Mr. Neville Shunt
Voice Over: (John Cleese)
That was an excerpt from the latest West End hit 'It all happened on the 11.20
from Hainault to Redhill via Horsham and Reigate, calling at Carshalton
Beeches, Malmesbury, Tooting Bec, and Croydon West'. The author is Mr. Neville Shunt.
(Shunt sitting among mass of
railway junk, at typewriter, typing away madly.)
Shunt: (Terry J, typing)
Chuff, chuff, chuffwoooooch, woooooch! Sssssssss, sssssssss! Diddledum,
diddledum, diddlealum. Toot, toot. The train now standing at platform eight,
tch, tch, tch, diddledum, diddledum. Chuffff chuffffiTff eeeeeeeeeaaaaaaaaa
Vooooommmmm.
(Cut to an critic.
Superimposed caption: 'GAVIN MILLARRRRRRRRRR')
Art Critic: (John Cleese)
Some people have made the mistake of seeing Shunt's work as a load of rubbish
about railway timetables, but clever people like me, who talk loudly in
restaurants, see this as a deliberate ambiguity, a plea for understanding in a
mechanized world. The points are frozen, the beast is dead. What is the
difference? What indeed is the point? The point is frozen, the beast is late
out of Paddington. The point is taken. If La Fontaine's elk would spurn Tom
Jones the engine must be our head, the dining car our esophagus, the guard's
van our left lung, the cattle truck our shins, the first-class compartment the
piece of skin at the nape of the neck and the level crossing an electric elk
called Simon. The clarity is devastating. But where is the ambiguity? It's over
there in a box. Shunt is saying the 8.15 from Gillingham when in reality he
means the 8.13 from Gillingham. The train is the same only the time is altered.
Ecce homo, ergo elk. La Fontaine knew his sister and knew her bloody well. The
point is taken, the beast is molting, the fluff gets up your nose. The illusion
is complete; it is reality, the reality is illusion and the ambiguity is the
only truth. But is the truth, as Hitchcock observes, in the box? No there isn't
room, the ambiguity has put on weight. The point is taken, the elk is dead, the
beast stops at Swindon, Chabrol stops at nothing, I'm having treatment and La
Fontaine can get knotted.
(Cut to man at desk.)
Man: (Michael Palin) Gavin
Millar...
(Cut to another man.)
Another Man: (Terry Jones)
...rrrrrrr...
(Cut to first man.)
Man: ... was not talking to
Neville Shunt. From the world of the theatre we turn to the world of dental
hygiene. No, no, no, no. From the world of the theatre we move to the silver
screen. We honour one of the silver screen's outstanding writer-dentists...
writer-directors, Martin Curry who is visiting London to have a tooth out, for
the pre-molar, er... premiere of his filling, film next Toothday... Tuesday, at
the Dental Theatre... Film Theatre. Martin Curry talking to Matthew Palate...
Padget.