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Canberra Today 3°/6° | Wednesday, May 1, 2024 | Digital Edition | Crossword & Sudoku

Review: ‘Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa’ (M) ***

Steve CooganEARLY in his career, English actor Steve Coogan became a household name in the UK playing radio DJ Alan Partridge on TV.

Director Declan Lowney and writer Peter Baynham have ongoing associations with Coogan, who co-wrote this film. The trio, supported by a strong cast (Colm Meaney, Anna Maxwell-Martin, Sean Pertwee and more) attacks the task of giving life to a plot that, at its best, is a drawn-out sitcom episode.

Alan P. is unrelenting in the awfulness of his persona, unaware of the needs of any other person on the planet. The Brit talk-back radio audience loves his crass. Between the film’s lines dwells a guy whom no human being with an ounce of compassion for the disadvantaged could like.

The movie’s plot builds when a takeover of the station leads to a token redundancy that Alan P contrives to remove his on-air colleague Pat (Meaney) who loses his cool, takes all the station staff, except Alan P, hostage thereby initiating a crisis of the kind that TV channels adore to report live.

It’s more clever than comical, more comical than credible, the anatomy of a profession that, let’s face it, you’d enter only if no-one would give you a job requiring brains. The money may be good; the notoriety may feed the ego, but nobody could call being a shock jock a socially-useful calling.

At Dendy and Palace Electric

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Dougal Macdonald

Dougal Macdonald

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Update

Canberra actor John Cuffe dies aged 91

One of the last remaining luminaries from the explosion of professional theatre in Canberra during the 1970s has died after complications from lung cancer. He was 91.

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