Derek
- TV sitcom
- Channel 4
- 2012 - 2014
- 14 episodes (2 series)
Bittersweet comedy drama written by and starring Ricky Gervais as a worker in a retirement home. Also features Kerry Godliman, David Earl, Holli Dempsey, Brett Goldstein, Karl Pilkington and more.
Press clippings Page 11
Derek ratings improve in second week
Ricky Gervais sitcom Derek saw its audience increase last night. Channel 4's divisive sitcom amused 1.5 million (an 8% share) and 147,000 on +1 despite clashing with part of a rescheduled Coronation Street.
Paul Millar, Digital Spy, 7th February 2013Review: Karl Pilkington is the saving grace
Once again, Karl Pilkington triumphed by taking handyman Dougie's lines and making them his own. When he drove everyone to the library where "some of them don't even get a book", his stoic stupefaction was moving and far more effective than being beaten over the head with Derek's goodliness.
Caroline Frost, The Huffington Post, 7th February 2013Interview: Ben Bailey Smith (Doc Brown)
He was raised to believe anything was possible. Now, thanks to Ricky Gervais, Ben Bailey Smith, a.k.a. Doc Brown, is enjoying his own purple patch.
Nick Duerden, The Independent, 6th February 2013Channel 4 describes Ricky Gervais's story of a London nursing home as a comedy drama and it makes a uniquely strange mush out of the two genres. One minute it feels very much a sitcom, the next it turns into a soppy parable. The plot - too strong a word, really - involves a celebrity-obsessed teen who arrives at Broad Hill to do community service and is instantly repulsed by the elderly residents. But they win her over via manicures and gloopy music sequences. The dramatic message is so pat it's embarrassing.
David Butcher, Radio Times, 6th February 2013Episode two of Ricky Gervais's odd little series and some characters feel indispensable.
Kerry Godliman who plays care home manager Hannah, is the beating heart of the piece - whether she's organising Derek's 50th birthday party or taking a teenage girl who's doing community service under her wing.
Other characters - notably Kev (David Earl) the sex addict with revolting personal habits who doesn't even live in the care home anyway - is what the fast forward button on your telly remote was made for.
Jane Simon, The Mirror, 6th February 2013Ricky Gervais is declining to play safe with his latest bittersweet comedy, if comedy is the right term. Comedy drama? I don't know. Perhaps there is a new genre here. Either way Derek (Wednesday, Channel 4) is about a man with learning difficulties who works in an old people's home. And you don't laugh at Derek, you laugh with him.
He may have a slack jaw and bad haircut but he is sympathetic and kind. In some ways he reminds me of the Peter Sellers character in Being There: the idiot savant who stumbles on profound truths, or at least says things which make you wonder a little (such as "Why aren't pigs called hamsters?").
As with The Office and Extras there are poignant moments. And there is pathos, too. The documentary style used in those earlier shows is also deployed here, with characters giving little one-to-one interviews away from the others. Hannah (Kerry Godliman) as the care worker running the home provides a necessary naturalistic balance to the grotesques around her.
Karl Pilkington plays a stroppy version of himself as the caretaker Dougie (in real life Pilkington has a deep suspicion of old people). And a new character has been introduced since the pilot last year: the sex-obsessed, trainwreck Kev (David Earl). Kev is Derek's friend, and as Hannah said: "If it weren't for Derek, Kev would have ended up dead in a skip."
When an accountant from the council came to inspect the home with a view to cutting its budget there were bound to be awkward moments - this was, after all, a comic device that echoed all the way back to the health inspector episode of Fawlty Towers - but I didn't see the Kev appearance coming. Bustled out of the way when the accountant arrived, he had taken his clothes off and gone for a "quick nap" in one of the beds while the elderly resident was still in the room.
In his stand up shows Gervais sometimes teases his audience about their nervousness at his politically incorrect jokes. It's OK, he implies, it is safe to laugh because I'm being postmodern and ironic. This territory is slightly less safe - laughing at the people laughing at Derek - but it is, nevertheless, still safe to laugh.
Nigel Farndale, The Telegraph, 3rd February 2013Derek: Funny how Ricky Gervais's show lacks laughs
Gervais's latest addition to his comedy menagerie grates more than it amuses.
John Walsh, The Independent, 3rd February 2013Derek, a special 30 minutes of absorbing telly
Episode one of this poignant series about a mentally challenged nice guy at a care home facing closure was a seriously touching story of our times.
Kevin O'Sullivan, The Mirror, 3rd February 2013Derek - Episode 1.1 review
Although I love it and have given it a very complimentary review here, I completely understand that it won't be for everyone.
UK TV Reviewer, 3rd February 2013If it's Ricky Gervais's curse to be judged against the success of The Office, I can't see his new comedy series, Derek, helping, being neither funny nor clever enough. Set in a retirement home and starring Gervais as a man with learning difficulties, it was a half-hour fight between caricatures of sentimentality and coarseness. I had hoped Gervais's performance as bobbing, gurning Derek might have become more nuanced since last year's pilot but it hadn't. Karl Pilkington fared well enough as the janitor but his bad wig spoke for the whole enterprise.
Phil Hogan, The Observer, 3rd February 2013