British Comedy Guide
Sex Education. Otis Milburn (Asa Butterfield). Copyright: Eleven Film
Asa Butterfield

Asa Butterfield

  • 27 years old
  • English
  • Actor

Press clippings Page 6

Sex Education season 2 review

The saturated palette, a season one controversy, is now essential to the functioning of the show.

Ed Cumming, The Independent, 16th January 2020

Sex Education, season 2 review

Sweet, funny, admirable - but not very sexy.

Anita Singh, The Telegraph, 16th January 2020

Sex Education: a classic, both horny and morally good

On paper it should have been a disaster, but the second season of Netflix's high-school drama is more than the sum of its parts.

Joel Golby, The Guardian, 11th January 2020

Asa Butterfield interview

Sex Education, the taboo-busting teenage drama, is returning to Netflix for a second season. Ed Potton talks dirty with its British star.

The Times, 9th January 2020

Asa Butterfield: interview

The former child star has won rave reviews for the hit Netflix show. So why does he feel ambivalent about acting?

Tom Lamont, The Guardian, 28th December 2019

Greed, review

Steve Coogan's satire of the filthy rich is torn between lecturing and sniggering.

Tim Robey, The Telegraph, 9th October 2019

Greed review - Steve Coogan gleams in knockabout satire

Michael Winterbottom's entertaining mockumentary about a high-street fashion tycoon presents a hideous carnival of obscene wealth, vanity and moral squalor.

Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian, 12th September 2019

Sex Education: warm, witty and a little wise

The Netflix show is teen drama in the best 1980s tradition.

Tim Black, Spiked, 13th February 2019

Netflix orders more Sex Education

Netflix's latest British comedy, the acclaimed Sex Education, has been renewed for a second series.

British Comedy Guide, 1st February 2019

Sex Education is deeply weird

It's rather bracing, in this cultural moment, to find a TV series so casually accepting of teenage sex (everyone is having it, and if they're not they want to be, and the script treats this as normal and healthy and good). But the show is also deeply weird.

Rachel Cooke, The New Statesman, 23rd January 2019

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