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Red Dwarf Appreciation Thread

I watched the first season recently because Netflix had it on instant watch. It was decent, but based on the fan following it has I guess I expected more.
 
I watched the first season recently because Netflix had it on instant watch. It was decent, but based on the fan following it has I guess I expected more.

It got better after the first season, but essentially seasons 1 to 8 are good and season 9 is crap.
 
I thought this was going to be about the future of our nearest friendly fireball, and was going to present a case of confusion and a mismatch of terms.

But, as I see now, my presence in this here thread only serves to further confuse me.
And make y'all waste time reading the meaningless words in this post.

If I return to read anything in this thread, I most certainly hope that by then, someone will have described just exactly what the hell this Red Dwarf is about; I most certainly shall not be expected to research it on my own.
 
I thought this was going to be about the future of our nearest friendly fireball, and was going to present a case of confusion and a mismatch of terms.

But, as I see now, my presence in this here thread only serves to further confuse me.
And make y'all waste time reading the meaningless words in this post.

If I return to read anything in this thread, I most certainly hope that by then, someone will have described just exactly what the hell this Red Dwarf is about; I most certainly shall not be expected to research it on my own.

Here you go:

Red Dwarf was created by Rob Grant and Doug Naylor, the radio and TV comedy writers behind Son of Cliché and Spitting Image. It was based on a series of radio sketches they had written called 'Dave Hollins - Space Cadet' about a man stranded on a space ship, alone except for his computer.

First broadcast in 1988, Red Dwarf is a half-hour science-fiction sit-com. It has so far run for 9 series, totalling 55 episodes. It stars Chris Barrie (Rimmer), Craig Charles (Lister), Danny John-Jules (Cat), Robert Llewellyn (Kryten), Chloë Annett (as Kochanski), Norman Lovett and Hattie Hayridge (both playing Holly).

On the mining ship Red Dwarf, professional slob Dave Lister works as a technician with his immediate superior and bunkmate, the officious Arnold Rimmer. To say that Rimmer and Lister don't get on would be like saying that high doses of radiation aren't entirely good for you.

Quite a coincidence, then, that a radiation leak picks this moment to wipe out Red Dwarf's crew.

Having smuggled his pregnant pet cat onto the ship, Lister is imprisoned in stasis - suspended animation - and so has no idea that his crew-mates, including love interest Kristine Kochanski, are being blasted into sherbet.

Lister is woken three million years later. Holly, the ship's computer, redirected the ship out of the solar system as soon as the accident happened, and then had to wait for the radiation to reach a safe background level.

To keep Lister company Holly resurrects Rimmer as a hologram. He can't touch anything, but he's as irritating as ever.

To everyone's surprise the team is soon joined by a humanoid animal evolved from Lister's pet cat. The shallow, self-involved creature is cleverly named 'Cat'.

After a year or so of drifting back through space, beginning the three million year journey home, the crew encounter Kryten - a servile mechanoid who thinks the phrase “Cleanliness is next to godliness” understates the importance of cleanliness.

In the following years Holly changes his gender from male to female (and back again), the crew misplace Red Dwarf and spend some time stranded on the small transport vehicle Starbug, Rimmer leaves to become an inter-dimensional space hero, a version of Kochanski appears from another dimension and, eventually, the entire crew of Red Dwarf are resurrected by nanobots.

And if you think that sounds complicated, just be glad we didn't get started on all the time-travel stuff that goes on...

From here: http://www.reddwarf.co.uk/about/
 
I realise that the Birtish version has humour which is an acquired taste. I'm not sure what the American version is like, since I never watched it nor do I want to, but I guess that they may changed the humour to make it more appealing to non-British audiences.

Any way, it is always rankled highly on the best of British sitcom programmes, like Only Fools and Horses, Fawlty Towers, Blackadder, etc.
 
I realise that the Birtish version has humour which is an acquired taste. I'm not sure what the American version is like, since I never watched it nor do I want to, but I guess that they may changed the humour to make it more appealing to non-British audiences.

Any way, it is always rankled highly on the best of British sitcom programmes, like Only Fools and Horses, Fawlty Towers, Blackadder, etc.

they're making a US version?

Red Dwarf is awesome though.
 
h_red_dwarf_02.jpg
 
It's quite good if you like lowbrow British humor (humour?).

The first time I watched episode 1 ("The End") I was LOL at the computer explaining the situation over and again to Lister.

As mentioned above, Netflix has it in the streaming library.
 
I don't know what is worse, this or Dr. Who. I have yet to see a good Bristish show, every one I have seen is generic as fu*(
 
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