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Red Dwarf: Complete BBC Series 1 [DVD]
 
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Red Dwarf: Complete BBC Series 1 [DVD]

Chris Barrie , Craig Charles , Ed Bye    Suitable for 12 years and over   DVD
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (55 customer reviews)
Price: £5.49 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Frequently Bought Together

Red Dwarf: Complete BBC Series 1 [DVD] + Red Dwarf: Series 2 [DVD] [1988] + Red Dwarf: Series 3 [DVD]
Price For All Three: £20.63

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Product details

  • Actors: Chris Barrie, Craig Charles, Danny John-Jules, Norman Lovett, Doug Naylor
  • Directors: Ed Bye
  • Format: PAL
  • Language English, Esperanto
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Classification: 12
  • Studio: 2 Entertain Video
  • DVD Release Date: 4 Nov 2002
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (55 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00006JI1V
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 3,786 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review

Notoriously, and entirely appropriately, the original outline for Doug Naylor and Rob Grant's comedy SF series Red Dwarf was sketched on the back of a beer mat. When it finally appeared on our television screens in 1988 the show had clearly stayed true to its roots, mixing jokes about excessive curry consumption with affectionate parodies of classic SF. Indeed, one of the show's most endearing and enduring features is its obvious respect for the conventions of SF, even as it gleefully subverts them. The scenario owes something to Douglas Adams's satirical Hitch-Hiker's Guide, something to The Odd Couple and a lot more to the slacker SF of John Carpenter's Dark Star. Behind the crew's constant bickering there lurks an impending sense that life, the universe and everything are all someone's idea of a terrible joke.

Later series broadened the show's horizons until at last its premise was so diluted as to be unrecognisable, but in the six episodes of the first series the comedy is witty and intimate, focusing on characters and not special effects. Slob Dave Lister (Craig Charles) is the last human alive after a radiation leak wipes out the crew of the vast mining vessel Red Dwarf (episode 1, "The End"). He bums around the spaceship with the perpetually uptight and annoyed hologram of his dead bunkmate, Arnold Rimmer (Chris Barrie, the show's greatest comedy asset) and a creature evolved from a cat (dapper Danny John Jules). They are guided rather haphazardly by Holly, the worryingly thick ship's computer (lugubrious Norman Lovett).

On the DVD: Red Dwarf I arrives in a two-disc set, with all six episodes on the first disc accompanied by an excellent group commentary from Craig Charles, Chris Barrie, Danny John Jules and Norman Lovett. (There's also a bonus commentary on "The End" with the two writers and director Ed Bye.) The 4:3 picture is unimpressive, but sound is decent stereo. The second disc has an entertaining 25-minute documentary on the genesis of the series with contributions from the cast, writer Doug Naylor and producer Paul Jackson. Navigate the animated menus to find a gallery of extra features, including isolated music cues, deleted scenes, outtakes ("Smeg Ups"), a fun "Drunk" music montage, model effects shots, Web links, audiobook clips, the original BBC trailer and even the entire first episode in Japanese. --Mark Walker

DVD Description

Episodes:
1.The End
2.Future Echoes
3.Balance of Power
4.Waiting for God
5.Confidence and Paranoia
6.Me 2

DVD Special Features:
Disc 1--Cast commentary; Bonus writers' and director commentary on "The End"
Disc 2--Documentary: Launching Red Dwarf
"Drunk" featurette
Japanese episode: "The End"
Photo gallery
Deleted scenes
Model effects shots
Smeg-ups
Easter eggs
Isolated music cues
Talking book chapters
Original BBC trailer
Weblink


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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
34 of 34 people found the following review helpful
By Budge Burgess TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:DVD
It's easy to dismiss this as not the 'best' of Red Dwarf - the characters, situations, production quality, and the writing all become more confident and more exuberant in future series. But this is the starting point. Without these ground-breaking and scene-setting episodes, there would have been no more.

The BBC was highly suspicious of anything with a 'science fiction' cachet - and couldn't accept that space travel, in the company of a dead man, could be funny. You wonder at this reluctance. Previous SF ventures - like "Dr.Who", "Blake's Seven", "Quatermas" - had become cult classics.

But the dominant television SF was American - clean-cut, moral, highly educated crews, travelling in clean, highly sophisticated space craft with the most advanced technology known to the imagination, wearing clean clothes (mini skirts and tight, tight uniforms), and pursuing a clean, glamorous lifestyle in which they made throw away allusions to science and scientific theory (and fantasy).

Red Dwarf is a mucky great space freighter ... the sort of thing you could imagine getting stuck behind just when you were planning on going into warp speed. It was crewed by misfits and rejects. No sane person on earth would employ these people, so they ended up as the crew of this hulk, enduring the boring routines and hazards of space. The best their technology could manage was a talking, existential toaster ... and other devices which made an art out of dysfunction (not least, the ship's computer). This is the working class in space - mucky slobs, boiler suits, not a Shakespearean Company accent in earshot ... and a real Scottish engineer who beamed beautifully.

The potency of Red Dwarf lies in its claustrophobia and the iconoclasm of its setting and theme. We're aboard a freighter the size of a city, wandering alone (?) in the vast infinity of space ... and we have a slob who doesn't appear to have a change of clothing, sharing a cell and bunk beds with a dead man. It stands in marked contrast to the glitz and glamour of other images of space travel.

This is a low budget production - tight sets, no special effects, small cast. "Don't make it look like a space ship", the BBC told the writers, as if a mainstream audience might be convinced it was 'legitimate' comedy. It's strength is in the interplay of the characters. Episode by episode, they will grow, become transformed. Episode by episode Grant & Naylor become more confident, more outrageous. They take the tension between Lister and Rimmer (and the two actors didn't exactly get on, off camera), and stretch it to comic extremes. What starts as a comedy of space-manners will, in later series, push the boundaries of science fiction and make ironic commentary on its themes and settings.

But there is complex science and philosophy from the outset. We start with two inept technicians - Lister the slob, Rimmer the pretentious jobsworth - who struggle even to maintain a soup dispenser ... yet we're aboard a spaceship which has the technology to restore life to the dead, to capture consciousness in a computer and keep the deceased alive as a hologram. The 'science' and the conceits which will make the series work are introduced early.

Television channels are reluctant to invest in science fiction - it sounds like an expensive adventure into special effects, and most people wouldn't understand the science! Red Dwarf proves that SF does not need special effects ... and that the television audience is more intelligent and more sophisticated than the programming experts are prepared to admit. Children and adults, alike, had no problem coping with the fantasies and 'science' of Red Dwarf.

Situation comedy is the hardest form of writing. It demands the creation of a believable situation, believable characters (who can be pushed to the extremes of behaviour yet still retain our sympathy and our conviction that they are, somehow, 'real' people), and enough variety of situation yet continuity of setting to maintain momentum and keep the audience involved. The situation can be pushed to extreme, can be utterly surreal, but as long as the audience is given a chance to identify with the situation and pick up its momentum, you can have classic comedy.

And classic comedy is precisely what you get. Superbly written, a fine, ensemble cast, and comedy which breaks out of the box.

The DVD extras? Well, the commentary is excellent - the cast talk you through the episodes, giving you a lot of insights into the making of the show. The rest of the extras contribute little, very little. But the show's the thing. Utterly riveting television which can be watched again and again and again.

Was this review helpful to you?
21 of 21 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
Being someone who had only viewed the first series remastered, I must say that this is startling more impressive than the updated version. The grey set and original model shots make Red Dwarf look more ordinary, adding to the comic atmosphere. It's also nice to see them in original format - it shows you what the cult grew from more accurately.

The episodes are viewable either individually or as a combined unit, allowing good flexibilty, not unlike most other DVD releases. The introduction animation and title menu is particularly special, showing a great variety of objects and entrance aboard the ship.

However, the thing that truly separates this DVD from the rest is it's individual extras disk. Only Red Dwarf could come complete with an entire episode in Japanese! The outtakes and smeg-ups have been previously available in the main, but the superior quality of the DVD really brings Red Dwarf to the present.

An excellent DVD of the entire first series, and extras that are impressive to say the least. Entertainment at its finest in your own home from Grant Naylor and the BBC.

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Was this review helpful to you?
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
Red Dwarf Season 1 on DVD is still as funny as it was back in the 80s, there's no doubt about it! This edition isn't the remastered episodes that were launched on video in the late 90s, either. Instead, they are the original episodes, sharpened up, with the colours and sounds touched up, to make them look as good as new. I know people are complaining about it being in a 4:3 format, but that's what it was filmed in, and there's nothing that they can do about that, as it would just make the episodes look untidy! The cast commenteries are not to be missed - you just know that Craig (Charles) and the gang had a great time recording them, back in June.

It's great to finally see this classic commedy on DVD - it's well overdue!!!

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Smegging brilliant!
After around twenty years since I last watched the ground-breaking first series of the BBC2 Sci-fi comedy, I'd forgotten just how smegging brilliant it was! Read more
Published 1 month ago by Scaroth, Last of the Jagaroth
A decent start from the boys from the dwarf
Even though this series was first released to television in 1988, it has undoubtedly stood the test of time. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Mr. A. Rothnie
These Are The Adventures Of The JMC Ship Red Dwarf...
Red Dwarf is perhaps the best, and funniest Sci-Fi/Comedy series ever (Futurama comes a very close second). Read more
Published 8 months ago by Dehumanizer
Review for the one-disc edition.
This series has been released on DVD several times previously and doubtless some will say that this one-disc edition is unnecessary. Read more
Published 12 months ago by M. Hopkins
Great service...shame about the product
Just to be clear, the product as in the red dwarf dvd's are themselves great and the delivery and packaging also... Read more
Published 12 months ago by Lowgun
And so a great was born...
It's hard to think how old this is now, yet it hardly aged at all. Shot on an extremely low budget, this had to be driven by a strong cast and script and here, we hit the jackpot. Read more
Published 17 months ago by S. Meadows
Future Echo's
This is a really good series and starts of with a laugh on the 1st line, of the 1st episode, of the 1st series, which is a start of things to come. Read more
Published on 4 April 2010 by Ben Nicholson
after all these years i still love it
i bought this item because i remember being a kid and
watching red dwarf i loved it then and i still love it
now any fan of bbc comedy should make this part of their... Read more
Published on 10 Sep 2009 by A. Gemmell
Review
Excellent service. DVD arrived on the day I thought it would be sent out! Would definitely recommend seller.
Published on 6 Jun 2009 by Pm Jones
Very dated, but essential viewing
Here's where Red Dwarf began. With a pitiful budget, the series looks grey and tacky; but what saves it is the perfect relationship between Lister and Rimmer. Read more
Published on 29 April 2009 by Dan the Man
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