Press clippings Page 31
James Corden puts the laddy banter of A League Of Their Own on hold to co-star in this blackly comic crime caper. It's a twisted and oddly gripping tale, following a pair of life's losers getting in way over their heads when a car crash unleashes a bizarre chain of events involving a mobile phone, a kidnapping and a case of mistaken leg amputation.
Corden's new comedy best friend here is Horrible Histories' Mathew Baynton, who bags a co-writing credit (with Corden) and steals the show as baleful Sam, a nerdy town-planning officer pining for his ex, playing the proverbial rabbit caught in the headlights to perfection.
Carol Carter and Larushka Ivan-Zadeh, Metro, 24th September 2013Radio Times review
James Corden's first narrative comedy since Gavin & Stacey does not disappoint, but is a quite different beast. Although Corden's character, office mailroom man Phil, could be Smithy's more optimistic cousin, this is no straight sitcom. It's a lavishly filmed and surprisingly gripping comic thriller about two meek losers caught in a kidnapping caper.
Corden is not the lead: his co-writer Mathew Baynton proves to be at home driving the action as Sam, a milksop who answers a phone at the scene of a car crash and becomes an unwilling hero. Think The Bourne Identity, remade by the Coen brothers, starring a hipster Frank Spencer.
Baynton and Corden's refusal to resort to spoof means the characters are likeable, the jokes are properly funny and the action is convincing. You'll want to know what happens next.
Jack Seale, Radio Times, 24th September 2013Just as the weather turns rotten, here's The Wrong Mans, a bit of fun with a smart enough script and some actual jokes. It's about two hapless chaps who get completely out of their depth in a Hitchcockian adventure with kidnappers, spies and gangsters. Nervous council employee Phil (played endearingly by Mathew Baynton of Horrible Histories) witnesses a car crash, picks up the victim's phone and gets mistaken for someone else by bad guys. His brash colleague Sam insists they "roll deep" and play things out.
It co-stars and is co-written by James Corden... wait, did I lose you there? I know: Corden is a divisive figure, who became so ubiquitous a few years ago that the very sight of his grinning face - shouting about his celebrity pals, flirting with Lily Allen, singing the England football team song, showing off at award ceremonies, etc - could induce sheer rage in otherwise reasonable people. While he always had his fans, there were as many who saw him as a representation of everything grim about modern celebrity culture. But, after an apologetic autobiography, an award-winning theatre run and the forthcoming biopic about Britain's Got Talent winner Paul Potts, Corden seems to be clawing his way out of the backlash. And the sheer energy of this new six-part series indicates that he's gone back to his strengths, co-writing himself a supporting part in an audience-pleasing entertainment, just as he did with Gavin & Stacey.
He is still, essentially, playing that Corden character that became so annoying, but the effect is lessened thanks to a strong plot, script and cast - full of familiar faces in cameo roles, presumably his celebrity pals.
Andrea Mullaney, The Scotsman, 21st September 2013Poor Jon Richardson. Tonight's guest comic is given the chance of a lifetime: to take a rugby conversion at Twickenham Stadium in front of a capacity crowd. It's a typically blockbuster challenge for this sports entertainment quiz - if only Jon's kicking skills were of the same level. Three disastrous attempts later and the dream has turned into a nightmare, with the Six Nations crowd and host James Corden mercilessly jeering his spindly efforts.
Man City footballer Joleon Lescott is also in the studio. Fair play to the England defender for taking part; shame that when encouraged to get involved by Corden and Jack Whitehall, his quick wit is found seriously wanting.
James Gill, Radio Times, 20th September 2013This new comedy drama written by and starring James Corden and Horrible Histories' Mathew Baynton is quite good. What's remarkable is the wealth of on-screen talent involved, and I don't just mean Dawn French, Rebecca Front, Nick Moran, Homeland's David Harewood and Him & Her's Sarah Solemani. When you can employ Paul Higgins (The Thick of It) and Twenty Twelve's Vincent Franklin in the seemingly throwaway roles of traffic cops, then that is casting in depth. Taking its title from Hitchcock's 1956 thriller of mistaken identity, The Wrong Man, it stars Baynton as a Berkshire County Council office drudge accidentally mixed up in a criminal conspiracy. Corden is on his best form as his excitable colleague.
Gerard Gilbert, The Independent, 20th September 2013James Corden and The Wrong Mans - in pictures
Photographer Richard Saker goes behind the scenes on James Corden's new BBC comedy series The Wrong Mans.
The Observer, 15th September 2013James Corden: why he still can't trust success
James Corden has had his setbacks, but not recently. He is on a roll with a new film and a television series he has co-written. Yet while the critics love him, he can't help but doubt himself. Carole Cadwalladr meets the hardest working man in show business.
Carole Cadwalladr, The Observer, 15th September 2013Spoofing action-filled, big budget American TV series, The Wrong Mans is both sitcom and thriller. Created by and starring James Corden and Matthew Bayton, as a luckless duo working for Berkshire County Council whose blue-collar lives are turned upside down by a chance phone call. Mistaken identities prompt comic mishap as they are drawn into a murky world of international espionage. The supporting cast includes Dawn French, Sarah Solemani, Rebecca Front, Dougray Scott, Emilia Fox, Nick Moran, Stephen Campbell Moore and Tom Basden - the very Best of British.
Holly Williams, The Independent, 15th September 2013Who knew that gruff football gaffer Sam Allardyce was a fan of Strictly Come Dancing? When the West Ham manager reveals a weakness for the dancing show, fellow guest David Walliams takes him for a spin on the dance floor. The resulting intimate waltz is characteristic of the show: trying to hype up the macho banter but inevitably ending in back-slapping bawdiness. "I can see why they call him Big Sam!" Walliams coos.
In another playful TV rip-off, series regulars have their very own MasterChef challenge. Freddie Flintoff serves a surprisingly bistro-style fish and chips; Jamie Redknapp goes retro with a pineapple upside-down cake; host James Corden cooks an ambitious beef Wellington ("basically a big pasty," laughs Flintoff); and Jack Whitehall hacks at a pheasant carcass.
James Gill, Radio Times, 6th September 2013James Corden as Paul Potts - Video Clip
James Corden's Paul Potts goes from bully victim to world-famous star in exclusive One Chance clip.
Sarah Bull, Daily Mail, 3rd September 2013