NEW YORK — Those who don't know Monty Python, and don't care, have been blessed with six hours they can spend on something other than watching IFC's new documentary series.
Of course, all Python disciples can look forward to comedy catnip in Monty Python: Almost the Truth (the Lawyer's Cut), airing at 9 p.m. Sunday through Oct. 23.
History. Hysterics. Silly walks. All bundled into an everything-you- wanted-to-know-or-rediscover chronicle of this legendary British comedy troupe, now marking 40 years.
It's not the first Monty Python documentary, but it's certainly the latest, longest and last (at least for now).
And its distinctive style is clear from its first moments. After the very silly, Pythonesque title sequence, each of the five surviving Pythons is heard from in fresh on-camera interviews (plus archived interviews with its sixth member, the late Graham Chapman), musing on their respective beginnings.
No soaring introductory pronouncements of what Python accomplished and represents. That will be spelled out, step by step, in the fullness of six hours, as interviews, film and audio clips decipher how Monty Python became the most groundbreaking, transforming wellspring of comedy in the history of the world (OK, maybe a wee exaggeration).
Chapman, along with fellow Brits John Cleese, Eric Idle, Michael Palin and Terry Jones, plus Minnesota-born interloper Terry Gilliam, were children during World War II. They were shaped by radio comedy as much as television. They bridled at, and feasted on, the uptight, tradition-bound 1950s culture of their youth. They harnessed the gloriously unhinged, subversive 1960s and used it as their launching pad.
On TV (notably Monty Python's Flying Circus, produced for British TV) and in live performances, recordings and feature films (including the incomparable Monty Python and the Holy Grail and Life of Brian), the Pythons' absurdist narratives and characterizations mixed raging intellect with shameless looniness. (IFC is including those two films, as well as Monty Python Live at the Hollywood Bowl and all four seasons of Flying Circus in its on-air Python-a-Thon.)
The group has been effectively disbanded for years as each Python struck out to pursue his own projects, but it lives on undiminished. As recently as 2005, Monty Python's Spamalot, a lavish stage musical based on the 1974 Holy Grail film, became a Broadway hit.
Meanwhile, classic Pythonesque drollery enjoys eternal life. The mere thought of "the Knights who say 'Ni'" or "Eric the half-a-bee" or the gay lumberjack song will reduce any Python fan to a helpless, silly state, never mind the passage of decades.















