completedit wrote: » I never got the point of this scene. He hands Ted a VCR and based off Ted's reaction he is pretty impressed. This was 1996 so I imagine VCR's were still a luxury good here in Ireland. But I don't understand, the guy is from communist Cuba. Why does he have access to such a system when the one thing we think of communist countries is shortages and a lack of capitalist luxury goods like VCR players. Is the point the Catholic church is corrupt so the priest has access to such a high tech good? Have I missed something?
CSSE09 wrote: » Ah it was a very basic model though
completedit wrote: » Hahah I must have just been poor. Didn't get a DVD player till 2003. That explains it.
Rothko wrote: » DVDs may have started in the mid-90's but they certainly weren't popular here until the early 2000's
completedit wrote: » It's always puzzled me. Never got the scene. Want to get to the bottom of it.
Loafing Oaf wrote: » You're way overthinking this. The (pretty rudimentary) gag is the bit about a 'simple example of Cuban handicraft.' The bit I never got was: MRS. DOYLE: You do like pheasant, don't you Father? TED: Pheasant? I love pheasant. MRS. DOYLE: Well there's a little clue. The thing you'll be eating likes pheasant as well.
completedit wrote: » Was that the point? I'm too young to know what type of VCR would have been in at the time? The way the priest had a bit of a swagger I just assumed he was wealthy.
unhappys10 wrote: » Taken you 24 years to realise you missed something?
L1011 wrote: » Taking a world with such things as the age of the 'new' car, the pissant amounts of money Ted bets and acts like the world has ended if he loses and so on, a VCR would be a very generous gift. It also set up a plotline anyway. By 1998 when we got a (massive, clonky, unreliable Philips) DVD player they were already taking up a significant amount of space in Xtravision locally - and remember they use less space than VHS tapes. VCRs held on for home recording for many years but DVD was already popular by '98 and probably dominant by 2000 for new purchase and rental. DVD recorders were only on the market affordably later than that, and realistically crap, which is why VHS held on until DVRs.
Woke Hogan wrote: » I'm surprised to see so many people misremembering the prevalence of DVDs in Ireland. Very few people outside of the techheads or wealthy middle class ponces in Dublin used them before late 2000.
JohnnyFlash wrote: » You strike me as the sort of fellow who picked one up 2nd hand from Donedeal circa 2009 along with 6 black bags of DVDs which were sold by the kilo.