Paul Makin's impressively original sitcom, combines dark
humour, sheer daftness, theatrical allusions, claustrophobia, violence and
intelligent self-awareness, as if the missing link between Hancock's Half Hour
(BBC, 1956-60), Father Ted (Channel 4, 1995-98), Only Fools and Horses (BBC,
1981-96; sharing director Tony Dow), Bottom (BBC, 1991-95), the Theatre of the
Absurd, Steptoe and Son (BBC, 1962-74) and The League of Gentlemen (BBC,
1999-2002).
The setting is, typically for British sitcom, claustrophobic: three security
guards patrol a building we never leave. Carter, the frustrated would-be
intellectual, clashes over aspirations with Bell, his unintelligent, animalistic
colleague, overseen by their boss, flawed father figure Sarge. Throughout, their
dead co-worker Smith sits with them, his wages drawn by the others. They
disagree on class, art, sex, existence and defining non-sequiturs, but are
mutually dependent in complex ways, heightened by the performances of a strong
cast. Their co-dependency (id, ego and super-ego?) is explored in 'Trouble in
Mind' (tx. 6/1/1993), when Bell is psychoanalysed and uncovers hidden tensions
(which echoes Steptoe's 'Loathe Story', tx. 20/3/1972), after raping a horse
(which doesn't). Throughout, potential pretentiousness is deflated by silliness
or broad physical comedy.
In this world, a gorilla is hired as co-worker; a werewolf conducts a heart
bypass; and a woman gives birth to consumer goods and insists at gunpoint that
she is an allegory. Nightingales' achievement is in integrating those plots and
character psychology into a non-naturalistic world. Plotting characters become
'Shakespearean villains' complete with lightning, dry ice and dialogue in iambic
pentameter; allusions to Mutiny on the Bounty cause the building to list like a
ship and a corpse can be 'buried at sea' from the window. Guest characters are
sometimes killed by the regulars: given that sitcom as a genre depends on
restoring the status quo at the end of each episode, the murders of potentially
disruptive characters make Nightingales feel, bizarrely, like the ultimate
sitcom.
Nightingales' self-awareness playfully explores ideas of theatre and genre,
and its surreal logic pre-empts the gentler Father Ted, but also expresses the
desperation of a neglected social class's inner life. These tensions are darkest
in the sinister final episode, which is closer to the devastating finale of
David Lynch's Twin Peaks (US, 1990-91) than a sitcom. Here we see the series'
catchphrase ("There's nobody here but us chickens"), just as we see sitcom
throughout: in a new light.
Dave Rolinson
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