The episodes are available separately on iTunes, Amazon Prime and Netflix with the original broadcast music and no laughter track on "Oh To Be In England".
[1] The episode opens with Damien's christening, shortly after which Del Boy concludes a deal with the vicar to sell "pre-blessed" communion wine from Romania.
An irate Rodney returns home later that night, having learned that Cassandra has important meetings with her bosses at the bank that week and thus cannot go with him.
The episode ends as the Trotter Brothers board their Virgin Atlantic Boeing 747 plane to America (satirically encountering Richard Branson).
Befriending him and Rodney, they hatch a plot to assassinate Del with the intention of tricking the public into thinking that the Don himself has been murdered, thus sparing him the trial and certain imprisonment.
Over the following days, several attempts to kill Del, including shooting him in a beach-side restaurant and sending him off on a jet ski with a broken throttle, fail.
Realising he has just attacked the head of a mafia family, Rodney agrees to return home and the two brothers escape through the window and run, ultimately ending up in the Everglades, dodging the gangsters and an alligator where they meet the holidaying Boycie and Marlene.
After pinning the drug dealing papers on the park ranger station's door, the Trotter brothers go straight to the airport and wait there until their return flight to England, where it is revealed on a news programme that Ochetti has been found guilty on all counts, the Colombians were caught thanks to Del's information, and Rico was arrested for illegally hunting in the Everglades.
Upon returning home, Del Boy and Rodney find stacked boxes of white wine in their flat, as well as a welcoming Raquel and Albert.
It was one of only two episodes to be shot entirely on film (the other being "To Hull and Back" although, unlike that episode, the set of The Nag's Head and the Trotters' flat did not have an extra wall), only three without a laugh track (the others being "To Hull and Back" and "A Royal Flush"), one of three not to use the regular closing music (the others being "The Jolly Boys' Outing" and "Rodney Come Home") and the only episode not to use the regular opening titles and theme music, instead opting for a cover of The Lovin' Spoonful song "Summer in the City", recorded by the Gutter Brothers.