Press clippings
Cancer comedy Ill Behaviour is a brilliant fantasia
I admit it: They got me. I love Ill Behaviour. I love it!
Amy Glynn, Paste Magazine, 13th November 2017BBC dark comedy Ill Behaviour finds home on showtime
Gross-out humor and cancer--do they blend?
Glenn Garvin, Reason, 10th November 2017Ill Behaviour: Showtime importing BBC comedy-thriller
Showtime is importing the BBC comedy-thriller Ill Behaviour stateside, premiering the six-part series as early as next month.
Ray Flook, Bleeding Cool, 4th October 2017Review, Ill Behaviour, iPlayer
Ill Behaviour is written by Peep Show's co-creator Sam Bain, but if anyone is expecting a laugh-a-minute sitcom about flatsharing misfits think again. Ill Behaviour is far more ambitious and original than that. Not as funny as Peep Show, but then I don't think that is its intention.
Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 24th July 2017Details revealed about new BBC comedy Ill Behaviour
Details have been revealed about Ill Behaviour, the new comedy drama by Sam Bain about a man with cancer.
British Comedy Guide, 16th February 2017After a patchy debut last week, Inside No. 9 finally came into its own with its second episode entitled "The 12 Days of Christine". The Christine of the title is a shoe shop employee played by Sheridan Smith whose life story is told during the episode. Although each of the twelve days occurs chronologically, each scene represents a different year as Christine grows older as the piece goes on. During the episode we see her meet and marry the man of her dreams (Tom Riley), give birth, get divorced and turn thirty. However Reese Shearsmith and Steve Pemberton litter this seemingly mundane tale with their trademark macabre flair. During the episode Christine experiences several surreal moments and occasionally sees a man dressed in white (Shearsmith) breaking eggs around her home. There are several other odd moments including the fact that her dementia-suffering father often pops up seeming incredibly lucid. The final scene reveals exactly why the events of the episode are slightly skewed and the importance of the music played throughout. I'm not sure why both series of Inside No. 9 have had a brilliant second episode but "The 12 Days of Christine" is definitely up there with "A Quiet Night In". The fantastic Sheridan Smith steps out of her comfort zone to play a rapidly ageing character who never seems to quite know what's going on. I feel this thirty minute episode showcased Smith's range more than last year's three part series of Cilla. Meanwhile Pemberton and Shearsmith took secondary roles here, with the former playing Christine's gay best friend Bobby. I was completely entranced by both Smith's turn and Shearsmith and Pemberton's writing which offered up a number of twists and turns before the shocking final reveal. If you are yet to see an episode of Inside No. 9 I would heartily recommend "The 12 Days of Christine" as it's an easy watch with a fantastic if tragic conclusion.
Matt, The Custard TV, 6th April 2015Radio Times review
If you're wondering why we're not billing this as a comedy, that's because there's almost nothing funny in the latest tale. Instead, it's an utterly superb piece of drama, imbued with an increasing sense of dread - with the almost unguessable sting in the tail that this series delivers so well.
Little should be said about the plot other than that The 12 Days of Christine is set in flat No 9 of a tower block and it begins with a woman dressed as a nun and a man in fireman gear tumbling onto a settee after copping off at a fancy dress party. Hunky Tom Riley is Adam and Sheridan Smith gives another multi-faceted, stunning performance as the troubled Christine. Sitcom legend Michele Dotrice plays her mum.
Writers Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith pop up in minor but telling roles. And Pemberton deploys Con te partiro on the soundtrack, as he once did in Benidorm - but with devastating effect.
Gill Crawford, Radio Times, 2nd April 2015Sheridan Smith stars in a story that sees Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith departing radically from their usual claustrophobic black comedy; there is little to laugh at in The 12 Days Of Christine, a study of time and memory that resembles a short enigmatic arthouse film. In a dozen scenes coinciding with public or personal red-letter days, Smith plays a woman passing through marriage, motherhood, divorce and bereavement, with Paul Copley, Michele Dotrice, Tom Riley and the writers in supporting roles.
Alarming things keep happening to Christine, making her increasingly troubled and presenting the viewer with a series of puzzles. Why, for example, does the heroine's flatmate mention mathematical number theory? Why are we subjected to Andrea Bocelli and Sarah Brightman warbling Time To Say Goodbye? Are these significant clues, or just red herrings?
John Dugdale, The Times, 29th March 2015Those masters of the dark arts, the former League Of Gentlemen co-stars Reece Shearsmith and Steve Pemberton, return with a second instalment of their deliciously macabre shorts, the first series of which won best comedy performance at the Royal Television Society awards last week.
Like a Tales Of The Unexpected for the 21st century, each perfectly formed 30 minutes offers a masterclass in storytelling: witty, imaginative, inventive and suspenseful - with a clever twist at the end for good measure.
The six tales are linked by the number nine and in the opening episode, La Couchette, Julie Hesmondhalgh, Mark Benton, Jessica Gunning and Jack Whitehall join Pemberton and Shearsmith on board the sleeper train from Paris to Bourg-Saint-Maurice. They're a motley collection trying to get a quiet night's sleep as the train makes its way across France, but as the sleeping compartment fills up, the chances of that begin to look highly unlikely...
The setting for future episodes include a séance in the grand Victorian villa, a modern-day family get-together, a 17th-century village witch trial and a volunteer call centre, with Alison Steadman, Claire Skinner, Jane Horrocks, Paul Kaye and Tom Riley among the cast. Special mention must go to Sheridan Smith, however, for her performance in next week's offering, The 12 Days Of Christine, a powerful, moving story of one woman's rocky journey through life. It is an absolute gem, one of the best things I have seen on television this year.