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Red Dwarf

  • Série télévisée
  • 1988–
  • TV-14
  • 30min
NOTE IMDb
8,4/10
39 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
1 093
46
Chris Barrie, Craig Charles, Ray Fearon, Danny John-Jules, Robert Llewellyn, and Norman Lovett in Red Dwarf (1988)
Home Video Trailer from BBC
Lire trailer1:35
1 Video
99+ photos
Artificial IntelligenceDark ComedyHigh-Concept ComedySatireSitcomSlapstickSpace Sci-FiComedySci-Fi

Les aventures du dernier être humain vivant et de ses amis, échoués trois millions d'années dans l'espace sur le vaisseau minier Red Dwarf.Les aventures du dernier être humain vivant et de ses amis, échoués trois millions d'années dans l'espace sur le vaisseau minier Red Dwarf.Les aventures du dernier être humain vivant et de ses amis, échoués trois millions d'années dans l'espace sur le vaisseau minier Red Dwarf.

  • Création
    • Rob Grant
    • Doug Naylor
  • Casting principal
    • Chris Barrie
    • Craig Charles
    • Danny John-Jules
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    8,4/10
    39 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    1 093
    46
    • Création
      • Rob Grant
      • Doug Naylor
    • Casting principal
      • Chris Barrie
      • Craig Charles
      • Danny John-Jules
    • 158avis d'utilisateurs
    • 49avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 6 victoires et 6 nominations au total

    Épisodes75

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux notés

    Vidéos1

    Red Dwarf: The Series
    Trailer 1:35
    Red Dwarf: The Series

    Photos433

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 427
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    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Chris Barrie
    Chris Barrie
    • Rimmer…
    • 1988–2020
    Craig Charles
    Craig Charles
    • Lister…
    • 1988–2020
    Danny John-Jules
    Danny John-Jules
    • Cat…
    • 1988–2020
    Robert Llewellyn
    Robert Llewellyn
    • Kryten…
    • 1989–2020
    Norman Lovett
    Norman Lovett
    • Holly
    • 1988–2020
    Hattie Hayridge
    Hattie Hayridge
    • Holly…
    • 1988–1992
    Chloë Annett
    Chloë Annett
    • Kochanski…
    • 1997–2009
    Mac McDonald
    Mac McDonald
    • Captain Hollister
    • 1988–2017
    Tony Hawks
    Tony Hawks
    • Dispensing Machine…
    • 1988–1991
    Daniel Barker
    • Alien Natural History Presenter…
    • 2016–2017
    Graham McTavish
    Graham McTavish
    • Ackerman
    • 1999
    Clare Grogan
    Clare Grogan
    • Kochanski
    • 1988–1993
    Rupert Bates
    • Bodyguard…
    • 1988–1991
    Jake Wood
    Jake Wood
    • Kill Crazy
    • 1999
    David Ross
    • Talkie Toaster…
    • 1988–2017
    Paul Bradley
    • Chen
    • 1988–1999
    David Gillespie
    • Selby
    • 1988–1999
    Simon Gaffney
    • Young Rimmer
    • 1989–1991
    • Création
      • Rob Grant
      • Doug Naylor
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs158

    8,438.5K
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    Avis à la une

    JinDigital

    I am hopelessly addicted to this show.

    Let's get one thing straight here: I don't watch much TV. A lot of the shows nowadays really get on my nerves. But RED DWARF is different. DWARF is shown on Saturday nights on my local PBS station, and the week just isn't the same if I can't see my favorite bunch of marooned space bums. The story is a bit of a long one: Dave Lister, a technician aboard the mining ship RED DWARF, is punished for having an unquarantined cat on the ship. His punishment involves going into stasis for 18 months, forfeiting all pay (which he wants to save up so he can move to Fiji with his cat and the love of his life, Kristine Kochanski). But while he is in stasis, his supremely anal-retentive superior officer and bunkmate Arnold Rimmer fails to fix a restraining plate properly on a warp drive, and the whole ship undergoes an internal nuclear explosion. When awakened by Holly, the ship's slightly loopy computer, Lister finds out he has been in stasis for over 3 million years. Rimmer, resurrected by Holly as a hologram, is back to keep Lister sane yet seems more probable to do the opposite. Lister's cat, who was pregnant, was safely sealed away in the cargo hold of the ship. There the cats have bred for 3 million years, and the last survivor of their race pops out of an air vent, a Felis Sapiens, or commonly known as just Cat. Together, they try to find a way back home to Earth...even if it takes 3 million years!

    I would recommend this to anyone who likes a good laugh. :o)
    alainenglish

    One of the funniest British comedies around

    One Britain's great science fiction comedies, "Red Dwarf" is one of the United Kingdom's finest television exports. This is due to the fact that alot of the comedy, through the characters, satirizes British stereotypes (slobs, snobs, neurotics) and makes its own commentary on the bleakness and absurdity that is human life.

    The format, which has become considerably more flexible in recent years, started thus. Set in space, some two or hundred years or so in the future, on an enormous mining ship called Red Dwarf, working class slob Dave Lister (Craig Charles) finds himself placed "in stasis"(frozen in time) as punishment for illegally hoarding a cat on board the ship. Awakened by the ship's senile computer Holly (Norman Lovett), Lister is shocked to discover he's been in stasis for three million years and the rest of the crew have been killed by a freak accident.

    Asides from the now-senile computer, Lister's only company is a vain, narcissistic lifeform who evolved from his cat (Danny John-Jules) and a hologram of Arnold Rimmer (Chris Barrie), his bossy and officious superior.

    This was the set up for the first two series of Red Dwarf. The format changed in series three when Holly swapped sexes and became Hattie Hayridge, and the crew recruited Kryten (Robert Llewllyn), an eager-to-please mechanoid with an overactive guilt chip. In series six, Red Dwarf and its computer were abandoned, and the crew were forced to survive in modified shuttlecraft Starbug.

    Chris Barrie left as Rimmer in series seven and was replaced, courtesy of an alternate universe storyline, by Kochanski (Chloe Annett), the love of Lister's life. The ship, complete with resurrected crew, returned for series eight and saw the adventurers, along with a back-from-the-dead Rimmer, thrown in the ship's brig for their adventures in the previous series.

    In the first two series with a minimum main cast, the much-despised grey sets lent an appropriately barren, lonely backdrop to the very character based comedy. Most of this consisted of intimate comic banter between Lister and Rimmer, occasionally livened up by the Cat's hilariously self-obsessed prescence or an off-the-cuff joke from the laconic Holly.

    Seasons three to five broadened the scope of the series, making it more experimental with different science fiction concepts. The added prescence of Kryten helped this, his 'groinal socket', susceptibility to the whims of a sometimes deranged Rimmer and increased attempts to break his restrictive programming brought new comic dimensions to the series.

    Series six and seven reverse the comedy-science fiction ratio of the series in that the former now takes a back seat to the latter. In other words the comedy of the series accentuates the main science fiction based plots. The comedy emphasis was restored for series eight, although, much like series seven, this element was alot weaker than before.

    The series benefitted from alot of strong characterisation. Craig Charles embodies carefree slob Lister, while Chris Barrie turns in a wonderfully uptight performance as the hopelessly neurotic Rimmer. Dancer Danny John Jules brings alot of colourful charm to the Cat, while Norman Lovett is wonderfully sardonic as Holly, whose almost apathetic stupidity allows for alot of comic misunderstandings. After being replaced by Hattie Hayridge for a few seasons, Lovett returned in series seven.

    Robert Llewellyn, his entire head covered in a prosthetic mask, has some fine moments in a character that is very much a comic take on the android "Data" from "Star Trek:TNG". Chloe Annett is wonderfully superficial as Kochanski, but is attractive enough to make plausible Lister's attraction to her.

    Series eight was helped considerably by the return of Mac MacDonald as Red Dwarf's hapless Captain. During the two-part episode "Pete" he is subjected to a series of increasingly hilarious indignations, prompting a wonderfully humiliated performance from MacDonald.

    Time will tell whether or not the series will return, but the series remains one of the definitive comic staples of British television.
    8richy1611

    Possibly the Best TV Comedy ever...............ruined!!!!!!!!!!!

    I would have rated Red Dwarf 10/10, but unfortunately, when rating the show in its entirety, you must consider the final two seasons/series.

    Series 1 - 6 will always be what I remember about the show. It was funny and original. You could relate to all characters (all the actors deserve the highest praise), and although there were plenty of plot holes, and continuity problems, there was a classic blend of good story lines, mixed with classic British-style humour.............it was unlike anything else before or since. Pure quality. Every episode was a classic, and I can watch them all again and again and laugh until I get a stitch.

    Then after series 6 (one of the best series') Rob Grant left the show, the production budget increased, and series 7 was given that stupid 'film look'. Also Rimmer was replaced halfway through the series with Kochanski (Listers long lost love). Basically it seemed like someone had pressed the show's self destruct button, and its never been the same since. All the humour seemed forced, and the story lines got so deep, you actually forgot you were supposed to be watching a Sci-Fi comedy.

    .......Then things got worse. Series 8 came out. The less said the better. I know there are hard core fans out there who say that series 8 isn't that bad. But try watching episodes from series 3, then watch series 8 and you'll realise how much the show went into freefall.

    Its such a shame because in the early days of Dwarf, there simply wasn't anything better on TV.
    9mcrocket-33814

    Series 1-6...9+ stars. Afterwards 8 descending.

    For those who do not know. The series was created and initially, exclusively written by Rob Grant and Doug Naylor.

    This lasted until Series 6.

    And each series - to me - just got better and better. To where 5 and 6 were just outstanding overall.

    Then - after Series 6 - Rob Grant left the show.

    And Doug Naylor brought other writers onboard to help him create further series.

    And, sadly, the show dropped noticeably in quality.

    It's heart was still in the right place. Even a bit 'nicer' and 'warmer' than the other series.

    But the pacing and the humor went noticeably down.

    The former made the show seem almost cartoonish.

    The latter was just dumbed down a bit. And physical gags (though some were very funny) became the main source of humor. As opposed to verbal ones.

    It just felt like the show had gone from originally written by seasoned, very-talented sci-fi writers/creators.

    To - later - a series created by intelligent college students who were sci-fi fans.

    So... Series 1-6 - some of the most outstanding, science fiction entertainment that I have ever seen.

    Series 7+ - a very good series with only moments of brilliance.
    Lizard_uk

    in space no-one can hear you scream with laughter .

    Reading through these reviews brought on a wave of nostalgia for me , I watched this show religiously from the very first episode , it's quite possibly the funniest thing I've ever seen . The first series when it was originally shown was so new and so different it was a really refreshing change from the usual dross that is the vast majority TV comedy . The friction between Lister and Rimmer is what really drives the show in the early episodes , it's great the way in which you have these two people who utterly detest each other but are confined together with no hope of escape from each other's company .

    With the third series the show took a change in direction and pace , with the introduction of the character Kryten as a regular and the all new female version of Holly . With any other show this might have signalled the beginning of the end , such radical changes rarely go down well but with Red Dwarf it was like a new lease of life and saved the show from becoming stale or repetitive . Series 4 and 5 continued in a similar vein with the stories becoming ever more way out and crazy , all riotously good stuff .

    Then along came series 6 and another set of very major changes , for a long time I had a really hard time getting into this series , the loss of the ship Red Dwarf was such a major change and it really kinda threw me . Upon repeated viewings this series really grew on me though , and it has some seriously funny episodes right up there with the best of them , and the end of the last episode in the series was really quite shocking , it actually brought a tear to my eye .

    Next we have the ill fated seventh series which started out well enough with the episode tikka to ride , but after that it rapidly degenerated , it deeply saddened me to see what my favourite TV show was becoming , it was but a shadow of it's former self and with series eight things took a further plunge into banality and throw away one liners , what a terribly sad way for it all to end .

    At it's best this show is the best entertainment it has ever been my pleasure to watch , but eventually I guess you can have too much of a good thing and I doubt we'll see it's like again .

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Craig Charles and Danny John-Jules are the only two actors to appear in every episode.
    • Gaffes
      The Cat is the last (on Red Dwarf after season one) of a species that evolved from Lister's pet cat, Frankenstein. It is sometimes stated that he evolved from Lister's pet cat. This in not inconsistent. Evolution is a process that takes place naturally over millions of years and over generation it become expressed. It is not a process that takes place on or to an individual even though an individual would be the first to contain a mutation.

      However, during the show's run it is implies and sometimes stated that evolution can take place on the individual level and a mutation can happen to non-living items whether they be organic or inorganic. These concepts are not support in the evolution process or the mechanism of natural selection.
    • Citations

      [repeated line]

      Lister: Smeg!

    • Crédits fous
      The closing credits in the remastered version of Red Dwarf: Backwards (1989) are in reverse.
    • Versions alternatives
      A video, "Red Dwarf VII: X-tended" (3 November 1997) was released containing extended editions of three episodes from the seventh series - "Tikka to Ride", "Ouroboros" and "Duct Soup", including fifty new bloopers and the full-length version of the Rimmer Munchkin Song from the end of "Blue".
    • Connexions
      Edited into Red Dwarf: Smeg Ups (1994)

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    FAQ

    • How many seasons does Red Dwarf have?
      Alimenté par Alexa
    • What is Red Dwarf and what is it about?
    • Why did Chris Barrie temporarily leave Red Dwarf?
    • Why does this series lack continuity?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 15 février 1988 (Royaume-Uni)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Sites officiels
      • BBC Red Dwarf Site (United Kingdom)
      • Grant Naylor Productions
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Esperanto
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Red Dwarf VII
    • Lieux de tournage
      • BBC Manchester, New Broadcasting House, Oxford Road, Manchester, Greater Manchester, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(studio: series 1-3)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Grant Naylor Productions
      • Baby Cow Productions
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      30 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.78 : 1 / (high definition)
      • 1.33 : 1

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    Chris Barrie, Craig Charles, Ray Fearon, Danny John-Jules, Robert Llewellyn, and Norman Lovett in Red Dwarf (1988)
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