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Bleak Expectations. Image of Sir Philip (Richard Johnson). Image credit: British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).

Bleak Expectations

Radio comedy following the remarkable adventures of Pip Bin as he struggles against the cruel plotting of his evil guardian Mr Gently Benevolent

Genre:
Sitcom
Broadcast:
2007 - 2008  (BBC Radio 4)
Episodes:
12 (2 series)
Starring:
Richard Johnson, Tom Allen, Anthony Head, Laurence Howarth, Geoffrey Whitehead, Susy Kane, Perdita Weeks, Sarah Hadland, James Bachman, Mark Perry, Celia Imrie
Writers:
Mark Evans
Production:
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)

A radio comedy aptly described as a "gloriously daft Victorian romp in the style of Charles Dickens after too much gin"

The sitcom follows the remarkable adventures of young Sir Philip 'Pip' Bin as he struggles to rescue himself and his sisters from the schemes of his evil and badly-named guardian Mr Gently Benevolent, and the blood-curdling Hardthrasher family.

Volume 2 of the comic Victorian epic tells of the further extraordinary adventures of Pip Bin and his trusty friend Harry Biscuit as they battle against the evil Mr Gently Benevolent, returned from the dead specifically to destroy all that is good and pure and true. Wince at the cruel vengeance of the Sternbeater cousins! Weep at the squalor of the opium den! Wonder at the engineering of the world's first beef and pastry railway!

Our Review: Absolutely fantastic! This is a highly entertaining sitcom - in fact, Bleak Expectations has quickly become one of our all-time favourite radio comedies. It's a modern classic in the making.

The comedy is exquisitely performed by all involved; Tom Allen as the Young Pip and Anthony Head as the evil Gently Benevolent are our personal favourites.

However, it is Mark Evans' writing that is the reason this sitcom stands-out as something a little bit special. It's very hard to describe style of the comedy, in fact you'd be best to listen to an episode to understand what the word play is like as we're never going to be able to do it justice in this review.

Suffice to say the bizarre and surreal Victorian world that Evans' vividly paints through his words makes for a magical and highly entertaining sitcom that you just must not miss.