Dates, Channel 4 | reviews, news & interviews
Dates, Channel 4
Dates, Channel 4
Strong casts and classy scripts distinguish short-form drama series
The idea of writing nine 30-minute dramas (or more like 26 minutes when you take the ads out) about the thrills and calamities of first-dating might have been asking for trouble, but seems to be working out unexpectedly well so far.
After a persuasive start on Monday with David and Mia, starring Oona Chaplin and Will Mellor, the ante edged up further with last night's Jenny and Nick, a pithy little piece written by Nancy Harris. Casting is all, and pitting Sheridan Smith as Jenny, a schoolteacher from Rotherham unhappily transplanted to Shepherds Bush, against Neil Maskell's brutish City "buy-side trader" Nick was a disunion made in heaven.
Obviously Jenny hadn't watched C4's dystopian horror-thriller Utopia, since otherwise she would have known that if you see Neil Maskell your only options are to shoot him or run like hell. She'd arranged to meet Nick in a City of London wine bar, where he greeted her by sloshing white wine into her glass and then treating her to a drunken (he'd already had a few at the office) semi-monologue covering his favourite subjects: his loathing for himself, his bitterness towards his ex-wife, and a generalised antagonism towards women.
Under the circumstances it wasn't clear why Nick would have gone on a blind date in the first place, especially when he disappeared in the middle of the evening to shag the waiter in the toilets. By contrast, even within this brief span Jenny was able to suggest interesting contradictions. Nick wanted to typecast her as a mousy do-gooder, but she impulsively stole another woman's lipstick in the ladies, and comfortably stood her ground as Nick's behaviour grew aggressive, erratic and confrontational. For a pay-off, she deftly left Nick stranded, penniless, in the rain. Perhaps she wasn't a schoolteacher at all.
In tonight's story, Mia and Stephen (pictured above), the exotic Oona Chaplin is back as an ex-escort girl who meets surgeon Stephen (Ben Chaplin, no relation) for dinner. Written by Ben Schiffer, it's full of delicious changes of pace and shifts in tone, as the languid, rather bored Stephen is brought face to face with his own shortcomings by the fearlessly outspoken Mia. To give Stephen his due, he takes the blows with remarkably good grace, not least because Mia gets him deliriously turned on. Terrific.
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Comments
the directors involved so far
Err... I think he was
Hmm, that was stupid of me.
Hmm, that was stupid of me. Back to 4oD.
'especially when he