The Beans of Blackadder:A Smegging Monty Python & Rowan Atkitson Movie

Plot
We open with the "It's" man falling off a tall, jagged cliff & running through a mine field a long distance from the camera,the Gumbys looks at the action and laughs,then they got blown,then we cut to Cleese at his desk in the woods laughing until he sees the camrea and says "And now for something completely different,(Long Pause)again" then the "It's" Man with Mr. Bean runs in then they say "IT'S" They get blown up as we fade to the Terry Gilliam's animation sprouting the words 'The Beans of Blackadder Starring Rowan Atikinson & Monty Python’s Flying Circus'.Mr. Bean fall onto the logo with the words falling

Cleese enters a cheese shop saying "I WANT TO BUY SOM' CHEESE!"

Characters

 * The "It's" Man (Palin), a Robinson Crusoe-type castaway with torn clothes and a long, unkempt beard who would appear at the beginning of the programme. Often he is seen performing a long or dangerous task, such as falling off a tall, jagged cliff or running through a mine field a long distance towards the camera before introducing the show by just saying, "It's..." before being abruptly cut off by the opening titles and Terry Gilliam's animation sprouting the words 'Monty Python’s Flying Circus'. It's was an early candidate for the title of the series.
 * A BBC continuity announcer in a dinner jacket (Cleese), seated at a desk, often in highly incongruous locations, such as a forest or a beach. His line, "And now for something completely different," was used variously as a lead-in to the opening titles and a simple way to link sketches. Though Cleese is best known for it, Idle first introduced the phrase in Episode 2, where he introduced a man with three buttocks. It eventually became the show’s catch phrase and served as the title for the troupe’s first movie. In the beginng of the film he says "And now for something completely different,(Long Pause)again" and was combined with the "It's" man in introducing the the movie.


 * The Gumbys, a group of slow-witted individuals identically attired in gumboots (from which they take their name), high-water trousers, braces, Fair Isle tanktops, and round, wire-rimmed glasses, with toothbrush moustachesand knotted handkerchiefs worn on their heads (a stereotype of the English working-class holidaymaker). They hold their arms stiffly at their sides, speak slowly in loud, throaty voices punctuated by frequent grunts and groans, and have a fondness for pointless violence. All of them are surnamed Gumby: D.P. Gumby, R.S. Gumby, etc. Even though all Pythons played Gumbys in the show's run, the character is most closely associated with Michael Palin.