The Drew Carey Show

1995

Seasons & Episodes

  • 9
  • 8
  • 7
  • 6
  • 5
  • 4
  • 3
  • 2
  • 1
  • 0

6.9| 0h30m| TV-PG| en
Synopsis

Drew is an assistant director of personnel in a Cleveland department store and he has been stuck there for ten years. Other than fighting with co-worker Mimi, his hobbies include drinking beer and not being able to get dates. To make a few extra bucks he has a micro-brewery going in his garage with his buddies.

Director

Producted By

Warner Bros. Television

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Trailers & Clips

Reviews

WillSushyMedia This movie was so-so. It had it's moments, but wasn't the greatest.
Griff Lees Very good movie overall, highly recommended. Most of the negative reviews don't have any merit and are all pollitically based. Give this movie a chance at least, and it might give you a different perspective.
Ginger Very good movie overall, highly recommended. Most of the negative reviews don't have any merit and are all pollitically based. Give this movie a chance at least, and it might give you a different perspective.
Billy Ollie Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable
kitteh_harbls The Drew Carey Show went off to a strong start in 1995 and kept getting funnier and funnier until it started to run dry right around 2000. Up until 1999, there was no funnier show on TV. PERIOD. The brilliance and wit of this show were criminally underrated. Yes, it was popular from the beginning but its popularity waned down until the show was forced to cancellation.Very few shows were able to compete with the genius of this show. I'd say Frasier was the most powerful competitor (along with 3rd Rock from the Sun in its first two years), but at the end of the day, the Drew Carey Show came ahead. Friends was funny and consistently well-written. Seinfeld had quite a few brilliant Larry David moments (and Jerry's usual hilarious comedic banter). But not one show in my opinion ever came close to the Drew Carey Show's constant rapid-fire succession of killer lines and situations. Line after line after line, this show had some of the wittiest, funniest, cleverest, most brilliant content EVER. The show was just way ahead of its time. Where does one start with this show? I'd say with the characters. This is a heavily character-driven show. Let's see:Drew Carey (played by Drew Carey): lovable, overweight and in a rut. Those sum the poor man's life. He's been in the same stinkin' job for over a decade. To give you an idea how bad it is for him, his position is "assistant director of personnel", but there *is* no director of personnel, so had the job of both but without the perks or paycheck of the director. He has a hellish co-worker (Mimi) whose non-stop pranks, schemes and put-downs never seem to take a break, not even when she's pregnant or nursing her child. Drew deals with his life with laughing and making jokes, sometimes at his own expense. It's what gets him through life (oh yeah, and beer - lots and lots of beer). That and his friends. He does badly on relationships, but he doesn't quit, giving us endless joy and laughter in one trainwreck of a relationship after another. You can't help but love Drew. Something feels so homey and close about him.Lewis Kinisky (played by Ryan Stiles): tall, thin and creepy. Lewis works in a shady drug company with a history of questionable practices and suspicious experiments. But, he doesn't care one bit. Why should he? He's 40, still single and still a janitor. He's got nothing to lose. So he's pretty trusted there, shifting up from his janitorial position at times and then demoted back because he screws it up somehow (he's not the smartest janitor out there). Ryan Stiles is absolutely hilarious in this part. An improvisation master, he had a cult following among the fans especially because of his improvisational comedy abilities on the British "Who's Line Is it Anyway?". Presumably, many of his lines on the show are also improvised.Kate O'Brien (played by Christa Miller): she's the cold-blooded witch from Scrubs (Dr. Cox' ex-wife), but here she's just adorable. She's cute, she's funny, she's the second of Drew's close friends. Oh yeah, she's kind of a slut too. Absolutely shameless when it comes to sex and masturbation, she's quite liberated from society's judgments. She just doesn't care.Oswald Lee Harvey (played by the supremely-versatile Deidrich Bader): the third of Drew's friends, he's Lewis' best buddy and arguably one of the dumbest people to ever appear on a TV show. Played to perfection by Deidrich, very rarely has dim wit and stupidity been played this good on TV. Let's see, Gob from Arrested Development, Bridget from 8 Simple Rules, Homer Simpson, Peter Griffin, I'd say those five are on anyone's short list for "funniest dumb characters in TV history". This character is absolutely hysterical. Mimi Bobeck (played by Kathy Kinny): a nightmare on feet, she's Drew's arch nemesis in the office (and often times in real life). She puts him down endlessly about everything, she hatches evil plans all the time, she made him the victim of countless pranks, her mission in life is to ruin his. She was never intended to be a recurring character, but thanks (many thanks) to popular feedback from the audience, she was kept.Nigel Wick (played by Craig Ferguson): Drew's English boss. He's my favorite character on the show. Played to extreme comedic heights by Ferguson (who's Scottish), you'll be amazed how well he gets the English accent. Compare his English accent to Americans doing the accent. God, so embarrassing. Craig gave me the surprise of a lifetime when he spoke his true Scottish accent one time. I was shocked. I could've sworn he was 100% English. Wick constantly ruins Drew's life, albeit not always on purpose. He's cold-hearted, selfish, self-centered, he's the epitome of the Machiavellian approach. Every line is a classic. Every scene is hysterity. One of the main reasons I watched this show.The show only kept getting better until 2000, then it started to go downhill, unfortunately. Drew lost his trademark (and funny) weight, the comedians lost some of their glare, bizarre - and utterly disgusting at times - plots were hatched (the low point being the very old gay couple living with Drew, describing some "intimacies" that include waxing each other, ugh), and very sadly, the show was not what it once was. But from 1995 to 1999, there was arguably no funnier show on TV, not even Seinfeld. Sure, it was more popular, but by no means better. The Drew Carey Show blew Seinfeld out of the water. Now we just have a sad and fond memory of a brutally funny and well-written show that is no more.
dansknik Since i've seen the show for the first time, it's been my favourite. The humor of the show is spot on, and the cast is great. The endless feud between Drew & Mimi is always funny, like the semi "gay" relationship between Oswald & Lewis. There has never been a show that agreed with my personal humor like the Drew Carey show, and I don't think there ever will be again. I can really recognize a lot of similarities between my own and Drews life. His failure at advancing in his professional as well as in his personal life is a thing, I think, will be recognized by a lot of people. Every time I see a similarity it makes me first smile but then when the show goes one step further it makes me laugh tears.
smdias65 Thank God for reruns. I missed the episodes from 1995-2001, because I was working when it was on. But, I've seen most (if not all) episodes in reruns. It kinda lost steam when Crista Miller left, but I've always liked Cynthia Watros. It just seemed to end abruptly, though. The last episode I remember seeing was when Kelly was pregnant and living with Drew. They never actually had the baby, did they? The show just ended while she was pregnant. I wanted more.I like Drew Carey. At this point, I've seen many episodes of the show more than once. It was very original. There's not many shows that will suddenly break into a dance number or musical number. I also enjoy "Who's Line" and have seen those episodes many times.
adowns_18 The Drew Carey was definitely one of my favourite sit-coms to come out of the 1990s. It was refreshing to see a show where the characters made fun of themselves in a self-deprecating way, rather than the usual brinkmanship of other shows. While Lewis and Oswald were two of the funnier characters, I feel that all characters had their moments. I've read several places that people do not find Drew Carey as funny, yet I believe he's necessary to balance out the many other cartoonish characters.This show also fascinated me because it wasn't always happy times and appealed to more than our sense of humour. One of my favourite episodes was where Drew and Nikki break up, as it just seemed like a very real moment when the episode ended with Drew watching the "break-up tape' alone while drinking a beer. The show made fun but also dealt with the flaws and weaknesses of its characters, something few comedy shows have ever done.Finally, I actually enjoy some of the later episodes. Granted the episodes that combined Drew's other show, "Whose Line is it Anyway" generally fell flat (but hey, at least they were trying something new), many of the episodes in the last season had some of the show's biggest laughs. Particularly, the episode where Drew and Kelly entered into the karaoke competition at the Warsaw still has me laugh every time I hear the song, "Do it to me one more time."Oh, there's rumours that a DVD set for Season 1 is finally coming out some time this year, and hopefully soon. Hell, if shows like Murder One and The Jamie Foxx Show are being released on DVD, it makes little sense that the number 1 ranked show during its prime isn't released on DVD soon. MAKE IT HAPPEN ABC!!!Cheers