Press clippings Page 12
Comedies have always been big on friendships, be they soulmates or odd couples. Men Behaving Badly's Gary and Tony were always the former and so it seems are actors Martin Clunes and Neil Morrissey: writer Simon Nye admits that it was sometimes difficult to see where his scripts ended and real-life began. There's a chance to witness some of that spark here thanks to a montage of very funny bloopers. Of course, get the chemistry right and you have a mucker for life - as the 295 episodes of Last of the Summer Wine demonstrate.
David Brown, Radio Times, 28th November 2011High on a cocktail of prescription drugs and faced with the unwelcome prospect of quiet retirement with her dull husband, Mrs Tishell (Selina Cadell) decides it is now or never to discover whether her infatuation with the Doc (Martin Clunes) might be reciprocated. Her idea of seduction - which involves using baby James Henry as bait - proves not only desperate but dangerous, providing a real, er, cliffhanger for the final moments of the series.
Gerald O'Donovan, The Telegraph, 31st October 2011Doc Martin stars: 'We're like a big family now'
Ahead of the heart-stopping climax of Doc Martin, Martin Clunes and Caroline Catz tell TV Times magazine about loyal fans and their dream job...
TV Times, 25th October 2011The Cornish whimsy continues tonight as Martin (Martin Clunes) and Louisa (Caroline Catz) discover that having a baby can actually cause a surprising number of arguments. They tackle his christening (Martin books it without consulting Louisa), who should return to work and whether the child should go to boarding school one day. Meanwhile PC Penhale (John Marquez) seeks to stop his recently unearthed wife Maggie (Julie Graham) leaving the village and school caretaker Mr Coley (Brian Pettifer) goes completely gaga.
Gerald O'Donovan, The Telegraph, 14th October 2011Martin Clunes admits people think he's typecast
Grumpy Doc Martin could shut his practice for good - if Martin Clunes fears the show is getting too cosy.
Mark Jefferies, The Mirror, 10th October 2011As Louisa and the Doc finally knuckle down this week to naming their poor baby, Julie Graham, who played Martin Clunes's wife in William and Mary, breezes into Portwenn - but this time she's married to PC Joe Penhale (John Marquez).
If your reaction to that is: I didn't know he was even married, well join the club, nor did Joe. But he seems awfully pleased to see Maggie all the same.
It turns out to be another medical puzzler for Doc Martin, whose talent for identifying extremely rare medical conditions rivals even Gregory House's.
It's all the more impressive seeing as the Doc is equipped with just his medical bag.
He usually has to double as a paramedic as well, since the folk of Portwenn have a strange inability to dial 999 - preferring instead to make the poor doctor sprint to each and every emergency.
I do hope that somebody buys him a nice pair of trainers for Christmas.
Jane Simon, The Mirror, 10th October 2011Another biggish guest star arrives: Julie Graham memorably spent three years as Martin Clunes's screen wife in William and Mary, and here they are again, reunited. Except they're not quite, because in Doc Martin, Graham plays the wife of PC Penhale (John Marquez). That's odd, considering we didn't know he was married. It's even odder that his wife thinks he's only just arrived in Portwenn.
Meanwhile, Cornwall's worst restaurateur Bert Large (Ian McNeice) is deeper in debt than ever, a fisherman keeps fainting, Eileen Atkins desperately deserves more screen time as Aunt Ruth, and Louisa's mother is still causing trouble, above and beyond her annoyingly nomadic accent.
As for the Doc himself, an episode full of the customary, satisfying sight of him being rude to people who fully deserve it has a glimpse of warmth at the end. That it's hard-won makes it all the more affecting - Clunes is brilliant at letting those little flickers shine through.
Jack Seale, Radio Times, 10th October 2011If you're looking for a bit of escapism then you could do worse than visit the quaint Cornish seaside retreat of Port Wenn in this light - and hugely popular - family drama, now midway through its fifth series. It's easy to see why Martin Clunes's shirty surgeon decided to stay in the idyllic fishing port rather than return to life in London as he nearly did at the end of the last series. The sleepy pace gently washes over you and the magnificent views (in reality those of the village of Port Isaac, which is indeed in Cornwall) transport the viewer to a picture-postcard paradise.
Tonight Clunes's no-nonsense Auntie Ruth (the splendid Eileen Atkins) is on formidable form cheating at chess, berating her chickens, and wanting to "bring back capital punishment for people who use their mobile phones on the train". The programme avoids banality by touching upon some serious medical issues. When PC Penhale's (John Marquez) ex-wife Maggie (guest star Julie Graham) turns up thinking it is April 2008, the Doc quickly spots signs of transient global amnesia and arranges an urgent brain scan.
Rachel Ward, The Telegraph, 7th October 2011Martin Clunes: Doc Martin loved for being grumpy
Canny Martin Clunes reckons he knows the secret of Doc Martin's continued success.
Colin Robertson, The Sun, 4th October 2011Dame Eileen Atkins, star of Cranford and co-creator of Upstairs Downstairs, is proving a delightful addition to this series as Doctor Ellingham's (Martin Clunes) equally grouchy aunt, Ruth, whose droll observations on life in the countryside pump up the comedy quotient considerably. Tonight Ruth clashes with some bumpkinish neighbours who keep stealing from her, and the doctor wrestles with fatherhood and oddball patients. With first-rate acting and lush Cornish scenery, it's a significant cut above similar cosy dramas.
Vicki Power, The Telegraph, 23rd September 2011