Great Night Out. Image shows from L to R: Hodge (Lee Boardman), Daz (Stephen Walters), Beggsy (William Ash), Glyn (Craig Parkinson)
Great Night Out

Great Night Out

  • TV comedy drama
  • ITV1
  • 2013
  • 6 episodes (1 series)

ITV comedy drama about four thirtysomething men who gather for a weekly night on the tiles in Stockport. Stars William Ash, Stephen Walters, Craig Parkinson, Lee Boardman, Naomi Bentley and more.

Press clippings Page 3

ITV has a great reputation of making drama, but not such a great reputation for comedy. Great Night Out seems to fall somewhere in between; not bad, but not great either.

The series follows four friends from Stockport: self-appointed leader Hodge (Lee Boardman), divorcee Beggsy (William Ash), nervous Glyn (Craig Parkinson), and pessimistic Daz (Stephen Walters). The quartet each spend a big night out, often with their wives, girlfriends and love interest, while getting impractical advice from their local pub landlord Warren (Ricky Tomlinson).

In this opening episode, Hodge has cocked-up his anniversary party, which is being held at a big hotel in Manchester (the entrance into which results in a chorus of boos from the Stockport Four). As Hodge parks his car he thinks he knocks over someone, but it turns out that the person is a drunk wanting to go to London. He, Beggsy and Daz get him on the train, only to find out he is a groom who has ditched his wife at the altar. The two rush to get him off the train, but (perhaps all too predictably), they don't get him off the train in time and they find themselves going to London. Meanwhile, Glyn "stalks" his childhood sweetheart to her salsa class, with help from Warren.

As I mention, some of the plot elements do seem to be somewhat predictable, as are some of the characters. For example, there is the instant dislike of the Australian man now married to Beggsy's ex, who has also taken his daughter down under. However, there are some nice visual gags, such a roadside seller of fridges called "Sellfridges", and other odd moments such as accusations that Fireman Sam might be gay.

These moments are fleeting, however, in a show that will probably not receive the kindest of obituaries...

Ian Wolf, Giggle Beats, 14th January 2013

ITV1's Great Night Out - review

This new comedy drama has four likeable leads but has an uneven plot structure.

Unreality TV, 13th January 2013

Review: Great Night Out, ITV1

Whereas The Worst Week of My Life had an internal logic to it, Great Night Out's farce is scarcely believable, and I found myself counting the ways in which the opening-episode scenario simply couldn't have worked within its time-frame, which is never a good sign.

Veronica Lee, The Arts Desk, 12th January 2013

Review: Great Night Out

Don't get me wrong, the show itself is quite a laugh, centred on a bunch of likeable thirty-something mates from Stockport, but unfortunately it's hard not to think of these guys in previous, less cuddly roles.

Mike Ward, Daily Star, 11th January 2013

Worst Week of My Life was one of the standout rom-coms of recent years. ITV's new series comes to us from the same writing team, but they've mislaid their deft touch with caricatures and comic mishaps. Instead we get a fairly heavy-footed farce revolving around four 30-something lads from Stockport - all likeable and well acted, but at the mercy of laboured plots. For instance there's a salsa class full of embarrassment (two blokes have to dance together!) and a getting-the-groom-to-his-wedding caper that goes wrong in ways we can see coming from the Pennines.

Underneath the prehistoric take on relationships and gender differences, it's a series with a warm heart and a sense of fun. What feels odd is that a drama about 30-somethings in 2013 should look and feel so proudly and resolutely old-fashioned.

David Butcher, Radio Times, 11th January 2013

The thirtysomething comedy-drama has been a holy grail for ITV ever since Cold Feet shuffled off-screen almost a decade ago. The channel's latest foray into the genre follows a quartet of mismatched but tightly knit Stockport chums enjoying a farcically disjointed weekly get-together while the long-suffering women in their lives show them how it should be done. It's pretty dated in its attitudes (boys go to the football then the pub, girls go on the razzle in a wine bar), and a certain goofy charm can't compensate for an absence of either many laughs or much drama. This in spite of spirited efforts from a cast including Ricky Tomlinson, Rebekah Staton and Craig Parkinson. Inoffensive but equally inconsequential.

Gabriel Tate, Time Out, 11th January 2013

Comedy drama from the makers of The Worst Week Of My Life, with four 30-ish lads from Stockport, each cut from a different stereotype - cuckolded husband, brash divorcee, shambling singleton and erm, the other one - venturing on a night out. This week's caper finds the quartet stuck on a London-bound train with a reluctant groom, and on cuckolded husband's anniversary, too. Light on gags but strong performances (including turns from Ricky Tomlinson and Isy Suttie) elevate this into watchable territory.

Gwilym Mumford, The Guardian, 11th January 2013

This new sitcom comes from the same writing team that gave us The Worst Week Of My Life, but despite a cast which includes Ricky Tomlinson as the local pub landlord, Great Night Out offers more gentle and much more obvious laughs.

Set in Stockport, it's a male bonding comedy about four ­life-long friends and Stockport County supporters played by William Ash, Lee Boardman, Craig Parkinson and Stephen Walters.

Their not-so-great night out this week finds them in Manchester's posh Midland Hotel attempting to celebrate the fifth wedding ­anniversary of their unofficial leader, Hodge.

The cast, which also includes Susie Blake and Isy Suttie in peripheral roles as well as Jessica Gunning as the Friend From Hell, should provide plenty of material for more misadventures each week. But when the biggest laughs of the episode go not to any of the leads but to a character billed only as Train Attendant, then ­something's gone a bit wrong somewhere.

Jane Simon, The Mirror, 11th January 2013

Great Night Out preview

Some comedies take an episode or two to find their feet, but with Great Night Out, it all comes together from the off.

The Scotsman, 11th January 2013

Great Night Out is a comedy drama about four thirtysomething mates from Stockport, whose principal interests are football, banter, women and the pub. That is also about as deep as their characterisation goes, leaving the quartet looking for all the world like stereotypes in search of a lager advert to occupy.

Episode 1 ambles along inoffensively enough, neatly interweaving a trio of plots concerning salsa classes, an anniversary celebration and a runaway groom on a London-bound train, but despite several winning performances I never really engaged or identified with any of the main characters.

This was a problem further compounded by two scene-stealing cameos from Jessica Gunning and Alex Lowe, as an obnoxiously insensitive party crasher and an endearingly bizarre Lancashire salsa teacher respectively. The characters charged with actually carrying the series looked very dull by comparison.

Great Night Out has so far provided nothing more than an okay night in, but things may improve as the series settles into its run. A few more laughs certainly wouldn't go amiss.

Harry Venning, The Stage, 11th January 2013

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