Press clippings Page 11

Red Dwarf Craig's costume change

Red Dwarf star Craig Charles said the cast's costumes have had to be altered to allow for their middle-aged spread.

The Sun, 27th August 2011

Red Dwarf is coming back, say Charles and Barrie

Craig Charles has revealed that two more series of Red Dwarf will go into production in 2011.

David Bentley, Coventry Telegraph, 6th June 2010

Oh smeg yes. After a decade in limbo, the sci-fi comedy series returns with a new three-parter, showing on consecutive nights over the Easter weekend. All the main cast members are present and correct which means no radical rework of concept or characters - Lister is still a loveable punk-poet slob, Rimmer a pugnacious coward, the Cat vain and stupid and Kryten riddled with neuroses.

The creators have definitely pandered to the hardcore fans, so anyone hoping for any character development will be sorely disappointed. But this is a comedy not a highfalutin' drama and so long as fresh mayhem is unfolding, nothing else really matters. The plot involves the foursome returning to Earth (for reasons that can't be divulged here) where, among other things, they pay a visit to Craig Charles's real paymasters on Coronation Street. A welcome return.

Joe Clay, The Times, 10th April 2009

For Craig Charles, one of the highlights of making this three-part special was finding he could still fit into the leather jacket and trousers that he wore as Dave Lister 21 years ago.

All the cast (minus Holly in either of his / her incarnations) are here, too - Chris Barrie as hologram Arnold Rimmer, Danny John-Jules as Cat and Robert Llewellyn as Kryten - for this much-anticipated reunion.

The sci-fi comedy ran for eight series on BBC2 between 1988 and 1999, picking up an International Emmy on its intergalactic travels. So well done to Dave (the channel, that is, not Lister) for doing what the BBC never managed - getting the crew of the Red Dwarf back to Earth.

Actually though, that's down to guest star Sophie Winkleman - a comedy favourite thanks to her Peep Show appearances. She plays the new holographic Senior Science Officer Katerina Bartikovsky, who works out a way to send Lister to a new dimension.

Katerina's arrival is bad news for Rimmer - this spaceship's not big enough for two holograms - but good news for Lister as, being the last surviving human, it will be his job to go forth and multiply.

Tonight's episode might feel a bit flat as the crew battle a sea monster but, in the next two instalments - tomorrow night and Sunday - there'll be plenty of surprises as they arrive on Earth in the year 2009 and find themselves on a Manchester street you'll certainly recognise.

The Mirror, 10th April 2009

New 'Red Dwarf' - Is it better than smeg?

Packed with more emotional content than before, and bolstered by a moving performance by Craig Charles as the urine recyc-guzzling last human, Red Dwarf: Back To Earth will hopefully lead on to more adventures from the quartet. The joy of seeing the cast back together is immense, but this good will won't last too long unless some fresh writing blood manages to board Red Dwarf.

Digital Spy, 9th April 2009

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