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As always I would love to read your comments below

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Red Dwarf

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Anonymous

Cheers

Anonymous

If you go back and watch the first episode of season 8 again, one of the first things rimmer says to lister is "You poured a whole testube of it over me" >.< lol

Adam C Turek

Dated as it looked, i really like the Cat/Blue Midget dance, Cat rarely has the chance to to take charge of a situation, and is only really there for comic relief. I can imagine it was a nightmare to create with that low budget 90's BBC CGI. The Warden that you saw at the end is played by Graham McTavish, who in recent years has really started to get about. He was one of the main Dwarves in The Hobbit Trilogy, voice of Dracula in the Castlevania Netflix show, The Saint of Killers in Preacher.

Saul

I think the bit where they all put on mop-heads and disguise(?) themselves as the Dibbley family(I mean, what the fuck for? not even the pretense of a reason for it beyond getting long-term fans to momentarily stir from their stupor) ranks as one of the most idiotic scenes ever, and comfortably RD's nadir. The cheers from the audience when their heads pop up...it might as well be cabaret by that point. There's a reason fan-service is considered lame. And yet...the Cassandra episode is quite clever. The show's pretty bad by this point, but it's never beyond redemption because the premise is so strong and the characters still have a few lingering puffs of chemistry.

ALW

One thing always puzzled me about this episode. Apparently, Rimmer went to the captain with the report and then licked the envelope, right? Meaning he should have been put into the same drugged state as the rest. Meaning his success with the women at the captains dinner was all fake and he didn't get laid at all. And they didn't make a joke about it? Seems a missed opportunity!

Anonymous

Rimmer explains to lister in the last episode that Yvonne McGruder was sleeping off part of the Karma Sutra thanks to the virus and I’m not sure if that was also part of the AR simulation but a joke about that and the captains table being fake could of still been in there. Also, Rimmer didn’t consent to being put on the psychotropic drugs.

Izzy of Albion

I completely agree with the criticism this show gets from series 7 onwards. Oh, I so hate to be negative about a show so integral to my youth, and if you don't want to hear it, don't read on... But the whole thing started to slide quite rapidly sideways from the moment Rob Grant left the writing team. It's as if he was the only one keeping the whole thing on a remotely even keel. It is the thought of most of us Dwarfers that there was a trajectory of quality and maturity, in plot, script, and cinematography that was peaking around the time of series 6. Who knows what series 7 and 8 would have been like had Grant stayed on. I think we experienced Dwarfers can imagine such a thing. But what actually happened with Naylor at the helm was a slide into pantomime. I reasoned at the time that this was an attempt to bring in a new generation of fans. I had, and to this day, still have, seen every episode of Red Dwarf on its original broadcast. For the very first episode, I was a captivated 9 year old. By series 7, I was in my late teens, and starting to wonder if the writers were not writing for dedicated fans like me anymore but looking past our shoulders for new blood. Clever scripts that could easily sustain what were effectively two-handers such as “Marooned”, brilliance forced in the early days by a shoe-string budget, were a thing of the past. Replaced by silly walks and even sillier faces that would make a kindergarten audience laugh but do little for anyone else. We long-serving fans were served nod-and-a-wink call-backs and inside jokes. Even worse, these things that merely garnished series 7 were now the main course in series 8. The whole thing seemed to be a competition between the writers to see who could “jump the shark” in the most shameless manner. My now tenuous ability suspend disbelief for the sake of a good laugh might have got me past the mop heads and comedy teeth, but not the mock Tarantino-esque way is was perpetuated. And the Blue Midget dance pushed my patience way beyond breaking point. I wonder if the 9-year-old me that watched the first episode with such delight would have liked it? Recalling the relative maturity of that episode, I suspect not. I will still watch it, and I hope that those new to the show, with the benefit of fresh eyes, can accept it for what it is, and not, like we who grew up with it, what it should have been.

Anonymous

As much as I dislike series VIII, I must confess to loving the "come back, Mr Sux!" lady (played by Jeillo Edwards, who had since sadly passed away - she also appears in series 3 of The League of Gentlemen).