The Halloween-styled Friday the 14th has always been one of my favorite Only Fools and Horses episodes :) Here's an article that digs deeper than the mere tropes and parodies set up by the horror genre, and more about the Trotters themselves:
‘Friday
the 14th’ is interesting because it works to highlight the inherent
venality of the Trotter family. While Del, Rodney & even their
crafty Grandad, are at heart good people (and Only Fools would not shine
away from outright sentimentality at points), they are crooked,
opportunistic, and will happily run away from a situation if they feel
the long arm of the law bearing down on them. In this case, what appears
to be the offer of a nice country cottage, rent-free, in Cornwall that
the trio can escape to comes with a caveat – Del has made a deal with
his old friend Boycie, who owns the cottage, to illegally salmon poach
in order to make money from and exploit the local area. This makes the
episode, to some extent, a cautionary tale. The Trotters are threatened
by a dangerous external force for their hubris, for emerging from the
moral vacuum of the crime-ridden, urban London landscape in order to
remove natural resources from Mother Nature. Del placing a tub of
writhing maggots on the dinner table as Rodney eats a curry with rice
foreshadows this juxtaposition, suggesting horror before they even leave
the homestead.
There
is, after all, an opportunistic cheapness to Del-Boy’s world (in which
those around him all orbit). As the series transforms him from
unlicensed trader emerging from a ‘70s of working-class hardship and
economic downturn, into a wannabe ‘yuppie’ and product of aspirational,
neoliberal Thatcherism, he becomes a tragic example of failed British
meritocracy. Del-Boy only gains his fortune, in the end, through dumb
luck – a centuries-old pocket watch that lands the Trotters millions of
pounds. By ‘Time on Our Hands’, the Trotters have become as much
extended family to the viewer as they are to each other, so their
success reads as cathartic, but it is a cheat. Sullivan’s message across
the run of Only Fools and Horses is that Del-Boy is destined to always
be a victim of Thatcherism and a Britain feeding class warfare and City
prosperity, and even when Rodney graduates art college and marries into
the middle-class, his working-class family origins, and his tether to
proxy guardian Del, frequently threaten the aspirational life he seeks
to build for himself. We might love the Trotters but in the best
tradition of comic British heroes, they are losers. At times, they are
even victims.
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