TV Review: Red Dwarf 10.2 - "Fathers and Suns"

rating: 4

(WARNING: Significant spoilers follow!) Red Dwarf is at its best when it focuses on just how incredibly dysfunctional our group of space travelers are. When they try to break the mold and turn them into heroes, it frequently doesn€™t work. But showing just how messed-up these people can be really tends to make for comedy gold. This week€™s episode was no exception. In it we learn that every Fathers€™ Day, Lister (Craig Charles) gets rascally drunk and writes a Fathers€™ Day card to himself (since he€™s his own father€it€™s complicated). He then gives it to Kryten (Robert Llewellyn) hand off to him next year. Since he was completely smashed out of his mind at the time he wrote it, he forgets what he wrote, so when he, the father, sees the card that he, the son, wrote the previous year, he gets to be touched at how thoughtful he is toward himself. Like I said, it€™s complicated. During this time, Rimmer (Chris Barrie) has had Kryten install a new computer system to replace Holly. After constantly saying that appearance doesn€™t matter, we can be €œshocked€ when the system has the face and breasts of an attractive woman. It turns out that this computer can predict people€™s actions with nearly 100% accuracy, something which does not bode well for the crew, especially since she views Rimmer as the one who is in charge. From start to finish this episode had a lot of great moments, but I think that the best is the conversation over video tape between Lister the father and Lister the son made by Lister when he realizes he€™s been a bad father to himself. It manages to be vaguely touching and exceptionally hilarious at the same time. I especially liked the way that Lister kept trying to get around everything he was telling himself to do. I liked less the very predictable outcome of having the new computer system. Once it started doing the whole €œI know everything you will do,€ business, I knew it was only a matter of time before it took over things. But that said, at least it was well-done. What I didn€™t really like, or really get the point of, was the €œChinese Whispers€ business. Other than giving the Cat (Danny John-Jules) something to do in an episode that otherwise lacked anything for him to do, I really don€™t think it was needed. There had to be a better way of getting him on screen and busy. That set of minor complaints aside, this was a strong episode, and if it wasn€™t quite as great as last week, well, that€™s ok. It was still much better than €œBack to Earth€. Imagine how sad it would have been if that had been the last we€™d seen of Red Dwarf. Next week: time travel!
Contributor

Chris Swanson is a freelance writer and blogger based in Phoenix, Arizona, where winter happens to other people. His blog is at wilybadger.wordpress.com