13 reviews
- kirbylee70-599-526179
- May 30, 2018
- Permalink
Charming, humorous and sad in spots but obviously pushed hard towards a leftist agenda. A lost opportunity
- barbie6982003
- Oct 5, 2019
- Permalink
Wasn't sure at first but once it got started I really loved this show. Ashley Jenson plays this part so well.
- brendavanasco
- Mar 18, 2018
- Permalink
Nothing surprises me in this life anymore and I thought this was a light hearted but possible look at what could happen in any office not just registration. It was great and let's have a second series.
I would never have thought that working in the Births, deaths and marriages department in Leeds would be all that glamorous or exciting. Kay Mellor's television series was rather proof of this.
Kate (Ashley Jensen) finds herself balancing a hectic family life with sulky teenage kids, a partner who is a cop and a secret. An affair with a work colleague that was caught on cctv. She also has heavy responsibilities at work where she is admired apart from one token villainess who is trying to blackmail her by wanting to expose her drunken infidelity.
Kate copes with the newly bereaved, fake wedding immigration scams, gay marriages, babies surviving the odds and Freddie Flintoff making his acting debut and somehow staying sober.
It was a load of unbelievable tosh.
Kate (Ashley Jensen) finds herself balancing a hectic family life with sulky teenage kids, a partner who is a cop and a secret. An affair with a work colleague that was caught on cctv. She also has heavy responsibilities at work where she is admired apart from one token villainess who is trying to blackmail her by wanting to expose her drunken infidelity.
Kate copes with the newly bereaved, fake wedding immigration scams, gay marriages, babies surviving the odds and Freddie Flintoff making his acting debut and somehow staying sober.
It was a load of unbelievable tosh.
- Prismark10
- Dec 20, 2017
- Permalink
- lindabruno-73418
- Mar 22, 2019
- Permalink
- info-216-488627
- Oct 31, 2019
- Permalink
Really thought this would have been top rate but, Man, was I disappointed. The script seems to revolve around so many coincidences that it becomes totally unbelievable. The dialogue is trite, and the script so badly written, that it could have come out of a high school drama club. The final episode is so cheesy and desperate to find a happy ending. Loose ends are all neatly tied up and the viewer is glad to see the back end of all the characters.
I had high hopes for this series. Great Cast. Ashley Jensen, Kenny Doughty, Rebecca Front. Brilliant writer with good track record in Kay Mellor. What could go wrong?
And yet it does all go terribly wrong and having said that I'm having problems putting into words just why it is that it does go so wrong.
I think what it comes down to (maybe!) is that it tries way too hard to be PC. Worse than that. It almost comes across like it is trying to preach to viewers as to HOW to be political correct.
Frightened of one day being confronted by a man at work who shows up dressed in woman's clothing and not sure how to react? Don't worry, this programme will give you some clues as to what to do and say.
Been invited to the wedding of an older man who is ex-army and who used to be married to a wonderful woman with whom he had two children but you've been shocked to discover he is now marrying a man? Again, this will ease you through the shock of not knowing how to react.
In this fantasy world, the cross dressing man is universally greeted with compliments by his fellow workers and clients. The gay man's former wife even attends his wedding to his new husband and has a huge smile on her face, obviously thrilled that he has at last found true love.
In real life though? Much as I'd like to say we live in a society where this is all possibly, the fact is we don't. A cross-dresser would certainly be greeted with some derision by at least some co-workers and certainly clients would be uncomfortable with the situation. A wife even attending her ex-husband's wedding to a man? Really? Most ex-wives wouldn't even attend his wedding to a new wife, let alone to a man all the time smiling at his new happiness. It just didn't ring true.
Worse, as I said, it felt like we were being preached to. This is what to do! This is how to behave! This is how to think!
In addition, one sub-plot has two of the Registers' workers fearing for their jobs after they were caught on CCTV by a 3rd blackmailing co-worker having sex after getting drunk at the office Christmas party. Leeds city apparently has a policy against co-workers entering into sexual relationships (true or not, I don't know) while at the same time is happy to have a cross-dressing male on staff and understandably (as per law and rightfully so) providing registers to conduct gay weddings? We aren't talking manager-employee sex by the way. Or Harvey Weinstein, Bill Cosby abuse of power and position type of sex. Just two co-workers at the same level, both consulting adults, having sex outside office hours after getting drunk at the Christmas Party . For that, City policy is instant dismissal. (Admitedly, the sex was on the premises but even so!). In this day and age, if the workers were fired, the union would call a full strike and the two fired workers would jointly higher lawyers to sue the Council for damages and solicitors would be queuing up to take on the task pro bono.
Again, it just didn't work for me.
My wife and I managed two episodes but after gritting our teeth through the last 20 minutes of the second episode we turned to each other and said, "No more".
By all means, make up your own minds and give it a try. Some will be happy watching this fantasy, others will be like us and other reviewers and just find it unsatisfactory.
By the way, what's with the "Lies" in the title? Does it refer to the lying about the real world being like this I wondered.
And yet it does all go terribly wrong and having said that I'm having problems putting into words just why it is that it does go so wrong.
I think what it comes down to (maybe!) is that it tries way too hard to be PC. Worse than that. It almost comes across like it is trying to preach to viewers as to HOW to be political correct.
Frightened of one day being confronted by a man at work who shows up dressed in woman's clothing and not sure how to react? Don't worry, this programme will give you some clues as to what to do and say.
Been invited to the wedding of an older man who is ex-army and who used to be married to a wonderful woman with whom he had two children but you've been shocked to discover he is now marrying a man? Again, this will ease you through the shock of not knowing how to react.
In this fantasy world, the cross dressing man is universally greeted with compliments by his fellow workers and clients. The gay man's former wife even attends his wedding to his new husband and has a huge smile on her face, obviously thrilled that he has at last found true love.
In real life though? Much as I'd like to say we live in a society where this is all possibly, the fact is we don't. A cross-dresser would certainly be greeted with some derision by at least some co-workers and certainly clients would be uncomfortable with the situation. A wife even attending her ex-husband's wedding to a man? Really? Most ex-wives wouldn't even attend his wedding to a new wife, let alone to a man all the time smiling at his new happiness. It just didn't ring true.
Worse, as I said, it felt like we were being preached to. This is what to do! This is how to behave! This is how to think!
In addition, one sub-plot has two of the Registers' workers fearing for their jobs after they were caught on CCTV by a 3rd blackmailing co-worker having sex after getting drunk at the office Christmas party. Leeds city apparently has a policy against co-workers entering into sexual relationships (true or not, I don't know) while at the same time is happy to have a cross-dressing male on staff and understandably (as per law and rightfully so) providing registers to conduct gay weddings? We aren't talking manager-employee sex by the way. Or Harvey Weinstein, Bill Cosby abuse of power and position type of sex. Just two co-workers at the same level, both consulting adults, having sex outside office hours after getting drunk at the Christmas Party . For that, City policy is instant dismissal. (Admitedly, the sex was on the premises but even so!). In this day and age, if the workers were fired, the union would call a full strike and the two fired workers would jointly higher lawyers to sue the Council for damages and solicitors would be queuing up to take on the task pro bono.
Again, it just didn't work for me.
My wife and I managed two episodes but after gritting our teeth through the last 20 minutes of the second episode we turned to each other and said, "No more".
By all means, make up your own minds and give it a try. Some will be happy watching this fantasy, others will be like us and other reviewers and just find it unsatisfactory.
By the way, what's with the "Lies" in the title? Does it refer to the lying about the real world being like this I wondered.
Two stars rather than one, only because of the lovely Ashley Jensen, who deserves far better than this politically correct garbage. And dear Rebecca Front - what on earth are you doing taking part in this right-on turn-off? Shudderingly dreadful.
- mikey-72132
- Dec 20, 2017
- Permalink