How Not to Be Seen

E409520

"How Not to Be Seen" is a famous absurdist sketch from the British comedy series Monty Python's Flying Circus that parodies instructional films by demonstrating, with darkly comic results, the importance of remaining unseen.

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How Not to Be Seen canonical 1

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Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Monty Python sketch
comedy sketch
television sketch
countryOfOrigin United Kingdom
createdBy Monty Python
distributionFormat television broadcast
featuresCharacter off-screen instructor
firstBroadcastDecade 1970s
genre absurdist comedy
black comedy
satire
hasCultFollowing true
hasLegacy frequently cited as a classic Monty Python sketch
hasTheme authoritarianism
bureaucracy
surveillance
visibility
hasVisualStyle film insert within television episode
influenced later sketch comedy about surveillance
laterReleasedIn DVD collections of Monty Python's Flying Circus
home video compilations
memorableQuote "This demonstrates the value of not being seen."
"This is Mr. E. R. Bradshaw of Napier Court, Black Lion Road, London, SE14."
narrationStyle formal instructional voiceover
notableFor absurd escalation of violence
deadpan narration
use of explosions as punchlines
originalLanguage English
originalNetwork BBC One
parodies instructional films
public information films
partOf Monty Python's Flying Circus
partOfFranchise Monty Python
performedBy Eric Idle
Graham Chapman
John Cleese
Michael Palin
Terry Gilliam
Terry Jones
productionCompany BBC
setting outdoor countryside location
targetOfHumor government-style instructional media
militaristic responses to trivial situations
tone darkly comic
usesDevice repetition
subversion of audience expectations
visual gags

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