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Extras

  • Fernsehserie
  • 2005–2007
  • 12
  • 30 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
8,3/10
62.498
IHRE BEWERTUNG
BELIEBTHEIT
1.300
166
Ricky Gervais in Extras (2005)
Showbiz-DramaSitcomDramaKomödie

Andy Millman ist ein Schauspieler mit Ambitionen und einem Drehbuch. Da er auf die Arbeit als Statist mit einem Agenten reduziert ist, enden Andys Versuche, seine Karriere voranzutreiben, un... Alles lesenAndy Millman ist ein Schauspieler mit Ambitionen und einem Drehbuch. Da er auf die Arbeit als Statist mit einem Agenten reduziert ist, enden Andys Versuche, seine Karriere voranzutreiben, unweigerlich in Misserfolg und Verlegenheit.Andy Millman ist ein Schauspieler mit Ambitionen und einem Drehbuch. Da er auf die Arbeit als Statist mit einem Agenten reduziert ist, enden Andys Versuche, seine Karriere voranzutreiben, unweigerlich in Misserfolg und Verlegenheit.

  • Stoffentwicklung
    • Ricky Gervais
    • Stephen Merchant
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Ricky Gervais
    • Ashley Jensen
    • Stephen Merchant
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    8,3/10
    62.498
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    BELIEBTHEIT
    1.300
    166
    • Stoffentwicklung
      • Ricky Gervais
      • Stephen Merchant
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Ricky Gervais
      • Ashley Jensen
      • Stephen Merchant
    • 99Benutzerrezensionen
    • 29Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • 1 Primetime Emmy gewonnen
      • 16 Gewinne & 47 Nominierungen insgesamt

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    Ricky Gervais
    Ricky Gervais
    • Andy Millman
    • 2005–2007
    Ashley Jensen
    Ashley Jensen
    • Maggie Jacobs
    • 2005–2007
    Stephen Merchant
    Stephen Merchant
    • Darren Lamb
    • 2005–2007
    Shaun Williamson
    Shaun Williamson
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    • 2005–2007
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    • 2005–2007
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    • 2006–2007
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    • 2006–2007
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    • 2006–2007
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    Martin Savage
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    • 2005–2006
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    • 2005–2007
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    Liza Tarbuck
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    • 2006–2007
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    • 2005–2007
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    • Make-up Woman
    • 2006
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    • 2006–2007
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    Ben Stiller
    • Ben Stiller
    • 2005
    Steve Speirs
    Steve Speirs
    • Dullard
    • 2005
    Boris Boscovic
    • Goran
    • 2005
    Michael Wildman
    Michael Wildman
    • Dan
    • 2005
    • Stoffentwicklung
      • Ricky Gervais
      • Stephen Merchant
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen99

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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    Super_Fu_Manchu

    First episode is highly promising

    Gervais had a big task on his hands with this project- The Office has now entered into comedy history, and people had very high hopes for his follow-up. The documentary style has been ditched, and Gervais has given his character just a little more dignity than he gave David Brent, so the comedy is a little less squeamish. The changes in direction and style are daring and pay off- the show doesn't feel like a desperate follow up or imitation of The Office. In fact, it's highly original.

    It's a pitch black satire, which follows the efforts of Gervais's character as he attempts to progress from being an extra to actually getting a real acting job, or at least a line. The shows also charts his female friend's unsuccessful love-life, his deadpan agent and parodies a celebrity every week. This week it was the turn of Ben Stiller, who was mocked as an evil dictator of a man, who constantly reminds those around him of the box office of his movies and insists that kissing Cameron Diaz "still counts", even though it was for a movie. Stiller is a good sport for joining in, and has fun messing with his image.

    Overall the show is gently paced, well written and shows extremely high potential for character study. Definitely one to watch.

    STILLER: DO YOU KNOW WHO I AM!? GERVAIS: Starsky or Hutch- I can never remember. STILLER: Was that supposed to be funny? GERVAIS: You were in it- you tell me.
    Gloobey

    Give it a chance, it has all the makings of a potential classic...

    It seems odd that the knives are being sharpened so quickly - one episode and, for some, it's all over bar the lynching. What price comedic success, eh…? Like everybody, I thought The Office was pure comedy gold. The premise was so strong that even the US offering couldn't fail. So, this time up, what has Ricky Gervais got for us? Well, more of the same only different. 'Extras' is in the same mould as The Office, there are those cringe worthy moments that we've all grown to love and expect...but there's a clever twist on the formula. The Gervaise character isn't the butt of all of the jokes this time around. Sure, the scene in the trailer with the crying eastern European reminded one of the fake sacking of Dawn and the scene towards the end at the party with the racial slurs was pure Brent, but more often than not Andy was observer and rye commentator on what was going on around him. This would simply have been beyond David Brent's self obsessed nature.

    All in all, 'Extras' has what it takes and I await the next episode with great anticipation.
    9WilliamofTexas

    Ashley Jensen

    In love with Maggie. I wanted to bash anyone who hurt her feelings. Jensen plays this character with such vulnerability and respect.
    10morphion2

    A testament to one of the world's most brilliant comic minds

    What is it about irony that tickles us so? In some ways it reminds me of films that I find delightful in their atrocity: "Doom", "DOA", "Snakes on a Plane" are some recent prime examples of Goodness By Antithesis; films that are so brazenly and proudly bad that you have to like them. Irony, as we like to see it, is similar in that it is Humor By Antithesis: situations and events that are so mundanely tragic, so cringe-making and excruciating that we just have to laugh. It is a bizarre logic, it's a twisted logic, but it's also worth noting that it's a line so fine that only the cleverest and subtlest of writers can really make it work. America's Larry David is one. England's Ricky Gervais is the other.

    In creating a follow-up series to "The Office", Gervais risked destroying a damn-near flawless career. It's hard to imagine there wasn't a niggling in his ear telling him to quit while he was ahead. What would really be the harm in letting the world remember him as David Brent? Apart from the nature of the character, the real harm in this would have been that to deny us Andy Millman would be to deny himself status as one of the world's most brilliant comic minds. "Extras" doesn't just further establish Gervais' incredible comedy prowess, it deepens it.

    On the surface, the series patiently shows us the mundane and rather fruitless life of a working film Extra, Millman (Gervais), who fancies himself a "real actor" but has never gotten any real acting work. He bitches about this to his friend, confidant and fellow Extra Maggie (Ashley Jensen), who also shares her problems with him. Deep down, however, "Extras" is a deliciously satirical look at the ambitions of the human heart, the ironic overthrow of those ambitions and the emotional chaos of breaking the unspoken rules of society (such as 'Don't Lie To A Catholic Priest About Your Nonexistent Catholicism', and 'Don't Tell Your Best Friend's Colleague That Your Best Friend Said He Was "Too Gay"').

    Other reviews have called "Extras" a watered down "Office", and I think this is a fair observation, but not at all a bad thing. After all, despite sequential order "Seinfeld" is much more diluted than "Curb Your Enthusiasm", but the former is still a far superior show. Not that any inferiority between Gervais' shows is being inferred, of course. Where "Extras" is softer than "The Office" is not in humor, or intelligence, merely in character. Andy is really quite a nice guy; insensitive at times, but only in a mild, charming kind of way. Your pity for him is genuine, and not the result of a deeper emotion such as bewilderment or frustration.

    The David Brents of "Extras" are not Gervais at all but the transient side characters, and often (brilliantly, fantastically) the celebrity cameos. In short, and this is said with no inflation whatsoever, Celebrity Cameos as a film/television device has its worth made and sold in "Extras". We thought we'd seen self-parody work before. We were wrong. The sheer reckless abandon with which Gervais and the gallant celebrity meat send themselves up (and up and up) practically creates fireworks. Ben Stiller, Kate Winslet and Patrick Stewart are not only the draw cards but the dazzling high lights. They are forever heroes in my eyes.

    Maybe it's this ultimate irony that galvanizes "Extras"' brilliance: the celebrity personalities who live the life Andy dreams of reveal themselves exclusively to him as being petty, irresponsible, greedy, insensitive, sexually perverted megalomaniacs, while he, the nobody Extra, cops all sorts of cosmic flack for, mostly, trying to do the right thing. Naturally, this kind of thing borders on cruel, but just before we begin to feel bad for laughing at his hopeless misfortune he lets us know it's alright by cracking a smile himself, telling a joke to Maggie and shaking it off. Then Cat Stevens washes us clean with "Tea for the Tillerman". Yes sir, Ricky Gervais knows how to make it work.
    9marcusedenellis

    Pure Comedic Gold from Ricky Gervaise

    Every so often, England hits the comedic mark and creates a benchmark to which all else must aspire; Monthy Python, Dad's Army, Fawlty Towers, Only Fools and Horses and, of course, the simply faultless "The Office". The writing team of Gervais and Merchant crafted in that series some of the most achingly funny and desperately well observed depictions of the human condition ever committed to film. "The Office" struck a particular chord with me because I have spent most of my adult life in sales and they nailed the highs and lows of that career brilliantly.

    Moving on then to their new offering; "Extras", I am happy to report that the observational skills have not deserted them. This time the central character (Andy Millman) is again played by Ricky Gervais, only, unlike his David Brent character, Millman is astute, caring and worth the time of day. Unforutnately, like Brent, he is also trapped in a spiral of underachievement.

    Andy Millman is an film extra, a background artiste, who aspires to a real acting role and the central theme of each episode is his quest for a "line" in each film in which he appears in the background. Along side him is his (seemingly) only friend, a frustrated thirty something woman, Maggie Jacobs (superbly played by Ashley Jensen), whose sole aim seems to be to find a husband / longterm partner. Add into this mix a chronically crap agent (Merchant himself), a nemesis in the shape of another extra who seems to be getting lines and a liberal sprinkling of cameoing "A" list guest stars and you have a wonderful platform on which to build a spankingly funny series.

    And wow... do they hit a home run! Every second of each episode is deliciously funny and acutely observed. Highlights to look out for are the Ben Stiller/Dodgeball opening weekend grosses scene - the Golly scene in Maggie's apartment - the "Are you really a Catholic scene" and, above anything you will have ever seen in a TV comedy, the entire Les Dennis episode.

    Les Dennis will be lost on Americans but for those of us who have followed his plunging career, you can only weep for this superbly written and judged performance. Pathos doesn't even begin to cover it.

    Also, anyone who can look at Kate Winslet again without thinking of that "phone sex" scene is a better man than me.

    Please, please, watch "Extras". It may, for some, be an acquired taste but once you have that taste, its like a piece of Swiss chocolate - exquisite.

    And no laugh track either - yay England.

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    • Wissenswertes
      In the Kate Winslet episode, she states the reason she's doing a movie about the Holocaust is because she'd been nominated for four Academy Awards and hadn't yet won, but doing a movie of this nature would guarantee her an Oscar. Four years later, after five nominations in total, she finally won the Oscar for Best Leading Actress, for her Holocaust based drama The Reader (2008).
    • Zitate

      Andy Millman: What's happening with my script?

      Darren Lamb: What script?

      Andy Millman: [rolls eyes] The script I gave you two months ago.

      Darren Lamb: Is it funny?

      Andy Millman: You haven't read it?

      Darren Lamb: What's it called?

      Andy Millman: "When the Whistle Blows".

      Darren Lamb: [writing] "When the W Blows".

      Andy Millman: Don't just write "W" you'll forget what the W stands for.

      Darren Lamb: "When the Wind Blows".

      Andy Millman: "Whistle"!

      Darren Lamb: Got it.

      [writing]

      Darren Lamb: "W" equals "Wind".

      Andy Millman: "Whistle"!

      Darren Lamb: [writing] "When the Whistle Blows".

      Andy Millman: So that's done, I can forget about that, I've got my best man on it. Just make sure the phone's plugged in.

      Darren Lamb: You joke about it, it was uplugged for two days... no one noticed.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Charlie Brooker's Screenwipe: Folge #2.1 (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Tea for the Tillerman
      Written by Cat Stevens

      Performed by Cat Stevens

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 16. Januar 2007 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • BBC (United Kingdom)
      • British Sitcom Guide
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Deutsch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Statisten
    • Drehorte
      • High Street, Uxbridge, Middlesex, England, Vereinigtes Königreich(Encounter with homeless man)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • Home Box Office (HBO)
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      • 16 : 9

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