Neat and Tidy: Adventures Beyond Belief (also known as Adventures Beyond Belief) is a British comedy adventure television series that aired for five episodes from February 12 to March 11, 1988, on Channel 4 and was created by Tony Brooke, Kevin Lygo and Marcus Thompson.[1] It featured a soundtrack of original Elvis Presley music including Guitar Man (song) as the theme song.[2][3][4]
Wimpish hero, Nick Neat (Skyler Cole) is a motor mechanic riding around the world on a Harley Davidson motorcycle on the run for a murder he did not commit. He comes across Tena Tidy (Jill Whitlow), the daughter of a gangster, on the run from school in search of "beer and biology". Assorted evil villains pursue the pair, including Elke Sommer, Graham Stark and Thick Wilson.
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | TBA | Marcus Thompson | Kevin Lygo, Anthony Rooke, Marcus Thompson | February 12, 1988 | |
2 | "Morocco" | Marcus Thompson | Kevin Lygo, Anthony Rooke, Marcus Thompson | February 19, 1988 | |
Nick and Tena find themselves in a casbah | |||||
3 | "Wild West" | Marcus Thompson | Kevin Lygo, Anthony Rooke, Marcus Thompson | February 26, 1988 | |
Nick and Tena are in the Wild West fighting against barroom bullies and a half-naked sheriff | |||||
4 | "India" | Marcus Thompson | Kevin Lygo, Anthony Rooke, Marcus Thompson | March 4, 1988 | |
Nick and Tena are in India, where Tena is tricked into joining the harem of a Maharaja | |||||
5 | TBA | Marcus Thompson | Kevin Lygo, Anthony Rooke, Marcus Thompson | March 11, 1988 | |
Final episode |
Brian Taylor of Hull Daily Mail wrote, "If you like humour which is bizarre in situations which are highly improbable, Neat and Tidy is your kind of programme."[5] Ian Macfarlane said in Cambridge Evening News, "Look out for an explosion of action, adventure and wild humour, to the sound of original Elvis Presley recordings, in this new series."[6]
In a review of the first episode, critic Renata Rubnikowicz suggested it would be a "zany, wacky, a cult comedy hit", writing it was "definitely a jolly first episode, with Mafia connections and Euro locations".[7] The Guardian's Sandy Smithies stated, "this wildly camp new comedy is worth taking the earplugs out for".[8]