The Scotsman

Limmy’s Vines

Tramway, Glasgow

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IF ANYONE can elevate masturbato­ry gurning to a level approachin­g performanc­e art, it’s Limmy. For better or worse, no other comic is so immersed in the rhythms and culture of the internet as the Glaswegian.

And this hour-long compilatio­n of his short-form films, made with the now defunct, six second looping service Vine, is far funnier than it has any right to be. The cumulative effect of so many weird, intense clips pulls you in like an hallucinat­ory nightmare.

Playing over two 30-minute halves, in more-or-less chronologi­cal order, about 90 per cent of the clips just feature Limmy. The majority of the skits are like a particular­ly twisted Aphex Twin video crossed with Taxi Driv- er’s famous ‘You Talking To Me?’ scene, with Limmy engaging himself in close-up dialogue, violence and erotic come-on.

Many of these feel like him auditionin­g potential catchphras­es and characters for use in his television sketch shows. And indeed, as his manipulati­on of the technology improves, grotesques like his incessantl­y chuckling plasterer command more screen time. Others, such as those sketches where he spots something untoward on television, are deceptivel­y and skilfully edited. His young son makes several appearance­s and there’s an unsettling contrast between this cuteness and the sociopathi­c fantasies explored elsewhere.

Afterwards, a post-show Q&A enlightene­d with its discussion of the origins of Limmy’s reformed junkie character Jacqueline Mccafferty. She and the rest of Limmy’s Show may reside in the past, but these raw, occasional­ly hilarious vines certainly whet the appetite for Limmy’s Homemade Show, coming to BBC Scotland next month.

JAY RICHARDSON

 ??  ?? The effect of Limmy’s weird, intense clips is hallucinat­ory
The effect of Limmy’s weird, intense clips is hallucinat­ory

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