him in Fresh Prince of Bel Air also comes up here.

    • @user-rp1pf1on1v
      @user-rp1pf1on1v 9 месяцев назад

      For me also the final scene of Life of Brian, after all the laughs along the way, showing the mass grave and thinking yes, it wasn't just one man they did this to: hundreds went through this horrifying and barbaric form of execution.

    • @erickamakeeaina1649
      @erickamakeeaina1649 8 месяцев назад

      600th like

  • @avidreader70
    @avidreader70 Год назад +604

    I remember watching this with my mum and dad when it first aired. We laughed and laughed and then this scene came up and we literally cried. It was incredibly moving.

    • @alpharius4434
      @alpharius4434 Год назад +16

      I had the exact experience... tough we weren't exactly crying, we just sat silently in shocked and sad silence...

    • @xxxxxx-zy9lu
      @xxxxxx-zy9lu Год назад +3

      @@alpharius4434 ditto

    • @MarkAtkin
      @MarkAtkin 10 месяцев назад +7

      Even though I now know what is coming, I still can't watch this without a tear welling up.

    • @marcwolf60
      @marcwolf60 2 месяца назад

      I did too.

  • @rhondaneuhaus1596
    @rhondaneuhaus1596 4 года назад +1906

    This ending always, always makes me cry. War is such a waste.

    • @bananacabana2817
      @bananacabana2817 4 года назад +15

      Rhonda Neuhaus idk man the Swiss usually made a shit ton of money off it

    • @jim7115
      @jim7115 4 года назад +14

      Madam,
      as someone that served in the BRITISH ARMY, I must say(text),
      just as at places such as isandlwa, rourke's drift, and other far of battlefields.....
      the BRITISH SOLDIER before, during, and after the GREAT WAR, HAS ALWAYS DONE HIS DUTY FOR KING AND COUNTRY.
      AMEN.

    • @jim7115
      @jim7115 4 года назад +1

      isandlwanna

    • @jim7115
      @jim7115 4 года назад +2

      JadonGamer WAR IS NECESSARY.
      WESTERN CULTURE HAS NOT, AND WILL NOT SURVIVE UNLESS WE ARE WILLING TO FIGHT AND, REGRETTABLY , DIE FOR OUR WAY OF LIFE.....
      IT HAS ALWAYS BEEN THUS.

    • @jim7115
      @jim7115 4 года назад +2

      JadonGamer THANK GOD FOR THE PARAS.
      RETIRED COLOUR SGT/3 PARA

  • @ragzaugustus
    @ragzaugustus 4 года назад +2393

    "Marry Doris", that one line basically turned Darling into a sympathetic character, all that arrogance and so, just so he could get home and marry Doris.

    • @blethigg9320
      @blethigg9320 4 года назад +197

      I always assumed that Darlings hostility was because he knew that he had a very cushy job, and he felt emasculated compared to the men who were actually putting their lives in danger. There was a strong element of self-loathing to it, which is dropped once he realises that he's going to die with the rest of therm.

    • @tikarimiekka8048
      @tikarimiekka8048 4 года назад +255

      @@blethigg9320 I think that's kind of the point of the "hate" relationship between the two captains. They loathe each other because they see their own faults reflected.
      Darling sees Blackadder as a coward who is always trying to elude his obligations, while deeply he knows that that's exactly what he would do himself.
      Blackadder sees Darling as a coward who stays safely at HQ, while deeply he knows that that's exactly what he wants for himself.

    • @bakaweiner6956
      @bakaweiner6956 4 года назад +14

      @@tikarimiekka8048 I can't fully watch the whole series, can you tell me why Darling fighting in the frontline with Blackadder? I asked because in the other videos, he's in the HQ...

    • @chrissiddall8525
      @chrissiddall8525 4 года назад +66

      @@bakaweiner6956 General Sir Anthony Cecil Hogmanay Melchett VC, KCB, DSO (played by Stephen Fry) literally gives him a personalised order to join the others on the front line for the big attack.

    • @bakaweiner6956
      @bakaweiner6956 4 года назад +25

      @@chrissiddall8525 Ohh, so he was ordered to join the attack? Poor sod...

  • @sampadsahu4136
    @sampadsahu4136 Год назад +534

    The last bit where they transitioned from a scarred battlefield to an eerily quiet and pleasant poppy field, had an instant connection for me. I mean, the feeling is incomprehensible, but a place at a different time on another day could conjure such opposite emotions is amazing, masterfully captured by the creators of the show.

    • @woodrobin
      @woodrobin Год назад +27

      "Where have all the flowers gone, long time passing, where have all the flowers gone, long time ago?"

    • @lindapiette8009
      @lindapiette8009 Год назад +9

      As an American I found this series to be one of the best. I love British tv. I found the
      ending to be absolutely brilliant. It’s sad because you know what the odds are to survival but they went anyway.

    • @lindapiette8009
      @lindapiette8009 Год назад +11

      I think it showed the futility of war. So many men lost their lives. wW1 was without a doubt the war that should have ended wars. The last scene broke my heart but also made you proud of the men who went over the top knowing their chances were not very good. Hats off to the producers for the brilliant ending.

    • @xr6lad
      @xr6lad Год назад +8

      It also conveys that even for the most horrid battlefield, peace eventually comes and heals the scars and in some ways, people move on and often forget what tragedy occurred on that spot

    • @xr6lad
      @xr6lad Год назад +8

      @@lindapiette8009 WW1 was actually a war that should never have happened. Full stop. It was egos. France or Britain were not threatened. Britain didn’t even have needed to have declared war. It was under no obligation to. It was egos. WW2 you can understand - AH was a mad man. But not WW1. It was as every ego with an axe to grind suddenly decided ‘here’s our chance’ and had no problems offering up their young people for sacrifice and even had to lie to the public to justify it.

  • @acerx203
    @acerx203 7 месяцев назад +89

    This ending always makes me tear up. The worse part, we haven't learned anything from then.

    • @garthornspike3648
      @garthornspike3648 4 месяца назад

      The people who should learn from the useless destruction of war are the power hungry lowlifes who start wars in the first place because they don't care who suffers.

    • @bradleybrown8399
      @bradleybrown8399 3 месяца назад

      I don't know. We attack with drones now.

    • @Disinformation_Hoax
      @Disinformation_Hoax Месяц назад

      Not a goddamn thing. You are absolutely right.

  • @UdanaWijesuriya
    @UdanaWijesuriya 3 года назад +2274

    Brilliant personality reversal. All throughout the season, we got to know them in a certain way.
    George was always enthusiastic about the war and yet he said "I'm scared, sir".
    Darling was always a 'robot' devoid of emotions and yet he had loved someone.
    Baldrick always came up with stupid ideas yet he was about to say the most cunning and brilliant one ever.
    Blackadder, always with great plans and yet he had nothing more to say.

    • @alastair9446
      @alastair9446 2 года назад +123

      Blackadder was brave willing to do his duty instead of finding a plan to get out of it.

    • @lewisallan9963
      @lewisallan9963 2 года назад +80

      @@alastair9446 I agree, I have no doubt blackadder knew what baldricks plan would be but was now at peace with giving his life for his country.

    • @howdoiputthecheeseintheove8437
      @howdoiputthecheeseintheove8437 2 года назад +59

      @@lewisallan9963 I'd say more because he swallowed that 800 plus years of ego, pride and selfishness and accepted the harsh reality, saw everyone not as either stupid of prat like but actual humans with emotions and lives and so joined them as commander in doing what melchett could never do, fighting with his men and dying with honour

    • @Field_Marshal_Emu
      @Field_Marshal_Emu 2 года назад +32

      When George says, "Sir, I'm scared", hits really hard.
      You understand the horror they're about to face, trapped in a situation not of their making, with absolutely no way out.

    • @neutronicalrblx2638
      @neutronicalrblx2638 Год назад +25

      Blackadder was always sarcastic yet he genuinely meant good luck

  • @richiefennah4699
    @richiefennah4699 3 года назад +588

    “1914 to 1917” the moment Every viewers heart dropped.

  • @aec9174
    @aec9174 Год назад +104

    The first time I watched this episode, I didn't see this coming. I wasn't expecting this to actually be THE end. It still brings me to tears, even now, many years later.

  • @JLongbow
    @JLongbow Год назад +110

    It's no exaggeration to say that this broke my heart as a kid when I saw it. For the first time, I saw that the good guy doesn't always win. George saying he was scared...it hit hard. Darling and Blackadder shoulder to shoulder at the end. And Blackadder, even after all his attempts to avoid this, doesn't hesitate in the slightest, nor show any fear for what he knows is coming. It makes me tear up even now.

  • @dennisjk76
    @dennisjk76 4 года назад +1130

    "Bugger"
    Last word in Cpt Darling's diary.

  • @JonnyHindu
    @JonnyHindu 4 года назад +2769

    Most Hilarious Show ended in the most Saddest way.

    • @pablopastor508
      @pablopastor508 4 года назад +4

      @Asa Fisher you're in the third

    • @jpj77263
      @jpj77263 4 года назад +46

      German here. Granson of a veteran who carried a bullet perislously close to his lung; It is the only way, with the most pognant final words, the most entertaining show about British history could have ended.

    • @joemoe974
      @joemoe974 4 года назад

      Quite true.

    • @vladdracul5072
      @vladdracul5072 4 года назад +3

      @@pablopastor508 As long as there are people like you around there will always be another war.

    • @pablopastor508
      @pablopastor508 4 года назад +1

      @@vladdracul5072 like the Palestinians

  • @nickwarne4406
    @nickwarne4406 5 месяцев назад +18

    My great grandfather fought at Ypres and Paschendale, and by some miracle, he made it through.
    His batallion consisted of 300 men at the beginning of WW1, but by the wars end, he was one of eight remaining.
    His best friend (who lied about his age (14)) was killed by a direct hit from a mortar whilst mounted on his horse.
    Nothing was found of him or the horse.
    He told my mum that he lived on nuts, chocolate, raisins, and Camp coffee that was sent from home.
    His wife was informed that he was missing in action in 1917, presumed dead, and didn't know he was alive until he got back to England a year later.
    He made a butter knife out of squashed bullet casings and various other disgarded metal whilst in the trenches that my mum still has today.
    I can not begin to imagine what horrors he must have witnessed and the immense toll it took on his life.
    We owe them so much, and I was proud to have known him for 9 years before he passed away.
    It was such a sad moment in history, and unfortunately, it was the beginnings of something far, far worse.

  • @theoz-zone7470
    @theoz-zone7470 2 месяца назад +5

    Dang, this was a heartwrenching ending. Much respect to my Mother Country of the UK. You really did give it your all in that horrid war. Rest In Peace to the fallen.
    Love & respect from America!

  • @schizoidboy
    @schizoidboy 4 года назад +642

    George is the beloved twit throughout this series, totally oblivious to what is going on around him. When he says he's scared and he's the last of the guys he enlisted with in 1914 really puts the hook into me. This is where the mood changes and it does it brilliantly. It just makes the whole ending heartbreaking, yet they still go through with it and even Blackadder doesn't shirk at the end. "Good luck everyone."

    • @liamodwyer3017
      @liamodwyer3017 3 года назад +8

      The whole thing pure genius. Moving beyond belief.

    • @christinellewellyn1447
      @christinellewellyn1447 2 года назад +2

      Yes that's the moment I feel so hard to watch, I wish he had stayed innocent to it all
      So well scripted a master piece.

  • @DSAEAyushSK
    @DSAEAyushSK 4 года назад +698

    "Who would've noticed another madman here?" That really hit me.

    • @Thecommander248
      @Thecommander248 4 года назад +8

      It's why the militaries of all the countries all revolted and refused to continue to fight. They hung men by the thousands, but couldn't force them all to go over the top.

    • @starwarsroo2448
      @starwarsroo2448 4 года назад +1

      I never even noticed that line, sad, been watching this simce I was a kid when it first showed in UK, POIGNANT

    • @jay_vng
      @jay_vng 3 года назад +7

      I think this is the most poignant line of all the scene, honestly. No wonder they added no laughs after it.

    • @Jebu911
      @Jebu911 3 года назад

      It hits worse if you watch the whole episode where he is literally playing a madman at start. But its still a great ending even tho its sad.

    • @w925gaming6
      @w925gaming6 3 года назад +2

      @@Thecommander248 actually for what i know only 360 something people were shot by the British for cowardice it would obviously be different for other nations but yeah.

  • @JH-ck1nr
    @JH-ck1nr Год назад +125

    The most moving moment in television history. I admit it moves me to tears every time in the final scene. What a tragic waste of life and brave men's futures. RIP.

    • @donniecatalano
      @donniecatalano Год назад +4

      I doesn't matter how many times I see this, my throat always gets tight

    • @RM-ti8nf
      @RM-ti8nf 9 месяцев назад +2

      Yes, it's absolutely criminal.

  • @pugswillfly3211
    @pugswillfly3211 4 года назад +1234

    In ‘Blackadder: The whole rotten saga’ They talked about this scene, And when they recorded it, the directors wanted another take, but rowan, Tim, Hugh, And Tony said to the directors that it was physically frightening for them and that they would not do it again, So even in a controlled environment, A studio, it still frightens people to the core.

    • @Red_Beard2798
      @Red_Beard2798 3 года назад +58

      Didn't they also have to do the scene on a stage/set that was far too short for a walk across No Man's Land and that's why it goes into slow motion with the Blackadder theme playing over their deaths and fades into a field of poppies. And they also couldn't do the scene because of that? It was exhausting and tiresome to get the right shot in such a small space so they had to compromise?

    • @pugswillfly3211
      @pugswillfly3211 3 года назад +23

      YeahNahHowYaGoin Both factors, the production struggles and the reality of losing their characters.

    • @somerandomguy3418
      @somerandomguy3418 3 года назад +48

      @@Red_Beard2798 During an interview Richard Curtis talked about how the part where they go over the top was supposed to be longer but the cast didn't know in advance about the effects. What we see is pretty much all they captured as the actors broke role almost immediately and demanded to know what the hell was going on, refusing to do another take. That left the producers with a problem; how does it end? With nothing else as a plan, they looked through the BBC stock photos of WW1, found the one of the poppies across Flanders and faded to that in the edit. They had no other options available. The rest is TV history.

    • @timmorodgers4271
      @timmorodgers4271 3 года назад +49

      The scene is so short as during filming they were meant to fall to the ground, as if they had been shot or injured. The set was made of cut and painted foam and when they hit the ground they bounced around in an almost comical manner. As a result they could only use the first few seconds. Those few seconds were all that were needed, the result is one of the most moving pieces of British comedy.

    • @zacmumblethunder7466
      @zacmumblethunder7466 3 года назад +17

      @@timmorodgers4271 One of the most moving pieces of TV in general.

  • @Ammeeeeeeer
    @Ammeeeeeeer 4 года назад +461

    "Sir...I'm scared sir..." that line, the delivery, I...words escape me.

    • @evattmab
      @evattmab 3 года назад +20

      George, the enthusiastic lieutenant breaking.... he tears my heart apart.

    • @ObamacareMishra
      @ObamacareMishra 3 года назад +8

      he imbodies the phrase "ignorance is bliss"

    • @russellcampbell9198
      @russellcampbell9198 3 года назад +2

      Yes.

    • @scsutton1
      @scsutton1 3 года назад +2

      Beautifully delivered by Hugh Laurie as well.

  • @davidedwards8365
    @davidedwards8365 7 месяцев назад +32

    By some distance, the greatest end to any television show. Perfectly delivered, paced and uncompromising. A work of utter genius

  • @Telcontar86
    @Telcontar86 7 месяцев назад +19

    One of, if not _the_ most, drastic and effective tonal shifts in any comedy ever made. Even the studio audience went quiet. 10/10 writing

  • @SlideIX
    @SlideIX 4 года назад +923

    Still one of the greatest moments in British television. More emotion and drama in those final moments than most tv programs today can muster in an entire season

    • @Durosity
      @Durosity 4 года назад +23

      james IX Honestly every time I see this scene I cry. The fact that so many actually faced this moment is just so utterly overwhelming.

    • @DocTommy1972
      @DocTommy1972 4 года назад +16

      One of the greatest moments in television

    • @fasthracing
      @fasthracing 4 года назад +2

      Agreed

    • @murphyspattaya
      @murphyspattaya 3 года назад +2

      gold 😌

    • @electriclightlynnetrex6346
      @electriclightlynnetrex6346 3 года назад +2

      Totally agree. Today all we get is a never ending river of garbage

  • @SirCraigius
    @SirCraigius 4 года назад +1091

    Interesting fact. The moment where they go over the top wasn't originally in slow motion. It was shot at normal speed, where they stumble through the smoke and pyrotechnics for about 15 feet, then slowly pretend to keel over and die. It looked terrible. The show producers looked at the tape and realized it wasn't going to be good enough to show on air, so they called for another take. At this point Rowan Atkinson got on the phone to them and basically said. "Yeah, listen guys. We've all had a talk. That was bloody scary and dangerous and were not doing another take". And hung up. The end result was they decided to show the scene in slow motion. Which ended up looking way better and was far more dramatic.

    • @gezzarandom
      @gezzarandom 3 года назад +158

      Plus the editors slowed the sound down which made it sound spooky, and the freeze frame switch to the poppy field with birdsong was genius. The editors really earned their money that day.

    • @lewisallan9963
      @lewisallan9963 3 года назад +23

      I read that the actors refused to re shoot because they thought it looked better

    • @busTedOaS
      @busTedOaS 3 года назад +26

      I mean, of course it was shot at normal speed. That's how cameras work.

    • @LordVader1094
      @LordVader1094 3 года назад +47

      @@busTedOaS I think he means it wasn't shot FOR slow motion, with a higher frame rate.

    • @buzzytrombone4353
      @buzzytrombone4353 2 года назад +9

      Another reason being that the studio audience were like "What the fuck is this? This isn't funny at all" and with that reaction, Richard Boden and John Lloyd felt that reaction was what would be the general consensus to the episode if they didn't do something about it.

  • @victoriamurphy6579
    @victoriamurphy6579 Год назад +103

    This is so powerful and moving,,you’ve laughed all the way through the series and then in a split second your heart just breaks “I’m scared sir” you know that this is it and they’re going over the top,,such a powerful end and a fitting tribute to the real heroes and lives lost in the 1st world war

  • @katsumontenerudorijji4365
    @katsumontenerudorijji4365 Год назад +38

    So happy my Great Grandfather survived WWI. But will never forget all those who gave their lives.
    R.I.P🇿🇦💚🇬🇧

  • @tgmartin
    @tgmartin 3 года назад +331

    Really makes you look at Darling in a whole new light. Most antagonists actions tend to be motivated by the prospect of gaining substantial wealth or power, whereas you realise right at the end that Darling wasn't especially after either of these things. He just wants to be able to play cricket and marry the woman he loves. So heartbreaking.

  • @centurionzen1005
    @centurionzen1005 4 года назад +393

    My favorite part of this scene is that Blackadder is pretending that darling is willingly there to give him a bit of dignity. That's the sign of a professional right there.

    • @Red_Beard2798
      @Red_Beard2798 3 года назад +18

      Well... it is Blackadder we're talking about. As much as he likely sympathises with Darling's situation, it's still Darling, well worth getting one last knock in before the off

    • @mikegloady
      @mikegloady 3 года назад +8

      I'd never put that together. And now I'm in bits again.

    • @paddystrongjaw9995
      @paddystrongjaw9995 2 года назад

      Their ancestors were best friends too

  • @raggeragnar
    @raggeragnar 5 месяцев назад +16

    They ended this series with what’s usually called a ”show-stopper”. A segment that turns a sitcom 180’ which makes people go full stop in their laughter and absorb a really powerful topic. This one was brutal.

  • @tomlyons8440
    @tomlyons8440 2 года назад +36

    I love “This is it?” “Afraid so. Unless I can think of something VERY quickly.” Like you’re expecting some classic quirky sitcom shenanigans, but he’s being more sarcastic and knows they’re about to die. And to end up “Good luck everyone.” I didn’t think a British sitcom could get so deep.

  • @paulgrove1407
    @paulgrove1407 3 года назад +631

    I remember watching this episode as a student. Waiting for the punchline, for Blackadder to find a way out. Then realizing as they go over that is was all over. It was actually a telling life lesson. Some things are inevitable - there is no avoiding it.

    • @reddishtykes
      @reddishtykes Год назад +13

      I too watched it as a student, with my mates Simon and John. At the culmination we could not look at each other because each of us was fighting back tears.

    • @56bturn
      @56bturn Год назад +1

      Also that a lot of people died for what was, for them, a fucking pointless war. Maybe there was some grand geopolitical benefit, but I doubt they ever saw it. If there was any.

    • @davidtomlinson6138
      @davidtomlinson6138 Год назад +3

      Powerful stuff , they all didn't stand a chance ! Big wigs miles away, making plans, ordering men to their certain. death ! 🤔😔SHIT ! WAR STINKS , NO WINNERS REALLY , fighting to keep people free ultimately !

    • @thadtuiol1717
      @thadtuiol1717 Год назад

      @@davidtomlinson6138 Well please tell that to all the big wigs in the capitals around the world, because we are currently heading towards WW3 at a rate of knots

    • @kenserhoofje
      @kenserhoofje Год назад +4

      Found this comment here. Our English teacher showed it to us in-class over 15 years ago. Back then I felt.. queasy; as a teenager I couldn't quite grasp what it was that made this scene so tragic. Looking back, being an English teacher myself in The Netherlands, I fully realise how a scene such as this honours the senselessness of such warfare. "Dulce et decorum est, pro patria mori", my arse! (pardon my French)

  • @Ashwin-zg7rt
    @Ashwin-zg7rt 4 года назад +911

    Such an emotional and mature ending. Loved the series

    • @insertclevername4123
      @insertclevername4123 4 года назад +12

      I've read that they had some discussions about another series of the show, but I'm glad they never went through with it--for me, this is the best finale of any comedy, ever, so anything they did afterward would have been a letdown.

    • @Kelly14UK
      @Kelly14UK 4 года назад +15

      Glad they never showed the details of them dying. Poppy ending was poignant enough.

    • @laurenbastin8849
      @laurenbastin8849 4 года назад +1

      Kelly14UK yeah they initially shot the scene with everyone dying in slow motion, but they realised it was so silly and messed with the tone of the finale and so they cut it

  • @timbrom
    @timbrom 6 месяцев назад +6

    I served for nearly a year in a German Navy ship (I'm British) and they adored this series (as well as Fawlty Towers.) We finished watching this in the Wardroom one night. Sat in silence for a minute or so and then all shook hands. No words. Few beers afterwards though.

  • @z-mkgaming7464
    @z-mkgaming7464 Год назад +32

    As many others have said, this scene (alot of this episode and a slight bit of the last aswell) manage to completely humanise Darling. While Darling's last line is powerful, reading his face throughout the entire scene is so incredible. Watching his face inspired with hope when Blackadder begins thinking up a plan, then drop in defeat the second Blackadder and Baldrick give in, was literally watching a man die inside. His talks of his wife and being scared genuinely turned his entire character on it's head. Similar with Blackadder, the last moments, knowing he could escape this hell but choosing not too. Such a brilliant end.

  • @docholiday6244
    @docholiday6244 4 года назад +2456

    "Good luck, everyone". For how many men and women, children even, were these the last words they've ever heard?
    Let us never become enemies again! Let such a thing never be repeated again! Greetings from Dresden, Germany!

    • @constantinosschinas4503
      @constantinosschinas4503 4 года назад +95

      war means nothing, we are all one. greetings from greece.

    • @ivanlazarevic78
      @ivanlazarevic78 4 года назад +26

      it is in humain nature driven be greed of wealthy one to want more so I dont think it will be ever a end of war.It will be that way until the cost of fighting the war isnt to coustly for theese reach man,as war is usually paid with the lives of ordinary working man and that is cheap for ruling class.

    • @stormtrooperelite1453
      @stormtrooperelite1453 4 года назад +50

      well then next time don't invade Poland! nah just kidding it's a Faulty Towers joke

    • @stephenle-surf9893
      @stephenle-surf9893 4 года назад +20

      Well said friend, like blackadder says at the end, who would notice another madman, sadly it seems not the British or American electorate

    • @DC_10
      @DC_10 4 года назад +13

      Not to worry, friends. In the future war will be fought by robots, drones, and AI. Once one side out of the robots will surrender first.
      Zero human casualties.

  • @joemoe974
    @joemoe974 4 года назад +168

    I always start to cry when Blackadder and Baldric do their very last "I have a cunning plan" just before they charge. It's like they're choosing their final moments of life to do the very thing that kept them sane sitting in their bunker all that time. It shows at the last moment how close they had become.

  • @juleshathaway3894
    @juleshathaway3894 Год назад +60

    I have watched the series and this ending dozens of times and it has the exact same effect on me. I remember when it was first shown I was stunned into tears watching the end. There has NEVER been such a poignant and moving end to a tv series as this one.
    To my great great great grandfather Harry Holmes who is still on patrol on The Somme and to all those who gave….
    LEST WE FORGET

  • @ARR1058
    @ARR1058 2 года назад +88

    This gives me goosebumps every single time. Every line from the moment darling walks into the trench to the moment they go over the top is poignant. And the ending is an absolute masterpiece. I have seen many war movies but none come close to capturing the horror and madness in the simplest of ways possible then these last few minutes of a comedy series

    • @geeman.8081
      @geeman.8081 26 дней назад +1

      Perfect acting too. The men in 1917 would have also laughed and joked.
      A lesser tv show would removed the comedy, forgetting the most important part of humanity.

  • @zacmumblethunder7466
    @zacmumblethunder7466 4 года назад +454

    I vividly remember the first time this was broadcast. Somehow even as I was watching it I couldn't believe they'd be brave enough end the series like this.
    Entirely appropriate, and probably the most extraordinary and affecting moment in comedy.

    • @cosmiceyness
      @cosmiceyness 3 года назад +7

      probably one of the most moving show endings ive ever seen

    • @trojanhorse5363
      @trojanhorse5363 3 года назад +4

      All the death and Haig safely tucked up in scotland never to visit any of the fronts, the bravest of men slaughtered for nothing

  • @dclark142002
    @dclark142002 4 года назад +652

    ...marry Doris...
    Sure, he is the villain foil for Blackadder...but you get reminded that he is part of a family, has people that he loves and who love him...and he's going to die because the General is insane.

    • @brainflash1
      @brainflash1 4 года назад +74

      Calling Darling the villain is a bit unfair. Sure he hated Blackadder, but he wasn't a "bad" guy. He deserved to live just as much as everyone else.

    • @naughtydog201
      @naughtydog201 4 года назад +75

      dclark142002 He and Blackadder are far similar than they'd ever care to admit. Each with their own scheme of trying to avoid being on the front line. Darling by being Melchett's bitch and Blackadder being a schemer. But they were both terrified and in the end, they both knew they were done for. A truly amazing series

    • @Thecommander248
      @Thecommander248 4 года назад +23

      They say you hate people who are like you because they subconsciously remind you of all of your faults.

    • @Widdekuu91
      @Widdekuu91 3 года назад +2

      @@Thecommander248
      Not always, sometimes. Sometimes you hate people that are acting the opposite of you and therefore, you don't understand them.
      I often have collisions (a.k.a. problems, fights) with people that seem to gleefully enjoy pain in other people.
      People that laugh and smile and enjoy seeing other people upset. I honestly burst into tears, even if the most horrible enemies or awful people stub their toe. So I don't understand why on earth they'd enjoy seeing others cry so much and it makes me upset and that's why we fight.

    • @Thecommander248
      @Thecommander248 3 года назад

      @@Widdekuu91 that is also true.

  • @MrAntonissifnos
    @MrAntonissifnos Год назад +20

    "Sir, I am scared sir" the synopsis of an epic series. A masterpiece which must be taught at schools.

    • @dave-io
      @dave-io 3 месяца назад

      We were taught using it. Both in history, and by the finest religious education teacher I ever had who, despite being collar-wearing clergy, refused to teach any religion's dogma and focused entirely on the greater philosophical questions of good and evil, love and hate.

  • @MarkWilliams-hj6hn
    @MarkWilliams-hj6hn 2 года назад +91

    This has never lost its power. A wonderful piece of TV. Well acted, well scripted and some genius editing to make it what it became. The slowing down the film, the slowing of the piano music, then the fades to darkness then the poppy field. t's probably my favourite ending to a sitcom. Never fails to make me tear up.

  • @timmo491
    @timmo491 3 года назад +278

    The fade to the poppy field is unnervingly respectful and sensitive.

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay 3 года назад +37

      BUT CUT SHORT, THE IDIOTS, I MISSED THE BIRDS SINGING, THE FINAL POIGNANCY.

    • @nicholasjones7312
      @nicholasjones7312 2 года назад +11

      This film clip cut it short and barely showed the poppies, the most poignant part!

    • @draigygoch
      @draigygoch 2 года назад +2

      it kills me

  • @TheNorthie
    @TheNorthie 4 года назад +167

    That one line “Sir, I’m scared sir” just hits too hard. How many other men like him who were patriotic and ready to fight suddenly felt like this? This is hands down one of the best endings for any show.

  • @kylemacvicar1345
    @kylemacvicar1345 Год назад +21

    It's been 34 years and I still cry every time I watch this episode.

  • @JCridford
    @JCridford 2 года назад +45

    Blackadder is one of the few comedies that can effortlessly turn and deliver moving drama on a whim. Blackadder at 3:00 has always struck me - finally showing some humanity and compassion towards Baldrick and the others.

  • @Sam-yx9ry
    @Sam-yx9ry 3 года назад +1044

    When I was just becoming a teenager, my father let me watch his copy of Blackadder Goes Forth. I laughed and howled at the comedy I was mature enough to understand at that point in my life, and absolutely loved the show.
    About ten seconds after watching this scene of the final episode, I walked out of my bedroom - glassy eyed - to get a glass of water. My dad saw me and asked, “Hey mate, are you okay?”
    I looked at him for a second or two, and then burst into tears as he hugged me.
    I was just thirteen, and had seen Gallipoli and studied WWI and WWII in school, and knew it was horrific, but none of that learning hit me as hard as this scene did. It haunts me to this day.
    I’m 24 in a month, and am still glassy eyed watching this. What a hauntingly beautiful end to a brilliantly funny show, it really sticks with you, and does so much in driving home the message of how awful war is, and how idiotic WWI was in particular.
    Well done Cast & Crew.

    • @darthhatchet775
      @darthhatchet775 3 года назад +18

      I hope this comment finds you well and in good health.👍

    • @SpeccyMan
      @SpeccyMan 2 года назад +29

      There is no shame in feeling the emotion associated with that terrible war. Cry every day for all the brave young men who were led by fools to certain death in that terrible war. Then read the poems of Wilfred Owen, who was tragically killed in action just one week before the armistice.

    • @coolsolder
      @coolsolder 2 года назад +5

      Not only ww1, most wars with muskets and guns were a waste with man walking in rows or running headlong into machineguns. Even in ww2 the Soviet Union used this tactic. This is insane as anyone with sense would automatically lie down if shot at yet all these folks were told bs and they ate it up, probably like today.

    • @gl3nnium
      @gl3nnium 2 года назад +23

      Thanks for sharing. Yes this episode affected me too. Years later as a grown-up I got a job working on a cruise ship and as fate would have it, every so often the ship would take a route up the Dardanelles on its way from the Mediterranean to Istanbul. Every damn time I'd just stare at Gallipoli as it eased by. None of my co-workers said a word to me during those moments - they all knew better. Sometimes a passenger from the U.S. or somewhere else would even approach me as ask what was wrong. I'd simply tell them "Im from New Zealand and every year my country mourns the thousands of us that died in this place". This would understandably confuse some of them, afterall, how on earth could that place be the scene of so many deaths for a country like NZ. How indeed.

    • @aworldmadeofcardboard3692
      @aworldmadeofcardboard3692 2 года назад +5

      Amen

  • @Finnthedude
    @Finnthedude 3 года назад +167

    For me it's not the over the top ending that hits hardest, it's Lt. George saying "I'm scared, Sir" and Baldrick saying "I'm scared too" that gets me every time.

  • @stevewinnard-brewer9302
    @stevewinnard-brewer9302 5 месяцев назад +4

    "We lived through it - The Great War, 1914 to 1917" - heartbreaking.
    The whole thing is a TV masterpiece, I first saw it studying WW1 at school - it hit hard then and still does.

  • @3rdworldofficer296
    @3rdworldofficer296 2 года назад +10

    "Made a note in my diary on the way here. Simply says 'Bugger'."
    Damn.

  • @mattsgrungy
    @mattsgrungy 3 года назад +134

    The drop in his voice when he says "Marry Doris" just breaks my damn heart.

  • @montyboon4127
    @montyboon4127 2 года назад +217

    George saying "Im scared" is one of the most powerful deliveries of a line in a sitcom ever

    • @qwot1
      @qwot1 Год назад +13

      Exactly. The way he starts excited over the prospect of being heroes together, and celebrating their noble cause, and how George slowly winds down as he begins to recognize what is truly about to happen (stripped of all the propaganda) and he can't fool himself anymore, until all he's left with is, "I'm scared, Sir."

  • @sgtgeneweenie
    @sgtgeneweenie 2 года назад +33

    "Rather hoped I'd get through the whole show..." this remains the best series about WW1, no revisionist history can make the Great War worth what it cost.

  • @lorrainecrampton1632
    @lorrainecrampton1632 11 месяцев назад +5

    The first time I saw this when it was originally broadcast I balled my eyes out.
    The two parts that really get to me in particular are when Blackadder calmly says "Good luck everyone" and then the birdsong amongst the field of poppies as the final images.

  • @jamiemurray4129
    @jamiemurray4129 3 года назад +277

    My husband, an army veteran, said as we watched this episode years ago, "What Valor, what waste." Then he stepped out onto the patio and wiped away tears.

  • @yj9032
    @yj9032 4 года назад +155

    “Who would’ve noticed another madman here” drives straight home doesn’t it.

    • @SpeccyMan
      @SpeccyMan 2 года назад +2

      The real irony is all the actual madmen were comfortable, way back behind the lines.

  • @yodude1194
    @yodude1194 Год назад +23

    When script writers could write. Probably the BEST EVER ending to a superb series.

  • @ananthunt
    @ananthunt Год назад +14

    This is a masterpiece. It's one of the greatest TV Shows I have ever watched. You realise the profound depth and sadness at the end of all that laughter and sarcasm, in this scene.

  • @PolliDick
    @PolliDick Год назад +11

    Ich kann mich an keine andere Comedy Serie erinnern, die ich gesehen habe, ein so ernstes und unkomisches Ende hatte, wie diese.
    Jedes Mal, wirklich jedes Mal, bekomme ich bei dieser Szene eine Gänsehaut. Auch bleibt die eine einsame Träne nicht aus. Ich schäme mich dessen nicht, denn das war großes Fernsehen.
    Und zum Schluss die Überblendung von der Vergangenheit zur Gegenwart. 😮

    • @frankmitchell3594
      @frankmitchell3594 11 месяцев назад

      Yes, I agree. Everyone who sees this has the same feeling.

  • @roguishpaladin
    @roguishpaladin 4 года назад +148

    This is one of the saddest moments in a comedy that I can think of, and I believe that without Captain Darling it wouldn't have worked nearly as well. Tim McInnerny deserves way more credit than he's received for this episode - over the course of a few lines, he humanizes Captain Darling and turns him from the character we hate most in Blackadder Goes Forth (yes, I think even moreso than General Melchett) into a person we feel significant empathy for, all without us noticing that we've done it. He may have had bigger roles on-screen, but this is possibly his best acting work ever.

  • @dougarnold9337
    @dougarnold9337 Год назад +13

    Always makes me tear up when I watch this. The futility of war has never been so brilliantly shown. The final shot when the drums of war stop and replaced by birds chirping shows that our actions will be forgotten while the earth will move on as if we never existed...

  • @RahulSingh-rg4pm
    @RahulSingh-rg4pm Год назад +2

    "I'm scared Sir" hits you like a brick.

  • @ElBandito
    @ElBandito 4 года назад +70

    2:40 That look of hope of Captain Darling at the mention of a plan, and the despair he shows when Blackadder said the plan will have to wait... heartbreaking.

  • @wrenclark4907
    @wrenclark4907 3 года назад +229

    I’m crying
    For a *comedy* show this truly captures the horror and reality of war better than most dramas. Perhaps it’s the sudden change in moods, as the audience slowly realise that this is not a joke. It’s about the only thing in the show that isn’t a joke. And you realise that all the fun and hilarity from previous episodes would always inevitably end in this. You realise just how real these people could be. George is just a young naive oxford student, like so many other soldiers, and (although he’s a prick) darling has a girlfriend who he will never see again. It’s absolutely heartbreaking

  • @rickyzuc
    @rickyzuc Год назад +23

    I’ve seen this so many times and it still gets my emotions. It’s actually a masterpiece. Comedy, the human condition and to remember those who went through that. I can’t think of another show like Blackadder.

  • @Schuck.
    @Schuck. Год назад +8

    I wonder if they realized at the time, what a masterpiece they made,
    I'm not afraid to admit i can't watch this without getting a lump in my throat and a tear in my eye....
    Three cheers...................

  • @alfabob
    @alfabob 4 года назад +433

    After all these years, still one of the bravest, cleverest, and humble ending to a comedy series. Despite all the comic, clever banter, simply reinforces how absolutely wasteful the First World War was.

    • @DieFlabbergast
      @DieFlabbergast 3 года назад +5

      As opposed to all the other wars, which were all thoroughly productive, eh?

    • @jillreyerma7592
      @jillreyerma7592 3 года назад +19

      @@DieFlabbergast
      That's not what they said. I mean, The First World War was... Very big. Consequently, it was exceedingly wasteful. Much more than most others, because it was massive. It is called a "World War" so yeah, it was way, way more wasteful than most.

    • @olinkirkland
      @olinkirkland 2 года назад +7

      @@DieFlabbergast Almost certainly when compared to all other wars, the first world war was a waste.

    • @dalebird1482
      @dalebird1482 2 года назад +17

      @@DieFlabbergast while world war 2 had more total deaths world wide than any other conflict in history, I think WW1 really takes the prize for being a complete and total nightmare of a meatgrinder. The callousness with which peoples lives were thrown away by the higher ups in either side of the conflict is sickening. All to gain a scant 6ft of ground in some cases.

    • @nineignorantcocks605
      @nineignorantcocks605 2 года назад +9

      @@DieFlabbergast It was supposed to be "The War to End All Wars", and was spectacularly wasteful. The flower of Europe's youth was left in Flanders. In Northern English towns especially, entire streets could lose all their young men in an single shell burst due to enlisting in Pals battalions. Between July and December 1916, there were over 1.6 million casualties on the Western Front, for all combatants. Let that sink in for a moment.

  • @VideoPaladin
    @VideoPaladin 4 года назад +187

    It really is a testament that they can make something both incredibly funny yet depressing sad at the same time.

  • @cornishpasty7853
    @cornishpasty7853 11 месяцев назад +6

    The part at the end where it fades to the field full of poppies actually gave me a lump in my throat when i was shown it for the first time in a school assembly. Truly a powerful scene.

  • @patriciasanderson2171
    @patriciasanderson2171 2 года назад +40

    This scene gets me every time. I go from laughing to tearing up in seconds. So well written.

  • @122ALVARO11
    @122ALVARO11 4 года назад +201

    One of the most emotional scenes ever on a tv show. I ve seen the whole series countless times and when it comes to this 5 minutes it allways makes me shed a tear.

  • @cornishphilosopher
    @cornishphilosopher 3 года назад +624

    The line "How are you feeling Darling?" is the last funny bit of the show, after that all the humour is sucked out by the horror of what is about to happen
    And that's a good thing

    • @janhammekenbuch142
      @janhammekenbuch142 3 года назад +50

      It's actually the point where Blackadder says something to Darling that wasn't a pun or ridicule, but an actual question, to try and give a little comfort in their last minutes together.
      In my humble opinion.
      And so well delivered. You can hear him asking the question seriously, and not just to goad him into a verbal trap.

    • @commandermccluck
      @commandermccluck 2 года назад +19

      It's these last few minutes that you realise Darling is far more than just a running gag because of his name.
      He's a human just like the rest of them, and just as terrified of what's coming as they are.

    • @Tourist1967
      @Tourist1967 2 года назад +21

      I think it's when they greet each other by rank: "Captain Darling." "Captain Blackadder......." First sign of mutual respect and that they're both soldiers, in it together.

    • @boobyqueen
      @boobyqueen Год назад +7

      I don’t know… that machine gun line was pretty funny

    • @rnw2739
      @rnw2739 Год назад +7

      Sorry but it isn't. Hugh Laurie's "Rather, sir. Wouldn't wanna face a machine gun without this!"
      is one of the funniest lines from the whole series.

  • @helengadd2789
    @helengadd2789 Год назад +2

    I have tears in my eyes every time I watch this - particularly when the music plays.

  • @Thecommander248
    @Thecommander248 4 года назад +39

    I love how the Captain, risen up from Lieutenant throughout the show, is as jolly and overly enthusiastic as he always is. Then suddenly he announces "I'm scared", smiling the entire time and never losing he's jolliness. That is brilliant. Amazing acting. He's putting on a brave face. He probably always shows that side of himself to the men to keep their spirits up. It's heartbreaking.

    • @johnpmchappell
      @johnpmchappell 10 месяцев назад

      He died a lieutenant, he was never promoted. There are two captains present, Darling and Blackadder, a lieutenant, and Baldrick is a private soldier.

  • @TERMINATIONBLISS08
    @TERMINATIONBLISS08 3 года назад +42

    The idea that Blackadder never expected to live out the war, makes his character make a lot more sense

  • @petelowson5481
    @petelowson5481 11 месяцев назад +8

    My grandad survived going over the top and open trench fighting in the First World War. Every time I watch this reminds me of him and how lucky he was to come home. My mum once told me a story when I was a little boy of about his wartime exploits and how my grandad was somewhere and a man to his left and a man to his right were both shot. I guess it was when he “went over the top”. Never really thought about it until I watched this of what he lived through ❤️

  • @melissamarsh2219
    @melissamarsh2219 Год назад +6

    Always watch this on Remembrance Day. Best way to remembering think. With laughter and tears

  • @JOBdOut
    @JOBdOut 4 года назад +56

    As a child this was the first show that ever gave me the realization that there isnt always a happy ending. Really set the stage for life.