Entertainment Weekly by Jason Clark
Freshly modern... Thanks to a superb Vincent Franklin. [17/24 Apr 2015, p.104]
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Creator
Russell T Davies
Cast
Vincent Franklin,
Cyril Nri,
Ceallach Spellman,
Hannah John-Kamen,
James Murray,
Julie Hesmondhalgh
Genre
Comedy,
Drama
Having happily lived with his boyfriend Lance for nine years, and content at work, Henry Best's life in Manchester seems to be going well. His plans are shattered when Lance brings home a younger man. After moving out, and getting suspended at work, Henry struggles to navigate his new life.
Entertainment Weekly by Jason Clark
Freshly modern... Thanks to a superb Vincent Franklin. [17/24 Apr 2015, p.104]
Boston Globe by Matthew Gilbert
It expands beautifully from the stereotypes, ultimately giving us portraits of very specific men and women and their very human trepidations regarding aging, attachment, self-esteem, and romance.
The New Yorker by Emily Nussbaum
Cucumber is the toughest series to take, but it’s also the most ambitious--and, at its heights, it is emotionally wrenching and acridly funny, an audacious and original expression of Davies’s challenging, often critical ideas about gay male identity.
The New York Times by Mike Hale
The plot complications occasionally feel forced, and Henry’s overwhelming dyspepsia sometimes comes off as meanspirited and a little mystifying (through two episodes, anyway). But Mr. Davies, as “Doctor Who” fans know, has perfected a style of propulsive, almost manic comic dialogue with an undercoating of melancholy, and there are plenty of hilarious and touching moments in Cucumber.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette by Rob Owen
The predicaments Henry gets himself into, while sometimes predictable, are nonetheless realistic and entirely believable within the universe of this show (and sometimes real life, too).
Variety by Brian Lowry
Not everything works, but enough does.
The Hollywood Reporter by Keith Uhlich
As Henry’s world expands, and as it becomes clear that his myopic perspective doesn’t exclusively define the intertwining narrative, it’s easy to get drawn in. Davies is best at capturing the easy camaraderie that develops among friends and lovers.... He’s on less sure footing with some of the more drastic shifts in tone in each series.
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