2004: The Stupid Version | |
---|---|
Genre | Mock reality |
Created by | Armando Iannucci |
Written by |
Armando Iannucci Stewart Lee Simon Blackwell Mick Bunnage Adam Buxton Roger Drew Jon Link Adrian Peters David Quantick Will Smith David Wellington |
Directed by | Armando Iannucci |
Starring | Armando Iannucci Stewart Lee Richard Ayoade Adam Buxton Matthew Holness David Quantick John Biggins John Guerrasio Carol Harvey Andy Hodgson Melanie Hudson Lewis MacLeod Kate O'Sullivan David Robb |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 2 |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Adam Tandy |
Running time | 60:00 |
Distributor | BBC |
Release | |
Original network | BBC Two |
Original release | December 31 | – December 31, 2004
External links | |
2004: The Stupid Version | www |
2004: The Stupid Version is a satirical documentary written by Armando Iannucci, broadcast in two parts on BBC Three on New Year's Eve 2004. The one-off programme is a parody of review programmes typically broadcast at New Year. It features edited footage from news and television series, as well as satires on the politics and fads of a year in which "only Andrew Marr kept his dignity".
The documentary was shown again on BBC Two on 29 January 2005, but has not been repeated since or released on DVD, although clips are available on the internet. Iannucci's 2006 series Time Trumpet follows a similar format to The Stupid Version, reviewing events satirically from a future perspective.
Iannucci himself narrated the content, but only appears on screen once to assess the aftermath of The Room Show, a spoof of the reality television shows prevalent at the time, in which Ian McCaskill, Eddie 'the Eagle' Edwards and a number of other minor celebrities were locked in a container (unfilmed) for 10 hours.
In particular, the show focuses on stories that made the headlines from 2004, for example the US presidential election, featuring edited footage showing George W. Bush singing "New York, New York" during a presidential head-to-head and a montage of election speeches emphasising the buzz-words used by Bush's campaign. In addition, the programme satirised politics in the UK, for example edits of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown both apparently contradicting one another, the favourite swear-words of Conservative politicians and the controversial Panorama documentary "Where the Tits were Saddam's WMD?"