Press clippings

Classic comedy dramas added to BBC iPlayer

Cardiac Arrest, Hamish Macbeth, Monarch Of The Glen and Making Out have been added to BBC iPlayer.

British Comedy Guide, 14th September 2023

Cold Feet review

What? Yet another unexpected family visit?

Carol Midgley, The Times, 21st January 2020

Cold Feet, series 9 episode 2, review

Emotional honesty, plus a blast from the past for Adam.

Anita Singh, The Telegraph, 20th January 2020

Andie MacDowell is the new Cuckoo in the Thompson nest

Hollywood star Andie MacDowell has been confirmed to replace Taylor Lautner in the new series of Cuckoo, which debuts on Friday 4th January 2019.

British Comedy Guide, 7th December 2018

Cuckoo, series 4 ep 1, review

There's still life and laughs in this daft family comedy.

Catherine Gee, The Telegraph, 6th August 2018

Cuckoo season four review

Having killed off its title character three seasons ago, this perky comedy revels in an anything-can-happen perversity.

Tim Dowling, The Guardian, 4th August 2018

Why did you come back, Cold Feet?

Returning for a seventh series, the show has sacrificed nuance and realism in favour of caricature and soap-opera silliness.

Fiona Sturges, The Guardian, 2nd September 2017

Cuckoo returns with 2 more series

Hit BBC Three sitcom Cuckoo has been recommissioned for a further two series, taking it to at least five series in length. All the cast are due to return for the new runs.

British Comedy Guide, 4th April 2016

BBC Three have brought back Cuckoo, a sitcom that is still named after a character who flew off into the sunset after the show's first series. I personally thought that Robin French and Kieran Quirke's comedy improved during its second run thanks to Twilight star Taylor Lautner whose Dale replaced Andy Samberg's irritating title character. I was surprised how good Lautner was in his role of the straight man up against Greg Davies' frantic lawyer Ken as the two formed a perfect odd couple relationship. We see Dale living in Shanghai and having to defend himself after conducting an illicit relationship with his boss's daughter. Forced to return to Lichfield, Dale seeks sanctuary in the home of Ken and his pregnant wife Lorna (Helen Baxendale) the latter of whom is expecting her baby any day now. As we're now on the third series of Cuckoo I do feel the cast are comfortable in each other's company and therefore the chemistry between the main players is superb. Davies and Baxendale are especially believable as the central down-to-Earth couple even if they both struggle with their West Midlands accents from time to time. Lautner is also great in the role of the rather simple Dale however I'm not quite sure how much of a stretch it is for him to play a good-looking simpleton. Whilst the cast are on form, the material is sadly lacking and there were very few moments during this first episode of series three that actually raised more than a titter from me. In fact the central storyline, in which Ken dreaded the fact that he would have to go on paternity leave, to be quite old-fashioned. In fact the central joke that it would be beneath Ken to look after his child whilst his wife deigned to go back to work felt like something from another decade and felt especially dated when you consider that this series is one of the first to debut on the BBC's new online platform. The final set piece, which involves Ken getting stuck in the hospital while Lorna gives birth, feels like something out of Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em rather than a contemporary sitcom aimed at a young audience. So, whilst the cast deserve some praise for working with what they've been given, overall the third series of Cuckoo hasn't exactly got off to the best of starts which begs the question why it got brought back at all in the first place.

Matt, The Custard TV, 19th February 2016

Cold Feet reunion - will the 90s hit work in 2015?

Robert Bathurst, Fay Ripley, John Thomson, Hermione Norris and James Nesbitt have been seen together on the set of ITV's revival - but will the show survive without Helen Baxendale?

Chitra Ramaswamy, The Guardian, 20th January 2016

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