The Mainland (Father Ted)

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"The Mainland"
Father Ted episode
Episode no.Series 3
Episode 4
Directed by Andy DeEmmony
Written by Graham Linehan, Arthur Mathews
Original air date3 April 1998 (1998-04-03)
Guest appearances
Graham Norton as Father Noel Furlong
Richard Wilson as himself
Episode chronology
 Previous
"Speed 3"
Next 
"Escape from Victory"
List of episodes

"The Mainland" is the fourth episode of the third series of the Channel 4 sitcom Father Ted and the 21st episode overall. It was first broadcast on 3 April 1998.

Contents

Synopsis

Ted, Dougal, Jack, and Mrs. Doyle depart Craggy Island for the mainland for various reasons; Ted plans to collect £200 he won in a bet, and then visit the "Very Dark Caves" with Dougal, Mrs. Doyle plans to meet with her friend Mrs. Dineen to have tea, and Jack needs to go to the optician to get a new pair of glasses, after his last pair was stolen by a crow.

After dropping Mrs. Doyle and Jack off, Ted and Dougal go to the caves. Ted is surprised to see Richard Wilson, from the sitcom One Foot in the Grave , waiting outside, and goes up to greet him with his catchphrase "I don't believe it!". Wilson, who is sick of hearing the phrase himself, turns on Ted and starts beating him up before others physically drag him away. Ted and Dougal proceed into the caves with a tour group. When Ted utters "I don't believe it!" in awe of a rock formation, he encounters Wilson again, and he and Dougal flee deeper into the caves, getting lost. The cave guide apologises to Wilson, who says that it's all right, as long as he does not have to hear "that bloody catchphrase" again. The cave guide then has to stop himself from saying it.

Ted and Dougal end up finding Father Noel Furlong and the St. Luke's Youth Group deeper within, having been lost there for two days. After Noel decides to have a screeching competition and is buried under a pile of falling rocks (while the Youth Group members leave and board flights to Paraguay), Ted and Dougal continue on their own. Ted eventually discovers that Dougal's jumper has come unravelled, and realises that the thread will provide a way out, but after inadvertently winding it all up in the excitement, he again exclaims "I don't believe it!", his words echoing to Wilson, who starts to lose his sanity. On their way out, they tell a passing binman about Noel's plight, unaware he is not a cave guide.

At the optician, Jack gets a new pair of glasses, only to immediately lose them to a crow again as he leaves. Wandering, he comes across a sign for an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting, mistaking it for a bar (due to only reading the word "drink"). The attendees fail to understand the nature of Jack's relationship with alcohol, and interpret his wild shouts of "Drink!" as a plea for help.

At the tea room, Mrs. Doyle and Mrs. Dineen have a great time reminiscing, but when the bill arrives, neither will let the other pay for their meal. They begin fighting, leading to both being arrested. Jack, meanwhile, enters a pub, and while ordering a drink, one of the attendees from the Alcoholics Anonymous meeting sees him and tries to stop him. Jack punches him out, leading to him being taken away in an ambulance and Jack also being arrested.

Ted and Dougal arrive at the police station, where they are told either to pay their fees of £200, or the two would have to stay in jail overnight. Ted is initially ready to let them stay, but when Dougal tries to get his attention, loses his temper and pays the money he won in the bet. He then lays into Dougal for making him pay the money and embarrassing him, only for Dougal to respond that he forgot about the money and was trying to tell Ted the zipper on his trousers were down. They return to Craggy Island, with Ted vowing never to go to the mainland again.

Sometime later, Wilson is bike-riding across Craggy Island, and gets lost. He goes to the parochial house to get directions. Ted answers the door, and Wilson, shocked to see Ted yet again, utters "I don't believe it!"

Casting

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References

  1. "BBC Drama Faces: Richard Wilson". bbc.co.uk . Retrieved 27 May 2008.
  2. Graham Linehan; Arthur Mathews (2000). Father Ted: The Complete Scripts. London: Boxtree. p. 298. ISBN   0-7522-7235-7.