Peep Show - Complete - Series Season 1- 2- 3- 4... ★
Here’s a proper, critical review of the complete series of Peep Show (Seasons 1–4, noting that the show actually ran for 9 seasons total; this review will focus on the first four as requested, while acknowledging the show’s full arc). Overview Peep Show , created by Andrew O’Connor and Jesse Armstrong (later of Succession fame), and Sam Bain, premiered in 2003. The first four seasons (2003–2007) lay the foundation for what would become one of the most influential British sitcoms of the 21st century. The show uses a unique first-person POV + internal monologue format, putting you inside the heads of two flatmates: the repressed, neurotic loan manager Mark Corrigan (David Mitchell) and the lazy, amoral freeloader Jeremy “Jez” Usbourne (Robert Webb).
– Perfection begins Widely considered the best of the early run. Mark dates a posh, seemingly perfect woman named Sophie (Olivia Colman in a star-making turn), while Jez gets involved with a “free spirit” named Nancy (Rachel Blanchard). The episode “Mugging” (Mark gets mugged; Jez pretends to be a hero) is a cringe masterpiece. The show’s cruelty—to its characters and by its characters—hits a sweet spot. The infamous “rainbow rhythms” scene (Jez’s fake band) is pure gold. Grade: A – No weak episodes. PEEP SHOW - Complete - Series Season 1- 2- 3- 4...
Unlike traditional sitcoms with laugh tracks or wide shots, Peep Show traps you in subjective reality. You see through Mark and Jez’s eyes, hear their unfiltered (and often horrifying) thoughts, and watch them fail at basic human interaction. The result is the comedic equivalent of a panic attack—brilliant, excruciating, and deeply addictive. Season-by-Season Review (1–4) Season 1 (2003) – Raw, low-budget, instantly distinctive The first season introduces the dynamic: Mark pines for colleague Toni (who’s dating a “wanker” named Tony), while Jez tries to launch a music career and seduce a woman named Toni (different Toni). The episode “Warring Factions” (house party gone wrong) sets the template for social catastrophe. The production is scrappy (shot on digital video, claustrophobic flats), but the writing is razor-sharp. Standout line: “People like Coldplay and voted for the Nazis. You can’t trust people.” Grade: B+ – Rough edges but essential. Here’s a proper, critical review of the complete
– Escalating stakes, darker laughs Mark proposes to Sophie (disaster ensues). Jez tries to “grow up” by getting a job at a bowling alley and dating a much older woman. The Christmas episode “Season’s Beatings” is a bleak holiday classic, featuring a disastrous turkey dinner, a fistfight, and Mark’s internal scream: “This is absolutely bonkers. I’m in a bad film.” The Sophie-Mark engagement storyline peaks with “Quantocking” (a tense weekend away). The show starts leaning harder into pure psychological horror disguised as comedy. Grade: A- – Slightly less consistent than S2, but higher highs. The show uses a unique first-person POV +
“Mugging” (S2E1) – Perfect 23 minutes of social dread. Worst Episode (S1–4): None truly bad, but “Conference” (S3E3) drags slightly.
The Office (UK), Curb Your Enthusiasm , Fleabag , Nathan for You , or feeling secondhand embarrassment as an art form.