Press clippings Page 7
Detectorists won't be coming back this year
Fans of Detectorists, the Bafta-winning Mackenzie Crook and Toby Jones BBC4 metal detecting comedy, may have a bit of a wait for a third series. Creator (and director) Crook is currently still thinking about making another chunk of the comedy.
Ben Dowell, Radio Times, 11th April 2016Detectorists... and now for something completely different
I highly recommend you give this show a chance - you will not regret it!
P. T. Jackson, TV Equals, 4th April 2016Peter Kay's Car Share leads BAFTA TV Awards comedy nominations
Car Share leads the comedy related nominations in the 2016 BAFTA Television Awards shortlists. Other nominations include Chewing Gum, Peep Show and People Just Do Nothing.
British Comedy Guide, 30th March 2016Don't panic, it is funny... in parts
Nobody could ever make a better Captain Mainwaring than the late, great Arthur Lowe, but Toby Jones pulls off the pomposity, the middle-class chippiness and, above all, the comic timing, to something close to perfection.
Brian Viner, Daily Mail, 5th February 2016Dad's Army review
Michael Gambon is glorious as Godfrey and Toby Jones charms as the deluded Captain Mainwaring in a "fond, flag-waving if faulty" film.
Mark Braxton, Radio Times, 5th February 2016Dad's Army -- film review
Only Toby Jones emerges with credit in this ill-advised revamp of the BBC's cherished Home Guard sitcom.
Nigel Andrews, The Financial Times, 4th February 2016Dad's Army - video review
Xan Brooks, Peter Bradshaw and Henry Barnes review Oliver Parker's big-screen adaptation of the much-loved 1960s sitcom, which stars Toby Jones as Captain Mainwaring, leading his Home Guard unit through their farcical trials at the tail-end of the second world war. Dad's Army, which also stars Catherine Zeta-Jones, Tom Courtenay and Michael Gambon, is released in the UK on Friday 5 February.
Xan Brooks, Peter Bradshaw and Henry Barnes, The Guardian, 4th February 2016Video: Getting nostalgic with Dad's Army cast
The stars of the new Dad's Army film, Toby Jones and Catherine Zeta Jones, have said they grew up watching the show on TV.
The film, directed by Oliver Parker, moves the Dad's Army story to May 1944 as the Allies prepare to invade occupied Europe.
Toby Jones takes on the role plays Captain Mainwaring and Catherine Zeta Jones plays a glamorous journalist who arrives in Walmington-on-Sea to write about the Home Guard.
Cast members Sir Tom Courtenay, Sir Michael Gambon, Bill Paterson, Blake Harrison and Daniel Mays tell entertainment correspondent Tim Masters their memories of filming in Bridlington.
Tim Masters, BBC News, 2nd February 2016Review: Dad's Army (PG) - no need to panic
Toby Jones and Michael Gambon silence the doom-mongers with a worthy remake of a TV classic, says Andy Lea.
Andy Lea, Daily Star, 31st January 2016A much-loved national treasure from the past has been dug up to leave many asking: "Shouldn't they leave it be?"
But that's a bit unfair -- Catherine Zeta-Jones isn't that bad.
She does add a touch of Hollywood glamour to a thoroughly spirited remake of a classic British comedy show.
I'm old enough to remember the original and I watched all the repeats on the Beeb.
And my report from patrol at the film's world premiere is that all the gentle wink-wink humour remains. Expect gags about being "on top" and lots of farcical hiding behind sofas.
So what if many of the jokes are older than the cast's combined age? They're the best ones. And they're delivered by great actors.
Toby Jones as Captain Mainwaring and Michael Gambon as Private Godfrey have comic timing to match the originals.
Great moments include Godfrey relieving himself against one of the platoon camouflaged as a tree.
This being a 2016 take on World War II, the females get more of a look-in, with the wives and girlfriends showing up the bumbling men.
Zeta-Jones, though, has fewer dimensions than Mainwaring's TV wife -- and we never saw her.
Of course, the action is upped for the big screen which is not always effective. Like the Walmington-on-Sea's Home Guard, this is a proud but far from perfect effort.
But, no kidding, it's sure to make you laugh.
Grant Rollings, The Sun, 27th January 2016