Search - The Mighty Boosh: Season 2 on DVD


The Mighty Boosh: Season 2
The Mighty Boosh Season 2
Actors: Noel Fielding, Julian Barrat
Genres: Television
NR     2009     2hr 47min

Studio: Warner Home Video Release Date: 07/21/2009 Run time: 168 minutes Rating: Nr

     
5

Larger Image

Movie Details

Actors: Noel Fielding, Julian Barrat
Genres: Television
Sub-Genres: Comedy
Studio: BBC Warner
Format: DVD - Color,Widescreen - Subtitled
DVD Release Date: 07/21/2009
Original Release Date: 01/01/2009
Theatrical Release Date: 01/01/2009
Release Year: 2009
Run Time: 2hr 47min
Screens: Color,Widescreen
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaDVD Credits: 2
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 5
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Languages: English
Subtitles: English

Similar Movies

The Mighty Boosh Season 3
6
   NR   2009   2hr 49min

Similarly Requested DVDs

Pirates of the Caribbean - At World's End
Widescreen Edition
   PG-13   2007   2hr 47min
   
Looper
Director: Rian Johnson
   1hr 58min
   
Sleepy Hollow
Director: Tim Burton
   R   2000   1hr 45min
   
Jaws - The Revenge
Director: Joseph Sargent
   PG-13   2003   1hr 29min
   
Beaches
Special Edition
Director: Garry Marshall
   PG-13   2005   2hr 3min
   
Lethal Weapon 4 Film Favorites
   R   2007   8hr 3min
   
Superman 4 Film Favorites
Superman The Movie / Superman II / Superman III / Superman IV The Quest for Peace
   UR   2008   8hr 15min
   
The Boondock Saints
Director: Troy Duffy
   R   2002   1hr 48min
   
Bridesmaids
Director: Paul Feig
   2hr 5min
   
 

Movie Reviews

A journey through time and space
E. A Solinas | MD USA | 06/13/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Goodbye, Zooniverse. Hello life of yetis, deranged sea hermaphrodites and musical glamour!

And so unsurprisingly, things continue to be utterly strange and deranged in "The Mighty Boosh: Season 2" even when our wacky protagonists have left their old jobs at the zoo. I can't help but miss some of the freakish side-characters of the previous season, but the visual bizarrities, freak-show plots and surrealist details keep things utterly amazing from start to finish.

Howard Moon (Julian Barratt) and Vince Noir (Noel Fielding) are living in a flat with Naboo the mystic and the talking ape Bollo, and are apparently trying to launch a music career. Howard does the music, Vince does the costumes.

In the first episode, a soul-killing trip to a mountain cabin is interrupted by the deranged hick Kodiak Jack (who immediately develops a huge crush on Vince). Too bad they're also in danger from a bunch of breeding Yeti, and Howard inadvertently ends up in their hands. Paws. Whatever. And during Vince and Howard's search for a new psychedelic musical sound before the deadline, Naboo tells them a strange story of Rudi and Spider ("Feel the power of my fusion lick!").

Then an age crisis sends Vince and Howard to Naboo's home planet to find the Fountain of Youth, but run afoul of the Hitcher and the Xooberon Tribe. An attempt to impress some goth girls ("Goth Juice, most powerful hairspray known to man... made from the tears of Robert Smith") causes disaster when Vince uses Naboo's "hardcore" black magic book to summon the evillest evil demon Nanatoo, who looks a lot like a little old lady and clones herself... meaning they're faced with Nanageddon!

And after a horrendous gig, Howard accidentally reels in the deranged sea hermaphrodite known as Old Gregg -- and ends up not only Gregg's captive, but the unwilling subject of his amorous intentions. Additionally, Gregg has The Funk... and Howard wants it. And a boat trip to the US goes horribly wrong when the boys end up marooned on a distant tropical island (Vince trimmed the captain's hair), where the boundaries of reality and fantasy start to blur. Fear the coconuts.

"The Mighty Boosh" is your basic average sitcom... on enough acid to fry its colorful little brains and send it flying across the universe on Naboo's magic carpet. This is a universe where the moon regularly says weird and nonsensical things, an extraterrestrial shaman and a talking gorilla live in the next room, and random music references abound (ranging from the Cure to Kings of Leon) -- and these aren't the weirdest things that go on.

As if the plots weren't surreal enough, Barratt and Fielding swathe the entire series in a sort of whimsical weirdness. Lots of strange dialogue ("I've got a strong feeling the Tudour look's gonna come back in while we're away. I don't want to get left behind!"), toilet humor (naturally), bizarre life-forms (Yetis! Coconuts! Old Gregg and his... oh, I can't say it!), weird outfits for Vine (the mirror-ball suit!) and a casual acceptance that anything can and will happen.

Barratt and Fielding are also quite awesome as a sort of surreal Odd Couple -- Barratt is great as a sort of lame-duck aspiring Artiste unaware of his intense uncoolness, while Fielding is deliciously over-the-top as a foppish, androgynous sort who changes his personal style every time it suits him (including renaming himself "Obsidian" to impress a pair of stereotypical goth girls). Michael Fielding also gets a good supporting role as too-mellow-to-not-be-taking-chemicals shaman-alien Naboo, who unfortunately is the smart one here.

"The Mighty Boosh Season 2" will leave you missing the Zooniverse, but it's still a brilliantly bizarre twist on your usual sitcom. Absolutely a must-see, for those who like to see the boundaries stretched, snapped, and doused in paint."
Hmmm....creamy.......beige
Stinky Wizzleteats | Portland, Oregon | 07/07/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I highly recommend Boosh series 2 if you like your offbeat, surrealistic, whimsical, rock'n'roll sitcoms to be creamy and beige."
Mighty Boosh Rule!
Karen S. Simpson | San Diego, CA United States | 10/07/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I own all 3 seasons Region 1 of Mighty Boosh, the Mighty Boosh Live dvd and the Region 1 Series 1,2,3 Collector dvd set. I watch them repeatedly and continue to pick things up every time. When I'm bored, feeling down, or just want an escape and to laugh a bit I can always count on the Boosh! These guys are brilliantly entertaining!"
Ever been to a club where people wee on each other?
bbfreak328 | Tennessee | 08/01/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"The second season of "The Mighty Boosh" is probably even wackier than the first. There are changes this time around (Howard and Vince are no longer working at a zoo, and instead are musicians), but one thing remains the same in terms of what to expect: Expect the unexpected. No matter how familiar you are with the Boosh, nothing can prepare you for the flood of random hilarity that takes place in each episode.

Howard Moon, Vince Noir, Naboo the shaman, and Bollo the ape are the only returning characters, but the actor who played zoo manager Bob Fossil in the 1st season plays a number of roles in season 2 as well. Here's a quick summary/rating for all 6 episodes:

"The Call of the Yeti" -5/5:
Howard decides that he, Vince, Naboo, and Bollo should take a weekend vacation at a cabin deep in the woods. But when they get there, they encouter a creepy old mountain-man named Kodiak Jack....who develops an affinity for Vince. Howard tells him he's a nature photographer and is looking for animals to photograph, so Jack makes a deal with him and gives him a map to a Yeti lair. Let the mayhem ensue.

"The Priest and the Beast" -3/5:
Howard and Vince are trying to find a new sound, and they go to Naboo for help. Naboo proceeds to tell them the story of Rudi and Spider, two psychadelic musicians who always went looking for "The New Sound". It shouldn't take you long to figure out that Rudi is basically a funky, black, door-in-his-afro guitar playing version of Howard, and Spider a sex-driven, Mexican-sounding Vince who got his name (Spider) for having 8 of a certain body part...

"Nanageddon" -5/5:
A personal favorite of mine. Howard and Vince try to impress a couple of Goth girls by showing them some magic. Unfortunately, they read a spell from Naboo's dark magic book and summon up a seemingly harmless old woman. The girls leave and Vince and Howard try to convince them to stay, but it's no good. To make matters worse, when they return to the living room, the book and the Nana are gone! From then on, it's a nonstop quest to find the book before the Nana, who is actually the most dangerous demon alive, can create a Nana army to take over the world. We also meet a board of Shaman who act as Naboo's superiors in this episode.

"The Fountain of Youth" -5/5:
Howard begins feeling old and self-conscious about his crow's feet, so when he overhears Bollo telling Vince that the key to Naboo's youthful appearance is that he has access to the fountain of youth, Howard knows what must be done. While going through Naboo's room, Howard and Vince stumble upon an amulet that transports them to another planet where they are captured by the locals. Vince is made their king, and Howard his slave, while all the while an evil green cockney resembling the Hitcher from the first season plots how he can steal the amulet from Vince and find the fountain of youth for himself.

"The Legend of Old Gregg" -5/5:
The best of the boosh! After a bad gig, Howard and Vince are forced to leave town and wind up in a small fisherman's town called "Black Lake". A shell-minded fisherman named Ramsey tells them the best way to unwind is to go out on Black Lake when the moon is full and fish away. What he doesn't tell them is what lurks in the murky waters of Black Lake; a scaly green tutu-wearing man-fish named Old Gregg. It should also be noted that Old Gregg is a hermaphrodite who takes a liking to Howard. Didn't see that one coming did you?

"The Nightmare of Milky Joe" -5/5:
Howard and Vince are made to walk the plank after Vince gives the ship's captain a mullet he doesn't like. Stranded on a deserted island and left to their own devices, the pair come up with their own friends made from cocnuts, Milky Joe (for Howard) and Ruby (for Vince). As time progresses, we see newer coconut faces and our boys develop relationships with some of the coconut ladies. But all relationships have their ups and downs, and Howard's is no exception...

The Moon makes regular appearances throughout the episodes and gives a little side about whatever's on his tiny little mind. It's no wonder why the Head-with-tentacles Tony Harrison calls him an "Alabastor Retard" ("Nanageddon"). In season 2, the characters are more eccentric, the scenery more colorful, and the plots more sporadic. So sit back. Relax. Cause the Boosh is loose and it's comin at ya like a shark with knees."