British Comedy Guide
Inside No. 9. Image shows from L to R: Steve Pemberton, Reece Shearsmith
Inside No. 9

Inside No. 9

  • TV comedy drama
  • BBC Two
  • 2014 - 2024
  • 55 episodes (9 series)

Dark comedy anthology series from Reece Shearsmith and Steve Pemberton. Each episode focuses on the goings-on around something to do with the number 9.

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Series 4, Episode 4 - To Have And To Hold

Inside No. 9. Image shows from L to R: Harriet (Nicola Walker), Adrian (Steve Pemberton). Copyright: BBC
Adrian spends his time photographing other couples' weddings, but his own marriage to Harriet is far from happy. Can they renew their vows, spice up their love life and make a fresh start, or have they just run out of love, trust and time?

Further details

Inside No. 9. Image shows from L to R: Harriet (Nicola Walker), Adrian (Steve Pemberton). Copyright: BBC
Inside No. 9. Image shows from L to R: Hannah (Miranda Hennessy), Max (Reece Shearsmith). Copyright: BBC
Inside No. 9. Image shows from L to R: Hannah (Miranda Hennessy), Max (Reece Shearsmith). Copyright: BBC
Inside No. 9. Image shows from L to R: Max (Reece Shearsmith), Hannah (Miranda Hennessy), Harriet (Nicola Walker), Adrian (Steve Pemberton). Copyright: BBC

Broadcast details

Date
Tuesday 23rd January 2018
Time
10pm
Channel
BBC Two
Length
30 minutes

Cast & crew

Guest cast
Nicola Walker Harriet
Steve Pemberton Adrian
Reece Shearsmith Max
Miranda Hennessy Hannah
Magdalena Kurek Agnes
Tom Mulheron Levi
Writing team
Reece Shearsmith Writer
Steve Pemberton Writer
Production team
David Kerr Director
Adam Tandy Producer
Jon Plowman Executive Producer
Steve Pemberton Associate Producer
Reece Shearsmith Associate Producer
Frances Mable Line Producer
Joe Randall-Cutler Editor
Dennis De Groot Production Designer
Tracey Gillham Casting Director
Yves Barre Costume Designer
Helen Speyer Make-up Designer
Christian Henson Composer
James Mather Director of Photography
Mark Challenor 1st Assistant Director

Press

Maybe some of you are sick of hearing it by now, but I personally think that this series of Inside No. 9 is possibly the best so far certainly in terms of variety. After last week's clever Memento-style darkly comic murder mystery, we have a much more subdued tale that has the usual twist-in-the-tale that we've come to expect from the show. To Have and To Hold feels like Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith's tribute to Mike Leigh as it focuses on the strains in the marriage between wedding photographer Adrian (Pemberton) and Harriet (Nicola Walker) over a handful of scenes. Adrian is painted as the most boring man in the world; a jigsaw enthusiast and pot noodle eater he spends more time in his darkroom than he does working on his marriage. Even though Harriet wants to renew their vows, Adrian is still simmering over a dalliance his wife had with a former colleague in a Premier Inn in Wolverhampton. In the episode's most excruciating scene Harriet attempts to inject some spice into their relationship however their role play doesn't go to plan and is soon interrupted by a recently-wed pair (Shearsmith and Miranda Hennessy) who have come to look at their wedding pictures. What I liked most about To Have and To Hold was the attention-to-detail in the scenes between Harriet and Adrian that added to the realism of the piece. Nicola Walker's casting was a piece of genius and her performance here was utterly heartbreaking as the woman stuck in marriage that had lasted due to habit rather than romance. She and Pemberton were utterly believable in their roles as they convinced as a couple who still loved each other but struggled to show it. I was utterly shocked when the twist involving Adrian was first revealed and as ever the writing duo gradually peeled back the dark side of the character before the dark denouement. Like the best episodes of Inside No. 9, To Have and To Hold is an instalment that you can revisit and try to spot all the clues that Pemberton and Shearsmith dropped about the true nature of Adrian's personality. Unlike many of the shows that have debuted this year, every episode of Inside No. 9 has provided memorable moments and that's especially true of To Have and To Hold which may be the best thirty minutes of TV that I've seen so far in 2018.

Matt, The Custard TV, 27th January 2018

Inside No 9 series 4 episode 4 review

This has been a remarkable series of Inside No 9, and this episode is no exception.

Andrew Allen, Cult Box, 24th January 2018

Irony defines Adrian's life. As a wedding photographer, he provides undying records of newlyweds' blossoming bliss - a high-contrast counterpoint to the lack of love left in his own marriage to Harriet. She struggles to reignite an emotional flame long extinguished, but Adrian is reluctant to leave his basement darkroom. The spleen-squeezing unease in this latest episode of Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith's anthology leaves little room for laughter, but is as essential a visit to No 9 as ever.

Mark Gibbings-Jones, The Guardian, 23rd January 2018

Inside No 9: To Have And To Hold

After all the fun - if occasionally murderous fun - in this season of Inside No 9 comes an episode with a distinct chill in the air.

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 23rd January 2018

Inside No 9: relationship drama hides horror

You have to hand it to the creators of Inside No 9. Four series in, their stories still have the power to surprise and shock.

Mark Butler, i Newspaper, 23rd January 2018

Inside No 9: To Have and to Hold, review

Just when you thought this series couldn't get any darker.

Catherine Geee, The Telegraph, 23rd January 2018

Inside No. 9: Series 4, Episode 4 - To Have and To Hold

A terrace house is the setting for this week's tale, about a married couple and some dark secrets.

Ian Wolf, On The Box, 23rd January 2018

Inside No. 9 series 4 episode 4 review

A wedding photographer's tired marriage comes under the microscope in yet another tremendous Inside No. 9 episode.

Louisa Mellor, Den Of Geek, 23rd January 2018

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