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Red Dwarf
Red Dwarf — Smeg Head!
1988 8 300.7K TV-PG views saved
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Red Dwarf

1988 8 300.7K TV-PG views saved
Red Dwarf

The adventures of the last human alive and his friends, stranded three million years into deep space on the mining ship Red Dwarf.

Countries: GB
Languages: English
Content Rating: TV-PG
Runtime: 30min
Status: Ended
First air date: 1988-02-15
Comments
Trix256
@trix256 9 years ago

Absolutely fantastic and hilarious. Brilliant show.......apart from the three part special (series 9)
(via TV Blaze for WP)

2
Trix256
@trix256 9 years ago

Absolutely fantastic and hilarious. Brilliant show.......apart from the three part special (series 9)
(via TV Blaze for WP)

2
@movieswatcher 3 years ago

Best show ever. What else to say.

0
DancinTedDanson
@dancinteddanson 4 years ago

Brilliant British comedy, great characters, great everything, great smeg.

0
Sandro
@agentsmith2k 13 years ago

I sooo hope series 10 goes back to the roots of what we know and love before the mentally corrupt series 7 and upwards

0
Nobumon
@nobuemon 1 month ago

Red Dwarf is one of those rare sci-fi comedies that not only found its own voice early on but managed to carve out a lasting legacy in British television. Part sitcom, part space opera, part existential farce, it’s a genre-bending, low-budget marvel that somehow still feels fresh even after decades. The concept is wonderfully absurd: the last human being alive is stuck on a mining ship three million years into deep space, surrounded by a hologram of his dead bunkmate, a humanoid creature evolved from a cat, and an obsessive, cleaning-obsessed android. It shouldn't work—but it absolutely does.

The early seasons are tight, hilarious, and full of sharp writing and well-timed absurdity. There’s a distinctly British flavor to the humor—dry, sarcastic, and unafraid to poke fun at both high-concept science fiction and the dull grind of working-class life. Lister, Rimmer, Cat, and Kryten form a dysfunctional but oddly lovable crew, each bringing a completely different energy to the group dynamic. Chris Barrie’s portrayal of Rimmer is especially brilliant—equal parts annoying, tragic, and hilarious.

As the show evolved, it dipped in quality here and there. Some of the later seasons lose the rhythm that made the earlier episodes so strong, either leaning too hard into overly dramatic arcs or drifting away from the character-driven humor that grounded the series. There are definitely a few seasons that are skippable, or at least forgettable, but even in its weaker moments, Red Dwarf still has that unmistakable charm.

Despite its uneven run, the majority of the series is excellent—funny, clever, and weirdly poignant at times. It’s a testament to how strong the core premise and cast chemistry are that Red Dwarf is still being talked about, quoted, and revisited today.

An essential piece of British sci-fi TV. 9/10.

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Season/Episode list
12 seasons available.
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