Press clippings Page 8
Shameless outtakes
Video of outtakes. Shameless slob David Threlfall has a Frankly ripping time as he bursts out into laughter during filming the Channel 4 show.
The Sun, 20th May 2009Shameless is back. The days when it was a semi-autobiographical family saga written by Paul Abbott are long gone, and for years now it has been jumping sharks on a regular basis. Despite that, it still has a raucous energy and an irreverent, devil-may-care humour, and David Threlfall's performance as Frank Gallagher is up there among the finest comic performances to be found anywhere on television in the past ten years.
David Chater, The Times, 27th January 2009David Threlfall interview
David Threlfall reveals Frank Gallagher's top tip for surviving the recession... just steal everything.
James Rampton, The Telegraph, 26th January 2009One day someone will make a television programme in which people from the south of England, particularly Londoners, are not emotionally frigid workaholics, and people from the north are not loveably daft pleasure-seekers with warm, beating hearts of gold. Shameless (Channel 4) is not that programme - it is, however, many other things. I couldn't help feeling, as I watched the repulsive Frank Gallagher (David Threlfall) head-butting his son and drinking himself into a stinking stupor that I was being encouraged in some way to forgive him. The fact that, despite my best efforts, I couldn't entirely hate him says much for the sterling quality of Paul Abbott's writing, and the amazing performance of every single cast member.
Shameless is, for all sorts of reasons, the drama about which everyone is talking at the moment. It addresses just about all TV's current obsessions: parenting, sexuality, substance abuse, social ills, the Blair government - the only thing missing so far is cosmetic surgery, but that may yet come. It is full of gallows humour and funny one-liners. It features acres of firm young flesh of both sexes, and last night it gave us a rare TV sighting of a milkman with a full erection. Like Footballers' Wives or Queer As Folk, it's got something to say and it knows how to say it. And it really couldn't have come at a better time for Channel 4.
Rupert Smith, The Guardian, 21st January 2004