The Russians Are Coming
"The Russians Are Coming" | |||
---|---|---|---|
Only Fools and Horses episode | |||
Episode no. | Series 1 Episode 6 | ||
Directed by | Martin Shardlow | ||
Written by | John Sullivan | ||
Original air date | 13 October 1981 (1981-10-13) | ||
Running time | 30:14 (DVD) / 30:23 (iTunes) | ||
Episode chronology | |||
| |||
List of episodes |
"The Russians Are Coming" is an episode of the BBC sitcom Only Fools and Horses. It was first screened on 13 October 1981, as the final episode of series 1. In the episode, Del buys a nuclear fallout shelter and, anticipating a nuclear war, the Trotters decide to build it.
Synopsis
Del Boy purchases a pile of bricks and discovers several boxes of lead underneath. Rodney finds some old paperwork with the lead and discovers that it is intended for a do it yourself nuclear fallout shelter. The episode was first screened during the Soviet–Afghan War, and Rodney persuades Del that, with the fear of World War III looming, they should build the shelter rather than sell the lead. Del agrees to test out living in the shelter over the weekend.
Several potential locations for the shelter, including Grandad's allotment and Grandad's own idea of an area in the New Forest, prove unworkable as the trio are unable to beat the four-minute warning, due to being pulled over by the police.
The rest of the episode is set in the shelter, where the conversation turns to war and the potential aftermath of the impending conflict. Del suggests that the present generation of British youngsters have been "denied their birth right of a war", which sparks an angry response from Grandad, who gives a sombre "war is hell" speech relaying his own experiences of seeing disfigured veterans at the end of World War I. The episode ends with Del dreaming aloud of what could become of the world in the event of nuclear fallout, while the camera zooms out to reveal the location of the Trotters' fallout shelter; on the roof of their tower block, Nelson Mandela House.
Episode cast
Actor | Role |
---|---|
David Jason | Derek Trotter |
Nicholas Lyndhurst | Rodney Trotter |
Lennard Pearce | Grandad Trotter |
Derek Newark | Eric (police officer) |
Kelly Garfield | Wayne (the car driver) |
Episode concept
The idea for the script was based on a true story which John Sullivan was reading about, which involved a group of people who did as the script suggested: purchased lead and built an air-raid shelter.[1]
Music
Ronnie Hazlehurst: Original Theme Tune
Note: In the original series 1 broadcasts of Only Fools and Horses, the theme tune was very different to the version adopted from series 2, which became the standard version known today. Composed by Ronnie Hazlehurst, the original theme tune was a jazzy instrumental tune that played over the start and end credits. This tune was replaced in series 2 with a version written and sung by John Sullivan. After the initial run of series 1, all future re-runs replaced the Hazlehurst version with John Sullivan's to match the other series. The VHS/DVD versions all contain John Sullivan's version, and recordings with Hazlehurst's original tune are extremely rare, though it can be heard in a scene during episode 1 of the first series.
References
- ^ Did You Know? ofah.net
External links
- "The Russians are Coming" at BBC Online
- "The Russians Are Coming" at IMDb
- v
- t
- e
- "Big Brother"
- "Go West Young Man"
- "Cash and Curry"
- "The Second Time Around"
- "A Slow Bus to Chingford"
- "The Russians Are Coming"
- "The Long Legs of the Law"
- "Ashes to Ashes"
- "A Losing Streak"
- "No Greater Love"
- "The Yellow Peril"
- "It Never Rains..."
- "A Touch of Glass"
- "Homesick"
- "Healthy Competition"
- "Friday the 14th"
- "Yesterday Never Comes"
- "May the Force Be with You"
- "Wanted"
- "Who's a Pretty Boy?"
- "Happy Returns"
- "Strained Relations"
- "Hole in One"
- "It's Only Rock and Roll"
- "Sleeping Dogs Lie"
- "Watching the Girls Go By"
- "As One Door Closes"
- "From Prussia with Love"
- "The Miracle of Peckham"
- "The Longest Night"
- "Tea for Three"
- "Video Nasty"
- "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?"
- "Yuppy Love"
- "Danger UXD"
- "Chain Gang"
- "The Unlucky Winner Is..."
- "Sickness and Wealth"
- "Little Problems"
- "The Sky's the Limit"
- "The Chance of a Lunchtime"
- "Stage Fright"
- "The Class of '62"
- "He Ain't Heavy, He's My Uncle"
- "Three Men, a Woman and a Baby"
- "Christmas Crackers" (1981)
- "Diamonds Are for Heather" (1982)
- "Thicker than Water" (1983)
- "To Hull and Back" (1985)
- "A Royal Flush" (1986)
- "The Frog's Legacy" (1987)
- "Dates" (1988)
- "The Jolly Boys' Outing" (1989)
- "Rodney Come Home" (1990)
- "Miami Twice" (1991)
- "Mother Nature's Son" (1992)
- "Fatal Extraction" (1993)
- "Heroes and Villains" (1996)
- "Modern Men" (1996)
- "Time on Our Hands" (1996)
- "If They Could See Us Now" (2001)
- "Strangers on the Shore" (2002)
- "Sleepless in Peckham" (2003)
- The Funny Side of Christmas: "Christmas Trees" (1982)
- "Licensed to Drill" (1984)
- "White Mice" (1985)
- "Royal Variety Show" (1986)
- "The Robin Flies at Dawn" (1990)
- "Comic Relief special" (1997)
- "Beckham in Peckham" (2014)