Nanarchy

In an attempt to get Lister a new limb after the Epideme incident, Kryten tracks down his missing nanobots, only to find they are in Lister's laundry basket and they have got an old friend with them.


Trivia
  • Kryten addressing the viewers ("Last week on Red Dwarf...") was the first time the show broke the fourth wall deliberatly. The only other time the fourth wall was broken was in the episode me2 when Craig Charles accidently looked at the camera while laughing.
  • This is the first time since "Parallel Universe" that Norman Lovett has appeared as Holly, the ship's computer. In between, his character was played by Hattie Hayridge.
  • The episode title can be analysed in two ways. The most obvious is to think of it as a pun on the word "anarchy", in connection with the nanobots. Alternatively, since the suffix -archy signifies rule of some sort, it could be interpreted as nan-archy, the rule of the nanobots. They are not strictly speaking in charge, but their actions do determine the fates of the Dwarfers.

Epideme

The Red Dwarf crew find a starship buried in an astro-glacier, and consequently encounter a zombie who used to be a crew member on Red Dwarf, but left when the ship was at Titan. Lister gets infected with an intelligent virus and promptly fails to convince it not to kill him. Kochanski has a solution that is better than death, but comes at a high price.

Beyond A Joke

Starbug passes an old derelict spaceship, the SS Centauri, which Kryten scavenges for supplies. He finds some live lobsters in stasis and brings them aboard Starbug to cook a fine supper. This is convenient, since it is exactly five years to the day since Kryten was rescued from the wreck of the Nova 5 and he was looking for a way to celebrate the anniversary (unbeknown to the rest of the crew who have forgotten what day it is).

Meanwhile, Kochanski does some scavenging of her own on the SS Centauri, and finds some new software to use with the virtual reality suite aboard Starbug she believes may come in useful. Kochanski is fed up with the juvenile activities of Lister and the Cat, and so decides to educate them on the finer points of etiquette by introducing them to a virtual reality rendition of "Pride and Prejudice Land" in "Jane Austen World". Meanwhile Kryten's plans for a lobster supper he had been preparing all day are scuppered by this.

Kryten's jealousy gets out of hand (in previous episodes of the series, his behaviour has becoming increasingly erratic), and he enters the virtual reality simulation and begins assassinating the virtual characters. He then loads a T-72 tank from a World War II game, and blows up the lakeside gazebo in which Lister, the Cat and Kochanski are having tea and crumpets.

Back in Starbug, whilst having their lobster supper, Lister suggests brown ketchup to go with it. This is too much for Kryten and he goes beserk, literally blowing his top — his head explodes. After fitting Kryten with a spare head, that head too blows up. This happens numerous times until all Kryten's spare heads have exploded. Kochanski does not know why this is happening, and Lister suggests that they board the SS Centauri again and look for some spare mechanoid heads there and perhaps any technology which may explain why this is happening to Kryten. However they discover a Rogue Simulant captain (played by Don Henderson) has since commandeered the Centauri.

Kochanski and the Cat come aboard the Centauri pretending to be GELFs and dressed as Kinitawowi tribesmen with whom the Simulants have an alliance with, and enter trade negotiations with the Simulant. They bring Lister on a leash and pretend he is their slave. Meanwhile a real Kinitawowi tribesman, a partner of the Simulant, ransacks Starbug and steals the remains of Kryten. The Simulant and the GELF then escape with Kryten aboard the Centauri. The other crew cannot catch up as the Centauri is much faster than Starbug, travelling at warp speed, which Starbug cannot do.

On board the Centauri, Kryten has the defect fixed which caused him to blow up his heads (although it is still not at this point explained why this was) by the Simulant. Kryten is then prepared for market as it seems the Simulant intends to sell the mechanoid to the GELFs. Kryten meets another mechanoid named Able who is a servant to the Simulant and who, it turns out, is from the same batch as Kryten (a 4000 series) and carries the same serial number. This means that Kryten and Able are, in effect, brothers. However Able is a "zoney" — he is addicted to a narcotic known as "outrozone" that is specially designed for mechanoids. Abuse of this drugs has corrupted Able's circuit boards. It takes Able about twenty seconds to recall his own name.

Kryten learns some depressing truths about his creator, Professor Mamet, and some truths about his model of mechanoid. Kryten, along with the entire 4000 series of mechanoid, were in fact designed as an insult to John Warburton, a bio-engineer who was once engaged to Professor Mamet. After Warburton jilted Mamet the day before their wedding, Mammet designed the series 4000 mechanoid in his image for revenge. The series 4000 mechanoids were bumbling buffoons; a caricature of his fussiness and pomposity. All negative thoughts and emotions (such as jealousy, guilt, envy, frustration, and insecurity) build up in a "mind negadrive", which when full would cause the mechanoid's head to blow up. This was supposedly a likeness to when Warburton would "blow".

The pair of mechanoid brothers escape to Starbug.

In the end, the Centauri attacks Starbug but the Dwarfers are saved by Able, who sacrifices his life for them. Able uses an escape pod to fly out to the attacking vessel, and activates Kryten's "mind negadrive", projecting Kryten's pent-up negative emotions onto the Centauri. The negative emotions envelop the attacking vessel in electronic form. The Simulant captain, overcome with grief and despair because of the effect, sets off the auto destruct sequence aboard the Centauri. The force of the explosion causes Able's escape pod to crash into an asteroid with some force, killing him instantly.

Kryten mourns Able, but at the same time is happier knowing that he had a brother, and that in the end Able gave Kryten reason to be proud of him. Kryten realises that he has evolved into something "beyond a joke".

The episode ends with Kryten rewriting the "Jane Austen World" virtual reality scenario to "Curry World". The food becomes too hot even for Lister's single remaining tastebud.


Trivia
  • Robert Llewellyn (who plays Kryten) helped Doug Naylor write this episode.
  • Robert Llewellyn wrote this episode with the intent to feature very little of Kryten due to his increasing dislike for the application of the Kryten makeup. After numerous revisions of the script, Kryten unexpectedly became an integral part of the episode, and Llewellyn also had to play the part of another droid, Kryten's brother, called Able. This meant he had to wear the Kryten makeup twice as much, as Able was played by Llewellyn in the same costume coloured green instead of black.
  • This was the last episode of Red Dwarf to feature two popular villanious races of the franchise: Rogue Simulants and GELFs both make their last appearances in the show.
  • Whilst filming the "Pride and Prejudice World" scenes in the lakeside gazebo, Danny John-Jules lost his "cat teeth" as he ate grapes. Production had to be halted whilst the cast and crew searched for the fake fangs.
  • The model for the Rogue Simulant battle cruiser was made from old answering machines.
  • The Rogue Simulant captain was played by veteran British actor Don Henderson. Science fiction fans may remember Henderson from Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope (1977) in which he portrayed High General Tagge. This episode proved to be Henderson's last work in the world of acting, and he died weeks after shooting his scenes for this episode. Henderson was in the latter stages of terminal throat cancer during filming, and his husky voice was not a special effect as many viewers believed but due to his condition. The crew and cast of Red Dwarf recall their fondness for Henderson on the Series VII DVD commentary, wherein he is referred to as a "sweet and friendly old man".
  • Kryten says that he loads a T-72 tank from a "World War II" game; however the T-72 didn't enter production until 1971, long after World War II was over.
  • The tank that was used was borrowed from the James Bond film GoldenEye set.

Blue

Blue was the fifth episode to air in Series VII of Red Dwarf. It is famous for The Rimmer Experience, a sequence featuring munchkin-like mannikins of departed crew member Arnold Rimmer extolling Rimmer's virtues in a song strongly reminiscent of Toad's song in A. A. Milne's Toad of Toad Hall.


Synopsis

Lister finds himself missing Rimmer so much he starts dreaming about kissing him. Kryten takes matters into his own hands by creating virtual ride, The Rimmer Experience, based on Rimmer's diaries, providing Lister with a permanent cure.


Trivia
  • The working title of this episode was "Heartache".
  • The filming of the The Rimmer Experience scene was said to be hellish. It took nearly a full day, but most of the cast had whiplash from being banged about in the carriage within five minutes. The cast referred to this as "Black Wednesday".
  • "The Kiss" again came about because Chris Barrie and Craig Charles were complaining about the lack of kissing scenes, so the writers fixed them up with each other.
  • Charles and Barrie did really kiss for that scene. Apparently, they were so lost in this, they didn't hear the director yelling cut and continued to kiss for quite a while (seen on the special features DVD)
  • During the Rimmer Experience, three versions of Rimmer from Seasons 3 - 7 are shown. The version of Rimmer from Seasons 1 and 2 is not shown.
  • In one of Lister's flashbacks he tells Kryten, Lister and Rimmer are scrounging through lockers. Lister opens a locker because Rimmer, being a hologram, probably can't do it. If this had taken place before Kryten came on the ship (even though the only indication was that Lister was telling the story to Kryten), Rimmer should have been dressed in gray and had the thick "H" on his head. Also, he shouldn't have reacted to the heat of the flames as he wouldn't have had a physical presence, even though he was dressed in his hard-light blue jacket.
  • This is Rimmer's last appearance as a hologram. His next appearance is as a human in Season VIII's Back in the Red: Part I

Duct Soup

Life on board ship is making Kochanski frustrated, so Lister arranges for her to have a bath in his quarters, a gesture that worries Kryten considerably. But before she gets the chance, an engine failure leaves the crew trapped in Lister's quarters, and they must navigate the tiny duct labyrinth to restart the engines before they crash. Lister starts to suffer from claustrophobia and explains how he got it, while Kochanski distracts him with some surprising news about her Dave.


Connection to Identity Within

"Duct Soup" was the last episode of Series VII to be written, as it replaced the script for the "lost episode" "Identity Within". This was due to budget constraints as the script for "Identity Within" was quite ambitious would have been too costly to produce (most of the budget had already been spent on the previous episode "Stoke Me a Clipper"). So, they opted instead for this simple-to-shoot idea of a character driven episode and of filming without special effects and in quickly put together tunnels built on the car park at Shepperton Studios.


Trivia
  • Due to its unusual nature as a Red Dwarf episode, "Duct Soup" was not well received by fans, generally speaking.
  • Robert Llewellyn (who plays Kryten) states in the Series VII DVD special features that "Duct Soup" is his favourite ever episode of Red Dwarf, due to the character development of the Dwarfers and the backstories developed, as no other Red Dwarf episode had character development on this level. In the episode commentary for the Series VII DVD, Chloë Annett (who plays Kochanski) also states that this is her favourite ever episode, while Craig Charles (who plays Lister) counts it among his favourites.
  • In reference to another episode, Lister's claustrophobia is mentioned in the "Confidence and Paranoia" episode, where, when he is outside the ship with his Confidence, Lister says that he gets a little claustrophobic in his space suit. Very few episodes show Lister in closed spaces, but when he is, he doesn't make a fuss about it.

Ouroboros

The crew of Starbug come across a linkway between dimensions and meet their counterparts from another reality, one in which Kochanski was in stasis when the Red Dwarf crew died, and Lister has since been brought back as a hologram. The linkway breaks, when attacked by GELFs, and Kochanski is trapped with our crew; and although Lister does not mind, Kryten becomes jealous and is determined to get her back to her own dimension. Lister finally uncovers his parents' identities.

The episode's name is derived from Ouroboros, the mythological dragon or worm (Or in this case, snake) swallowing its own tail.


Production Notes
  • This is the second Red Dwarf episode to forfeit the opening titles for the purposes of time and episode pacing (the first being the Series II episode "Parallel Universe").
  • This episode included the first computer generated sequence ever produced by the newly-commissioned CGI department of the BBC, an exterior shot of the blue "sub-space" passageway connecting to Starbug


Series continuity
  • The baby Lister was placed under the table in November, 18 months after he was born. 18 months, being a year and a half, before November is May of the previous year. In Emohawk: Polymorph II Lister states that he is an Aries. If Lister were an Aries, he would be born in either March or April and not May (Taureans and Geminis are born in May). This could be explained that as he was abandoned the orphanage had to take a guess with his age and was just off by a month or so
  • It is confirmed in this episode that Kryten killed the crew of the Nova 5 (albeit accidentally). This is in line with the Red Dwarf novels, where Kryten caused the ship to crash by washing the inside of the computer systems.

Stoke Me A Clipper

Ace Rimmer arrives from another dimension badly injured and reveals to Arnold Rimmer his secret — the fact that alternate versions of Rimmer from countless dimensions have all taken the reins to be everybody's favourite hero. Now Ace must train Rimmer to succeed him and keep the legend going. The episode title comes from Rimmer's end-of-episode attempt to 'be' Ace Rimmer as he tries to copy the catchphrase "Smoke me a kipper, I'll be back for breakfast." but does it all wrong and ends up with "Stoke me a clipper, I'll be back for Christmas." shortly before ejecting himself from the space craft instead of taking off.


Guest actors

This episode featured a large number of famous guest actors. Some of these included:

  • Scottish-born Hollywood movie veteran Brian Cox played the Medieval English King.
  • Prolific British comedy actress Sarah Alexander portrayed the French Queen.
  • Veteran English soap actor Ken Morley portrayed the German commander Captain Voorhese. Morley is best known for previously playing the character of Reg Holdsworth on the British soap opera Coronation Street. He had also previously played a Wehrmacht general in 'Allo 'Allo.
  • British television actress Alison Senior portratyed Princess Bonjella.
  • A German television comedy duo, Kai Maurer and Stephan Grothgar, portrayed the Wehrmacht soldiers who get hit on the head by the crocodile.


Quote(s)

These are two variations of the "Ace Rimmer saying"

Ace Rimmer: Smoke me a kipper, I'll be back for breakfast

Rimmer: Stoke me a clipper, I'll be back for Christmas


Trivia
  • The working title for this episode was "Natural Born Rimmers" but it wasn't used, being deemed too risqué.
  • A special effects crewman/set maker recalls on the Series VII DVD special features that this episode was fun to make, but at the same time the most difficult episode of all to produce.
  • Ace Rimmer fights off Nazis and jumps out a World War II Heinkel on the back of a crocodile. The same crewman recalls that in the original script for this episode, Ace Rimmer was fighting off Rogue Simulants and jumped out out a flying saucer on the back of an alien.
  • Chris Barrie refers to the opening of the episode as a "007" moment
  • Even though he later says to Rimmer that he wasn't the original Ace, Ace greets the crew as if he were. It is believed by fans that Ace kept log's in which his other replacements could use to learn about the adventures he'd been through and the people hed met.
  • Even though Ace tells Rimmer that he too is a hard-light hologram, Ace does not have an "H" on his head. this is explained in the show as the Light-bee remote changes the outward appearance of holograms and removes the H.
  • The large collection of dead Rimmers means that Ace has not only travel between dimensions but also through time. There is also the plot hole as to the planet in their dimension being that which holds all of the 'Coffin-Pods'.

Tikka To Ride

Unable to function without a good curry, Lister tampers with Kryten so he will help him to go back to Earth with the time-drive and place a large takeaway order. Their calculations are a little off and they find themselves at Dallas, Texas in November 1963, where Lister pushes a gun-man out of a fifth floor window, allowing President Kennedy to live. Within minutes, they have altered the future for the worse, and now they are going to have to hatch a plot that is going to drive the conspiracy theorists crazy (using a small hill covered in grass: "You mean... the Grassy Knoll, sir?")


Trivia
  • Earlier in the episode it is explained that the paradox caused Starbug to grow substantially and have considerably more decks/rooms. yet Starbug itself did not change in size, indicating that the paradox created a Tardis like effect upon the ship.
  • This episode features the first use of a flashback to a previous episode ("Out of Time").
  • This episode was the second to have no studio audience. The first one, the third series episode "Bodyswap", was not done in front of an audience, as Craig Charles and Chris Barrie had to mouth their lines, so they could be synced in later.
  • The title of this episode is a piece of word-play based on the name of the song "Ticket to Ride" by the Beatles, in accordance with the theme of curry on which the storyline focuses.
  • Craig Charles only took one take to do the long monologue at the start of the episode.
  • When the second shooter fires from the Grassy Knoll, Lister, Rimmer and Cat are dressed up as tramps. Three tramps are reported to have been found on the Grassy Knoll when the police searched it after the shooting, but nobody knows who they were or what happened to them afterwards.
  • The Xtended version of the episode features a fuller, alternative ending. Lister is seen to discover that the curry supplies had been hidden by himself from the past to the aft section of Starbug, to prevent them from being destroyed in the flood. However, Rimmer's joke is only played out when he separates that section from the rest of Starbug.


Continuity
  • This episode contains an unusually large number of continuity errors, some of which even contradict the previous episode. Two of the most glaring errors are the following:
  • A big deal was made in "Out of Time" of the fact that the time-drive travels only in time, not in space. In this episode, the time-drive seems to function in both, and yet the crew at no point decide to use it to get them home, or to retrieve Red Dwarf, although the crew are determined to avoid time travel to prevent turning out like their future selves. The time-drive being able to function in space as well as time could be explained by the portable model's resemblance to the matter paddle from "Meltdown". Presumably, Kryten combined the two, for which there is a precedent, as Kryten tweaked the matter paddle to duplicate matter in "Demons and Angels", otherwise the teleporter could be used as this is already capable of travelling in space and time as seen in "Rimmerworld". Also, at the beginning of the episode, Lister says that things have 'Emerged from both timelines to cope with the paradox', and as their future selves obviously found a way to get back to Earth to sample the finest life can offer, the time drive found in this episode may be theirs.
  • At the beginning of this episode it is explained that, when the crew from the future killed their past selves, the resulting paradox restored their past selves to life. However when Kennedy does the exact same thing at the end of the episode, his past self remains dead.

Season 7

After a temporary bout of deadness, the Dwarfers find themselves solving one of the biggest conspiracy plots of all time, before Ace Rimmer drops in with the challenge of Rimmer's life. Meantime Kryten gets seriously tetchy and Lister has one of the hottest screen kisses ever. Pity it's not with the girl of his dreams. Pity it's not with a girl.

Episodes:
*Also includes special extended version


On The DVD (Buy The DVD)
  • Cast Commentary
  • "Back From the Dead" Original Documentary
  • Deleted Scenes
  • Smeg Ups
  • "Identity Within" - the lost episode
  • Robert Llewellyn Video Diary
  • Fan Films - the winning shorts
  • "Burning Rubber" Featurette
  • "How Do They Do That?" - the effects
  • Trailers and Kryten Introductions
  • Raw FX Footage
  • Isolated Music Cues
  • "Dave Hollins" Radio Sketch
  • Photo Gallery
  • Weblink
  • PLUS Hidden Easter Eggs
  • Remastered Tikka to Ride
  • And Collector's Booklet