The Last Chancers
| The Last Chancers | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Sitcom |
| No. of series | 1 |
| No. of episodes | 8 |
| Original release | |
| Network | E4 |
| Release | November 21, 2002 |
The Last Chancers is British television sitcom, originally a one-off show screened under the Comedy Lab banner at 11:40pm on Thursday 21 November 2002. The show was later developed into a five-part series which was broadcast on E4 in December 2002. Currently the Channel 4 website has one series consisting of eight episodes listed.
History
[edit | edit source]The show was initially screened under the Comedy Lab banner. Stephen Merchant directed the initial screening, which featured the actors Adam Buxton and Steve John Shepherd. Channel 4 subsequently slated the show for production in two instalments.[1] Tony MacMurray and Buxton wrote The Last Chancers series.[2] The show is a comedy drama.[3]
Cast
[edit | edit source]- Adam Buxton - Johnny
- Steve John Shepherd - Paul
- Kevin Bishop - Dan
- Patrick Driver - Brian
- Tony MacMurray - Alex
- Alice Lowe - Claire
- Joe van Moyland - Tom
Crew
[edit | edit source]- Tony MacMurray - Writer
- Stephen Merchant - Director
- James Harding - Executive Producer
- Richard Osborne - Executive Producer
- Sally Martin - Producer
Reception
[edit | edit source]In a mixed review, Rupert Smith of The Guardian wrote, "Any programme that involves puking, guitar solos and incredibly stupid drummers is always going to get a thumbs-up from me, but I wished The Last Chancers had decided whether it was vicious satire, feelgood comedy or laddish high-jinks."[2] Referring to Valerie Edmond, The Sunday Times television critic John Dugdale criticized the show, writing, "Underused on TV since The Crow Road, Edmond is a welcome signing; but the comedy's problem is its hero, who suffers as many humiliations as Brent and Alan Partridge but lacks their compelling and richly imagined awfulness."[4]
The Independent's Thomas Sutcliffe praised the show, calling it "quite strongly reminiscent of Peep Show, with its anti-climactic rhythms and loser slapstick, but good enough not to suffer by the comparison".[5] In a positive review, Gabrielle Starkey of The Times said the show is "well observed and written", "funny", and found every character to be "well-defined and instantly recognisable without being total cliches".[6]
References
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External links
[edit | edit source]- BBC Comedy Guide article
- Channel4.com article
- The Last Chancers at IMDbLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 29: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
- Channel4.com episode guide
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