Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaTakes five women who headed out on a weekend of a lifetime to celebrate Zara's engagement only to be interrupted by the end of the world. They have to wait it out in an isolated holiday cott... Leggi tuttoTakes five women who headed out on a weekend of a lifetime to celebrate Zara's engagement only to be interrupted by the end of the world. They have to wait it out in an isolated holiday cottage in Wales.Takes five women who headed out on a weekend of a lifetime to celebrate Zara's engagement only to be interrupted by the end of the world. They have to wait it out in an isolated holiday cottage in Wales.
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I originally posted this review against the final episode of the show, but with confirmation now that it will not be returning, I've decided to add that review here also.
Five women from Birmingham travel to a remote North Wales cottage for a hen night. Unfortunately, a pandemic of crab measles wipes out much of human civilisation, particularly the men. Several weeks later, they risk a trip out to hunt for supplies but in doing so risk anyone they meet learning about their secret. That male stripper Drew (Ben McGregor) who visited that night is still alive and chained to the radiator for his safety.
The apocalypse is always going to work well on UK TV and films, because unless you want to do zombie hoards, the lack of supporting artists is going to keep the cost down. The characters are fairly broadly written to start with, but the longer the show goes, the more explanations you get for why people are as they are. After the first couple of epsiodes, the plot splits in two, as the main cast come to realise the "white gold" mine they have, with potentially the last man alive and try to convince the bride, Zara, that her fiancée is not coming to rescue her. They're all brilliantly played. Luzie Shorthouse, from "We Are Lady Parts" is Zara, Elizabeth Berrington almost steals the whole show as her mum, Bern - ostensibly the villain of the show. Callie Cooke from "Cheaters" plays her best friend Shelly and Lauren O' Rourke, from "White Gold" plays survivalist Veena.
But what I really liked was the other, madder plot, where Jen, played by Kate O'Flynn, is driven mad on a combination of pain, infection, loneliness and probably some mental illness to begin with, and goes on a fantasy quest with Danny Dyer, playing himself in "ultimate geezer" mode.
As I say, it's more amusing than funny, and if you want to argue that time is too short for all but the pinnacle then I'd say this isn't the one for you. If you're prepared to invest a bit of time in the character though, the returns are there.
Five women from Birmingham travel to a remote North Wales cottage for a hen night. Unfortunately, a pandemic of crab measles wipes out much of human civilisation, particularly the men. Several weeks later, they risk a trip out to hunt for supplies but in doing so risk anyone they meet learning about their secret. That male stripper Drew (Ben McGregor) who visited that night is still alive and chained to the radiator for his safety.
The apocalypse is always going to work well on UK TV and films, because unless you want to do zombie hoards, the lack of supporting artists is going to keep the cost down. The characters are fairly broadly written to start with, but the longer the show goes, the more explanations you get for why people are as they are. After the first couple of epsiodes, the plot splits in two, as the main cast come to realise the "white gold" mine they have, with potentially the last man alive and try to convince the bride, Zara, that her fiancée is not coming to rescue her. They're all brilliantly played. Luzie Shorthouse, from "We Are Lady Parts" is Zara, Elizabeth Berrington almost steals the whole show as her mum, Bern - ostensibly the villain of the show. Callie Cooke from "Cheaters" plays her best friend Shelly and Lauren O' Rourke, from "White Gold" plays survivalist Veena.
But what I really liked was the other, madder plot, where Jen, played by Kate O'Flynn, is driven mad on a combination of pain, infection, loneliness and probably some mental illness to begin with, and goes on a fantasy quest with Danny Dyer, playing himself in "ultimate geezer" mode.
As I say, it's more amusing than funny, and if you want to argue that time is too short for all but the pinnacle then I'd say this isn't the one for you. If you're prepared to invest a bit of time in the character though, the returns are there.
At the start of episode 1 I thought I'd hate it, as the characters were grating and really not the kind of people I'd want to watch a show about (or so I thought) as they came across as rather abrasive.
But as the episode went on, that changed completely.
The characters are over the top and somewhat annoying in contrast with the seriousness of the situations they're in, and despite quite a bit of the humour being focused on some narrow topics, there's some pretty clever dry humour chucked in there too.
I saw one review mentioned the dialogue being really bad and I can't help but feel like they maybe missed the whole idea of the show in terms of tone. And again, the dry humour.
Also, somehow, in 6 episodes half hour episodes, it has more character development than most shows that get double the runtime and episode count per season.
My advice to anyone wanting to watch it, is that if you want to watch a surprisingly well written show wearing the mask of a badly written show, give it a go.
But as the episode went on, that changed completely.
The characters are over the top and somewhat annoying in contrast with the seriousness of the situations they're in, and despite quite a bit of the humour being focused on some narrow topics, there's some pretty clever dry humour chucked in there too.
I saw one review mentioned the dialogue being really bad and I can't help but feel like they maybe missed the whole idea of the show in terms of tone. And again, the dry humour.
Also, somehow, in 6 episodes half hour episodes, it has more character development than most shows that get double the runtime and episode count per season.
My advice to anyone wanting to watch it, is that if you want to watch a surprisingly well written show wearing the mask of a badly written show, give it a go.
Henpocalypse contains some fairly stereotypical characters in a storyline that veers between post and pre-apocalypse. Sadly it's not that amusing and the plot is not especially unusual, witty or suspenseful in any way. The plot is quite conventional even if the scenario isn't with a number of off the peg characters. Probably the only person who comes out with any credit is Danny Dyer who plays himself with...utter conviction. Could have been a whole lot better and the icing on the cake was the last unsatisfying episode where the writer had the gall for setting it up for another series. It's becoming quite tiresome with series trying to string out thin storylines over multiple seasons.
Talked into watching this by my wife, I thought it would be dull, have poor jokes and be a general waste of time. I was very wrong. Found myself laughing throughout the whole series.
Really quite funny, with frequent laugh-out-loud moments. The girls in it are all good in their own way. Can't fault it. Surprised it has such a low rating. Definitely doesn't deserve the rating it has at this point in time.
Don't know what else to say. It was a good series. Well worth a watch. I don't need to go on about it. Glad it was a group of girls from Birmingham. Reminded me of Bridesmaids meets Shaun of the Dead.
Watch it.
Really quite funny, with frequent laugh-out-loud moments. The girls in it are all good in their own way. Can't fault it. Surprised it has such a low rating. Definitely doesn't deserve the rating it has at this point in time.
Don't know what else to say. It was a good series. Well worth a watch. I don't need to go on about it. Glad it was a group of girls from Birmingham. Reminded me of Bridesmaids meets Shaun of the Dead.
Watch it.
Its a fun concept but unfortunately the title 'Henpocalypse!' was the funniest thing in it. Yes there were a few decent one-liners here and there and some visual gags with sex toys which worked, but overall it was too short of laughs for a pure comedy and consequently a miss.
Production values really were cheap and cheerful - I wouldn't be surprised if the cast and crew stayed in the Welsh cottage and shot it over a weekend. I think viewers would have happily overlooked this if the story and characters had been better developed and it was funnier.
The acting wasn't brill, Callie Cooke was the only one that shone, she has natural comic sense and timing. Generally there was just a bit too much pointless running around and shrieking to no effect.
I have no problems with female led comedies - really enjoyed Bridget Christie's recent comedy drama 'The Change' on C4 which was LOL funny as is 'We are lady parts also on C4 catch-up. Check them out if you haven't seen them, they're both much better than this one.
Production values really were cheap and cheerful - I wouldn't be surprised if the cast and crew stayed in the Welsh cottage and shot it over a weekend. I think viewers would have happily overlooked this if the story and characters had been better developed and it was funnier.
The acting wasn't brill, Callie Cooke was the only one that shone, she has natural comic sense and timing. Generally there was just a bit too much pointless running around and shrieking to no effect.
I have no problems with female led comedies - really enjoyed Bridget Christie's recent comedy drama 'The Change' on C4 which was LOL funny as is 'We are lady parts also on C4 catch-up. Check them out if you haven't seen them, they're both much better than this one.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizFilmed in Llanfair in north wales
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