Join Rob Brydon and team captains Jane Moore and Dave Gorman for a double dosage of hilarity in this box set containing series 1 and 2 of the off-beat panel show where what happens off set is just as amusing as what happens on it!
An acutely observed forensically honest warts-and-all look at a working-class couple in their mid-20s.
They have spent three series talking about it. Now the day has come. It's Paul and Laura's wedding day and the final chapter for Steve and Becky. With Becky as chief bridesmaid and Steve as best man each episode follows a different stage of the day - from the early morning wake-up call through to the ceremony and the speeches to the drunken mess of the late night disco - we watch the wedding in real time in all its glory. The series brings all the familiar elements of the show back in a new setting over one day for Laura's final showdown with Paul and Steve and Becky's biggest moment yet.
Comedy-drama series about three twenty-something housemates trying to live normal lives despite struggling with unusual afflictions - one is a werewolf one is a vampire and the other is a ghost. They face a human threat in the form of the mysterious Professor Jaggat and the cold-hearted Kemp. Jaggat and Kemp are fundamentalist Christians who have discovered the existence of vampires werewolves and ghosts - and are determined to destroy them or carry out brutal experiments upon them. They believe that vampires are the Devil incarnate and must be destroyed; that werewolves contain an evil gene that can be removed by violent scientific experiments; and that ghosts must be forced over to the other side whether they like it or not.
Russell Tovey stars as the lovable George battling with his double identity as a mild-mannered and geeky hospital porter who for one night a month is transformed into a flesh-hungry predatory werewolf. Aidan Turner plays the good-looking and laid-back Mitchell who in contrast to George has the gift of the gab and an easy confidence with the ladies. But he is also a blood-sucking vampire struggling with going cold-turkey from the blood he craves. Completing the flat-share trio is Annie played by Lenora Crichlow a talkative ghost lacking in self-confidence and desperate for company. Annie is still pining after her fianc whom she was due to marry before the fatal accident that left her with her ghostly affliction - and who happens to be the landlord of their flat. Follow the trio as they do their best to live their lives as normally as possible despite their strange and dark secrets. But with unwelcome intruders into their world rumblings about an impending revolution from the vampire underworld and constant threats of exposure - on top of the usual issues faced by young people surrounding love work and mates - the only thing they may be able to rely on in their heightened world is each other.
Series 2 sees Becky move into Steve's place permanently. Their relationship blossoms above the nitty gritty of living together - but there's trouble on the horizon. Becky's sister Laura and her friend Shelly have become best mates with Steve's ex-girlfriend. Dan, the lonely bloke from upstairs, is back with his girlfriend. And Laura's fianc Paul is up to his old tricks again. Him & Her lifts the lid on life as it really is, warts and all, focussing on the important stuff like coat hangers, smelly clothes and orange squash. Love goes on for Becky and Steve, now living together but still gloriously lazy. Special Features: That Was Then... Series One Revisited This Is Now... Series Two Teaser Laura & Paul’s Holiday Photo Gallery Salon Wolves Exclusive Behind the Scenes
Series 1 Steve [Russell Tovey] and Becky [Sarah Solemani] are young, unemployed and lazy. All they want to do is eat, drink and have sex - so they do. They don't want to get a job - so they don't. They're happy to spend their days watching DVDs in Steve's bedsit, but they're constantly interrupted by Dan - the lonely bloke from upstairs, Laura and Paul -Becky's sister and her fiance or, most frighteningly for Steve, Becky's parents. Him and Her is an anti-romantic comedy, lifting the lid on love as it really is - warts and all - with farts, bickering and toast. Special Features: Video Diaries Special Featurettes Deleted Scenes The Argument Uncut Commentaries with Russell Tovey, Sarah Solemani, Stefan Golaszewski, Richard Laxton and Kenton Allen Series 2 Series 2 sees Becky move into Steve's place permanently. Their relationship blossoms above the nitty gritty of living together - but there's trouble on the horizon. Becky's sister Laura and her friend Shelly have become best mates with Steve's ex-girlfriend. Dan, the lonely bloke from upstairs, is back with his girlfriend. And Laura's fiance Paul is up to his old tricks again. Him and Her lifts the lid on life as it really is, focussing on the important stuff like coat hangers, smelly clothes and orange squash. Love goes on for Becky and Steve, now living together but still gloriously lazy. Special Features: That Was Then... Series 1 Revisited This is Now... Series 2 Teaser Laura and Paul's Holiday Photo Gallery Salon Wolves Exclusive Behind the Scenes
Having recovered from a shattering emotional breakdown, college professor Ben Marshall (Ed Stoppard) relocates to the countryside with his wife (Sophia Myles) and young son, hoping for a fresh start. He has a teaching job lined up and a new home to move into; things finally look to be going Ben s way. Until, that is, he starts to feel that something isn t quite right in the house. Finding himself plagued by visions, Ben becomes obsessed with uncovering the truth behind a local mystery that appears to be putting the lives of his family in danger. He begins to investigate the local gamekeeper Jack (Russell Tovey) and the ex-paratrooper vicar, Father Patrick (Paul Kaye) but things complicate when an old friend Dominic (Greg Wise) and his girlfriend (Joanna Vanderham) enter the frame.
Russell Tovey stars as the lovable George, battling with his double identity as a mild-mannered and geeky hospital porter who for one night a month is transformed into a flesh-hungry, predatory werewolf.Aidan Turner plays the good-looking and laid-back Mitchell who, in contrast to George, has the gift of the gab and an easy confidence with the ladies. But he is also a blood-sucking vampire struggling with going cold-turkey from the blood he craves.Completing the flat-share trio is Annie, played by Lenora Crichlow, a talkative ghost lacking in self-confidence and desperate for company. Annie is still pining after her fianc, whom she was due to marry before the fatal accident that left her with her ghostly affliction - and who happens to be the landlord of their flat.Follow the trio as they do their best to live their lives as normally as possible despite their strange and dark secrets.But with unwelcome intruders into their world, rumblings about an impending revolution from the vampire underworld and constant threats of exposure - on top of the usual issues faced by young people surrounding love, work and mates - the only thing they may be able to rely on in their heightened world, is each other.
In the mid-1960s, with Dalekmania sweeping Britain, BBC TV's Doctor Who materialised on the silver screen. Doctor Who and the Daleks replaced William Hartnell with Peter Cushing and remade the Daleks' TV debut with a much bigger budget in Technicolor and Techniscope. With his two granddaughters, Roberta Tovey and Jennie Linden (and Roy Castle along for comic relief), the Doctor becomes an intermediary in a conflict between the robotic Daleks and angelic Thals on the almost dead world of Skaro. A huge hit on release, the film remains an enjoyable, well-produced family adventure, though somewhat lacking the menace of the TV original. Daleks: Invasion Earth 2150 AD remakes the second Dalek TV serial and finds the Doctor and companions in a ravaged future London where a resistance movement has literally gone underground to fight the Nazi-like alien invaders. Peter Cushing once more makes a kindly, dependable Doctor, though Bernard Cribbins is given a cringe-making comedy routine impersonating a "roboman", and the jazzy soundtrack is wildly out of place. Nevertheless this is a superior sequel, offering lavish production values, better action set-pieces and a higher suspense and fear factor than its predecessor. The best moments remain surprisingly chilling even today. On the DVD: Doctor Who and the Daleks--the first disc--has a fun, very well-made 1995 documentary running 57 minutes and recounting the production of both feature films. Included are interviews with various surviving cast members. There is also an affectionate commentary with Roberta Tovey and Jennie Linden, hosted by Jonathan Southcote, author of The Cult Films of Peter Cushing. Sadly Daleks: Invasion Earth 2150 AD has no substantial extra features, but both discs include the respective trailer, presented anamorphically enhanced, and a DVD-ROM reproduction of the relevant cinema brochure. The mono sound is good and the pin-sharp, vibrantly colourful, anamorphically enhanced 2.35:1 transfers are all but flawless, making both films look good as new. --Gary S Dalkin
Someone is picking off the last remaining occupants of a tower block using a high-powered silenced rifle. Nobody else has heard the shots and no help is coming. If the terrified victims can’t figure out how to escape they’re all going to be killed one by one. With career-defining performances from Sheridan Smith (Cilla) BAFTA Award winner Jack O’Connell (Starred Up) Russell Tovey (TV’s Being Human) Kano (TV’s Top Boy) and Ralph Brown (TV’s Babylon) this fantastically gripping British thriller is a movie not to be missed.
Looking offers up the unfiltered experiences of three close friends living – and loving – in modern-day San Francisco. Friendship may bind them but each is at a markedly different point in his journey: Patrick (Jonathan Groff – Spring Awakening) is the 29-year-old video game designer getting back into the dating world in the wake of his ex’s engagement; aspiring artist Agustín (Frankie J. Alvarez - Smash) 31 is questioning the idea of monogamy amid a move to domesticate with his boyfriend; and the group's oldest member longtime waiter Dom (Murray Bartlett) 39 is facing middle age with romantic and professional dreams still unfulfilled. Episode List: Looking for Now Looking for Uncut Looking at Your Browser History Looking for $220/ Hour Looking for the Future Looking in the Mirror Looking for a Plus-One Looking Glass Bonus Features: Audio Commentaries Inside the Episodes – 8 in total tied to each episode
Zavvi Exclusive Steelbook - Limited to 2000 Copies Set during disco's heyday Boogie Nights is a dark hilarious and hysterical expose of the pornography industry as seen from the inside. Eddie (Mark Wahlberg) is a 17-year old busboy looking for a break when he is spotted in a disco by veteran porn director Jack Horner (Burt Reynolds). Jack immediately senses that the virile and well-endowed young man can make him very very rich. Lead by Jack into the wickedly glamorous realm of porn movies Eddie emerges as Dirk Diggler the superstar who's always pleased to see you... Bonus Features: Commentary by Director Paul Thomas Anderson Commentary by Don Cheadle Heather Graham Luis Guzman William H. Macy Julianne Moore John C. Reilly Mark Wahlberg and Melora Walters Additional Scenes Michael Penn Try Music Video The John C. Reilly Files: Outtakes and Extended Sequences Theatrical Trailer
Russell Tovey stars as the lovable George battling with his double identity as a mild-mannered and geeky hospital porter who for one night a month is transformed into a flesh-hungry predatory werewolf. Aidan Turner plays the good-looking and laid-back Mitchell who in contrast to George has the gift of the gab and an easy confidence with the ladies. But he is also a blood-sucking vampire struggling with going cold-turkey from the blood he craves. Completing the flat-share trio is Annie played by Lenora Crichlow a talkative ghost lacking in self-confidence and desperate for company. Annie is still pining after her fianc whom she was due to marry before the fatal accident that left her with her ghostly affliction - and who happens to be the landlord of their flat. Follow the trio as they do their best to live their lives as normally as possible despite their strange and dark secrets. But with unwelcome intruders into their world rumblings about an impending revolution from the vampire underworld and constant threats of exposure - on top of the usual issues faced by young people surrounding love work and mates - the only thing they may be able to rely on in their heightened world is each other.
The heroes move to Wales to continue their quest to live like normal human beings but the net is closing in on Mitchell Annie is trapped in purgatory and George and Nina battle domestic challenges.
Russell Tovey Lenora Crichlow and Aidan Turner return as George Annie and Mitchell in the critically-acclaimed drama Being Human in which three housemates try to live normal lives despite being a werewolf a ghost and a vampire. After the death of vampire leader Herrick at the end of series one the supernatural friends are hoping that they can now get on with their lives but an even greater danger is lurking within the very human world in which they are desperate to be a part of. Werewolf George is coming to terms with the fact that he has Herrick's blood on his hands and a girlfriend who knows his horrific secret. Meanwhile turning down the door of death has implications for ghost Annie but her confidence is at a peak and she is determined to stand up and be counted in the real world... And with Herrick gone Mitchell must appease the vampire world; but can he find a way to lead by example? With unwelcome intruders into their world rumblings about an impending revolution from the vampire underworld and constant threats of exposure - on top of the usual issues faced by young people surrounding love work and mates - the only thing they may be able to rely on in their heightened world is each other.
One tower block. Fifteen tenants. One sniper. With career-defining performances from Sheridan Smith, Jack O'Connell, Russell Tovey, Kano and Ralph Brown, this fantastically gripping British thriller is a movie not to be missed. Special Features: Interviews with Cast and Crew
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