Heading Out

2013

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1

6.1| 0h30m| en
Synopsis

Sara is a woman approaching middle age who is popular and successful - she's a veterinarian so skilled that she can spay a tortoise using just one hand - but has a chink in her armour: she's afraid to tell her parents that she is a lesbian. So on the eve of her 40th birthday, friends Jamie and Justine give Sara an ultimatum - either tell her parents next time mum and dad visit or they will.

Director

Producted By

Red Production Company

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Trailers & Clips

Reviews

ThiefHott Too much of everything
LouHomey From my favorite movies..
Hadrina The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful
Hayden Kane There is, somehow, an interesting story here, as well as some good acting. There are also some good scenes
latashaseam Heading Out is as charming as you'd expect from a comedy starring Sue Perkins. The supporting cast is really hilarious and so likable. I actually love all the characters on this show! They are played perfectly; subtly over-the-top...which may be just a standard British comedy thing that generally appeals to me but I have to note that the actors' take on the womens' characters are especially fresh to me. Not to mention the guest-stars alone make this show worth watching. You can tell that the cast are having so much fun and it sucks you in. It's pitch perfect for a light comedy yet still irreverent enough to keep it interesting. So many great shows on TV these days are unyieldingly dark and shocking in it's humour. It's nice to have a bit of respite from all the over-sexed or psychotic characters on TV delivering one-liners from a pool of blood which has sort of become the expectation from good TV these days. Aside from all of that Heading Out also happens to be really, really funny. I hope to see another season...even if it's just free on Youtube....(sorry!)
Ophilia Balls Sadly, thanks to years of being jaded by some appalling lowest common denominator sitcoms on the BBC, people are bound to have preconceptions about any new comedy programme and it is all too easy to dismiss a show like Heading Out and almost expect to be disappointed.Unfortunately, this may cause viewers braced to be let down, to judge it too early and too harshly because it didn't have them howling with laughter immediately.The main thing this show has going for it, is Sue Perkins' likability. This is certainly not a groundbreaking show or armed with one hilarious joke after another. What it is light comedy that would perhaps be better suited to an afternoon slot, (possibly in place of endless repeats of repeats). It is possible to enjoy Heading Out, if it is watched with an open mind and enjoyed for what it is, rather than what it isn't.
LuckyDuck22 I like Sue Perkins. She's charming, witty, and a good actress. I wanted to like this show and stuck with it as long as I could - but four minutes into the third episode I had to give up. Tonally the show is all over the shop. What lets it down more than anything is the direction. Sue Perkins has set the tone of the show as single camera comedy (i.e. more realistic - think 'The Office') and her performance reflects this. Yet several other members of the cast (namely Joanna Scanlan) seem to think they're appearing in an episode of 'Miranda'. These vastly different styles of performance within one show undermine the reality of the situation. If it doesn't gel together, you cannot suspend disbelief. Good sitcoms are like well-oiled machines. This one feels like a series of parts from vastly different gadgets have been flung together without any lubrication.
Jellybeansucker Perkins gets the TV sitcom nod and wink, no questions asked, from the increasingly cronyistic BBC. Straight to BBC2 with no pilot, so she's certainly settled in well in the secluded labyrinths of Broadcasting House.That's not to say the lady doesn't have some comic talent or that she would be doomed to write a turkey. The likelihood that she'd create something half decent was quite strong in fact, with her respected wit and intelligence. But two episodes in and we are questioning whether we've over praised her in calling her the female Stephen Fry so soon.Bits of this sitcom have had some flashes of intelligent humour but way too much has been unoriginal to say the least. She's opted for a modern off centre comedy style referencing films and pop culture in the style of Spaced but it's so close to it that it looks more like plagiarism than influence.The narrative has been butchered seemingly in favour of making the scenes stand out, but of course this rarely works unless you're the Cohen Bros. and even then makes the narrative a very bumpy ride. Sorry, I can't say much good about this sitcom yet, but we do have four episodes left to watch. I fear they've already been written though and it's too late to save the amiable Ms Perkins' sitcom writing career.PS The sitcom opened with a long scene starring a dead cat! Look no further than this for an omen of its future.