I watched it a lot in the '90s. My friends and I would tape it off our local PBS station broadcasts. I didn't realize there were so many seasons. I've only watched up through season 4. I just learned that Patrick Stewart was a fan. He was working in the US on Star Trek: The Next Generation, so he didn't know this show was airing in England. One day when he was back in England, he was surfing the channels when it came up. He was outraged! He felt they were making fun of Next Gen. He had his hand on the phone to call someone and complain about it when a line in the show made him laugh. So he watched a bit more and kept laughing. He finally got it that it wasn't making fun of Star Trek specifically, but having a laugh at all science-fiction tropes in general. He became a huge fan, even doing the Rimmer salute in the video where he talks about it.Just finished series five of Red Dwarf. I like them all so far and although some of the episodes end abruptly due to the half hour format I haven't found them a chore to watch. Holoship in series five got a real slating in the Smegazine poll but I found it a solid episode.
A lot of fans online seem to find Back To Reality with Duane Dibbley the best episode ever but while it was pretty solid for me the hype made it hard for me to appreciate it fully. However, I can't remember any of the episodes standing out as being particularly bad although Meltdown was slightly disappointing in places with how horrible Rimmer was. Conversely Queeg, Marooned, White Hole and Inquisitor stood out for me as being good examples of having a mixture of interesting plots and funny routines. I also can't get that Tongue Tied song from Parallel Universe out of my head.
Looking forward to series six as the last solid one for a while. Just started Psirens and it seems fine so far. I remember seeing Gunmen Of The Apocalypse a long time ago and enjoying it. No wonder that Heineken ad ripped it off so blatantly. The redditors I've read so far dislike the removal of the ship but from what I remember most of the Red Dwarf-set shows not set in Lister's bedroom or off ship seem to consist of them running through a dark cargo hold dodging monsters of the week in repurposed Manchester warehouses packed with crates.
I'm preparing for the gutpunch of series seven, eight and nine/Back To Earth before the show bottoms out and starts to improve but'll reserve judgment until I've seen them. I hope Krytie TV isn't as unwatchable as I'm fearing it'll be.
Wow, spooky stuff,Getting back up to speed, here are days 5, 6, and 7 of my 31 Days of RiffTrax Halloween marathon. The Devil’s Hand is a late ‘50s b/w story of a man who joins a cult run by a doll-maker. Ghosthouse is an early ‘80s gore fest about a house haunted by a young girl and her horrifying doll, and finally, breaking the doll-themed movies is Frankenstein Island, an early ‘80s movie about balloonists landing on an island run by mad scientists and a bunch of bikini babes. No, it doesn’t make sense. They’re only watchable because of the brilliant riffing of Kevin, Mike, and Bill.
View attachment 1293334
View attachment 1293335
View attachment 1293336
I have to say my science experiments never turned out this good...Day 8 of my 31 Days of RiffTrax Halloween. Today was Mesa of Lost Women. A mad scientist (Jackie Coogan, more famous for playing Uncle Fester on the Addams Family TV show) turns spiders into hot Mexican women. Because science, that’s why.
View attachment 1293661