Press clippings Page 17
Count Arthur Strong and the comforts of sitcom
When life hurts, well-crafted, traditional sitcom like Count Arthur Strong can be an indispensable salve...
Louisa Mellor, Den Of Geek, 26th September 2016For the British, sitcoms aren't just entertainment, they're much more important than that. Over the past half-century, they've been a means for us to discuss race, gender, sexuality and - again and again, deep into the past and no doubt far into the future - class. This cheery accompaniment to the BBC's sitcom season enlists Steve Coogan, Graham Linehan and many more for a whistlestop survey of TV's funniest, sharpest half
Phil Harrison, The Guardian, 12th September 2016Undoubted comedy of the week was Motherland, a terribly truthful exposition of what it means to battle between being the "good" mother - a flawlessly moneyed, pretty, organised and quietly angry Lucy Punch - and the hopeless, exemplified here by Diane Morgan, who lives off frozen food, only gives a forlorn what-the-bugger-now sigh when she severs her finger, and is quietly happy.
Caught in the middle, as I suspect an entire 90% of British mothers are and always have been, is the phenomenal Anna Maxwell Martin as Julia, who makes the one mistake - one! - of lying, once. When asked, by the impossibly kind school to which she ferries with difficulties her two children, whether she had forgotten it was half-term, she opts for a proudly cheerful "No. No?" and so mires herself in a day of tense phone calls, criminal driving, accidental and deliberate snobbery, blood, wine and insane hunger while trying to hold down a job in event management. She's due later in her hellish week to have Peter Mandelson introduce the Women in Construction awards, which deserves an award of its own. As does the terse "I don't have to come to the office for a whole day to watch Elaine print out a press release."
"What time is it now?" she begs Liz (Morgan) as they struggle with their many kids, with prayers for it to be about 4.30pm, or if possible midnight. "Just after midday." "Fucking HELL." It's written by, among others, Sharon Horgan and Graham Linehan, features the most fascinating annoying dad yet written, and is a sure triumph.
Euan Ferguson, The Observer, 11th September 2016Motherland review
Sharon Horgan and Graham Linehan's slapstick sitcom shows the fullblown apocalypse of child-rearing.
Tim Jonze, The Guardian, 7th September 2016Motherland, BBC Two, review
Promising pilot of comedy about middle-class parenting.
Veronica Lee, The Arts Desk, 7th September 2016Mumsy stuff gives me the boak. Reading about this new comedy I was immediately left cold and queasy: a sitcom about the stresses of "middle-class motherhood"? No thanks. And then I watched it and loved it, because the glorious, furious, stressed-out mother in this is clearly also nauseated by the horrors of motherhood.
Anna Maxwell Martin plays Julia, a frantically busy working mother who goes through hell trying to take the brats to school, only to find it's closed for half-term. Her mum is refusing to babysit any longer and Amanda, the soulless blonde Queen of the Alpha Mummies at the trendy cafe admires Julia for being able to hold down a job and simply "switch off" her family. Oh, I would just "hate myself too much", she simpers with silky poison. I was surprised at how much I loved this, given the recent glut of miserable sitcom pilots, but this one is written by Graham Linehan and Sharon Horgan. Enough said.
Julie McDowall, The National (Scotland), 6th September 2016Motherland has realities of school run down to a tee
Modern parents will recognise themselves - and cringe - in this pilot comedy from Catastrophe's Sharon Horgan and Father Ted's Graham Linehan, says Ben Dowell.
Ben Dowell, Radio Times, 6th September 2016Motherland preview
Frenetic, stressy and trying to juggle several balls at once... the whole tone of Motherland has a lot of parallels with the chaotic realities of parenthood, which it represents so well.
Steve Bennett, Chortle, 6th September 2016BBC Landmark Sitcom Season: the pilots review
In my last post I looked at three of the sitcom revivals that the BBC have produced but alongside these pieces, this new season also includes five new sitcom pilots. Over the next two weeks, all five of these shows will air and in this article I will pass judgement on them all.
Matt Donnelly, The Custard TV, 6th September 2016Motherland - review
It's straight to the naughty step if the BBC declines to commission a full series.
Ed Power, The Telegraph, 6th September 2016