Doc Martin (2004)
- TV comedy drama
- ITV1
- 2004 - 2022
- 79 episodes (10 series)
Comedy drama following the trials and tribulations of a socially challenged surgeon turned GP working in Cornwall. Stars Martin Clunes. Also features Caroline Catz, Ian McNeice, Joe Absolom, Selina Cadell, John Marquez and more.
- Series 1, Episode 3 repeated Friday at 8pm on ITV3
- Streaming rank this week: 1,604
Press clippings Page 14
Doc Martin returns with over 7.5 million viewers on ITV
Doc Martin returned to top the ratings outside of soaps on Monday evening (September 2), according to overnight data.
Tom Eames, Digital Spy, 3rd September 2013The will-they-won't-they romance between Doc and Louisa gives way to the sound of wedding bells as the comedy-drama returns. Naturally, the village turns out in force for the event, whether invited or not, and soon the couple are being whisked away for a surprise honeymoon. Which is when everything goes wrong, both for the newlyweds and for Ruth, who volunteers to look after baby James Henry. An idealised view of Cornish rural life? Of course, but well-crafted and witty, too.
Jonathan Wright, The Guardian, 2nd September 2013Haven't we been here, done this before? There's a strong sense of déjà-vu wafting in the sea breeze over Portwenn as wedding bells ring out for the second time to celebrate the happy union of Doc Martin (Martin Clunes) and the long-suffering Louisa (Caroline Catz).
As the sixth series opens for business, they're taking a second stab at tying the knot after their plans unravelled back in series three.
Quite why Louisa has shown such dogged devotion to miserable Martin is a bit of a mystery. Yes, he's got a certain inept charm but he's a grumpy old man before his time. Perhaps the prospect of Happy Ever After will put a smile on his face.
Carol Carter and Larushka Ivan-Zadeh, Metro, 2nd September 2013It's two years since we last saw flinty curmudgeon Dr Martin Ellingham and when we return to the pretty Cornish village of Portwenn nothing has changed - he's still a miserable git. Even the prospect of his much-anticipated wedding to his beloved Louisa doesn't put a song in his heart. The couple's first attempt at matrimony fell apart, but at last they are successful (this isn't a spoiler, the nuptials are in the opening minutes).
The ceremony is smartly dispatched by a very impatient groom and we spend the rest of the episode with the happy couple (Martin Clunes and Caroline Catz) as they confront a string of disasters on a hopeless honeymoon. There's not much of a story, just a series of increasingly weird and barely credible incidents. Back home Aunty Ruth (splendid Eileen Atkins) is babysitting, and has her fair share of troubles, too.
Alison Graham, Radio Times, 2nd September 2013It might have started out as a three-way pun involving the popular boot boy footwear, the profession of its main protagonist and the christian name of its star. But Doc Martin is into a somewhat implausible sixth series now and tonight we begin with something as close to a bang as this curious show gets. For a start, Martin Clunes's titular lead is getting married to the long-suffering Louisa. But that's just the half of it as the couple's honeymoon turns first disappointing and then nearly disastrous.
Odd to say for such an enduring series but it feels like Doc Martin still struggles with its tone - at times it seems to aim for sitcom chuckles, at others a degree of dramatic heft. Still, Clunes is likeably lugubrious and it makes a pleasant change to see a primetime ITV drama that doesn't seem too desperate to please everyone.
Phil Harrison, Time Out, 2nd September 2013Doc Martin, ITV, review
This enduring hit for ITV (the first series aired back in 2004) is by now rather flat. Though the cast members, particularly Martin Clunes in the title role, are all perfectly good, and the script and pacing are fine, the package is as cosy as an advert for fabric softener.
Adrian Michaels, The Telegraph, 2nd September 2013Martin Clunes and Caroline Catz shine
It's fair to say that Doc Martin will never be a critically acclaimed piece of work, but the drama is full of well-crafted characters and brilliant spots of comic timing.
Unreality TV, 2nd September 2013Doc Martin review
The quickest way to kill off a comedy is to throw a wedding. So we could only hope Doc Martin's nuptials would come a cropper before Martin Clunes and Caroline Catz reached the altar.
Christopher Stevens, Daily Mail, 2nd September 2013Behind the scenes on the long-awaited new series
The wardrobe truck carries a clue to the roller-coaster opening episode of the long-awaited new series of Doc Martin. Hanging on the rails are four identical wedding dresses, one pristine and the others in various stages of ruin - ripped, mud-splattered and bloody.
Daphne Lockyer, The Mirror, 1st September 2013Martin Clunes' weight loss causes wardrobe worries
Martin Clunes lost a stone in weight after catching a virus and had to have his wardrobe rejigged for the new series of Doc Martin.
Chris Wilson, The Mirror, 27th August 2013