Press clippings Page 2

Year of the Rabbit is a strange but funny beast

It's tempting to just write down all the best one-liners and jokes so you know how good they are, but it would be impossible to do justice to the actors' deadpan delivery. Never has extreme physical violence and brutal murder been so hilarious.

Eleanor Bley Griffiths, Radio Times, 7th June 2019

The Likely Lads Blu-ray review

Although it breaks no new ground, and feels like two episodes of a situation comedy stretched out and filmed on a higher budget, The Likely Lads raises enough laughs to endear it to anyone who already enjoys the original sitcoms.

Greg Jameson, Entertainment Focus, 30th March 2019

Matt Berry's Year Of The Rabbit casting revealed

Keeley Hawes has been announced amongst the supporting cast of upcoming Channel 4 period sitcom Year Of The Rabbit, starring Matt Berry. Alun Armstrong, Sally Phillips and Paul Kaye also enjoy roles in the series.

British Comedy Guide, 30th January 2019

Funny Cow review

Maxine Peake is wonderful as a female comedian.

Louis Barfe, The Daily Express, 29th April 2018

Funny Cow review

If Adrian Shergold's film tells us anything about life in 1970s England, the overriding message is that being a female standup comedian was clearly no laughing matter.

Philip Caveney, Bouquets & Brickbats, 23rd April 2018

Movies about comedy are rarely funny but Funny Cow takes the sad clown cliché to such a grim extreme it becomes almost laughable. Starring the excellent Maxine Peake as an aspiring British stand-up in the sexist, racist, homophobic environs of the Northern working men's clubs of the 1970s and early 1980s, the film around her is such a wilfully incoherent mess it renders her performance all but dead on arrival.

She plays the eponymous Funny Cow (no other character name is given), a battered wife who has apparently found success by transforming the trauma of her life into a stage act that mixes the sort of politically incorrect gags of the era with uncomfortable confessionals about her childhood, her marriage and her surroundings. Using what seems like a television special or a monologue-based theatre show as a framing device, the film deploys random flashbacks (with occasional magical realist flourishes) to various incidents in her life in order to track her evolution from defiant child who stood up to her violent father (Stephen Graham) to self-determining woman able to conquer the male-dominated club circuit with racist and fat-shaming jokes of her own.

Along the way she's mentored by a terminally depressed veteran comic (Alun Armstrong) and meets a cartoonishly conceived bookseller (a woefully miscast Paddy Considine), whose Pygmalion fantasies she's more than happy to exploit as she escapes her brutal marriage to the knuckle-dragging Bob (played by the film's writer Tony Pitts). Blink-and-you'll-miss-them cameos from the likes of Vic Reeves and John Bishop capture some of the sad, broken spirit of the variety circuit, but the film's determination to avoid the rise-fall-redemption character arc of the biopic (even a fictional biopic) backfires. By plotting a more elliptical and impressionistic course - one perhaps inspired by Nicholas Winding Refn's Bronson or the Andy Serkis-starring Ian Dury biopic Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll - Funny Cow might give some sense of the chaos of its protagonist's life, but that's not the same thing as making it compelling on screen. In the end it feels like a hollow and rather pointless exercise.

Alistair Hawkness, The Scotsman, 20th April 2018

Review: Funny Cow

Maxine Peake captivates in a film that takes a serious look at being funny.

Emma Simmonds, The List, 16th April 2018

Why is stand-up film Funny Cow not funny?

It is unfortunate that nothing Maxine Peake's stand-up comic says, either on or off stage, is remotely amusing.

Ryan Gibley, The New Statesman, 13th April 2018

Funny Cow review - Maxine Peake blazes

Peake is hypnotically belligerent as an ambitious club performer trampling over prejudice and sticky carpets on the 1970s comedy circuit.

Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian, 11th October 2017

'Funny Cow': London review

Maxine Peake is defiantly good as a Northern comic working the sexist circuit of the 1970s and 80s.

Wendy Ide, Screen Daily, 10th October 2017

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