Damned
Damned
| 27 September 2016 (USA)
SEASON & EPISODES
  • 2
  • 1
  • Reviews
    Ensofter

    Overrated and overhyped

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    Sexyloutak

    Absolutely the worst movie.

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    Ava-Grace Willis

    Story: It's very simple but honestly that is fine.

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    Tayyab Torres

    Strong acting helps the film overcome an uncertain premise and create characters that hold our attention absolutely.

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    quicksmartmcoy

    When I saw the first episode I thought, great another bland, poorly written, dramedy, but give it time to grow on you and you quickly realise what a well observed, well acted piece of work it actually is, almost every comedy show I love I didn't like my first taste of, but over a year after seeing the first episode as has always been the case something made me come back to this show and I am very glad I did, it's allot better than it gets credit for.

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    alissabonnett

    My father caught me watching this and sneered. It's one of those programs that remains 'meh', hence the 5/10 rating. An 'alrighter'. An 'it's decent, yeah' one. The acting is what you'd expect from a bunch of comedians: they behave as they usually do, being humorous over deep. Sometimes there are moments of character building, but the amount of care put into them is shallow. Alan Davies was surprising, as he managed to play quite a different character than his QI persona, and, out of all the team, I'd say he was the most interesting.The saving grace of this one is the fact that Jo Brand has had experience with social work and the greatest pits of human suffering. When watching, you get the impression she may have pulled this from reality, which makes Damned more touching to watch. The scenes expressing mature or morbid lives in less fortunate households do work, and the viewer finds themselves rooting for the poorly funded, barely functioning team.The plot, whilst working when it needs to, does often feel bare, with reality somewhat being prioritised over interest. There's a lot of filler, so to speak. It relies on the banter to keep it going, which is moderately humorous, but nothing above what you'd hear two strangers on a bus laughing about. I think for Damned to have been more successful, it should've really taken control over the resources it has, since the setting is that of room of sweating, miserable people. There was room for a darker sense of humour, true gallows, mischievous stuff. It might've retracted from the message, but that's precisely the problem. Damned is a social commentary, and that's respectable, but it's not educative ENOUGH for it to work, and nor is it risky enough to be truly comical. It's in a grey area, and it had to push one way or the other to be anything above 'decent'.

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    david-kraft

    I really wanted to like this. Alan is such a character on Q.I. and I haven't really seen him outside of it. The setting is something that could have the potential of being something like The Office, but I got a serious headache out of it and only half way through the first episode I had to stop watching. It wasn't funny at all and I generally love all the comedy that is produced on Britich television. It was such a mess with phones ringing all the time and very short and seemingly unimportant encounters that you just wanted it to end. Everything seems to have been filmed by a 6-year old too because it's very shaky and badly filmed. I hope it does become better after half the first episode, but even if it does, it has to be so much better that I actually think it will be impossible.:(

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    loftyonthehill-69-847141

    As a man who grew up on tough council estates I always felt a bit damned as a child. Run with the pack or get run down by them - literally if Ada...(censored for legal reasons)...ey had stolen a car again. Just about every flat had a harassed looking man or woman knocking on the door armed with a file and a weak smile. These were the earnest souls from Social Services, looking to fill in the disastrous chasms with a metaphorical tube of polyfilla.Now Channel 4 pays tribute to these national band-aids with a dark comedy about their exploits. Familiar faces Alan Davies, Kevin Eldon, Jo Brand and Georgie Glen portray staff in an office that always looks on the verge of breakdown. There's Alistair (Davies) constantly fending off his former client Anne Marie's stalking - physical and cyber. Then there's Rose (Brand) who's received so many kicks in life that she's developed a healthy dose of cynicism. However, that heart just won't stop coming to surface when faced with suffering. Sneaky Nitin (Himesh Patel) is the sort of ambitious p***k who makes all workplaces miserable. Various other characters knit together the whole Hellhole perfectly.Right... I can safely say this is brilliant observed satire with just enough balance to stay perfectly amusing without being spiteful, poignant without being sentimental and well crafted without being plagiaristic.A pat on the back for everyone involved. I consider myself quite hard to please but this had me enthralled from start to finish. Maybe too early to call this the new Derek (Ricky Gervais' wonderful series set in a care home) but here's hoping. Damn fine creation!

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