British Comedy Guide
Doc Martin. Dr Martin Ellingham (Martin Clunes). Copyright: Buffalo Pictures / Homerun Productions
Martin Clunes

Martin Clunes

  • 62 years old
  • English
  • Actor

Press clippings Page 17

Clunes confirms fifth 'Doc Martin' series

Martin Clunes has confirmed that Doc Martin will return for a fifth series.

Paul Millar, Digital Spy, 8th March 2010

The Beeb's latest sitcom is hewn from the same rock as The IT Crowd: it's big, bold, colourful and obvious. The setting this time is a hapless advertising agency - waters charted much better in the recent Martin Clunes remake of The Fall And Rise Of Reginald Perrin. Still, it might be a grower, in the same sledgehammer way that Miranda was - and fans of Iain Lee and Adam Buxton will appreciate their putting in an appearance.

Sharon Lougher, Metro, 13th January 2010

If I had to name a TV guilty pleasure, then Doc Martin would be near the top of the list, if guilt is the right way to describe being swaddled in an eiderdown of cosy eccentricity. Either way, it's been the perfect X Factor comedown, so the Doc's departure last night will leave a grumpy hole in my heart. Except, of course, he'll be back. We'd been led to believe Martin Clunes was packing up his stethoscope and departing Cornwall, lured back to London by daft thoughts of a brilliant career. The subtext being Clunes was yearning to do more documentaries on dogs, or the Orkneys, or whatever. But all it took was a popped sprog and a baleful look from Louisa and his irascible armour, nurtured over four series, collapsed in a mist of paternal pride. Well, for 30 seconds at least.

So we haven't seen the last of Clunes and his coterie of clotted admirers. The love that burns bright in the breasts of Mrs Tishell and PC Penhale - there really is something about a man with a stethoscope - may yet speak its name.

Keith Watson, Metro, 9th November 2009

Dr Martin Ellingham (Martin Clunes) welcomes in a tide of patients for his last day of surgery in Portwenn, in the final episode of this series of the comedy drama about a GP in a sleepy Cornish village. Before his move back to London, Martin dispatches a raft of last-minute medical cases, even tending to one of his removal men. Tasha (Sophie Thompson), too, is suffering a dizzy spell, and it remains to be seen whether Martin can make his departure without Louisa (Caroline Catz), pregnant, requiring his attentions.

Robert Collins, The Telegraph, 7th November 2009

Newcomers such as Mock the Week can snap at its heels, but Have I Got News for You continues to operate at the same reliably high comic level that it has done for years. Much in the same way, you could say, as tonight's host. He's had his ups and downs, but Martin Clunes remains a British comic institution - he's currently in Doc Martin on ITV1 - and seems certain to prosper as the latest beneficiary of the show's Sugababes-style hot-desking policy. Also worthy of note this week is guest panellist, the Guardian's Charlie Brooker.

The Guardian, 16th October 2009

The long-running and consistently funny news panel show returns for its 38th run. Martin Clunes takes the presenter's chair as the series's first guest host. Joining him is Arlene Phillips, whose sacking from Strictly Come Dancing caused a storm of controversy, plus writer and broadcaster Charlie Brooker.

The Telegraph, 16th October 2009

Surely the dumping of Angus Deayton as the regular host of Have I Got News For You, way back in whenever-the-heck-it-was, was the best thing that ever happened to this programme.

Not because Deayton was a bad presenter - let's be fair, the man's autocue-reading skills were first-class - but because it brought about the rota system, presenting-wise, that's managed to keep the show fresh ever since.

And given that tonight, believe it or not, is the start of its 38th series (with Martin Clunes in the chair), maintaining both its freshness and its must-watch status is no mean feat.

The Daily Express, 16th October 2009

Mock The Week does a sterling job at, er, mocking the week but we still have a special place in our hearts for its televisual older brother, which returns tonight for an astonishing 38th series. Helping Ian Hislop and Paul Merton with the mirth will be satire's latest poster boy Charlie Brooker and axed Strictly judge Arlene Phillips, and Martin Clunes is back as guest host, a role he's made a good fist of before... though it beats me why they can't get someone permanent in the main chair.

Sharon Lougher, Metro, 16th October 2009

Still, this is a BBC Jane Austen and compared with Doc Martin, which last week beat it in the ratings, it is a masterpiece. Yesterday's episode, in which Martin Clunes waded through the usual shallow rock pool of West Country misunderstandings, was much weaker than the season opener, and continued to deprive us of decent scenes between the bad doctor and his pregnant ex, Louisa. There is gentle drama and there is soporific, and this seems on the turn.

Andrew Billen, The Times, 12th October 2009

Having succeeded Victor Meldrew as television's leading miseryguts in 2004, Dr Martin Ellingham (Martin Clunes) was well-positioned for a long and fruitful career, which he's continuing - begrudgingly - with this fourth series of ITV's popular pastoral sitcom, Doc Martin. In tonight's episode, the Doc bungles a consultation with an elderly couple, berates heavily-pregnant Louisa (Caroline Catz) for being too active, and toys with the idea of leaving it all behind for a high-powered job at Imperial College in London.

The Telegraph, 10th October 2009

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