Sitcom set in a future Britain that's been invaded by the USSR and turned into a Communist country. God alone knows why there was only one series made. George Cole is great as ever as the Dad of the title, and his role is a great character, a true believer in or natural suck-up to the regime, forever scolding his family that all is for the best in spite of shortages, bureaucracy and repression, exalting the great leader Chairman Hoskins, and piously correcting any wrong thoughts that slip out with his eyes turned up to the spy satellites that may be listening. Almost a sort of soviet Uriah Heep, or a Micawber of the Five Year Plan, or a British version of some character out of Eastern European satire. In some ways he's awful, but he's not only a great comic turn but also invested with a certain pathos - he'll never get the party membership card he dreams of, he's too innocent to have the sense to know when to bribe people, he may be the only person left who believes in the system.
The exuberant invention and attention to detail in the world-building is truly excellent and puts many more serious alt-worlds to shame. The writing is informed by the absurd but awful truth of life in the Communist Bloc before the Berlin Wall fell. Alarmingly, there are bits that are relevant today. But only about half the jokes are satirical - a lot are more character-based and revolve around Cole's warm and likeable cockney family and their exasperated affection for him, or his more highly-sexed navvy wife's attempts to make him pay as much attention to her as to Chairman Hoskins - and there's malapropism and slapstick and downright silliness in the mix. I found it very entertaining and frequently laugh-out-loud. As a bonus for bookworms, Episode 3 is a tribute to 'Le Grand Meaulnes'. Really. At the time of writing there's no DVD available (sort it out, Beeb) but several episodes can be found online.