Product Description
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Extras: The Complete Second Season (DVD)
What happens when an unknown actor who can't catch a break
actually catches one? For Andy Millman, who's just broken through
with a TV sitcom called When the Whistle Blows, celebrity doesn't
necessarily mean happiness - it just means your follies and
fauxes-pas get that much more attention. Extras: The show with
big, big stars...and Andy Millman.
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In Extras' exquisitely excruciating second and, alas, final
season, Andy Millman, former "supporting artist," learns a
humbling lesson: Be careful what you wish for. Andy (Ricky
Gervais) is still "an impossible person," but he is now an
impossible person with a sitcom, one that, to his increasing
horror, humiliation, and disgust he allows to be severely
compromised. The character he portrays, a factory boss, is
outfitted in a ridiculous wig and big glasses, and Andy becomes
enthrall to his catchphrase: "Are you havin' a laugh?" The result
is high ratings for the show, but the critics' slings and arrows
are ed at Andy. Surely, David Bowie (just one of the A-listers
who grace this season) can relate to Andy's struggle for artistic
integrity. Instead, his plight inspires Bowie to improvise a
V.I.P. lounge sing-along ditty that mocks his pretensions
("Little man who sold his soul/Little man who sold his
dream"). Andy's two closest relationships drive the series. The
first is with his clueless and useless manager (Stephen
Merchant), who in one there's-everything-wrong-with-that episode,
arranges for Andy to be unwittingly cast as a gay man in a play.
The second is with Maggie (Ashley Jensen), Andy's platonic
friend, still an extra, who is steadfast and supportive, but at
times absolutely tactless, as when she reveals to a woman whom
Andy dumped how he lost his virginity (an embarrassing anecdote
the vengeful woman proceeds to share with the attendees of
Britain's most prestigious awards ceremony).
Season 2 is a no less star-studded affair than its predecessor.
Among the astonishingly game notables having a laugh at
themselves are Orlando Bloom ("You know who does get ignored?" he
tries to impress Maggie, "Johnny Depp"), a randy Daniel
Radcliffe, and Coldplay's Chris Martin, who makes a hilariously
gratuitous guest-star appearance on Andy's show. Priceless are
cameos by such venerable British entertainers as Robert Lindsay,
Ronnie Corbett (one of The Two Ronnies) and "Barry from
EastEnders." Extras is a classic cringe comedy in the grand
tradition of Albert Brooks, The Larry Sanders Show, and Curb Your
Enthusiasm. All of Andy's worst impulses are magnified by his
newfound fame. In one episode, he complains about a disruptive
child in a restaurant, only to discover he has Down's Syndrome.
Enhancing these all-too-few six episodes are Extras' extremely
entertaining extras, including a multi-part behind-the-scenes
look at the show. One wonders how the actors got through these
brilliantly funny episodes without "corpsing" (breaking up). As
the generous outtakes reveal, they very often didn't. With
Extras, Gervais has accomplished what the hess Andy could not:
Create "a good credible comedy that will stand the test of time."
--Donald Liebenson