Xixax Film Forum

Film Discussion => The Small Screen => Topic started by: cine on August 04, 2005, 11:50:51 PM

Title: Extras
Post by: cine on August 04, 2005, 11:50:51 PM
worthy of its own thread. yeah yeah, not as good as the office, but that was expected. second episode wasnt as funny as the first but kate winslet's coming up this sunday should be really funny. check out the episode 3 clip on gervais's site!
Title: Extras
Post by: modage on August 05, 2005, 11:34:56 AM
i am dying to see this.  i've been bugging my roomate to download it on bittorrent cause i dont know what the hell that is yet.
Title: Extras
Post by: RegularKarate on August 05, 2005, 01:50:22 PM
I saw the Ben Stiller one... is that the first one?  It didn't seem very firstish.
Title: Extras
Post by: cine on August 06, 2005, 12:45:41 AM
episode 3 was the best so far. really funny. too bad nobodys seen this yet.
Title: Extras
Post by: Stefen on August 06, 2005, 01:46:34 AM
Quote from: Cinephileepisode 3 was the best so far. really funny. too bad nobodys seen this yet.

Was that pubrick reporting? Whats the deal?
Title: Extras
Post by: cine on August 06, 2005, 01:57:16 AM
no sense spoiling the content of the episode but winslet's character is so full of herself and gervais gets himself into so much trouble, you're forced to think of it as a lost episode of the office.
Title: Extras
Post by: Pubrick on August 06, 2005, 02:04:50 AM
Quote from: StefenWas that pubrick reporting? Whats the deal?
i think u mean pete. i'm usually the last person to see things.
Title: Extras
Post by: RegularKarate on August 06, 2005, 12:29:15 PM
I think Cine's being kind of a prick... keeping the location of the newer torrents to himself.

I've only seen the first one... with Stiller.
Title: Extras
Post by: Irulan on August 11, 2005, 11:17:22 AM
I've seen all episodes so far. Only the second one wasn't so good, the other two were great. Don't know which celeb is on tonight, but I'll be watching again :)
Title: Extras
Post by: GoneSavage on August 11, 2005, 04:25:12 PM
Quote from: RegularKarateI think Cine's being kind of a prick... keeping the location of the newer torrents to himself.

I've only seen the first one... with Stiller.
I go to Torrent Spy (http://www.torrentspy.com) for my Extras.  They have a few different versions of each 3 episodes and will most likely have tonight's on there Friday or Saturday.
Title: Extras
Post by: modage on August 18, 2005, 06:36:54 PM
HBO won't start satcasting the first season of Ricky "The Office" Gervais' new sitcom "Extras" until Sept. 25, but BBC 2 has already greenlit a second season.


its only a month, i guess i'll just wait.
Title: Extras
Post by: RegularKarate on August 20, 2005, 12:24:32 AM
It's clearly not as good as the office, but it's still damned funny and it's more than "ripping on celebrities personas"
Title: Extras
Post by: RegularKarate on August 21, 2005, 12:57:13 PM
When I posted that, I had only seen the first 3...now that I've caught up, I agree with you a little more.

I still find it very funny.. especially the bit with the dolls.
Title: Extras
Post by: meatwad on August 25, 2005, 10:49:09 AM
Gervais is going to be in the new Christopher Guest film

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/film/4180674.stm
Title: Extras
Post by: cron on September 13, 2005, 11:42:08 PM
i saw the winslet episode. oh man...

(https://xixax.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fpics-02.hi5.com%2Fuserpics%2F302%2F689%2F68962302.img.jpg&hash=00760ceab2cd45929d11dc3de8329ae820ad55ad)
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: Ravi on December 07, 2005, 03:27:38 AM
Any word on a US release of the first series on DVD?
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: polkablues on December 07, 2005, 06:38:16 PM
Quote from: Ravi on December 07, 2005, 03:27:38 AM
Any word on a US release of the first series on DVD?

I wasn't able to find any details about the US release, but if you're an idiot who bought a PSP (like me), you can get the British release on UMD discs, which are region-free.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: cron on September 16, 2006, 10:25:47 AM
has anyone found the torrent ???
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: modage on September 16, 2006, 11:18:54 AM
Quote from: cronopio on September 16, 2006, 10:25:47 AM
has anyone found the torrent ???
http://www.torrentspy.com/download.asp?id=859658
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: cron on September 16, 2006, 12:41:39 PM
i wanna marry you. thanks
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: cron on September 18, 2006, 05:34:05 PM
relax Garam. it isn't one of the worst things on anything. but i have to say it was a weak start.  that's how the last series started,though, it got good till the kate winslet episode so i'll see the other six episodes anyway.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: cron on September 18, 2006, 06:06:48 PM
the bbc executive letting andy know that he should stay quiet. maggie getting hit in the head. but i said it was a weak start, man. i already expressed my opinion on ricky gervais' comedy on the office thread.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: Pubrick on September 19, 2006, 02:30:14 AM
Quote from: Garam on September 18, 2006, 05:22:18 PM
Orlando Bloom plays a pompous version of himself - completely dull and unoriginal,
that sounds like the usual/only version of himself.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: cron on September 22, 2006, 09:01:25 AM
You're not alone charlie brown Garam:

Extras work needed, Ricky?
By Chris Tryhorn / Television 10:50am
Opinions seem sharply divided on Extras now that we are two episodes into its second series: there are those who think it's the smartest and funniest thing on TV, and plenty of others - like me - who just don't find much in it to laugh at. Obviously humour is subjective but here are a few gripes I have with the programme, particularly evident in the second series.

You only have to have read or watched the recent interviews with Ricky Gervais to see know that the programme takes itself very seriously. Now, you can forgive Gervais a certain arrogance after the success of The Office, which has allowed him to do precisely what he wants in comedy and to summon up pretty much any megastar - most recently Orlando Bloom and David Bowie - to oblige him with a little cameo.

But his golden boy status seems to have made him tetchy and unduly tormented by the awful demands of articulating his art. The essential subject matter of Extras has changed quite markedly from series one, which inhabited the fairly traditional sitcom milieu of frustrated losers. Now the programme is about the anguish of the sitcom writer and the travails of incipient stardom. This isn't something that really induces much sympathy, and turns the joke away from us laughing along with Andy and Maggie's difficulties and against the rest of the world who are giving Andy a hard time. The tone is altogether sourer.

The device of the sitcom within a sitcom also betrays a kind of snobbish contempt for popular taste. When the Whistle Blows, Andy Millman's cartoonish factory-set sitcom, is a critically panned BBC1 throwback that nevertheless gets 6 million viewers. It is basically just the kind of unadventurous fare that Millman didn't want to make and Gervais has been lucky enough not to be forced into. Rather unfairly, given their total indulgence of Gervais, the BBC is portrayed as interfering, its comedy department run by a rather crudely stereotyped gay couple.

When the Whistle Blows is a superbly realised parody - though strangely I find myself laughing at its jokes unironically and admiring its hackneyed but clever script rather more than anything else in Extras. I do wonder why has Gervais got it in so much for this kind of comedy. What's so wrong with it after all? In setting himself against trad sitcoms - and catchphrase comedy such as Little Britain and Catherine Tate (specifically referenced on audience T-shirts) - Gervais shows a surprising amount of contempt for Britain's comedy culture. It seems a shame that his desire to take his comedy into smart, naturalistic territory requires him to repudiate the way virtually everyone else does things. It's also worth noting that he's not above stealing jokes - the staged autograph in last night's show being a breathtakingly obvious ripoff of I'm Alan Partridge (series one, episode five, if you want to check).

Yet in spite of itself Extras does include some broad touches - and these are often the best things about it. The dimwitted duo of agent Darren Lamb (played by co-writer Stephen Merchant) and Barry from EastEnders knock about the place like a pair of traditional bungling buffoons. Mistaking an internet review of The Wind of the Willows with an appraisal of When the Whistle Blows is a pretty broad joke, and none the worse for it.

Gervais often talks about his admiration for American comedy, and in Extras you can see him striving to match the brilliance of The Larry Sanders Show and Curb Your Enthusiasm, which handle layers of reality with dazzling insouciance. For me, he is not remotely in their league - and maybe he'd be the first to admit that. I think if he relaxed a bit and stopped worrying about his legacy or the purity of his comedy he could be a lot funnier. He is already interested in moving on to do drama, and today he quit podcasting - to "knock it on the head before everyone hates us". It suggests that he's not really happy doing what he's doing now - and for me that shows through all the time in Extras.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: Redlum on September 22, 2006, 01:02:02 PM
The majority of the gags for this series are coming from the weakest and most repetitive sources of the first series whether that be the tedium of Maggie's topical conversation, Barry's toil as a pathetic out-of-work actor, or the random, crude outbursts from guest stars. I'm quite happy to watch where the story is going but cringe everytime there's a joke that is constructed on the premise of the previous series. The story (and therefore comedic premise) has progressed quite radically but the comedy hasnt moved with it.

The funniest bit so far has been Andy trying to direct Keith Cheguin. That seems fresh to me because its one of the few times we see the creativity (or at least competency), which has earnt Andy the opportunity of his life. I see more potential for him wreaking havoc at the BBC and hopefully this the arc they are going for - Andy resigned to creative failure > Andy pulling his thumb out > opting out/success. Makes sense for a 6 episode series.

Yes, its started to take its self more seriously - the new situation demands it. However this makes it all seem very illogical. Take Andy's situation with his agent - perhaps we will see him fired later in the series for a new and improved model.

I think the show is working best with moments of frustration and sadness - not comedy. There's a fine line and thats why I havent given up on it yet (and because the other options are real-life versions of When the Whistle Blows).

edit: you can watch both episodes for free here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbctwo/
(not sure if they restrict international web users)
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: modage on September 22, 2006, 04:51:15 PM
i think some people would beg to differ!

(https://xixax.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.rickygervais.com%2Fimages%2F2extras_praise.jpg&hash=f09700d71aa082a6bde800d5aeab71dd91560d15)
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: cine on September 30, 2006, 10:15:16 PM
season 2 is kicking season 1's ass. good god.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: modage on September 30, 2006, 10:22:34 PM
the bowie cameo was awesome. 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQG_UOuqlM0&eurl=
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: cine on September 30, 2006, 10:38:10 PM
the radcliffe episode was more awesome.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: modage on September 30, 2006, 10:52:56 PM
i didnt think so, but whatever.  :yabbse-grin:
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: MacGuffin on January 13, 2007, 12:44:13 AM
(https://xixax.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.latimes.com%2Fmedia%2Fphoto%2F2007-01%2F27343711.jpg&hash=ddd5990315c16b0be478d793b63d805eb6e9d919)


An extra dose of fame
Recognize Ricky Gervais? He'd rather you not, but celebrity fuels his BBC import.
Source: Los Angeles Times

RICKY GERVAIS was hanging out with some friends here recently when he experienced another brush with the uncomfortable byproduct of fame.

A group of Australian tourists approached the British comedian and asked casually, "Hey, you want to come have a beer with us?"

Gervais adopted a look of befuddlement as he recalled the exchange. "I'm with friends," he told them with disbelief. "No, I don't want to go have a beer with you."

The Australians seemed surprised.

Such awkward moments simultaneously amuse and appall Gervais, who harbors a deep dislike for celebrity and the superficial sense of intimacy it creates. They occur frequently when he's back home in London, where the pudgy actor-writer is well-recognized as the creator and star of the original BBC version of the television comedy "The Office."

"Everyone knows who you are, so you're always on," he said in a recent interview at HBO's Midtown offices, sporting a white T-shirt and stubble as he sipped from a coffee mug. "You're always thinking, 'How am I behaving?' "

Yet such discomfort also provides great fodder for his latest comedy, "Extras," which has aired in England and returns for its second season in the U.S. on Sunday on HBO. Conceived as a sardonic look at unsuccessful actors trying to make it in the movie business, the series takes a new turn this season when a sitcom script written by the long-struggling Andy Millman, played by Gervais, is picked up by the BBC.

Andy's exuberance is quickly diminished when network executives proceed to dumb down the workplace comedy, titled "When the Whistle Blows." They make him don a curly black wig and outsized glasses for his part as a dim factory boss. They insist his character utter an annoying catchphrase whenever someone appears to have cracked a joke: "Are you having a laugh?"

Critics pan "When the Whistle Blows," which is nevertheless a popular hit, a fact that only further depresses Andy. In one scene, he is accosted at a pub by fans of the sitcom who urge him to deliver his character's catchphrase, which he does with no small amount of self-loathing.

"The big theme of it, I suppose, is 'Don't compromise,' " Gervais said. "Be careful what you wish for. Success without respect is nothing."

Some of the incidents that befall Andy on "Extras" — like getting recognized by the homeless — were drawn from Gervais' own experiences.

But the 45-year-old comic has found the path to success substantially smoother than his on-air alter ego.

"The opposite happened to me, really," said Gervais, a former radio programmer who wrote "The Office" with his onetime assistant Stephen Merchant. The show was purchased by the BBC, developed a huge fan following in England and inspired the American version now airing on NBC.

"They left us alone completely," he said of the BBC executives. "Extras," on the other hand, shows "what could have happened. What would I have done? Would I have been a man? Would I have walked away? I would like to think so. It's a difficult decision. A lot of people say, 'I've been struggling for a while. Let's put on the funny wig and glasses.' "

Joining Gervais this season in his exploration of the trade-offs of success are A-list celebrities such as Orlando Bloom, Chris Martin and David Bowie, who pop up in cameos throughout the six episodes. The stars gleefully puncture their own images; Bloom, for example, is astounded that Andy's friend Maggie Jacobs does not find him attractive and insists on kissing her to prove his desirability.

"I think actors love taking the mickey out of themselves, because it's with their blessing," Gervais said. "They really like exorcising all these ridiculous auras and myths and legends around them, so they can debunk all these things and have fun with their press persona. It shows they're a good sport."

Like "The Office," "Extras" thrives off of what its creator terms the "comedy of embarrassment." Andy's contorted efforts to promote himself inevitably result in cringe-inducing humiliation, such as the time he persuades Maggie to ask for his autograph in front of a female neighbor he's trying to impress, only to have her stumble and reveal the ruse. The neighbor looks at him with scorn and disgust.

"In a society where it's safe and we've got enough food and we're not being shot at, the worst thing that happens to most people every day is they might have embarrassed themselves or they have bad service," Gervais said. "I think everybody can relate to that."

Of course, some people in England never got the humor of "Extras," he admitted.

"The real irony is, people shout the catchphrase to me on the street. They go, 'You having a laugh?' " he said, sighing heavily. "I want to sit down and go, 'Let me explain.' "

For the most part, though, Gervais believes the theme of "Extras" is universal, which is why he dismisses the idea that American audiences don't understand British irony as "total rubbish."

"That's idiots not getting it in England," he said, exasperated. " 'The Simpsons,' 'Curb Your Enthusiasm' — Americans get irony. A lot of English things are very parochial. And it gets big in England, and then they wonder why it doesn't get big in America. Well, you haven't made it accessible."

The first season of "Extras" that aired on HBO in September 2005 drew a modest audience of 700,000 viewers on average for the first airing of each episode and an average of 1.6 million people watching each episode on the various HBO channels throughout a week.

But Gervais professed to be unconcerned about the ratings.

"I care less what happens to it when it's exactly how I wanted it to turn out," he said. "I'd much rather it be a million people's favorite show than 10 million people's 10th favorite show. I just think the point of this in any sort of art form, even as lowly an art form as a sitcom, is to make a connection."

The comic is now immersed in his newest project, an animated television adaptation of his children's book series "Flanimals." He's also touring Britain in his third stand-up show, "Fame," adding somewhat embarrassedly, "I'm afraid it's sold out."

For now, Gervais has no plans to do another season of "Extras," although he noted that there was a rumor in England that he was working on a third season in which Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger would appear.

Gervais giggled at the thought.

"Although if he called and said, 'I'd be in it,' I'd do one, definitely," he added brightly. "I think we could have great fun with Arnie."
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: Derek on January 26, 2007, 10:55:20 PM
The bit with Patrick Stewart in his trailer, when he's giving Andy career advice is absolutely one of the funniest things I've ever seen. And I've seen everything.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: Neil on January 29, 2007, 02:00:40 PM
Great show. How far in is the second season?
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: ASmith on February 19, 2007, 02:39:52 AM
That would be a bit of a weak end to the series if in fact the season 2 finale was the last episode.  Comedically it was brilliant, of course, but I felt that it didn't conclude the story with any real satisfaction.  A few scenes also felt as though they were stuffed in in an attempt to tie up every loose end of an unfairly short season.  Maybe I just want more.

On the other hand 12 episodes over two years leaves plenty of time for Ricky to have something else ready to premiere.  Let's just hope there's a part in Gervais' next work for Stephen Merchant, who was as good as anyone in his role on Extras. 
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: modage on February 19, 2007, 08:35:39 AM
Quote from: ASmith on February 19, 2007, 02:39:52 AM
That would be a bit of a weak end to the series if in fact the season 2 finale was the last episode.  Comedically it was brilliant, of course, but I felt that it didn't conclude the story with any real satisfaction.
i agree.  definitely did not cover as much ground as The Office did in the same amount of time.  while the second season was funny obviously, i don't think there was as much character development as there could've been.  at the same time i'm not dying for a 3rd series of this, since there will probably never be one. 
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: MacGuffin on March 20, 2007, 12:23:28 AM
Extras Ending After Two Seasons
Source: Variety

Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant have ruled out a third season of cult British comedy hit "Extras."

The writer-performers, who also created "The Office," will end "Extras" with a one-off special as they did with "The Office."

"We don't have a date or any details about the cast yet," a spokeswoman for Gervais said, adding that the idea was in its "very, very early" stages. However, the pair "will, at some point, sit down together and write it," she said.

"Extras" follows the exploits of comic actor Andy Millman and his haphazard agent, Darren Lamb. HBO airs it in the U.S.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: Ravi on November 04, 2007, 01:37:45 AM
I just finished series 1 and its funny, but I don't love it.  I didn't find any single episode particularly brilliant, and the episodes themselves are uneven.  I do like that Gervais doesn't play another Brent-like buffoon, though he has his moments of idiocy.  There's little that is outright bad about the show, but some of the humor, like the faux pas around minorities, gave me deja vu.  Stephen Merchant as the inept agent was the funniest recurring part of series 1.

Photos of Ricky Gervais in an 80s pop group Seona Dancing (http://www.seonadancing.com)

(https://xixax.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fimg266.imageshack.us%2Fimg266%2F1294%2Fseona3bighb5.jpg&hash=4cbbc548f9fb4e7cf88b5ae65b16c030546f7335)

(https://xixax.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fimg266.imageshack.us%2Fimg266%2F1439%2Fricky2bigrw3.jpg&hash=8cde278421d3a50b55763a54089a33531d76a536)
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: cine on November 04, 2007, 01:56:53 AM
Quote from: Cinephile on September 30, 2006, 10:15:16 PM
season 2 is kicking season 1's ass. good god.

don't worry, ravi, the best is coming.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: modage on November 04, 2007, 09:26:30 AM
(https://xixax.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.rickygervais.com%2Fimages%2Fextrasspecialhbo_lg.jpg&hash=42fb9a0fe7db717468088560b259d68d3d88258c)

trailer here: http://www.rickygervais.com/
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: cine on November 04, 2007, 01:44:17 PM
The British phenomenon and 2007 Emmy®-winner Ricky Gervais, founder of BBC's original The Office, stars in the hilariously funny series Extras, now available in a Gift Set!

Watch the story unfold as Ricky Gervais plays a lowly film extra, Andy Millman, who makes his mark in the background while the stars do their work. The never-before released 90 minute Extra Special Series Finale will feature big guest stars including Clive Owen and George Michael!

This Gift Set is packaged in a slip case that includes both Seasons of the hit series Extras and the 90 minute Extra Special Series Finale.


Yes, HBO's show returns to DVD on January 15th in a special Extras - The Complete Series gift set that contains both seasons, previously released on DVD, and new content in the form of a 90-minute "Extra Special Series Finale". No further info is available just yet, as this was mainly a heads-up for retailers about the upcoming set, so the only other detail we have so far is a list price of $49.99. Stay tuned and we'll bring you more info, and package art, just as soon as that is available for the press.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: MacGuffin on December 06, 2007, 06:12:38 PM
Ricky Gervais: It's a Wrap for `Extras'

It feels like an actual scene from HBO's "Extras."

Ricky Gervais, the writer-director-star of the critically acclaimed showbiz lampoon, is sitting on the set of "Ghost Town," a 2008 release and his first feature film as a leading man. A few feet away, a group of real-world extras are stationed on the other side of a flimsy retractable rope line.

"They're not allowed to mix with me. That's electrified," he boasts, not breaking from the signature deadpan that helped him win a best actor Emmy for "Extras" earlier this year. "If they get anywhere near me, 40,000 volts go through them. It's true."

He's kidding. Right?

Either way, Gervais' transition to the big screen is leaving no room for Andy Millman on the small one.

The movie-extra-turned-sitcom-star character will soon join embarrassing boss David Brent from the British triumph "The Office" in retirement. Gervais and comedy partner Stephen Merchant, who also plays Millman's hilariously amateurish agent, are ending "Extras" with an 80-minute Christmas special, just like they did with "The Office" four years ago.

"It probably won't capture the zeitgeist like `The Office' did, but I think this is the best work we've ever done," Gervais told The Associated Press during an interview on the "Ghost Town" set.

In the surprisingly emotional finale, airing Dec. 16 at 9 p.m. EST, Millman quits his silly sitcom "When the Whistle Blows" in hopes of working on more meaningful projects. Of course, in the forlorn fashion of "Extras," Millman instead fades further into obscurity, forced to accept such bit parts as an alien slug on an episode of "Doctor Who" and appear as a contestant on a particularly washed-up edition of "Celebrity Big Brother."

Don't expect a happy ending for Millman. Do expect to "be havin' a laff."

"We wanted it to be a standalone movie," Gervais says. "It was practice for my possible future career. I did want it to be more filmic, not just another episode. I wanted it to properly end the series. Most of all, if you've never seen `Extras,' I wanted you to be able to watch it and know what's going on. It has a beginning, middle and end."

It also has some shrewd cameos from George Michael, Gordon Ramsay and Clive Owen as themselves.

Since its debut on the BBC in 2005, "Extras" has attracted a cadre of A-list celebrities willing to unabashedly defame themselves in the name of comedy. Looking back, Gervais counts David Bowie, Samuel L. Jackson, Kate Winslet and Robert De Niro among the series' most memorable guest stars.

Gervais says a pivotal scene in the finale, in which Clive Owen petitions perennial background actress Maggie Jacobs (played by Ashley Jensen) to smear the nastiest of special effects cocktails on her face, is the series' funniest.

"I think the sketch with Clive Owen is the most perfect comedy sketch ever," Gervais says. "He's brilliant in it."

HBO is billing the "Extras" Christmas special as the series finale. However, unlike "The Office," Gervais could envision returning for more. He already knows what he wants Millman to do next: come to America.

"I can imagine it," Gervais reasons. "With `The Office,' I couldn't imagine it. I've never gone back to it, and I never will. If we ever did another `Extras,' which we almost certainly won't, I think it would be about Andy trying to make it in Hollywood and failing miserably. Obviously."

Perhaps, by then, Gervais will be A-list enough to cameo as himself.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: cine on December 18, 2007, 02:05:09 PM
so i just watched the xmas special and goddamnit, they've done it again. i probably teared up at the exact same spot i did with the office xmas special. how the fuck do they do it?

extras is officially superior to the office.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: modage on December 18, 2007, 02:44:35 PM
Quote from: Cinephile on December 18, 2007, 02:05:09 PM
extras is officially superior to the office.

(https://xixax.com/index.php?action=dlattach;attach=1564;type=avatar)
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: cine on December 18, 2007, 02:56:37 PM
and now i woof myself.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: cron on December 20, 2007, 12:25:01 PM
aww this was adorable. i don't know what else to say :(
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: Ravi on January 13, 2008, 12:40:22 AM
For those of you who already have series 1 and 2, HBO is releasing the finale separately on February 26th.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: ElPandaRoyal on January 16, 2008, 10:38:41 AM
I jut saw the Christmas Special and man, oh man, Extras is a fantastic show. Ricky Gervais was wonderful once again, fantastic performance and, well, I think it's just in my blood to cry at movies ou tv shows, but I was on the verge of doing it near the end. What's so great about Gervais/Merchant is that they have the best sense of humor but they also have a great heart. It was one of the best things I've ever seen about celebrity, integrity and, well... human beings. I'm stunned.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: MacGuffin on October 21, 2008, 10:42:24 AM
Gervais moots 'Extras' one-off for Hollywood

LONDON (AFP) – British actor and screenwriter Ricky Gervais said in an interview Tuesday he wanted to make one more episode of hit comedy "Extras" with struggling actor Andy Millman trying to make it big in Hollywood.

In an interview with Zoo magazine, Gervais said his idea for another episode of the programme, where he played Millman, "would work best as another Christmas special".

"I think it would be funny to see Andy trying to make it in Hollywood," he said.

"The problem is, I don't think (co-creator) Stephen Merchant wants to do it. But I reckon he will if I insist!"

Gervais gained world-wide fame for co-creating and starring in "The Office", a comedy filmed in fake documentary style about a paper business where he played cringe-inducing middle-manager David Brent.

"The Office" has been sold in over 70 countries by the BBC, and has spawned re-makes in the United States, Chile and Russia.
Title: Re: Extras
Post by: MacGuffin on June 16, 2010, 07:17:19 PM
Ricky Gervais previews next project
Talks up 'Life's Too Short' at Banff TV festival
Source: Hollywood Reporter

BANFF, Alberta -- Ricky Gervais insists "Life's Too Short," his single-camera comedy pilot for BBC2, is long on laughs.

"It's the funniest thing we've done," Gervais said of his latest collaboration with fellow "The Office" and "Extras" creator Stephen Merchant while attending the Banff World Television Festival.

"It's pure funny," he added about the observational comedy starring Warwick Davis ("Star Wars," "Harry Potter") as a little person with "a small-man complex."

Davis first grabbed the attention of Gervais and Merchant while performing in an episode of "Extras." While on set, he told the writing duo of his frustrations and real-life experiences living in a grown-up world at only 3'6" in height.

"The real Warwick tells us these great stories. They're comedy gold," Gervais recalled.

Davis' real-world experience includes using a broom handle to retrieve out-of-reach supermarket products, or being forever touched by ordinary people for good luck, as if he were a leprechaun.

Gervais and Merchant eventually approached the BBC to turn Davis' comedy material into a half-hour series, albeit one without the pathos of "The Office" or the drama of "Extras."

"He refuses to live his life as a disabled person. We're making him empowered but also give him these foibles," Gervais said of Davis' character.

Gervais, in Banff to receive the Sir Peter Ustinov comedy award, will executive produce "Life's Too Short" along with Merchant and Mark Freeland.