The elevator pitch for Fackham Hall (2025) is "Bridgerton in the style of Airplane! done by Monty Python". Not inaccurate.
It is set in majestic Fackham Hall after WWI. It has been in the family for generations (their mottto is Incestus ad Infinitum), but the families four sons, John, George, Paul and little Ringo, have died in the war (or in a bizarre strangle wank accident). Unless one of their two daughters marries the right cousin, they will lose the hall. Fortunately, older daughter Poppy (Emma Laird) is about to be wed.
Meanwhile, orphan and pickpocket Ben Radcliffe gets a mysterious letter to deliver to the hall. But as he bicycles up to the hall, he is struck by a vision of beauty, motoring along the road. Struck as in run over, because she has fallen in love with him as well.
When he tries to deliver the letter, he is mistaken for a job seeker, and given a job as footman. Since the girl he fell in love with is Rose (Thomasin McKenzie), younger daughter of the family, he'll do whatever he can to be close to her.
Laird's wedding to her cousin is presided over by Jimmy Carr, who gets some of the best jokes in. But she impulsively refuses to marry him, because she is in love with a filthy door-to-door manure salesman. Now it's up to McKenzie. If she doesn't marry her cousin, the family will lose the hall. If she does, she'll Radcliffe. This becomes pressing when her father is murdered, so the hall will now pass to the nearest male heir, the cousin.
The plot is pretty familiar - of course, since this is a parody. You might even guess where the orphan Radcliffe came from. There are bits of Gosford Park, along with Bridgerton, Upstairs, Downstairs, and Downton Abbey. Of these, I've only seen Gosford Park, so I'm sure I missed some bits. Fine gags abound, like the family worrying the Cyri the butler is listening to their conversation, like Alexa the maid. Some are surreal, like when they are duck hunting, and shooting down foxes and deer from the sky. Also, father is repeatedly shot, without consequence, until his murder later. He is killed, by the way, by being stabbed, shot, poisoned, and drenched in acid. Probably an accident.
Carr, as parson, has the best set of jokes. As part of the wedding service, he says things like, "Know that God is with us, and Jesus is gay." Pause, try again. "Know that God is with us, and Jesus is. Gay though we are..." Carr is one of the writers, and I'll bet he wrote this stuff for himself.
This was a lot of fun, with great production values. I did feel that the joke density wasn't quite what I had hoped for - not quite ZAZ levels. But enough yuks for me, and it's great to see a clever comedy so well executed.