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 13
Derek watched by 1.4m viewers
Ricky Gervais's first full series of Derek began with a respectable audience last night. The Channel 4 care home sitcom was watched by 1.44m (7.7%) and 207,000 on +1.
Digital Spy, 31st January 2013Derek: 1.01 - Review
It feels very goodies vs baddies, piano music to symbolise a sad bit, uncomplicated carers-are-saints. Hell, it could almost be a straight docusoap sometimes.
Nick Bryan, The Digital Fix, 31st January 2013Ricky Gervais interview: People hate my mere existence
Ricky Gervais is in defiant mood as his controversial Channel 4 sitcom Derek returns, finds James Rampton.
James Rampton, The Telegraph, 30th January 2013Interview: Ricky Gervais
Ricky Gervais is a master at making us chuckle - but keep the tissues handy while watching his latest sitcom.
Colin Robertson, The Sun, 30th January 2013It divided opinion when it debuted last April but there's a charming, ingenuous quality to the offbeat humour in this new comedy series from Ricky Gervais. He stars as Derek, a vulnerable adult working in an old people's home, who reckons he's the luckiest man in the world, surrounded by all of his 'favouritest' people, including long-suffering best friend Dougie (Karl Pilkington) and the home's manager, Hannah (Kerry Godliman). The laughs are bittersweet and there's a poignant truth beating at the heart of the story - the council is looking to cut its budget, which means Derek's happy home faces the chop.
Carol Carter and Larushka Ivan-Zadeh, Metro, 30th January 2013Kerry Godliman on working with Ricky Gervais on Derek
"After seeing Derek, another comic said to me 'well, lucky you! That's your ticket out isn't it?'" Kerry Godliman smiles, a little awkwardly, over a cup of tea.
Jay Richardson, The Scotsman, 30th January 2013Last year's pilot episode got a mixed reception, so many were surprised when Ricky Gervais's comedy-drama about a retirement home worker with learning difficulties was commissioned for a full series. Yet here it is, starting a run of six episodes. Gervais writes, directs and stars as sweet-natured, animal-obsessed, autograph-hunting Derek Noakes. Gervais's regular sidekick and stooge Karl Pilkington reprises his role as caretaker Dougie, while Kerry Godliman is the standout performer as workaholic manageress Hannah. This opening episode finds Broadhill care home's future under threat from council cuts. Hannah takes inspectors on a guided tour but her efforts to impress are hampered by tadpoles in the bathroom and a naked guest in one of the beds, leaving the ragtag team struggling to prevent the home's closure. There are tender moments and its heart is in the right place, but the end product is misjudged. Much of the acting is awkward, while the script attempts to wring laughs out of bad wigs, sexual innuendo and gratuitous swearing. You can't help feeling it was Gervais's past reputation and celebrity status which got this made, rather than the quality of the show.
Michael Hogan, The Telegraph, 30th January 2013Tasteless? No. Pointless? Possibly. It's hard to believe, after last year's misfiring pilot, that Derek would have got a series commission without Ricky Gervais's involvement.
Shattered nuts and well-used sledgehammers litter the scene of this strange comedy-drama mock-doc: telling trumps showing every time, and the converted cover their ears while the preacher drones on about tolerance over a cloying piano soundtrack.
For the uninitiated, Derek tells the story of the eponymous innocent savant (Gervais), a slightly slow but tender-hearted care worker in a retirement home, misunderstood by the outside world but loved by those who take the trouble to get to know him. In this week's opener, said retirement home is slated for closure by the council. Derek and chums Dougie (Karl Pilkington) and Kev (David Earl) join home manager Hannah (the excellent Kerry Godliman) in taking some direct action.
No one can doubt Derek's good intentions, but it owes its existence to a man desperate to prove he's not who we think he is. And as for the comedy? Well, with apologies to Oscar Wilde, the final scene is so hilariously sappy that you'd need a heart of stone not to laugh.
Gabriel Tate, Time Out, 30th January 2013The bleak world of Derek
Whilst I appreciate Ricky Gervais is trying something new, I can't say I enjoyed the opening episode of Derek as much as I'd hoped.
The Custard TV, 30th January 2013TV Review: Derek
Unfortunately, most of the problems that plagued the pilot return intact. Ricky Gervais's mannered characterisation stands in uncomfortable contrast to the underplaying of the rest of the cast.
Tim Dowling, The Guardian, 30th January 2013