Press clippings Page 11
What The Inbetweeners did next...
Simon Bird, Joe Thomas, James Buckley and Blake Harrison have come a long way since they left Rudge Park Comprehensive behind.
Ellie Walker-Arnott, Radio Times, 17th January 2013The Inbetweeners star James Buckley marries girlfriend
James Buckley has married his girlfriend Clair Meek. The Inbetweeners star, who plays Jay in the comedy, wed Meek in a Scottish ceremony yesterday.
Frances Taylor, Digital Spy, 4th November 2012James Buckley: 'The Inbetweeners will never return'
James Buckley, one of the stars of The Inbetweeners, has said that show is almost certain to never return.
NME, 10th May 2012The Inbetweeners: 'Movie's success doesn't make sense'
Blake Harrison, Joe Thomas, James Buckley and Simon Bird on the year they made the most successful British comedy movie in history.
Tom Lamont, The Observer, 18th December 2011James Buckley and pregnant girlfriend gear up for baby
James Buckley looks a million miles away from the randy teenager he plays on screen. The 22-year-old actor appears to have grown up as he and his fiancee did some last minute shopping for their unborn baby.
Daily Mail, 16th October 2011Biting political satire has never really been The Comic Strip's main selling point.
But films such as a "A Fistful Of Travellers' Cheques" or "Five Go Mad In Dorset", which took the mickey out of spaghetti westerns and Enid Blyton novels, proved that you don't always need a big target to score a cracking comedy bullseye.
Their latest effort - the first for six years - is a peculiar, stylish mishmash that re-imagines the Iraq Inquiry as a black and white film noir. Unfortunately, not all of it works, perhaps because their confusing vision of the 1960s contains songs from both The Beatles and Duran Duran.
That said, Stephen Mangan - of Green Wing and Alan Partridge fame - makes a surprisingly plausible stand-in for the former, guitar-strumming Prime Minister who, very much like Corrie's John Stape, becomes an almost accidental serial killer.
As the bodies pile up, he's pursued by a pair of policemen played by Robbie Coltrane and The Inbetweeners' James Buckley, all the while maintaining an air of innocence.
There's no appearances from stalwarts such as Dawn French or Adrian Edmondson this time around, but Jennifer Saunders pops in with another take on Margaret Thatcher.
We also have Rik Mayall playing a music-hall psychic who makes uncanny predictions about weapons of mass destruction, Peter Richardson, who also directs, pops up as George Bush in gangster mode, and Nigel Planer simply IS Peter Mandelson.
The joke seems to be not how much the actors look like the people they're supposed to be playing, rather how much they don't.
You'd never guess in a million years that John Sessions is supposed to be Norman Tebbit, for instance.
Jane Simon, The Mirror, 14th October 2011Good to see some of The Comic Strip gang (Jennifer Saunders, Rik Mayall, Nigel Planer) return after a six-year break. They're joined by Stephen Mangan and Inbetweener James Buckley for a cunningly conceived film noir romp featuring Tony Blair as a murderer on the run. Mangan is well-cast as Blair, constantly trying to justify his actions (he's an innocent man, really), while Buckley teams up with Robbie Coltrane's Inspector Hutton in a bid to chase him down.
Sharon Lougher, Metro, 14th October 2011Peep Show and The Inbetweeners fans, listen up. Fresh Meat stars Joe Thomas and was written by Sam Bain and Jesse Armstrong, so deserves your attention.
It's a great sitcom about freshers in a university house-share - a sit so ripe with possibilities you might wonder why it hasn't been strip-mined for com before.
Actually it has; of course there was the classic The Young Ones, and some of you might have seen a short-lived BBC3 comedy a couple of years ago with much the same premise called Off The Hook, starring another Inbetweener, James Buckley.
But Fresh Meat is much more assured and has wonderfully subtle characters.
Joe Thomas is the token normal one as Kingsley, and Kimberley Nixon plays nice, sweet Josie, his female counterpart.
More intriguing are Vod (Zawe Ashton) who's like a younger, female, sexually ambiguous version of Peep Show's Super Hans and Oregon (Charlotte Ritchie) who tries too hard to be tough and play down her swottiness - and fails at both.
There's also Greg McHugh as Howard (think a young, Scottish Nick Frost).
But it's stand-up and panel-show regular Jack Whitehall who steals the show as cocky public schoolboy JP.
We first meet him in the men's toilet waving a wrap of cocaine at a total stranger. We've never seen Jack acting before but he turns out to be surprisingly good at it. Unless - of course - this is what he's like in real life.
Jane Simon, The Mirror, 21st September 2011Much like Peep Show, it's understandable that some people assume that the stars of gross-out-but-sometimes-oddly-sweet teen sitcom The Inbetweeners - Simon Bird, Joe Thomas, James Buckley and Blake Harrison - actually wrote the show, as they seem to fit their characters so well. Not so, however - that honour belongs to (Damon Beesley and Iain Morris) but Bird and Thomas are in fact pretty experienced comedy writers, having performed (and impressed) at the Edinburgh Fringe with their show The Meeting, created with award-winning stand-up comic Jonny Sweet.
For Chickens, these three have got back together and produced a properly entertaining half hour pilot in which they play the only three men left in a pretty Heart-of-England village during the First World War. They each have their reasons for staying behind: Cecil (Bird) isn't allowed in the army on account of his flat feet, teacher George (Thomas) is a conscientious objector and Bert (Sweet)... well he just finds it difficult to remember there's a war on, what with all the girls (and women, and old ladies) of the village distracting him the whole time.
There was an element of farce about this - Cecil ends up accidentally peeing on a tree planted in remembrance of a dead soldier - but as with so many sitcoms, Chickens actually works best when it's just the three leads chatting and bickering. Jonny Sweet, I think, pretty much steals the show. As a self-centred lothario, he's simultaneously incredibly creepy and massively watchable - here, as with his stand-up, it's his delivery that makes him so much fun. All the best comics can make an apparently simple word sound hilarious and Sweet is no different. Just take a listen to how he says the word 'crow'.
Anna Lowman, Dork Adore, 4th September 2011James Buckley refused naked 'Inbetweeners' scene
James Buckley has told Digital Spy that he refused to appear naked in The Inbetweeners Movie.
Paul Millar, Digital Spy, 20th August 2011