Detectorists
Detectorists | |
---|---|
Genre | Comedy-drama Sitcom Slice of life |
Created by | Mackenzie Crook |
Written by | Mackenzie Crook |
Directed by | Mackenzie Crook |
Starring | Mackenzie Crook Toby Jones |
Theme music composer | Johnny Flynn |
Opening theme | "Detectorists" |
Composers | Johnny Flynn, Dan Michaelson |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 3 |
No. of episodes | 20 |
Production | |
Producers | Adam Tandy, Gill Isles |
Cinematography | Jamie Cairney |
Editor | Colin Fair |
Camera setup | Single-camera |
Running time | 29 minutes |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | |
Release | 2 October 2014 26 December 2022 | –
Detectorists is a British comedy television series first broadcast on BBC Four in October 2014. It is written and directed by Mackenzie Crook, who also stars alongside Toby Jones.[1]
The series is set in the fictional small town of Danebury in north Essex. The plot revolves around the lives, loves and metal-detecting ambitions of Andy and Lance, members of the Danebury Metal Detecting Club. The main filming location for the series was Framlingham, a small market town in Suffolk.
Detectorists won a BAFTA at the 2015 British Academy Television Awards for Television Scripted Comedy.[2] In May 2019, it was voted 19th in a Radio Times list of Britain's 20 favourite sitcoms by a panel that included sitcom writers and actors.[3] The series was filmed using a single-camera setup approach. The show had three series from 2014 to 2017, with Christmas specials airing in 2015 and 2022.[4]
Cast
[edit]- Mackenzie Crook as Andy Stone, an agency worker who qualifies as an archaeologist during the series.[5] A member of the Danebury Metal Detecting Club (DMDC)
- Toby Jones as Lance Stater, a forklift truck driver for a vegetable wholesaler, and amateur musician. A member of the DMDC
- Lucy Benjamin as Maggie, Lance's ex-wife who runs a New Age supplies shop (series 1, 3)
- Adam Riches as Tony, Maggie's boyfriend, a pizza restaurant manager (series 1)
- Rachael Stirling as Becky, Andy's girlfriend (wife as of series 2), a primary-school teacher
- Gerard Horan as Terry Seymour, a retired policeman who is the president of the DMDC
- Sophie Thompson as Sheila Seymour, Terry's wife
- Pearce Quigley as Russell, a DMDC member
- Divian Ladwa as Hugh, a shy and awkward DMDC member
- Orion Ben as Varde, a mostly silent DMDC member and girlfriend of Louise. Despite appearing in nearly every episode, and being described by members of the DMDC as very talkative, her only lines of dialogue are in series 2, episode 4, and the 2022 Christmas special.
- Laura Checkley as Louise, a forthright DMDC member and girlfriend of Varde
- Aimee-Ffion Edwards as Sophie, a university student studying ancient history (series 1, 2)
- David Sterne as Larry Bishop, an eccentric farmer and landowner (series 1, 2)
- Simon Farnaby as Philip Peters and Paul Casar as Paul Lee, members of "AntiquiSearchers", later "Dirt Sharks", "Terra Firma", and then "Absolut Hunters", a rival metal detecting group. Lance and Andy call them Simon and Garfunkel because of their passing physical resemblance to the pop duo Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel. Both give their full names when questioned by the police in series 2, episode 5 (echoing the rather different vocal pairing of Peters and Lee)
- Diana Rigg as Veronica, Becky's mother and occasional child-minder for Stanley (series 2, 3). Rigg, who died in 2020, and Stirling were mother and daughter in real life.[6] In the 2022 Christmas special Veronica is stated to have died before the events depicted in it.
- Alexa Davies as Kate, daughter of Lance (series 2, 3)
- Rebecca Callard as Toni, a mechanic and colleague of Lance, who becomes his girlfriend (2015 Christmas special, series 3, 2022 Christmas special)
- Daniel Donskoy as Peter, a German visitor who seeks the DMDC's help in finding the location of his grandfather's aircraft, alleged to have crashed during World War II. He becomes a love interest for Sophie (series 2)
- Jacob and Isabella Hill as Stanley, Becky and Andy's baby (series 2)
- Asa James Wallace as Stanley, Becky and Andy's child (series 3, 2022 Christmas special)
Episodes
[edit]Series 1 (2014)
[edit]No. | Title | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | "Episode 1"[7] | 2 October 2014 | |
Andy and Lance are approached by Sophie, who explains that she is a student with an interest in metal detecting. They invite her to attend the next meeting of their detecting club, the DMDC, where she is enthusiastically welcomed. Lance finds an excuse to visit his ex-wife Maggie at her shop, in the hope of reviving their relationship, but she is never far from her obnoxious new boyfriend Tony. Andy is convinced that a royal Saxon ship-burial is located on a nearby farm. The landowner, the eccentric Farmer Bishop, permits Andy and Lance to search his land, with the exception of one field, where it is rumoured that he has buried his wife. | |||
2 | "Episode 2"[8] | 9 October 2014 | |
Lance suggests to Andy that they perform a song he has written at a local pub open-mic event, hoping to impress Maggie. Andy tries to convince his girlfriend Becky to come along, knowing that she resents the time he spends out detecting with Lance. At Bishop's Farm, they are approached by two rival detectorists who also intend to search the site. Wary of others muscling in on their patch, Andy and Lance decide to keep their operations secret, but Sophie seems to know more than she should. Farmer Bishop shows the detectorists a couple of Saxon artefacts that were ploughed up on the farm decades ago, which seems to confirm that the site of the ship-burial is nearby. | |||
3 | "Episode 3"[9] | 16 October 2014 | |
Andy and Lance get an unexpected visit from rival detectorists the "Antiquisearchers", who know all about the artefacts after Bishop showed them. Deciding they need to act fast, Lance and Andy get the club involved, and Terry — the club president, who is a retired police officer — is only too keen to muck in if he can prove that Larry Bishop murdered his wife. Meanwhile, the open-mic event turns into a disaster. Andy cringes with embarrassment after performing Lance's song, prompting Sophie to take his hand to console him. Becky walks in on this scene and reacts furiously, accusing Andy of having an affair. (The episode includes a short performance of the title song, performed by Johnny Flynn as "Johnny Piper".) | |||
4 | "Episode 4"[10] | 23 October 2014 | |
After striking an unexploded bomb while digging on Bishop's land, Terry is hospitalised and announces that he is standing down as president of the DMDC. Sophie calls Andy, telling him she has bought a new detector and the two go out detecting. Andy is jubilant when he finds his first gold coin, but Lance resents him for going detecting without him and refuses to talk. They find themselves on opposite teams in a pub quiz, with Andy trying to keep the peace between Becky and Sophie, who are openly hostile, and Lance having to endure the company of Tony, who mocks him in front of Maggie. Later, Becky is sent an incriminating photograph of Andy sharing a celebratory kiss with Sophie (taken just after they had found the gold coin) and storms out on him. | |||
5 | "Episode 5"[11] | 30 October 2014 | |
Andy tries to convince Becky that he is not having an affair. She shows him the photograph but does not know who took it. Lance helps out at Maggie's shop, where she pressures him to give her a large loan. Later, he and Sophie encounter the Antiquisearchers, who announce that they now have the sole right to search Bishop's Farm. Andy storms up and accuses them of taking the photograph. When Sophie sees it, she is outraged at this attempt to destroy Andy's personal life and denounces the Antiquisearchers, revealing that they sent her to spy on Lance and Andy's detecting activities. The DMDC are on the verge of disbanding when Terry returns and takes back the club's presidency. Bishop is arrested on suspicion of murder when the archaeological excavation turns up bones on his land. | |||
6 | "Episode 6"[12] | 6 November 2014 | |
Andy gives up detecting, hoping that by selling his detector he can prove his devotion to Becky. He proposes to her and she accepts. Lance discovers that the only reason Maggie keeps in contact with him is that she knows he has substantial lottery winnings saved. Sophie visits the DMDC to apologise, explaining that she was used by the Antiquisearchers and will undo the damage her actions have caused. Bishop is released without charge when it turns out that the bones found on his land were from a dog. He invites Andy, Lance, Sophie and Becky back to his land to detect, giving the detectorists one last chance to discover their hearts' desire: the burial place of King Sexred of the East Saxons. |
Series 2 (2015)
[edit]Series 2 commences with a three-minute sequence showing an Anglo-Saxon priest carrying a holy book and an aestel (a pointer stick similar to that associated with the Alfred Jewel) in a sack and fleeing mounted spearmen. He buries the sack near a standing stone. Time lapse then shows the wooden handle of the aestel decaying, leaving only the jewelled section. The shot pans upwards to reveal Andy and Lance walking across the field in the present day, detecting as they go. Having had no success, they decide to look up the hill. The jewel is shown again, still buried, at the beginning of subsequent episodes.
No. | Title | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | "Episode 1"[13] | 29 October 2015 | |
Baby Stan has arrived, Andy has qualified as an archaeologist but has no work, and Becky is off with Gay Martin, talking about VSO. A young German man, Peter, turns up at a meeting of the DMDC, telling them he is looking for the wreckage of a Junkers World War II bomber. His grandfather was one of the crew members when it crashed somewhere nearby in 1941. Sophie offers to help him research the location of the crash site. Andy and the other members of the DMDC, worried that Lance is becoming lonely, try to convince him to try internet dating. Later Lance receives a call from a mystery woman called Kate. | |||
2 | "Episode 2"[14] | 5 November 2015 | |
Lance is preparing to meet the mystery woman, but keeps it a secret. Andy heads to the library to join Sophie and Peter with their research, but gets the impression they do not want him around, so leaves them to it. Meanwhile Becky's patience with the petty politics at her school is at breaking point and she walks out of a staff meeting. Andy spots Lance in a cafe with the mystery woman, who is much younger than he is. Danebury's mayor seeks the DMDC's help finding his chain of office which he has lost at a dogging site. Whilst out detecting Andy and Lance encounter their old rivals – now renamed the "Dirt Sharks" – who suggest that Peter might have other motives for finding the plane than simply to lay a wreath. | |||
3 | "Episode 3"[15] | 12 November 2015 | |
Russell and Hugh begin the search for the mayor's missing chain of office. Sophie and Peter discover Lance buying flowers and chocolate – apparently preparing for a date – and, on Andy's instructions, spy on him as he meets the mystery woman again. It transpires that the crash site is on the Mayor's land, leading Terry to suggest that the club should ask for permission to search his land as a reward for finding the chain. Becky tries to convince Andy to consider volunteering abroad; she has found an archaeological dig in Botswana and set him up for an interview. Lance reveals to Andy that Kate is his estranged daughter. The chains of office are discovered, along with an unspecified unpleasant item on it. | |||
4 | "Episode 4"[16] | 19 November 2015 | |
The mayor – unwillingly, but with the threat of blackmail from Russell and Hugh – agrees to let the DMDC search his land. Sophie and Peter have been spending a lot of time together, and when Peter asks her to go travelling with him in the summer, she accepts. Andy's interview goes disastrously at first, but his enthusiasm for archaeology shows when he presents some clay pipe pieces he found in a flower-bed. Terry receives the licence from the MOD to excavate the crash site, which reveals there were no crewmen on board when the plane crashed. He challenges Peter, who is apparently taken aback at this news and hastily departs. Lance attempts to connect with Kate, but she is overwhelmed by 20 years' worth of presents and leaves him. | |||
5 | "Episode 5"[17] | 26 November 2015 | |
Andy fears the uncertainties of providing for his family in Botswana and conceals that he has been offered the job, leading to Becky becoming angry and telling him she and Stan are going to Botswana regardless of whether Andy accompanies them. Sophie manages to contact Peter, who tells her he has been offended by the accusations Terry made against him and is going home. Meanwhile Andy and Lance call an emergency meeting of the DMDC when they discover Peter has met with the Dirt Sharks and carries a Nazi gold coin in his wallet. Sophie defends Peter, accusing the others of paranoia, but later discovers he was lying to her all along. The other club members stake out the field at night and catch the Dirt Sharks nighthawking, though Peter escapes. Lance makes several unreturned calls to Kate. | |||
6 | "Episode 6"[18] | 3 December 2015 | |
The DMDC hold their rally at the Junkers Ju 88 crash site. Peter, who Sophie learns has been twice convicted of disturbing war graves in Germany and is banned from using a metal detector there, skulks in to search and is caught by Terry, who calls the police on him. Kate arrives and is reconciled with Lance. After speaking with Veronica, Andy rushes to Becky at the school's Dickens-themed fete and they agree to have an adventure in Botswana together. Andy and Lance are returning from their last detecting session before Andy leaves for Botswana, when Lance hears horses near the fallen standing stone. Lance digs and uncovers the aestel, and joyously dances the gold dance with Andy and Sophie. |
Christmas Special (2015)
[edit]No. | Title | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|
— | "Christmas Special"[19] | 23 December 2015 | |
Lance's lucky strike, a late Saxon gold and jewelled aestel, is on display at the British Museum but seems to have used up all his luck, as he has not had a single find since (not even a ring-pull), and he suffers a series of misfortunes which his club-mates consider to be "the curse of the gold." |
Series 3 (2017)
[edit]In March 2017, the BBC released a statement confirming the filming of a third and final series.[20] The six-episode third series was filmed in the summer of 2017 and aired weekly on BBC Four from 8 November 2017.[21]
The first episode ends with a historical timeline sequence, backed by the song "Magpie" by The Unthanks.[22] Reviewing the opening episode for The Guardian, Sam Wollaston said: "Mackenzie Crook and Toby Jones shine in the third and final series of this beautifully written and performed slice of life."[23]
No. | Title | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | "Episode 1"[24] | 8 November 2017 | |
An energy company plans on building a solar panel array on a farm in Danebury. Lance is finding Kate staying to be disruptive. Andy is not enjoying his mother-in-law's hospitality and does not find his job rewarding. A newspaper has an article about Russell and Hugh finding a prison tag, as well as a piece about the proposed solar farm. Lance dislikes staying on Toni's boat because of "seasickness" and she does not like staying at his flat when Kate is there. | |||
2 | "Episode 2"[25] | 15 November 2017 | |
Six weeks to go before the fields become a solar farm. Lance and Andy are making interesting finds. Andy unearths a section of Roman mosaic at the development where he is employed as part of an archaeological team inspecting a site before building work begins. Toni suggests Lance has hypnotherapy so he can stay with her. Terra Firma ("Simon and Garfunkel") get permission to search the fields which leads to a confrontation with Lance and Andy, though it is resolved after an intervention by someone representing the site's new owners. | |||
3 | "Episode 3"[26] | 22 November 2017 | |
Lance dreams about detecting with Linda Lusardi. He picks Andy up and they race Terra Firma to the fields. The mosaic has been removed, so Andy resigns realising that the archaeological investigation is a sham. Becky has arranged to view a flat, based on her assumptions about Andy's steady employment. Lance goes into work and sees Toni. Mags turns up at Lance's home and is let in by Kate. Lance returns home and finds Mags there. Lance finds a gold coin but a magpie takes it. He tells the DMDC. Mags rings to say she's found a bottle of wine. Lance and Andy camp out at the fields after Andy finds signs of a Roman burial suggesting that more is to be found. | |||
4 | "Episode 4"[27] | 29 November 2017 | |
Lance and Andy camp out at the field. Lance leaves a message for Toni in which he lies that Kate has not taken up his offer to use his car and visit friends. Toni goes to Lance's and finds Mags there, Kate having let her in as she herself left. Lance intends to catch a "thieving" magpie. Varde gives a talk to the group. Toni confronts Lance about Mags. Andy admits to Veronica that he quit his job after she spotted him doing agency work. Kate finds out that Mags is after Lance's money and kicks her out. | |||
5 | "Episode 5"[28] | 6 December 2017 | |
"Simon and Garfunkel", noticing Lance and Andy concentrating on a small area of their field, launch a drone to spy on them but it crashes. A contractor comes to chop down an ancient oak tree in the field where Andy and Lance are detecting, and the pair want to stop them. Kate visits Toni on her narrowboat and tells her that she is thinking of moving out of Lance's home, and Lance asks Toni to move in with him. Andy stumbles across a dilapidated cottage and goes to see it with Becky. Andy installs a bat box in the tree, knowing that bats on the site will stop the tree being cut down. He rings a bat helpline for advice about how quickly the bat box will be occupied, which turns out to be run by "Simon and Garfunkel". They offer to help but want something in return. | |||
6 | "Episode 6"[29] | 13 December 2017 | |
Lance and Kate go to Toni's narrowboat, where Kate is going to live, whilst Toni is moving in with Lance. Terry publishes a book on buttons of north-west Essex. Lance and Andy plan a rally and make "Simon and Garfunkel" an offer: access to their fields in exchange for a bat preservation order on the oak tree. Andy and Becky want to buy the cottage they have seen at auction. Andy wonders why he and Lance go metal detecting; to be "time travellers", Lance replies. As the show ends, Lance and Andy walk past the oak tree and notice the coins that have just fallen from the magpie nest above them. They've found their gold. |
Christmas Special (2022)
[edit]A 75-minute Christmas special was announced in May 2022.[30] The episode aired on BBC Two on 26 December 2022.
No. | Title | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|
— | "Christmas Special 2022"[31] | 26 December 2022 | |
Trouble stalks the Danebury Metal Detecting Club when the local council propose demolition of their base, the local scout hut. The club missed out on a large finder’s fee (for the gold found at the end of the previous series), which instead went to "Simon and Garfunkel", and need to find a way to raise funds to save the hall. Lance secures permission to detect on ten acres (4.0 ha) of previously unsearched land and things take a turn for the better when he and Andy start to find artifacts from an important medieval battle. However, when Lance makes an important discovery he breaks protocol by wanting to withhold the information from the authorities and the DMDC, threatening his friendship with Andy and the club's survival. |
Production
[edit]Detectorists was announced by the BBC on 31 January 2014. The producer was Adam Tandy and the series was a Channel X and Lola Entertainment co-production.[32]
Although the series is set in Essex, it was mainly filmed in neighbouring Suffolk, with Framlingham used as a major location.[33][34][35][36] Other locations used in filming include Orford, where Orford Primary School was used as the outside of Becky's school, Great Glemham, where interior pub scenes were filmed, and Ipswich. In series 2, the round-tower church at Aldham was used as a recurring location.[37] One location in Essex was used in Detectorists: the scenes involving Lance's girlfriend Toni's houseboat, 'Elsie', were filmed at Paper Mill Lock, Little Baddow. Locations were sourced by Creative England.[38]
Upon deciding to finish the show at the end of series 3, Crook commented "… it took a while to realise that I did want to do six more episodes to finish. I don't want to make any sort of big, dramatic announcement that 'never again', but I can't see myself going back to it."[22]
Despite ruling out further episodes at the end of series 3, Crook suggested in December 2020 that a fourth series was not out of the question, saying "I'm just starting the process of thinking 'yeah, we should get the old band back together'."[39]
When asked about the possibility of Detectorists returning for a fourth series after the 2022 Christmas special, Crook responded "I’m going to give the same answer I gave at the end of the third series; "probably not". I guess, dot dot dot, I mean, where can you go after this?".[40]
Broadcast
[edit]Overseas, the series premiered in Australia on 9 November 2015 on BBC First.[41] In the United States, the series premiered on streaming subscription service Acorn TV in August 2015.[42]
Reception
[edit]Critical response
[edit]Series one of Detectorists was met with positive reviews from a number of UK and US media outlets. David Renshaw, writing for The Guardian, had particular praise for the "delightful double-act" Mackenzie Crook and Toby Jones. Renshaw points to the "biggest ratings BBC4 has ever had for a comedy" as evidence that "Detectorists has clearly struck the sort of gold that Lance and Andy spend hours sweeping the fields for".[43] Rupert Hawksley, writing for The Daily Telegraph, was particularly impressed with Crook's "first-rate writing" and remarked in his review that series one "has all the markings of a classic sitcom".[44]
Ellen E. Jones of The Independent said that while the show "requires some patience... it has turned out to be one of the best new sitcoms of the year".[45]
In the US media, The New York Times writer Mike Hale describes Detectorists as a "distinctive creation – not for everyone, but bound to be fiercely loved by those who fall into its rhythms".[46] Robert Lloyd of the Los Angeles Times "can't recommend it enough", saying: "Like the ordinary lives it magnifies, Detectorists has the air of seeming to be small and immense at once, to be about hardly anything and almost everything. It is full of space and packed with life."[42]
When the programme returned for a second series, the response was again positive.[6][47]
On the completion of the third and final series, Radio Times website reviewer Mark Braxton wrote "The series finale... is one of the most satisfying conclusions ever. Series one and two both ended in clever and memorable ways: bittersweet and punch-the-air respectively. But the series three finale has a real poetry to it; Crook seems to be saying: 'Yes, that's where we'll leave it – I'm happy with that.'"[48]
In 2019, The Guardian ranked Detectorists at number 38 in their list of "The 100 best TV shows of the 21st century".[49]
The series received praise for its authentic portrayal of "a gentler side to maleness and male bonding", with Ben Dowell of The Times describing the show as being "steeped in a gentle kindness that I hadn't seen before".[50]
A book of essays about the series, Landscapes of Detectorists, was published by Uniformbooks in 2020.[51]
Awards and nominations
[edit]Year | Award | Category | Recipient | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2015 | British Academy Television Award (BAFTA) | Best Situation Comedy | Detectorists | Won | [52] |
2016 | British Academy Television Award (BAFTA) | Best Male Comedy Performance | Toby Jones | Nominated | [53] |
2018 | British Academy Television Award (BAFTA) | Best Male Comedy Performance | Toby Jones | Won | [54] |
2018 | Rose d'Or | Rose d'Or for Sitcom | Detectorists | Won | [55] |
References
[edit]- ^ Dowell, Ben (31 January 2014). "Mackenzie Crook to play metal detector enthusiast in one of four new BBC4 comedies". Radio Times. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
- ^ "2015 Television Scripted Comedy". BAFTA. Retrieved 24 January 2018.
- ^ Rosseinsky, Katie (8 April 2019). "Best British sitcom of all time revealed: From Fawlty Towers to Absolutely Fabulous here's the Top 20". Evening Standard. London. Retrieved 2 October 2019.
- ^ Carr, Flora (11 May 2022). "Jack Whitehall's Bad Education returns for anniversary special and new season". Radio Times. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
- ^ Andy gives his name as "Andrew Stone" when arriving for his job interview in series 2, episode 4
- ^ a b Dowell, Ben (29 October 2015). "Detectorists series 2 episode 1 review: Mackenzie Crook and Toby Jones return in style". Radio Times. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 1, Episode 1". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 1, Episode 2". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 1, Episode 3". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 1, Episode 4". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 1, Episode 5". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 1, Episode 6". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 2, Episode 1". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 2, Episode 2". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 2, Episode 3". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 2, Episode 4". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 2, Episode 5". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 2, Episode 6". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, 2015 Christmas Special". BBC.
- ^ Dowell, Ben (31 March 2017). "Mackenzie Crook comedy Detectorists is returning for third and final series". Radio Times. Retrieved 20 April 2017.
- ^ "BBC at the Edinburgh Festivals 2017 – Detectorists: An Exclusive Screening and Q&A with Mackenzie Crook". BBC Music Events. Retrieved 21 October 2017.
- ^ a b Dowell, Ben (8 November 2017). "Mackenzie Crook explains why this series of Detectorists will be the last". Radio Times. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- ^ Wollaston, Sam (9 November 2017). "Detectorists review: more tender comedy about men, middle age and metal-detecting". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 3, Episode 1". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 3, Episode 2". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 3, Episode 3". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 3, Episode 4". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 3, Episode 5". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four - Detectorists, Series 3, Episode 6". BBC.
- ^ Goldbart, Max (11 May 2022). "BBC Commits To "High Impact" Comedy With $12M Budget Increase; Jack Whitehall's 'Bad Education' To Return Alongside 'Detectorists' Feature & 'Jerk', 'The Cleaner', 'Guilt' Recommissions". Deadline. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
- ^ "BBC Two - Detectorists, 2022 Christmas Special". BBC.
- ^ "BBC Four announces new comedies for 2014". BBC. 31 January 2014. Archived from the original on 17 March 2014. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
- ^ Everitt, Lauren (10 May 2015). "BBC4 sitcom Detectorists which was filmed in Framlingham picks up Bafta prize". Ipswich Star. Archived from the original on 27 October 2016. Retrieved 26 October 2016.
- ^ Clarke, Andrew (12 May 2015). "Is Framlingham the New Hollywood? Comedy filmed in town wins BAFTA while homegrown stars continue to soar". East Anglian Daily Times. Archived from the original on 27 October 2016. Retrieved 26 October 2016.
- ^ Barker, Ellis (25 June 2015). "Mackenzie Crook sitcom Detectorists to return to Suffolk". East Anglian Daily Times. Archived from the original on 6 March 2017. Retrieved 26 October 2016.
- ^ Lewis, Tim (25 October 2015). "Mackenzie Crook: 'We aspire to be the sitcom Thomas Hardy would have written'". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 October 2016.
- ^ Webb, Claire (29 October 2015). "Where to find Mackenzie Crook's Detectorists in Suffolk". Radio Times. Retrieved 26 October 2016.
- ^ "What Locations Were Used In BBC Four Sitcom Detectorists?". Creative England. 1 October 2014. Archived from the original on 7 August 2016. Retrieved 26 October 2016.
- ^ Richardson, Jay (22 December 2020). "Mackenzie Crook moots Detectorists revival". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
- ^ Braxton, Mark (13 December 2022). "The Detectorists are back for a Christmas special after a five-year break – and its stars are buzzing". RadioTimes.com. Immediate Media Company Limited. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
- ^ Purcell, Charles (6 November 2015). "New This Week (Nov 9): Mr. Robot, Nashville, Legends, Rousey v Holm and live sport". The Green Room. Archived from the original on 7 November 2015. Retrieved 7 November 2015.
- ^ a b Lloyd, Robert (25 August 2015). "British 'Detectorists' on Acorn TV uncovers a comedy treasure". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 19 January 2017.
- ^ Renshaw, David. "Detectorists – box set review: this gentle tale of treasure-hunting folk struck TV gold". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 October 2015.
- ^ Hawksley, Rupert (2 October 2014). "Detectorists, BBC Four, review: 'first-rate writing'". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 5 October 2015.
- ^ Jones, Ellen E. (30 October 2014). "Detectorists, TV review: Mackenzie Crook's sitcom has saved its sparkliest treasures for those who stick around to earn them". The Independent. Retrieved 5 October 2015.
- ^ Hale, Mike (16 August 2015). "Review: 'Detectorists' on BBC and Acorntv Hope to Unearth a Fortune". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 5 October 2015.
- ^ Rees, Jasper (30 October 2015). "Detectorists, Series 2 Episode 1, BBC Four, review: 'truthful'". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
- ^ Braxton, Mark (13 December 2017). "The final episode of Detectorists is 'one of the most satisfying conclusions ever'". Retrieved 3 May 2018.
- ^ "The 100 best TV shows of the 21st century". The Guardian. 16 September 2019. Retrieved 5 October 2024.
- ^ Dowell, Ben. "The end of Lad TV: how comedy for men became touchy-feely". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
- ^ Howell, Philip (2021). "Book Reviews: Landscapes of Detectorists". The AAG Review of Books. Vol. 9, no. 3. pp. 7–8. doi:10.1080/2325548X.2021.1921444. Retrieved 8 October 2022.
- ^ "Bafta TV awards 2015: Winners". BBC News. 8 April 2015. Retrieved 7 January 2017.
- ^ "BAFTA Television Awards 2016 – winners". Radio Times. 8 May 2016. Retrieved 7 January 2017.
- ^ "Double Bafta win for This Country". chortle.co.uk. 13 May 2018.
- ^ "Detectorists wins international Rose d'Or Award". British Comedy Guide. 17 September 2018. Retrieved 8 October 2022.
Further reading
[edit]- Keighren, Innes; Norcup, Joanne, eds. (2020). Landscapes of Detectorists. Uniformbooks. ISBN 978-1910010242.
- Wahlbrinck, Bernd. Detecting Allusions in Mackenzie Crook’s Detectorists – An Illustrated Guide. Tumbleweed, 2023. ISBN 978-3982146386
External links
[edit]- Detectorists at BBC Online
- Detectorists at IMDb
- Detectorists at British Comedy Guide
- Detectorists at epguides.com
- Detectorists scripts at BBC writers room
- Detectorists Filming Locations Map
- 2014 British television series debuts
- 2022 British television series endings
- 2010s British comedy television series
- 2020s British comedy television series
- BAFTA winners (television series)
- BBC television comedy
- British English-language television shows
- Metal detecting
- Television duos
- Television shows set in Essex
- 2010s British sitcoms
- 2020s British sitcoms
- Slice of life fiction