British Comedy Guide

Press clippings Page 2

TV preview: Inside No. 9, Lip Service, BBC Two

One of the many takeaways from this week's episode, Lip Service, is that it's so different to the last two episodes in the current series of Inside No 9.

Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 24th May 2021

Inside No. 9: Lip Service review

One of the more subdued entries in the Inside No 9 canon, Lip Service takes place in a gloomy and uninviting hotel room where Felix, a sad data entry manager, is holed up.

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 24th May 2021

Inside No. 9 series 6 episode 3 review: Lip Service

Do not disturb? Too late. Fleabag's Sian Clifford joins Inside No. 9 for a slippery episode that repeatedly sheds its skin. Spoilers.

Louisa Mellor, Den Of Geek, 24th May 2021

Inside No. 9 review

Lip Service continues a run of classic episodes.

Sophie Davies, The Custard TV, 24th May 2021

Inside No 9, episode 3, review

Brimming with bent coppers, this gripping episode satirised corruption and the deep state. If only Andrew Scott's Hot Priest had showed up.

Ed Power, The Telegraph, 24th May 2021

Russell Tovey & Sian Clifford star in new improvised film

Filming has completed on a new improvised comedy from director Jamie Adams, starring Russell Tovey and Sian Clifford.

British Comedy Guide, 2nd February 2021

Inside No. 9 Series 6 cast revealed

Filming has completed on Series 6 of Inside No. 9. The guest stars joining Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith will include Sian Clifford, Adrian Dunbar, Paterson Joseph and Sir Derek Jacobi.

British Comedy Guide, 27th January 2021

Two Weeks To Live: Series 1 review

While it appears from the first episode that much of the story will be centred around Kim's blossoming relationship with Nicky (a nicely funny Mawaan Rizwan), the heart of the series increasingly becomes the brilliantly twisted and violent mother/daughter relationship between Kim and Tina.

Eamon Hennedy, The Digital Fix, 8th September 2020

Review: Two Weeks To Live

Maisie Williams' dark comedy is too much standard-assassin.

Deirdre Falvey, The Irish Times, 3rd September 2020

TV review: Two Weeks To Live series 1 episode 1

Whether or not the series works as a whole is going to depend on how they manage the juggling act of keeping it feeling realistic despite clearly being a very unusual creation, but despite the odd flawed moment the majority of it is beguiling and amusing material, and I'm definitely intrigued as to how it will play out.

Alex Finch, Comedy To Watch, 3rd September 2020

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