Rimmerworld: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox television episode | {{Infobox television episode | ||
| series = [[Red Dwarf]] | | series = [[Red Dwarf]] | ||
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| episode_list = List of Red Dwarf episodes | | episode_list = List of Red Dwarf episodes | ||
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"'''Rimmerworld'''" is the fifth episode of [[science fiction]] [[ | "'''Rimmerworld'''" is the fifth episode of [[science fiction]] [[sitcom]] ''[[Red Dwarf]]'' Series VI<ref name="British Sitcom Guide – Red Dwarf – Series 6">{{cite web | url =http://www.sitcom.co.uk/red_dwarf/series6.shtml | title =British Sitcom Guide – Red Dwarf – Series 6 | publisher= sitcom.co.uk |accessdate =2008-02-01 }}</ref> and the 35th in the series run.<ref name="TV.com – Rimmerworld summary">{{cite web | url =http://www.tv.com/red-dwarf/rimmerworld/episode/10979/summary.html | title = TV.com – Rimmerworld summary | publisher = tv.com |accessdate =2008-02-01}}</ref> It was first broadcast on the British television channel [[BBC2]] on 4 November 1993,<ref name="BBC – Programme Catalogue – RED DWARF VI – RIMMERWORLD">{{cite web | url = http://catalogue.bbc.co.uk/catalogue/infax/programme/NMRE272S | title =BBC – Programme Catalogue – RED DWARF VI – RIMMERWORLD | publisher =BBC |accessdate =2007-12-12}}</ref> was written by [[Rob Grant]] & [[Doug Naylor]] and was directed by Andy de Emmony.<ref name="Rimmerworld Full cast and crew">{{cite web | url =https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0684176/fullcredits#cast | title = Rimmerworld Full cast and crew | publisher =IMDb |accessdate =2008-02-01}}</ref> | ||
==Plot== | ==Plot== |
Latest revision as of 11:43, 12 February 2023
"Rimmerworld" | |
---|---|
Red Dwarf episode | |
Episode no. | Series 6 Episode 5 |
Directed by | Andy de Emmony |
Written by | Rob Grant & Doug Naylor |
Original air date | 4 November 1993 |
Guest appearance | |
| |
"Rimmerworld" is the fifth episode of science fiction sitcom Red Dwarf Series VI[1] and the 35th in the series run.[2] It was first broadcast on the British television channel BBC2 on 4 November 1993,[3] was written by Rob Grant & Doug Naylor and was directed by Andy de Emmony.[4]
Plot
Arnold Rimmer undergoes a medical examination and learns he has a stress-related condition that could give him an electronic aneurysm, resulting in his death. To prevent this, Kryten prescribes several stress relief measures, including Chinese worry balls. Shortly after this, the pair join with Dave Lister and Cat in investigating the simulant ship they defeated a few weeks earlier for supplies. While aboard, the group finds that one of its crew survived their encounter and confronts them. Rimmer opts to flee in an escape pod, inadvertently triggering the collapse of the ship. Kryten, Lister and Cat use the matter transporter they had been using to load supplies onto "Starbug" as an alternative exit, though their return to the ship is stalled by Kryten making a programming error on the device and sending them back into their past a week ago. Once they have returned, the group find Rimmer's pod, which Kryten discovers was looted and had terraforming equipment, is being drawn into a wormhole with time dilation effects, meaning that it will take six centuries from Rimmer's perspective for them to recover him but only a few hours from the crew's.
Rimmer opts to wait upon the closest S3 planet beyond the wormhole that the pod lands on, and uses the equipment to create a paradise from himself for the time being. When the rest of the crew finally reach him, they find themselves confronted by a race of power-hungry Rimmer-clones, who throw them into a dungeon with the real Rimmer. Through him, the group learns that he attempted to create a female companion but created clones of himself instead, who eventually overthrew him, much to his despair. With his hard light drive preventing him from being executed, Rimmer was imprisoned for over five centuries. Rimmer further explains that the others will be executed for having un-Rimmer like traits, which the clones consider a crime, which Kryten points out will cause the clones to not evolve and die out. Although Lister forms a complex plan to escape, Kryten simply suggests they use the transporter to return to Starbug, though he causes another programming error that takes the crew out of the present. Believing that they have again travelled into the past, Lister and Cat tease "past" Rimmer about his future six-hundred-year ordeal. However, informing the crew that they have in fact travelled weeks into the future, future Rimmer implies that something terrible will happen to Lister, leaving him worried for his future before they leave.
Production
"Rimmerworld" was filmed back to back with "Gunmen of the Apocalypse" to avoid having to rebuild the sets and models for the Simulant ship, and having to hire actress Elizabeth Hickling twice. It was planned as a sequel to "Gunmen" but was effectively cut down from its original idea.[5]
This episode was planned to air fourth in the series run, but was eventually placed fifth, after "Emohawk: Polymorph II". This had the added bonus of tying up continuity – Lister refers to the Simulant ship they shot down "a couple of weeks back" (meaning time for the crew had passed at the same rate as it had for the audience), the equipment used in the previous episode is said to have broken down, Cat wears the same outfit twice (although he unconvincingly claims the one in this episode is slightly different) and the final scene about something terrible happening to Lister foreshadows his future self appearing in "Out of Time".
Cultural references
The process of terraforming the planet from desolation to verdant paradise over the course of six days mimics the Genesis creation narrative. The Biblical allusion continues with Rimmer comparing himself to Adam in the Garden of Eden, however, he seemingly confuses that story with the adventures of Tarzan in which Jane is the love interest of the jungle-dwelling hero. The Thirty Years' War and the Hundred Years' War are both referenced when Kryten explains how long Rimmer will spend on the other side of the wormhole before help can arrive.
Reception
This episode has been described as "one of the strangest adventures" in Series VI.[6]
The episode was due to be broadcast as part of a repeat season on 13 March 1996. It was suspended due to the Dunblane massacre, when it was feared that the gun-toting simulant at the start of the episode, and other references to a "psychotic deranged ruthless killer", could be thought to parallel the real-life tragedy, and thus be considered offensive.[7] "Out of Time" was shown in its place, followed by series IV episode "Dimension Jump" a week later; "Rimmerworld" itself was eventually repeated in mid-April.
References
- ^ "British Sitcom Guide – Red Dwarf – Series 6". sitcom.co.uk. Retrieved 2008-02-01.
- ^ "TV.com – Rimmerworld summary". tv.com. Retrieved 2008-02-01.
- ^ "BBC – Programme Catalogue – RED DWARF VI – RIMMERWORLD". BBC. Retrieved 2007-12-12.
- ^ "Rimmerworld Full cast and crew". IMDb. Retrieved 2008-02-01.
- ^ "Red Dwarf series VI Production". Red Dwarf.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2008-01-07. Retrieved 2007-12-17.
- ^ "Series VI review at Sci-Fi Dimensions". scifidimensions.com. Archived from the original on 7 January 2007. Retrieved 2008-01-29.
- ^ "Edit News: Red Dwarf – Broadcast". ganymede-titan.info. Retrieved 2012-11-22.