"The Good Life" Plough Your Own Furrow (TV Episode 1975) Poster

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6/10
Plough Your Own Furrow
Prismark1031 May 2021
I used to visit the type of office block where Tom Good (Richard Briers) and Jerry Leadbeatter (Paul Eddington) worked in the late 1990s.

It was an absolute horrid place especially in the summer as itb had no air conditioning and opening the windows meant the noise of outside traffic.

The kind of office built in the 1960s and only fit for that decade.

No wonder Tom, a draughtsman who has just turned 40 and realises that his life is stuck in a rut.

Jerry has gone up the corporate ladder and admits he has done it through brownnosing rather than talent. Tom cannot keep a straight face when his boss speaks of his brand new idea. Toy giraffes for breakfast cereal packets.

The first episode sets up Tom's frustration and boredom. Everyone in his office is younger than him and get on life without him such as playing in the office cricket team.

Jerry who joined the firm at the same time as Tom is going upwards.

It leaves Tom with a decision to make. Opt out of the corporate rat race. Luckily wife Barbara (Felicity Kendal) is up for the idea of self sufficiency. The Goods will grown their own food and turn their house into a mini farm.

There is no getting away this is a middle class sitcom even though it tries to be daring and groundbreaking. Jerry drives a Volvo automatic. Tom might be 40, he has a big house and has already paid off his mortgage.

Paying off your mortgage before 40, something most of has can only dream about. So it really is fantasy and Tom is married to Felicity Kendal. What more proof do you need!
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10/10
The first ever episode
Scaramouche200413 August 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Draughtsman Tom Good (Richard Briers) has reached both 40 and a pivotal point in his life. No longer content in his 9-5 city job of designing small plastic animals for cereal packets, he feels he has accomplished very little and that time is passing him by.

Jerry Leadbetter (Paul Eddington) is his friend, colleague and neighbour, who unintentionally rubs salt in Tom's wounds by being a high flying executive in the same company. While Tom languishes away in a grubby workroom on the fourth floor, Jerry rubs shoulders with the big boys in the pristine executive lounges of the sixth floor.

That night Tom makes a life changing and monumental decision. He and his wife Barbara (Felicity Kendal) will quit the rat race, break the chain of normality and become self sufficient.

They will grow their own food by turning their front and back gardens into allotments, design and build the things they need and will exist entirely on their own efforts.

The first episode ends with Tom explaining to Jerry why he has quit his job and the idea behind his new way of life.

Jerry, believing him to have gone insane, can only stand back aghast as Tom ploughs up his front lawn with his new rotary cultivator.
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9/10
"Self-sufficiency...in Surbiton?"
ShadeGrenade9 May 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Tom Good ( Richard Briers ), a draughtsman at J.J.M., is forty years old and is from happy about it. Life seems to be passing him by. He is still on the fourth floor while his friend and neighbour - 'Jerry Leadbeatter' ( Paul Eddington ) - has progressed to the seventh. The commissionaire ( Norman Atkyns ) fails to remember his name, and he is angry to find that he has been passed over for the office cricket team because he is thought to be too old. That night, he works out what the problem of his life is. He and wife 'Barbara' ( Felicity Kendal ) need to become totally self-sufficient...

So begins the classic John Esmonde and Bob Larbey comedy 'The Good Life'. Its almost ( but not quite ) a retread of the Vince Powell and Harry Driver show 'Two In Clover' which starred Sid James and Victor Spinetti and ran for two seasons in 1969-70. Where it differs is that the main characters decide to stay in their city home rather than move to the country. This added to the comedy immeasurably. Another masterstroke on the writers' part was to keep the bond of friendship between the Goods and the Leadbeatters intact. Logically, it should have disintegrated, but then you'd have got a middle-class version of 'Love Thy Neighbour'. It is a bit hard to believe that any wife would willingly agree to give up her comfortable lifestyle to adopt Tom's self-sufficiency idea; Barbara is shown from the onset to be a bit of a game girl who likes a challenge.

Penelope Keith's 'Margo' is heard yelling at Jerry in the bedroom, but is nowhere to be seen. She soon would be though, and went on to become the show's most popular character.

Reginald Marsh, who plays 'Sir', Tom and Jerry's boss, was also in 'Terry & June' as 'Sir Dennis Hodge'.

Funniest moment - Tom struggling to keep a straight face as Sir comes out with a daft idea to make plastic giraffes. Slipping out of the office, he busts a gut laughing.

Second funniest moment - Jerry looking on in horror as Tom digs up the front lawn as a prelude to planting potatoes!
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9/10
Escape from Suburbia.
Sleepin_Dragon31 January 2021
Tom and Barbara Good reach a decision on his fortieth Birthday, to escape the rate race, and become self sufficient.......in Surbiton.

It is a legendary comedy, one I've not seen for many years. It gets off to a cracking start, this first episode gives us a few laughs, sets the tone, and basically gives us the purpose of Tom and Barbara, and their mission for the next four years.

Plenty of laughs, now that I am forty I get the early jokes a whole lot more than I did watching this in my younger years. He's had enough, he can see his life unfolding in front of him, and he wants a change.

We hear Margot, but don't get to see her, she will become a vital part.

A glorious start, 9/10.
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