The visual style mimics high-end BBC documentaries, featuring sweeping shots of Cunk standing on windy cliffs and stroking old walls. This prestige aesthetic contrasts sharply with her commentary on the Victorian era, which she summarizes as a time when everyone was very serious, wore too many clothes, and invented the chimney.
Ultimately, "The Empire Strikes Back" serves as a satirical mirror to traditional historical narratives. By asking the "wrong" questions—like whether the Spanish Armada was a type of spicy dip—Cunk exposes the absurdity often found in nationalistic storytelling. It is a brilliant, bumbling journey through Britain's most expansionist period. Cunk on Britain - S01E02 The Empire Strikes Back
Cunk navigates the rise of the British Empire with the grace of a toddler in a porcelain shop. She investigates how a small, damp island managed to own nearly everything in the world before eventually losing it all behind the sofa of history. The episode highlights Cunk’s signature blend of profound historical ignorance and startlingly earnest questioning. By asking the "wrong" questions—like whether the Spanish