Red Dwarf is a British science fiction sitcom that ran for eight series, from 1988 to 1999. It was created and originally written by Grant Naylor (a so-called 'gestalt entity', in reality a collective pseudonym for the writing duo Rob Grant and Doug Naylor).
Despite the pastiche of science fiction used as a backdrop, Red Dwarf is primarily a character-driven comedy, with many off-the-wall science fiction elements used as complementary plot devices. For example, in the early series a recurring source of comedy was the 'odd couple' relationship between Lister and Rimmer, its two central characters.
The mining ship Red Dwarf is a spaceship 5 miles (8 km) long belonging to the Jupiter Mining Corporation. In the first episode, an on-board radiation leak kills everyone except for low-ranking technician Dave Lister (a genial Liverpudlian slob, albeit a more intelligent one than is initially apparent), who is in suspended animation at the time, and his pregnant cat, Frankenstein, who is safely sealed in the cargo hold. Lister had smuggled Frankenstein aboard the ship following shore-leave on Titan, but had been caught in possession of the illegal lifeform and chose to be sentenced to eighteen months in stasis imprisonment rather than surrender his pet to be dissected. Following the accident, the ship's computer Holly has to keep Lister in stasis until the background radiation dies down — a process that takes three million years. Lister therefore emerges as the last human being in the universe — but not the only lifeform onboard the ship. His former bunkmate and immediate superior Arnold Rimmer (a fussy, bureaucratic bully obsessed with rank and rules, who is at heart a neurotic coward), is resurrected by Holly in hologrammatic form after the accident to keep Lister sane, while a creature known only as The Cat is the last surviving member of Felis sapiens, a race of humanoids that evolved in the ship's hold from Frankenstein and her kittens during the millions of years that Lister was in stasis.
The main dramatic thrust of the series is Lister's attempt to get back to Earth (indeed, in the novels, this was introduced as a desire of his, even before the accident that left him stranded three million light-years away). Along the way, however, are frequent distractions that usually see the not-so-intrepid Dwarf crew encountering strange races and lifeforms that have developed in the intervening millions of years (although a core tenet of the series is that there are no aliens anywhere in the universe — every element of the large and bizarre mix of intelligent life within the Red Dwarf universe is in one way or another derived from Earth, a result of developments in robotics and/or genetic engineering).
Furthermore, the crew roster changes as the years go by. During the second series, the "Dwarfers" encounter the sanitation mechanoid Kryten, rescuing him from a long-since crashed vessel. Initially, Kryten only appears in one episode of Series II, but by the beginning of Series III he has becomes a full time character in the series. At the end of Series V, however, disaster strikes when Lister loses Red Dwarf, having forgotten which planetoid he parked it around. This forces the crew to travel in the smaller Starbug craft for two series, with the added side-effect that they lose contact with Holly. And in Series VII, Rimmer departs the crew to take up the role of his alter-ego from a parallel universe, Ace Rimmer, whose name has become a long-standing legend and a legacy passed down from dimension to dimension. Shortly afterwards, the crew find a replacement for Rimmer when they encounter another parallel version of themselves. In this universe, it was Kristine Kochanski — Lister's ex-girlfriend and long-time crush — who went into stasis, while Lister died and was brought back as a hologram. A complicated series of events leaves Kochanski stranded in 'our' universe, and she is forced to join the crew.
Finally, in the eighth (and so far final) series, Red Dwarf itself is reconstructed by Kryten's nanobots that had stolen it and broken it down into its constituent atoms. In the process, the entire crew of the ship — including Rimmer — are resurrected, but the Starbug crew all find themselves sentenced to two years in the ship's brig on a set of convoluted charges. The series ends, however, with Red Dwarf being eaten away by a virus and all onboard evacuated, save for Rimmer who is left to face his (apparent) death for the second time - although the cliffhanger ending leaves this open to interpretation.
Grant and Naylor wrote the first six series together (using the pseudonym Grant Naylor on the first two novels and later as the name of their production company, although never on the episodes themselves) before Grant left in 1996, leaving Naylor to write the final two with a group of new and less well-known writers, notably including Paul Alexander and actor Robert Llewellyn.
For the most part, Ed Bye produced and directed the series. He left before Series V due to a scheduling clash, and Juliet May took over as director, but she parted ways with Grant and Naylor partway through the series for personal and professional reasons. Grant and Naylor took over direction of the series, in addition to writing and producing. Series VI was directed by Andy De Emmony, with Bye returning for the final two series.
Series I, II and III were made by Paul Jackson Productions, with subsequent series produced by the writers' own company Grant Naylor Productions, all for BBC North; all eight series were broadcast on BBC2. At the beginning of Series IV, production moved from the BBC's Manchester studios to Shepperton.
The theme tune and incidental music were written and performed by Howard Goodall, with the distinctive vocals on the theme tune courtesy of Jenna Russell. Goodall also wrote music for the show's various songs, including "Tongue Tied", with lyrics written by Grant and Naylor, which Danny John-Jules reorchestrated and released as a Top 20 single. Craig Charles wrote, performed and sang "Cash" — from the episode "Timeslides" — with his band. Goodall's own voice can be heard in the version of the song "High Noon" in "Queeg" (Series II), and in the "Rimmer Munchkin Song" in "Blue" (Series VII).
A period of three years elapsed between Series VI and VII, partly due to the imprisonment and subsequent exoneration of Craig Charles, but also due to cast and crew working on other projects (notably Chris Barrie in The Brittas Empire) and disputes over pay. When the series returned, it was filmised and no longer shot in front of a live audience (a common misconception is that canned laughter was used, when in fact the completed episodes were later shown to an audience), allowing for greater use of four-walled sets, location shooting and single camera techniques. Although some critics praised the higher production values, many fans disliked the series (see "Mixed reactions"), and when the show returned two years later it had dropped use of the filmising process and restored the live audience.
In 1998, on the tenth anniversary of the show's first airing (between the releases of Series VII and VIII), the first three series of Red Dwarf were remastered and released on VHS. The remastering included reformatting the series in 14:9 widescreen, applying the same 'field-removal' film effect as Series VII, replacing model shots with computer graphics, cutting various small pieces of dialogue (and, in some cases, entire scenes), and updating music and ambient sound effects. Red Dwarf Remastered was met with a generally poor fan reaction in the UK, but massive international broadcast success. No further series were remastered and the later DVD releases of the same series reverted to the original versions, although the first episode of Series VII ("Tikka to Ride") would also include an alternate Remastered version, featuring upgraded CGI as the only difference to the original broadcast version.
The franchise has expanded to include four novels, written by the show's creators, Doug Naylor and Rob Grant (under the combined name of Grant Naylor).
These novels contain deeper insights and more thorough backstories for the main characters, as well as more information on humanity's future state of affairs. Rather than adapting the show outright, the books provide yet another, possibly idealized version of the series' backstory. They reinterpret and reposition elements from past episodes, and even introduce ideas that would later be used in the show.
For various reasons, Grant and Naylor decided to both work alone when writing the sequel to Better Than Life, and so two completely different, contradicting sequels were made. Last Human (by Doug Naylor, who would go on to make two further television series) introduced Kochanski to unsuspecting fans and felt very much like Series VII of the TV programme, while Backwards (by Rob Grant) was more in keeping with the previous two books, feeling much like Series VI. The styles of these sequels vary wildly from the two predecessors and each other. While opinion differs strongly on which solo effort is superior, neither matched the widespread fan acclaim of the original co-written novels.
All four books were published in audiobook format, the first two read by Chris Barrie, Last Human read by Craig Charles, and Backwards read by its author Rob Grant.
The BBC World Service re-recorded the first two books as The Red Dwarf Radio Show, with Chris Barrie narrating and additional sound effects. The first series was broadcast from 3 December 1995 to 17 February 1996, and the second from 13 March 1997 to 28 March 1997.
An Omnibus edition of the first two books, including a few edits to the original text and some extra material such as the original script to the first episode of the TV series, was released in 1992 (ISBN 0140174664).
Other books include:
There have also been two script books — Primordial Soup (1993, ISBN 0140178864) and Son Of Soup (1996, ISBN 0140253637) — each containing six scripts, and an extremely rare short book entitled Scenes From The Dwarf (ISBN 0146002431) was also released in 1996 as part of the Penguin 60s series, and contained scripts of a handful of scenes from the series.
A later, extremely low-budget network promo consisting of scenes from the first pilot edited in with new footage (and featuring Terry Farrell as a female Cat) was also unsuccessful.
Clips from the first pilot can be found on the DVD of Series V in the featurette Dwarfing USA, along with interviews with the British cast and Doug Naylor. Bootlegs of the pilots are widely circulated among Red Dwarf fans, and sold at conventions, while some low-quality recordings can be found on the Internet for downloading.
Since the end of Series VIII, Doug Naylor has been attempting to get funding to make a feature length film version of the show, but on every occasion so far has been thwarted by circumstances. He has long persisted with his conviction that the making of the movie (for which the script has been written for many years) takes precedence over the production of a ninth TV series. On the Series VIII DVD documentary The Tank, however, he admits to being — perhaps mindful of the age and schedules of the principal cast — close to having to make a final, outright decision of whether to continue to pursue the film, make a Series IX or some one-off TV special(s) (as Only Fools & Horses did previously), or simply end the series as isSee Red Dwarf VIII (BBC DVD, 2006), documentary "The Tank". Naylor sent a letter to the Red Dwarf fans at DJ XI, which mostly consisted of his failed attempts to create the film, such as a fake duke of Manchester sending forged money to fund the film.
The song "Tongue Tied", originally featured in a dream sequence in the series II episode "Parallel Universe", was rearranged and rerecorded by Danny John Jules (under the name 'The Cat') and released as a single in October 1993. It reached number 17 in the UK charts, and was expected to get higher, but a planned performance on Top Of The Pops never eventuated, thus halting momentum for the single.
Probably the most famous special is the Can't Smeg Won't Smeg special, a spoof on the popular cooking program with Ainsley Harriet. The two teams must compete in making a chicken vindaloo. The teams are Kryten and Lister vs. Rimmer and Duane Dibbley. Another notable special is Red Dwarf A-Z, a half hour production. The special lists certain things from the series in alphabetical order, with special guest speakers such as Stephen Hawking, Terry Pratchett and Patrick Stewart.
Regions 2 and 4 have also seen the release of Just The Shows: Volume 1, a special digipack boxset containing all the episodes from Series I–IV without any extras. Volume 2 is expected to be released in the UK on September 25, 2006. In late 2006, meanwhile, an Interactive Quiz DVD entitled Red Dwarf: Beat The Geek will be released. The quiz will allow "hardcore fans" to compete against casual viewers, in addition to offering general knowledge questions for friends/family not au fait with the series News report on Beat The Geek release. The DVD will be hosted by Norman Lovett and Hattie Hayridge, both reprising their roles as Holly.
Prior to the DVD releases, all eight series had been available on VHS. All the videos are now deleted, but none — save for "Six Of The Best" — are particularly rare. Three episodes of Series VII were also released as special "Xtended" versions with extra scenes and no laugh track (these "Xtended" episodes would later be included on the DVD), while the Remastered versions of Series I–III were released individually and in a complete box-set. A special limited edition box-set, Six Of The Best, was released in 1997, featuring one episode from each (then-existing) series selected by the writers, and an audio CD of discussion and commentary by Rob Grant, Doug Naylor and Ed Bye (this discussion would later be split up and used as extras and easter eggs on the DVD releases).
For the initial release of the VHS editions, the videos were named after the first episode on the tape, as were other BBC videos at the time. This was changed for the second half of Series I, as the BBC already had another series called Waiting for God (The title of the fourth episode in the series) so the video was named after the fifth episode, "Confidence and Paranoia". Because of this the episode summaries on the back of the tape were mixed up with the second episode being listed first. The first video of Series VI was named after the third episode on the tape, presumably because the Emmy-winning episode Gunmen of the Apocalypse was seen as being more prestigious than Psirens, the first episode of the series.
Finally, two outtake videos were released, the famed Smeg Ups in 1994, and its sequel Smeg Outs in 1995. Smeg Ups contained outtakes from Series IV–VI, with brand new specially-recorded links performed by Robert Llewellyn as Kryten, and featured the never-before-seen original ending of the Series VI finale "Out Of Time". Smeg Outs featured outtakes from the first three series, with more new links (now also featuring Craig Charles as Lister), in addition to the full-length video for "Tongue Tied". These videos were a strong commercial success, and Red Dwarf's outtakes remain among the most famous in television. All the outtakes featured on the videos have now been included on the relevant DVDs, but the links have yet to be re-released. However, Smeg Ups is set to be re-released on UMD in June 2006, with Smeg Outs to follow 'for Christmas' Information on future DVD releases.
Meanwhile, three episodes — "Marooned", "Quarantine" and "Cassandra" — are also available to view on selected mobile phones on a "ROK Chip".
Nevertheless, Red Dwarf does attract a certain kind of fan, often a curious hybrid of the sci-fi geek and the comedy buff. Most-commonly known as 'Dwarfers' or 'Smegheads', Red Dwarf fans are also notable among the sci-fi community for their large female proportion, and their propensity for obsessive trivia about the show (the Red Dwarf Quiz Books have been bestsellers, while a special quiz themed around the show was broadcast in 1998, entitled Universe Challenge).
Its official fan club is still going strong, some seven years after the show was last seen on air, and the annual convention "Dimension Jump" is consistently well-attended. There are also still a significant number of active fansites devoted to the show.
Notable celebrity fans of the show include Bill Clinton, Stephen Hawking, Terry Pratchett and Patrick Stewart, who famously recalled during BBC2's Red Dwarf Night in 1998 an incident whereby he was channel-hopping and came across an episode of the series, initially believing it to be 'a ripoff of Star Trek' before it made him laugh and he became hooked.
The many changes that were made to the series' cast, setting, creative teams and even production values from series to series have meant that opinions differ greatly between fans as to the quality of certain series. In particular, Series VII was seen by many as a major disappointment — while much slicker and higher-budget in appearance, the shift away from outright sitcom and into something approaching comedy drama did not impress the majority of longstanding fans. Furthermore, the attempt to then shift back into traditional sitcom format for Series VIII was greeted with a response that was similarly lukewarm — and at times downright hostile — by many fans who felt that the level of humour in that series was far below that which they'd come to expect from the show. There was also a significant amount of criticism aimed at the decision to resurrect the entire crew of Red Dwarf, as many felt this detracted from the series' central premise of Lister being the last human being alive.Ganymede & Titan - "Under Fire", 4th April 2003
On the other hand, there are many Red Dwarf fans who feel that Series VII and VIII, either individually or as a whole, are the equal of — if not superior to — the earlier series, and the topic is therefore the subject of constant fervent debate among the show's fandomGanymede & Titan - "Why I Actually Like Series VII", 7th November 2004. Similar discussions revolve around the quality of Series VI (seen by some as the strongest series, but by others as a descent into formulaic comedy with an unwelcome change of setting), although not to the same extent; and there are even those who argue that the show lost its way with the significant changes made after the second series.
Within the context of British comedy in general, meanwhile, Red Dwarf occupies a curious position. While revered by many — and still a successful programme, as recent DVD sales have shown (Series IV and V were the third and fourth bestselling BBC DVDs respectively in 2005 BBC report on DVD sales, 6th June 2005) — it is also often looked down upon by those in the comedy fraternity. This could be the result of any number of factors — its niche content, the fact that its writers largely worked alone and are noted for little else in the industry, or the 'unfashionable' status of some of its cast members.
Other invented expletives and euphemisms include 'goit' (one who is annoying or awkward; perhaps adapted from the words 'git' and 'oik' or referring to someone with the condition goitre) and 'gimboid' (one who is stupid or clumsy; possibly an adaptation of the word 'gimp'). Another term of abuse used in the show was the word 'gwenlan', the last name of Gareth Gwenlan, a former BBC head of comedy who had once passed on the show.
One way in which many of the series-to-series continuity errors can be explained away is by exploring the possibilities of different series taking place in alternate dimensions. Indeed, this is often used as a general explanation for the many changes in style (and characters' histories) between Series II and III — with many fans taking the words 'THE SAME GENERATION... NEARLY' in the opening scrolling text of the episode "Backwards" as indicative of this. Indeed, it is at this point in the series that Grant and Naylor began to introduce elements from the novels' continuity (such as Lister and Kochanski having actually had a prior relationship) into the series.
A fan-written document entitled the Plot Inconsistencies Project has circulated around the Internet for many years. Contributed to by a large variety of Red Dwarf fans, it documents just about every known continuity error in the show, in addition to attempting to come up with logical, in-continuity explanations for many of them, and was even used as reference by Rob Grant and Doug Naylor when writing the segment of Smeg Ups entitled "The 10 Most Asked Things About Red Dwarf".
BBC television sitcoms | Fictional spacecraft | Programs broadcast by YTV | Red Dwarf | Science fiction television series | British television comedy
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