After Life (TV series)

Last updated

After Life
Title screen for the Netflix series, After Life.png
Genre
Created by Ricky Gervais
Written byRicky Gervais
Directed byRicky Gervais
Starring
Composer Andy Burrows
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series3
No. of episodes18
Production
Executive producers
ProducerDuncan Hayes
CinematographyMartin Hawkins
EditorsJo Walker (seasons 1–2)
Mark Williams (season 3)
Camera setup Single-camera
Running time25–31 minutes
Production companyDerek Productions Limited
Original release
Network Netflix
Release8 March 2019 (2019-03-08) 
14 January 2022 (2022-01-14)

After Life is a British black comedy-drama television series created, written, produced, and directed by Ricky Gervais, who plays lead character Tony Johnson. It premiered on 8 March 2019 on Netflix. The second series premiered on 24 April 2020. The third and final series premiered on 14 January 2022.

Contents

Premise

Set in the fictional town of Tambury, After Life follows newspaper writer Tony Johnson, whose life is turned upside down after his wife dies from breast cancer. He contemplates suicide, but instead decides to spend his life punishing the world for his wife's death by saying and doing whatever he wants regardless of how it makes other people feel. Although he thinks of this as his "superpower", his plan is undermined as he realises he does care about a select few people. Over the course of the series, he stops trying to be awful and, despite never really moving on from his wife's death and remaining suicidal, decides true meaning in life comes from helping and being there for others. [1]

Cast and characters

Main

Recurring

Guest

Episodes

SeriesEpisodesOriginally released
168 March 2019 (2019-03-08)
2624 April 2020 (2020-04-24)
3614 January 2022 (2022-01-14)

Production

Development

On 9 May 2018, it was announced Netflix had given the production a series order for a first season consisting of six episodes. The series was created and directed by Ricky Gervais, who is also executive producer, alongside Charlie Hanson. [1] [2] [3] [4] On 14 January 2019, it was announced the series would premiere on 8 March 2019. It was further announced Duncan Hayes would serve as an additional executive producer and that Hanson would actually serve as a producer. [5] On 3 April 2019, it was announced the series was renewed for a second season, which premiered on 24 April 2020. [6] On 6 May 2020, the show was renewed for a third season, the first time a fiction series created by Gervais had (excluding special episodes) been extended beyond two seasons. [7] [8]

Hanson was suspended from his position in the show during filming for the third season, due to eleven women saying he had committed sexual misconduct and assault against them between 2008 and 2015. Netflix said: "Whilst the allegations are unrelated to his time on the show, we immediately removed him from the production and referred the matter to the police." Gervais commented he was "shocked and appalled" to learn of the allegations, and Hanson claimed they were "demonstrably false" from the information given to him. [9] [10]

Casting

Alongside the series order announcement, it was confirmed Gervais would star in the show. [1] On 5 July 2018, it was announced Penelope Wilton, David Bradley, Ashley Jensen, Tom Basden, Tony Way, David Earl, Joe Wilkinson, Kerry Godliman, Mandeep Dhillon, Jo Hartley, Roisin Conaty, and Diane Morgan had joined the cast. [11]

Filming

Principal photography for the first series reportedly began by July 2018 in London. [11] The series was filmed in Hampstead, Hemel Hempstead, The Royal Standard of England pub in and around Beaconsfield, and Camber Sands in East Sussex. [12]

The third series of After Life began production in April 2021 and wrapped in June 2021. [13]

Use of Aboriginal painting

After the release of season 1, it was revealed that a copy of a 1987 painting by the Aboriginal Australian artist Warlimpirrnga Tjapaltjarri, which had been made by an artist commissioned to do so for a props company in 1999, had been prominently displayed in several scenes. Gervais's company agreed to pay compensation for using the copy of the work, entitled Tingarri Dreaming, as well as a fee for ongoing use of the work in season 2. [14]

Reception

Critical response

Critical response of After Life
Season Rotten Tomatoes Metacritic
173% (45 reviews) [15] 59 (15 reviews) [16]
277% (31 reviews) [17] 62 (6 reviews) [18]
362% (13 reviews) [19] 44 (7 reviews) [20]

Series 1

The first series received mixed to positive reviews upon its release. On Rotten Tomatoes, it has an overall approval rating of 73% with an average score of 6.6/10 based on 45 reviews. The site's critical consensus reads: "After Life's first season teeters tonally between dark comedy and affecting drama, but Ricky Gervais' poignant performance illuminates new sides of the actor's talent". [15] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the first series a score of 59 out of 100 based on 15 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". [16]

Merrill Barr from Forbes said of the series, "Overall, After Life is one hundred percent a series to check out. It's the Ricky Gervais project people have been begging for, for a long time." [21] Josh Modell of AV Club states that After Life is a "dreary, sarcastic self-pity party that also manages—in a magic trick perhaps only Gervais is capable of pulling off—to constantly point out its protagonist's intellectual superiority" and that "as a meaningful meditation on grief, is dead on arrival". [22]

Series 2

The second series received generally positive reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, it has an approval rating of 77% with an average score of 6.8/10, based on 31 reviews. The site's critical consensus reads: "Though After Life's second season struggles to affirm its existence, it's a solid entry for anyone aching for a little more contemplative gallows humor." [17] Metacritic assigned the second series a score of 62 out of 100 based on 6 critics, indicating "generally favourable reviews". [18] The BBC reported mixed responses from critics. [23] Ed Cumming from The Independent wrote: "all I see is a series constantly looking for easy solutions" and that "the script has a habit of using swearing where a joke ought to be". [24]

Series 3

The third series received mixed reviews. On Rotten Tomatoes, it has 62% positive reviews with an average rating of 6 from 13 critics. [19] Metacritic assigned the third series a score of 44 out of 100 based on 7 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". [20] Louis Chilton for The Independent gave the series 2/5 stars, adding that it was "bogged down by sentimentality". [25] Brian Lowry for CNN called the series "admirable" and "quirky", but felt "in the final analysis, the show never wholly [advances] beyond the initial appeal of its premise". [26] The Radio Times gave it 3/5 stars [27] and NME gave it a 4/5 star rating, adding that the series had ended "on a high"; the review's writer, James McMahon, felt that the series' final scene was "moving and poignant [...] among its creator's greatest works." [28]

Accolades

Accolades received by After Life
AwardDate of ceremonyCategoryRecipient(s)ResultRef.
AACTA International Awards 8 December 2021 International Award for Best Comedy SeriesAfter LifeNominated [29]
National Film Awards UK 1 July 2021Best Screenplay in a TV SeriesAfter LifeWon [30]
[31]
Best Actor in a TV SeriesRicky GervaisNominated
Best Actress in a TV SeriesMandeep DhillonNominated
National Television Awards 9 September 2021 Best ComedyAfter LifeWon [32]
Satellite Awards 15 February 2021 Best Actor – Television Series Musical or Comedy Ricky Gervais Nominated [33]
National Television Awards 13 October 2022 Best ComedyAfter LifeWon [34]

Benches

Netflix has collaborated with suicide prevention charity Campaign Against Living Miserably (CALM) in a mental health initiative installing park benches all about the UK. [35] [36]

A bench is the setting across all three series where Anne, played by Penelope Wilton, sits beside Gervais's character, Tony.

Ricky Gervais is originally from Reading, where a bench has been installed at Henley Road Cemetery. [37]

We hope the benches will create a lasting legacy for After Life, as well as become a place for people to visit.

Ricky Gervais, January 2022 interview
SiteLocation
Victoria ParkAshford
Sydney GardensBath
Cofton ParkBirmingham
Ashton CourtBristol
Parc Cefn OnnCardiff
Victoria ParkCardiff
Calton HillEdinburgh
Gyllngdune GardensFalmouth
Glasgow GreenGlasgow
Stanley ParkLiverpool
Woolton Walled GardensLiverpool
Highgate WoodLondon
Parliament HillLondon
Queens ParkLondon
Ravenscourt ParkLondon
Rookery Gardens & WoodlandLondon
York House GardensLondon
Wythenshawe ParkManchester
Blenheim GardensMinehead
Exhibition ParkNewcastle
AboretumNottingham
Highfields ParkNottingham
Henley Road CemeteryReading
Lightwater Country ParkSurrey Heath
Vivary ParkTaunton

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