Lab Rats | |
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Cartoon-style title screen of Lab Rats. |
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Genre | Sitcom |
Written by | Chris Addison Carl Cooper |
Directed by | Adam Tandy |
Starring | Chris Addison Selina Cadell Jo Enright Geoffrey McGivern Dan Tetsell Robin Ince |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 6 |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Simon Nicholls |
Running time | 29' |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | BBC 2 |
Picture format | PAL (576i) |
Audio format | Stereophonic |
Original run | 10 July 2008 | – 14 August 2008
Lab Rats is a 2008 BBC 2 situation comedy set in a university science laboratory. It stars Chris Addison, who has co-written the series with Carl Cooper. The series is produced by regular collaborator Simon Nicholls, directed by Adam Tandy and exec produced by Armando Iannucci with whom Addison worked in The Thick of It.
Iannucci stated that the programme would be a traditional-style sitcom recorded in front of a live audience. He hinted that it will be a "very cartoony" show featuring "lots of giant snails".[1]
A pilot was announced as part of a series called "Behind Closed Doors" in Autumn 2006, but was never aired.[2] A series of six episodes was broadcast in 2008, although the show was not recommissioned for further series.
Contents |
Lab Rats is set in the Arnolfini, a research lab (and staff) for hire in St. Dunstan's University, designed to make some money for the university by carrying out research on behalf of other people.
The main characters are:
The series of six episodes began airing on BBC Two at 9.30pm on 10 July 2008.
# | Title | Director | Original airdate |
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1 | "A Snail" | Adam Tandy | 10 July 2008 |
A maverick Russian professor asks the laboratory to solve his human cloning problem in 24 hours. | |||
2 | "A Donor" | Adam Tandy | 17 July 2008 |
A lab inspector turns up and causes havoc. The scientists must also keep a secret from him —- they have a donor locked up in a cryogenic unit. | |||
3 | "A Protest" | Adam Tandy | 24 July 2008 |
A protest against nothing in particular is held outside the laboratory. | |||
4 | "A Bee" | Adam Tandy | 31 July 2008 |
A friend of Professor Mycroft loses his prize test super bees. | |||
5 | "A Seven-Nighter" | Adam Tandy | 7 August 2008 |
The team have a special overnight job in a secret government lab for 7 long nights. | |||
6 | "A Diary" | Adam Tandy | 14 August 2008 |
Alex's father finds the teenage diary of Captain Scott and the lab is hit by freak weather conditions. |
Reception to the first episode "A Snail" was mixed in the British press. The Guardian Guide found the programme "mundane and dated",[3] Lucy Mangan also of The Guardian said "the kind of stuff that would barely have passed muster in the 70s [...] all the jokes are spatchcocked into a wafer-thin plot that veers uncertainly between reality and surreality, this particular experiment can only be deemed a failure.".[4] Tim Teeman writing in The Times said "Lab Rats is a truly appalling new sit-com [...] Bad puns, redundant characters, lame jokes [...] Not even the best surgeon in the land could save this." (0/5 stars)[5]
However Robert Hanks in The Independent said "remarkable for its combination of very silly jokes and rather well-researched evolutionary theory. The cast is good. The plot of last night's episode was pleasantly absurdist, the jokes were commendably odd and wide-ranging [...] Somehow, though, it didn't quite gel, largely because of the studio audience, whose laughter, as so often, slowed things down and underlined jokes that needed to be thrown away [...] Worth giving it a week or two, though." [6] Robert Collins of The Daily Telegraph gave it his critic's choice, calling it "likeable, madcap comedy [...] a catalytic reaction of Red Dwarf and The IT Crowd, in a solution of Are You Being Served? And it's not a bad formula."[7]
Visitors to the British Comedy Guide website voted Lab Rats as the "Worst New British TV Sitcom" of 2008 in its annual awards, with the website saying that: "The idea behind the show may have been good (to bring back silly studio-based sitcom to the BBC), but the execution was anything but good. An awful, awful comedy."[8]