Press clippings Page 9
Warwick Davis already eyeing second series
Warwick Davis is keen to film another series of Life's Too Short - but he will leave the decision up to Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant.
Metro, 9th November 2011'Life's Too Short': Meet the cast and celebrity cameos
Ricky Gervais, Stephen Merchant and Warwick Davis have hired in some of their best A-List pals for their third major sitcom project (the follow-up to Extras and The Office) Life's Too Short.
Alex Fletcher, Digital Spy, 9th November 2011It's become clear that Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant are never going to make anything like The Office ever again. And, as they've said themselves, why should they: having created sitcom genius and revolutionised the genre, they are hardly likely to top it.
It's become clear that Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant are never going to make anything like The Office ever again. And, as they've said themselves, why should they: having created sitcom genius and revolutionised the genre, they are hardly likely to top it. What they did for an encore was Extras, which mocked their entry into the showbiz elite, yet celebrated it by bringing in all their new pals to amusingly send up their public images. They foisted the tedious witterings of their non-famous pal Karl Pilkington upon us, until he was in showbiz too. And Ricky made some disappointing movies and popped up in all his American showbiz mates' TV shows and on his pal Jonathan Ross' chat show and annoyed everyone by being offensive on Twitter (but maybe it was just him pretending to be offensive, except that still involved offending people, but they weren't his friends so they didn't really count). And meanwhile Stephen, er, did some "ironic" bank adverts.
OK, they did make the film Cemetery Junction, which wasn't about fame at all, but not many people saw that. Instead, Gervais in particular has seemed to relish spending his time in the public eye portraying a smug, annoying celebrity character to the point where the last line of Animal Farm seems to apply - looking "from pig to man and from man to pig ... but already it was impossible to say which was which".
So it is, ahem, small wonder that the pair's latest venture returns to that well, starring their showbiz chum and Extras guest star Warwick Davis, in a faux-documentary sitcom about a dwarf actor who runs an agency for other short actors (as Davis actually does) but who can't get any work for himself, even when he begs Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant to write him something. Confused? Yes, that's the point: life's too short revels in the boundaries between the real and the not-real, with most of the characters using their actual names, while playing themselves as venial twits.
The similarities to Extras can barely be overstated. While Davis has the starring role - and it was apparently his idea - the dialogue makes him actually sound like Ricky Gervais: you can hear those Brentian speech rhythms leaking out. It's oddly reminiscent of the recent films of Woody Allen, where he drafts in various young actors to play the "Woody" character and they all end up imitating those familiar nervous tics. Here, it's difficult not to hear Gervais's voice behind Davis's lines, such as: "I'm a bit like Martin Luther King, because I too have a dream that one day dwarves will be treated equally ... you say, oh no, it's not the same ... but I've never seen a black man fired from a cannon. Every day for a whole season and twice on Saturdays."
It's not the fault of Warwick Davis, who's absolutely fine in the role of a hapless fictional version of himself and clearly well up for any resulting confusion it may cause. But there's just so much of Gervais and Merchant, both in the references and on screen, that he's in danger of being squeezed out of what's meant to be his own show.
The show shares Extras' fascination with celebrity cameos and when Liam Neeson pops up to consult Gervais and Merchant, playing "themselves", on his stand-up comedy plans, Davis is relegated to the background while they milk the scene, surrounded by posters reminding us of all their previous work. Like Extras' Andy Millman, Davis' character has a useless hanger-on: instead of an agent, it's his accountant (Steve Brody, who was David Brent's useless agent in The Office Christmas Special). Even Barry Off Of EastEnders turns up, still playing the same loser.
Well, plenty of people loved Extras, of course, but given that it was a self-referential take on Gervais's own rise to fame, isn't making a meta-parody of it just a post-modern gag too far? But worse than that, the joke isn't all that funny anymore. There are a couple of laughs here, for sure (mostly from Neeson's bit), but the whole thing just seems like an indulgent, back-slapping waste of talent.
The Scotsman, 9th November 2011"My name is Warwick Davis. I'm the UK's go-to dwarf." Four years on from Extras - and eight since the last episodes of The Office - Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant return to their mockumentary roots with this excruciatingly funny sitcom starring 3ft 6in actor Warwick Davis as a rather down-at-heel version of his real self. Trailed by a camera crew making a documentary about his life as a film star and dwarf talent agent, Warwick - who's been in everything from Return of the Jedi to the Harry Potter movies - has hit hard times and is keen to brush over embarrassing realities and make a good impression. "I want people to see a sophisticated dwarf-about-town who carries himself with dignity. I'm a role model, a bit like Martin Luther King..."
Making viewers feel as uncomfortable about their political correctness as their prejudice is Gervais and Merchant's stock in trade, and the cringe-making moments pile up relentlessly. They also revive a key ingredient of Extras, cramming the series with as many celebrity guest appearances as possible. Liam Neeson gets the lion's share of the self-deprecation tonight, although Extras regular Shaun Williamson also gets to make a familiar contribution.
Gerald O'Donovan, The Telegraph, 9th November 2011Reality and satire get even closer in this latest offering from Gervais and Merchant. In this supposed documentary series, we follow actor Warwick Davis, "the UK's go-to dwarf". Davis plays himself as a cross between David Brent and Tony Blair, a man with a delusional sense of his own importance, who sees himself as a valued character player, and campaigner ("like Martin Luther King") but who sees others of his stature as slightly pitiable. Liam Neeson guests, expressing a wish to debut his spectacularly unfunny standup comedy.
John Robinson, The Guardian, 9th November 2011You suspect Ricky Gervais, Stephen Merchant and BBC2 are getting their defence in first with this "making of" doc, screened before the start on Thursday of their new comedy series, Life's Too Short, starring dwarf actor Warwick Davis.
Gervais insists they aren't making fun of small people, though the Davis character has "a small man complex". Celebrity guests doing Extras-type cameos - Johnny Depp, Liam Neeson and Helena Bonham Carter - tell us why they wanted to take part.
Alison Graham, Radio Times, 5th November 2011Life's Too Short: watch an exclusive clip - video
Life's Too Short, a new comedy series written and directed by Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant, is a fake documentary starring real-life dwarf actor Warwick Davis as a fictional version of himself - fame obsessed and self-centred but always getting his comeuppance.
The Guardian, 3rd November 2011Size matters: Warwick Davis is no small talent
The actor has starred in Star Wars, every Harry Potter film, and now his very own Ricky Gervais-scripted BBC comedy series.
Gerard Gilbert, The Independent, 22nd October 2011GQ: Life's Too Short exclusive
A video in which Stephen Merchant and Ricky Gervais discuss the clothing choices of Warwick Davis.
Stuart McGurk, GQ, 12th October 2011Warwick Davis is hitting the big time
With Stephen Merchant gushing that Warwick Davis is a "real comic star-in-waiting", it's no wonder the actor feels slightly daunted.
Christian Koch, Evening Standard, 30th August 2011