(2001– )

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7/10
Quirky comedy, sadly short-lived
hpmons10 December 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I remember seeing this a few years ago, but I don't know if its even been repeated - it simply disappeared.

It was a sketch show, and the vague memories I have of it are strange but funny. I don't think it would be for everyone, it would depend on your taste.

One scene that I do remember is where a man had a dream about flying around and eating marshmallows, then when he woke up, and pulled back the bed covers, he was lying next to a skeleton (his wife).

Its not the kind of thing that could last for more than one series, and unfortunately there almost no information available online.
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8/10
"Welcome to 'Scottish Bookcase'!"
Rabical-914 September 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Another sketch show hoping to be a modern day 'Monty Python', 'Velvet Soup' was a short lived BBC Scotland sketch show which starred Steven McNicoll, Julie Duncanson, Gavin Mitchell and Mark McDonnell. It began life as a radio show entitled 'The Velvet Cabaret' ( so named because the recording venue of the show was called 'The Velvet Rooms' ). It struck a chord with listeners so the idea of mounting it into a TV show was mooted. In 2001, a six part series was made.

Like 'Monty Python', 'Velvet Soup' featured some rather macabre skits. One sketch saw a man dreaming that he was floating in mid-air eating giant marshmallows. He then awakens to find himself lying next to a blood stained skeleton ( he had eaten his wife in his sleep ). Another sketch saw a group of men heckling children at a school nativity play, only for the children to turn around and hurl abuse back at them! Another rather funny sketch saw a police sniper being instructed by his colleagues to take the first clear head shot of the suspect when he gets the first opportunity. The suspect walks into vision to reveal he has an abnormally over-sized head that a sniper could not miss even if they tried!

The first series went down reasonably well and so a second series series followed in 2003 however it was not so popular this time around. Firstly, the second series was scheduled erratically, meaning ratings were unremarkable. Worse, due to lack of scheduling space, the second series, which was supposed to consist of six episodes, was aborted after only four weeks, meaning two episodes to this day have yet to see the light of day. 'Velvet Soup' simply fizzled out after that.

Well, after watching it recently, I have to say that whilst it may not have been a wonderful show, it was good fun and was well served by its talented cast, most especially Steven McNicoll and Gavin Mitchell, the latter who became a household name with viewers as Bobby in 'Still Game'.
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10/10
Too Bad
christthorn2313 July 2008
Very funny show which my wife, friends and I all enjoyed quite thoroughly, and I'm an American! Too bad more people couldn't appreciate their style of humor. I've always wondered why there weren't more episodes produced. So now my question is: where do I find more comedy like this? Obviously you blokes overseas know how to write a funny bit. I grew up on Monty Python, and League Of Gentlemen was also very entertaining. My highest recommendations to anyone who appreciates originality and intellectual thought as applied to humor. So much of what I see from the States is rubbish. Please keep making funny comedy, England!
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10/10
Why is this not on DVD? It's brilliant.
greeny-1028 February 2009
This Scottish sketch comedy show has fallen into obscurity, which is a crying shame because it's as good as much better known contemporaries such as "Big Train", "The Sketch Show" and "Dead Ringers". It had some classic sketches including the depressed (and potentially murderous)hitchhiking clown, the wistful Dirk Bogarde style monologist who haunted rundown seaside towns,the baby eating father in law, the horny mother continually trying to seduce her daughter's teenage boyfriend and many others. There were only six half hour episodes ever made. It was shown a couple of times on the ABC in Australia but hasn't been repeated recently. Surely it's worthy of a DVD release.
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