Everyone Else Burns
Everyone Else Burns | |
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Genre | Sitcom Comedy-drama |
Created by |
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Written by |
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Directed by | Nick Collett, Jamie Jay Johnson |
Starring |
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Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 12 |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producer | Molly Seymour |
Editor | Mike Holliday |
Production companies | |
Original release | |
Network | Channel 4 |
Release | 23 January 2023 present | –
Everyone Else Burns is a British television sitcom made for Channel 4 by JAX Media and Universal International Studios, starring Simon Bird, Kate O'Flynn, Amy James-Kelly, Harry Connor and Morgana Robinson. The first series premiered in January 2023, with a second broadcast in October 2024; all episodes were made available at once on streaming.
Synopsis
A coming-of-age sitcom about a Manchester family who are part of a puritanical Christian sect.[1]
Cast
- Simon Bird as David Lewis, the patriarch of the Lewis family whose passion for keeping his family in line with the scripture of the Order stems from his conspicuous desperation to gain influence in his chapter, usually in overly complex, bizarre fashion that serves instead to distance himself from his wife and children.
- Kate O'Flynn as Fiona Lewis, whose mostly emotionless and servile existence is starting to grate, and - after almost two decades dedicated to her family - tries to explore her own interests and ambitions, uncovering how they and what the misogynistic setup of the Order demands of her are incompatible.
- Amy James-Kelly as Rachel Lewis, the teenage daughter of David and Fiona who is starting to bore of the restrictions imposed on her life and ambitions by the Order - discovering that her attempts to escape the life devoted to a family that is expected of her are very difficult to carry out, and her yearning and exploration for more has pitfalls of its own.
- Harry Connor as Aaron Lewis, the young son of the family whose staunch, fastidiously pernickety adherence to the Order's text word-for-word sees him express disapproval of his family and believe of himself as the most pious among them; this compounds his isolation from others his age, spending his time honing his exceptionally precocious drawing skills instead.
- Morgana Robinson as Melissa, the new, lesbian, provocative neighbour of the Lewises, who aids Fiona's newfound confidence to express herself and discover life outside of the home.
- Ali Khan as Joshua, a teenage boy Rachel meets on her doorstep proselytising, who she comes to fall in love with despite it being forbidden, but has his own storied history with the Order.
- Arsher Ali as Elder Samson, the head of the local chapter of the Order who utilises his power to the fullest extent and rules with an iron fist, demanding pure adherence to the Order's principles and unaccommodating of those who fall short of his edicts.
- Al Roberts as Elder Abijah, whose desire for a more lackadaisical approach to enforcing the rules of the chapter - and abashed, gauche expression of such - sees him often clash with Elder Samson on fundamental matters.
- Kadiff Kirwan as Andrew, a neighbour of the Lewises who David possesses a one-sided battle with over competence in expressing the values of, and greater influence and control within, the Order.
- Liam Williams as Joel, a diffident new convert to the Order looking for renewed purpose in life after an acrimonious split from his girlfriend.
- Lolly Adefope as Miss Simmons, teacher at the Lewis children's school whose turbulent personal life crosses too much over into her professional one.
- Soph Galustian as Julia, a young Order member with excellent skills for duplicity and teaching Rachel the ways of the world outside of the Order.
- Kath Hughes as Sid
- Sian Clifford as Maude (series 2), a demure new arrival to the chapter who instantly becomes attracted to the incredibly compatible David, sharing his quirks and curiously idiosyncratic principles and rules for life.
Episodes
Series 1 (2023)
All episodes were made available on All 4 prior to broadcast on 23 January 2023.
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Channel 4 airdate [2] | |
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1 | "Episode One" | Nick Collett | Dillon Mapletoft, Oliver Taylor | 23 January 2023 | |
At the advent of the apocalypse, the deeply religious Lewis family evacuate to the hills, but it turns out to be just a dress rehearsal initiated by patriarch David. Anticipating a promotion to the role of Elder at his evangelical sect, The Order of the Divine Rod, David is considering quitting his job at a package sorting depot. Academically gifted daughter Rachel is proselyting when she finds the friendly ear of a young man called Joshua. When he asks about the practice of ‘shunning’ Rachel is shocked to find that he used to be in the order, but has been excommunicated. When fellow ordinand and widowed-neighbour Andrew is given the post of Elder, David is more than a little put out. Wife Fiona reaches out to neighbour Melissa so that she can watch TV. | |||||
2 | "Episode Two" | Nick Collett | Dillon Mapletoft, Oliver Taylor | 23 January 2023 | |
Rachel is persuaded to get a mobile phone by her teacher in order to advance her university application for a course in medicine. She crosses paths with Joshua and starts to develop a rapport despite the fact he is persona non grata. On ministering visits to potential recruit Joel, David and son Aaron make a nuisance of themselves, prompting Elder Andrew to intervene and take over. Melissa convinces Fiona to start a business despite an ancient sect order declaring that women ‘have no place in the agora’. | |||||
3 | "Episode Three" | Nick Collett | Dillon Mapletoft, Oliver Taylor | 30 January 2023 | |
Rachel is paired with outwardly prim and proper Sister Angelie to go out and save the souls of unbelievers, however, she soon discovers that Angelie is actually Julia and a serial rule-breaker. Persuaded to accept Joshua's invite to a party on her birthday, Rachel finds herself as the only guest at what the order considers a pagan ritual. David proposes a date night to Fiona in order to distract her from her increasingly successful business venture. Fiona's insistence on a Japanese noodle bar as the venue leads to a culinary epiphany for her husband. | |||||
4 | "Episode Four" | Nick Collett | Dillon Mapletoft, Oliver Taylor | 6 February 2023 | |
Rachel and Joshua start dating. When Rachel asks her parents if she was excluded by the church, would they shun her, David and Fiona respond in the affirmative under the impression that the fear of shunning alone would act as a deterrent to their daughter ever stepping out of line and therefore never requiring them to act on the threat. David confesses he has a sexual fantasy about the Sun-Maid raisin girl and calls a crisis meeting with the church elders. Unimpressed with their dismissive attitude to his transgression, he undertakes penance at his Uncle's caravan. Elder Andrew under pressure from the sect to remarry, entrusts Fiona with his late wife's wedding band. | |||||
5 | "Episode Five" | Nick Collett | Dillon Mapletoft, Oliver Taylor | 13 February 2023 | |
Rachel panics when she discovers applications for a degree in medicine close at midnight. Unable to find a computer to complete the online form she turns to Angelie/Julia for help and then takes refuge at Joshua's flat. Her discovery of photos on the laptop showing Joshua and Julia together forces her boyfriend to reveal the reason for his banishment from the church. Melissa accidentally gets Fiona drunk whilst they watch a racy movie. An awkward encounter ensues when Andrew calls round for the wedding ring which has become stuck on Fiona's finger. At the caravan, Aaron wants his father to accept the homoerotic nature of his religious drawings, but David cannot get his head around it. | |||||
6 | "Episode Six" | Nick Collett | Dillon Mapletoft, Oliver Taylor | 20 February 2023 | |
Joshua turns up to church to ask forgiveness from chapter leader Elder Samson who is revealed to also be his father. Rachel discovers her university application has been withdrawn without her knowledge. When her mother admits to being the guilty party, the two fall out. At the church's annual gathering, inter-chapter rivalries are high and the prize of Joel's conversion hangs in the balance until David has a heart to heart with him, a conversation which is inadvertently broadcast on the PA system. When Elder Samson gives Rachel an ultimatum, either to stay in the order (on penance) or go to University and be excommunicated, she decides to give up her hopes of becoming a doctor. |
Series 2 (2024)
All episodes were made available on 3 October 2024 for subscribers to the paid tier of Channel 4's streaming service;[3] this expanded to all users on 17 October 2024.
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Channel 4 airdate [4] | UK viewers (millions) | |
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1 | "A Big Sexless Cardigan" | Jamie Jay Johnson | Dillon Mapletoft, Oliver Taylor | 17 October 2024 | N/A | |
Rachel is only able to quietly express her relief at the completion of her penance; her short-term glee after learning of another potential escape route extirpated upon discovering Josh has now firmly returned to the Order, and the chapter is reintroducing arranged marriages. Fiona's own marriage being one leads her to reckon with the security of her relationship with David, who has grown curious about a forthright, if slightly eccentric, new arrival into the chapter; his actions within the family home, meanwhile, have risked expunging any remaining respect son Aaron had for him, as David's yearning to improve his standing in the church cross and collide with Aaron's attempts to rescue Elder Andrew from his pit of despair and return him to service in the hopes of moderating the increasingly tyrannical Elder Samson. | ||||||
2 | "A Boot Loaded With Mass" | Jamie Jay Johnson | Dillon Mapletoft, Oliver Taylor | 17 October 2024 | N/A | |
The discovery she will need a driving license to fulfil her now-less-broadened-horizons dream of becoming a paramedic deflates Rachel, more so when it is David who insists on training her up - he oblivious to his own track record of reckless road usage, which his unique teaching style worsens considerably. Her turmoil is assuaged, however, following the announcement the arranged marriage mechanism has paired her up with the captivatingly bad-boy-esque Jebediah, but struggles to cope after being also forced into company with Josh. Fiona manages to bring Aaron out of his funk - derived from being unable to help an increasingly errant-of-mind Andrew - by allowing him to publish his curiously homoerotic drawings as part of her business, which leads the pair into the eye-opening world of raving. | ||||||
3 | TBA | Jamie Jay Johnson | Dillon Mapletoft, Oliver Taylor | 24 October 2024 | N/A | |
4 | TBA | Jamie Jay Johnson | Dillon Mapletoft, Oliver Taylor | 24 October 2024 | N/A | |
5 | TBA | Jamie Jay Johnson | Dillon Mapletoft, Oliver Taylor | 31 October 2024 | N/A | |
6 | TBA | Jamie Jay Johnson | Dillon Mapletoft, Oliver Taylor | 31 October 2024 | N/A |
Production
Channel 4 announced the project had been commissioned in May 2022 with the cast in place and JAX Media and Universal International Studios producing from a script written by Dillon Mapletoft and Oliver Taylor, and Nick Collett as director.[5] Speaking about his wig for the show Bird told The Independent, "My first reaction [upon seeing the wig] was laughter, annoyingly, which was pretty much everyone’s reaction. Which meant that we had to go ahead with it."[6]
Channel 4 renewed the series for a second season in May 2023.[7] Sian Clifford joined the cast for the second series.[8] Filming for the second series took place in Heaton Moor, Greater Manchester in April 2024.[9]
Broadcast
Everyone Else Burns premiered in the UK on Channel 4 on 23 January 2023. The first season consisted of six episodes in total, which are also available to on the streaming service All4.[10]
International broadcast
The series debuted in Canada on W Network on 29 May 2023.[11] In the United States, the series debuted on The CW on 26 October 2023[12] before being pulled from its schedule in November 2023.[13] Brad Schwartz, President of Entertainment of The CW, blamed the marketing of the show for it being pulled.[14] The series is currently available in Australia on SBS On Demand.[15]
Reception
Viewership
The series opened to 1.4 million viewers with four weeks of post-broadcast viewership included.[16][17] The show was "the biggest comedy launch since Derry Girls on Channel 4's streaming service".[18]
Critical reception
Everyone Else Burns has received critical acclaim, with a 90% 'certified fresh' rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[19]
Writing in The Daily Telegraph Anita Singh said "there is much to enjoy here. It's not a comedy going for cheap laughs about Christianity. It is a show about family, and it has a lot of heart" and said that the comedy derives from a "subversion of norms". She also praised the writing, performances and characterisation “from the leads down to the supporting players", noting that "there are truths about family and friends that make it seem like more than a throwaway sitcom."[20] Lucy Mangan in The Guardian commented that it is "simply very, very funny" and that the "hyper-religiosity is used to look anew at family dynamics and dysfunction; how blind you can be to abnormalities if they are all you know".[21] Carol Midgely in The Times described it as "a small delight" and praised the performance of Simon Bird and the cast, as well as the "sharply, wittily written" script, adding that "it is a brave comedy that targets religion, but only a clever one could do it with this much heart and jolliness."[22] The i described it as "funny as hell" [23] while, in a four-star review for The Evening Standard, Vicky Jessop wrote "who knew eternal damnation could be this fun?".[24]
Reception in the United States has been similarly positive. Time Magazine described it as "a fantastically warped family sitcom” and “easily the best new broadcast comedy since Abbot Elementary".[25] The New York Times labelled it "a charmer - smart, distinctive, lovely".[26] The Hollywood Reporter called it "very funny" [27] while The LA Times named it "a dysfunctional family comedy you can believe in".[28] Similarly positive reviews came from The New York Post ("hell yeah")[29] and The Daily Beast, which called it "really goddamn funny" and "the sort of laughs-at-any-cost sitcom rarely made in the UK these days".[30]
Accolades
In February 2024, the series was nominated at the Broadcast Awards in the Best Comedy Programme category.[31]
References
- ^ "Everyone Else Burns". Comedy.co.uk.
- ^ "Everyone Else Burns - Episode guide". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 17 October 2024.
- ^ "Watch Everyone Else Burns | Stream free on Channel 4". Channel 4. Archived from the original on 4 October 2024.
- ^ "Everyone Else Burns Series 2 episode guide". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 18 October 2024.
- ^ "Channel 4 Commissions New Apocalyptic Comedy 'Everyone Else Burns', Starring Simon Bird". Chamnel4.com.
- ^ "'What's below beta male? That's where I am': Simon Bird on his Christian sect sitcom and The Inbetweeners' mixed legacy". The Independent. 23 January 2023.
- ^ "Everyone Else Burns Renewed for Second Series on Channel 4". TV Zone. 2 May 2023. Retrieved 14 July 2023.
- ^ Harp, Justin (24 April 2024). "Fleabag star joins Channel 4 series with The Inbetweeners' Simon Bird". Digital Spy. Retrieved 25 April 2024.
- ^ Maidment, Adam (8 April 2024). "Stars seen filming new series of popular sitcom in Greater Manchester". Manchester Evening News. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
- ^ "Everyone Else Burns release date, cast and latest news". Radio Times.
- ^ Corus Entertainment (13 April 2023). "THIS SUMMER, SOAK UP SHOWCASE AND W NETWORK'S REFRESHING SLATE OF COOL NEW SERIES AND RETURNING FAN FAVOURITES" (Press release). Retrieved 18 May 2023.
- ^ Porter, Rick (18 May 2023). "The CW Sets Acquisition-Heavy 2023-24 Schedule". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 18 May 2023.
- ^ Iannucci, Rebecca (16 November 2023). "Acquired Series Run the Burbs and Everyone Else Burns Pulled From The CW's Schedule". TVLine. Retrieved 18 November 2023.
- ^ White, Peter; Campione, Katie (15 February 2024). "The CW Wants To Rival The Broadcast Networks But Brad Schwartz Needs To Find His Next Hit First". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ Quinn, Karl (5 December 2023). "The comedy designed to put the fear of God in you". The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 16 March 2024. Retrieved 16 March 2024.
SBS On Demand from December 7, SBS Viceland from January 29 at 9:25pm
- ^ Price, Stephen (4 April 2023). "Light In The Hall shines for Channel 4". Broadcast. Retrieved 17 October 2024.
- ^ Price, Stephen (4 October 2023). "Kemp and Dyer battle it out on Channel 5". Broadcast. Retrieved 17 October 2024.
The first of C4's three 10pm original comedies so far in 2023 was Everyone Else Burns, which opened on 23 January with 1.3 million/10%, rising to 1.4 million, including 96,000 on devices.
- ^ "In brief: Film & TV Charity; Everyone Else Burns; AIB". Broadcast. 18 May 2023. Retrieved 17 October 2024.
Penned by Dillon Mapletoft and Oliver Taylor, the show is reportedly returning for a second series after becoming the biggest comedy launch since Derry Girls on Channel 4's streaming service.
- ^ https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/everyone_else_burns/s01
- ^ Singh, Anita (23 January 2023). "Everyone Else Burns, review: your prayers for a new bingeworthy British sitcom have been answered". The Telegraph.
- ^ "Everyone Else Burns review – a comedy to become religiously devoted to". The Guardian. 23 January 2023.
- ^ Midgley, Carol. "Everyone Else Burns review — a warm, witty send-up of religion's hypocrisies". The Times.
- ^ https://inews.co.uk/culture/television/everyone-else-burns-channel-4-review-simon-bird-religious-comedy-funny-hell-2100405?srsltid=AfmBOooo0JBZHpGn7ljTnHTaLjzRqestE49bjGQPIyqWuqCe9qDluOBq
- ^ https://www.standard.co.uk/culture/tvfilm/everyone-else-burns-review-who-knew-eternal-damnation-could-be-this-fun-b1047587.html
- ^ https://time.com/6324680/everyone-else-burns-review/
- ^ https://static.nytimes.com/email-content/WG_sample.html
- ^ https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-reviews/everyone-else-burns-review-simon-bird-the-cw-1235628072/
- ^ https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/tv/story/2023-10-25/everyone-else-burns-cw-review
- ^ https://nypost.com/2023/10/23/entertainment/everyone-else-burns-in-new-cw-comedy/
- ^ https://www.thedailybeast.com/obsessed/everyone-else-burns-review-a-hilarious-new-british-cult-comedy
- ^ "Black Ops wins at Broadcast Awards 2024". Comedy.co.uk. 9 February 2024. Retrieved 9 February 2024.
External links
- 2023 British television series debuts
- 2020s British sitcoms
- Channel 4 sitcoms
- British English-language television shows
- Television series about cults
- Television series about Christianity
- Television series about dysfunctional families
- Television series about marriage
- Television series by Universal Television
- Television shows set in Manchester