Stephen is finally taking over his father's pub, and he has a tough act to follow. His dad, Laurie, is a local hero. At least he was, until he died. There's only one problem: Stephen is a loser. And when the charismatic Andrew turns up at Laurie's funeral, Stephen's anxiety strikes. Andrew claims the short time he spent fostered by Stephen's family was the happiest of his life. But to Stephen, Andrew is just one of 30-odd foster kids he resented during childhood. A slick sociopath who's trying to replace him. As Stephen teeters on the brink of paranoid mania, he investigates Andrew's past but his most surprising discoveries will be about himself. Written by Emmy winner Simon Blackwell.
Armando Ianucci presents a satirical look at the present onwards... from the future. Witness an increasingly bizzare Tom Cruise Tesco invading Denmark George Lucas' CGI enhanced funeral and many more hilarious memories yet to happen.
Live from his luxury apartment in London's glittering East End Dean Learner: club owner celebrity manager restaurateur entrepreneur and publisher of high-class gentlemen's magazines invites you to meet some of his closest friends Man to Man.
This Box Set features the following: Man To Man: Live from his luxury apartment in London's glittering East End Dean Learner: club owner celebrity manager restaurateur entrepreneur and publisher of high-class gentlemen's magazines invites you to meet some of his closest friends Man to Man. Garth Marenhi's Dark Place: Celebrated horror genius Garth Marenghi introduces his long-lost television project: a haunting medical drama set in Romford. The best-selling writer is already known to hundreds as the creative force behind such classic chillers as The Ooze (can water die?) Afterbirth (a mutated placenta attacks Bristol) and Black Fang (rats learn to drive). Darkplace was originally filmed in the 1980s and has since earned a cult reputation as one of the most terrifying and radical television programmes ever made. Even now Garth warns that the show which he describes as an effort to radicalise men's minds may prove 'too subversive too dangerous too damn scary'.
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