US-Fernsehen (inklusive Season- und Pilot-Reviews), britisches Fernsehen etc.
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von Valleyman
#434795
Nachtrose hat geschrieben:Sofort.
Wenn ich alles auf einmal gucke ist das zuviel gutes auf einmal.

Also lieber häppchenweise damit ich auf jedes kleine Detail achten kann und net erdrückt werde von zuviel ^-^
ah wenn das wie die erste season wird dann guck ich es eh 3 4 mal am stueck ,o)
von Nachtrose
#434805
Valleyman hat geschrieben:
Nachtrose hat geschrieben:Sofort.
Wenn ich alles auf einmal gucke ist das zuviel gutes auf einmal.

Also lieber häppchenweise damit ich auf jedes kleine Detail achten kann und net erdrückt werde von zuviel ^-^
ah wenn das wie die erste season wird dann guck ich es eh 3 4 mal am stueck ,o)
Vllt entscheid ich mich auch noch um aus Zeitgründen oder um keine Cliffhanger ertragen zu müssen.
Mal schauen.
Ist ja auch noch ne Weile hin ^^
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von Poffel
#434810
ich werde warten und es am stück schauen
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von Valleyman
#434865
Poffel hat geschrieben:ich werde warten und es am stück schauen
ich wette 100 leonzen das du es nicht ertraegst und schwach wirst
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von Poffel
#434874
ich werde warten und es am stück schauen, und zwar die ganze folge ohne unterbrechungen
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von Valleyman
#434881
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von Waterboy
#434949
ach ihr seit doch alle schwach pfff :x :lol:

naja mal gucken was ich machen werden...


Extreme Spoiler zu Series 2


Folge 1
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Series two is set six months after the conclusion of the first. Tony is alive following his collision with a car, but he is now severely impaired: he can't write, he struggles to hold a fork and he remembers little about the world around him.

Episode one is all about Maxxie, who opens the new series with a slammin' dance routine in a church. We get the first look at his family life - he has a dad! And a mum! And a dog! - and the homophobia he suffers from the ASBO boys on his estate.

Guest starring this series is Bill Bailey (the one from Buzzcocks that looks like a caveman) as Maxxie's dad Walter. Expect to see him standing up for his son, falling out with his son... and performing a dance routine with a dog.

Maxxie's getting some action! The toe-tapper has a filthy encounter in a forest with a very unlikely suspect.

Episoden 2 Spoiler ( new Boy )
versteckter Inhalt:
Episode two introduces the mysterious character of Sketch, who has been stalking one of the gang.

Cassie/Sid Spoiler
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Cassie is now living in Scotland, but is keeping in contact with her boyfriend Sid by sending video tapes through the post. Only thing is, there are two Scottish boys dancing with her in her latest video. Sid, jealous? Never!

Chris Spoiler
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Things go from bad to worse for Chris this series as he is expelled and rendered homeless for getting up to something naughty in the Science corridor. But could his luck be about to change? I hear he ends up finding romance with a female character. And it's not Michelle.

Effy Spoiler
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7. Tony's troublesome sister Effy has a bigger role this series, while Michelle has a new, manipulative step-sister called Scarlett who has designs on one of her friends.

andere Spoiler für die ersten 5 Episoden
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Prepare yourselves for a jaw-dropper. Two characters that you never thought would get together will, by around episode four. Any guesses?

The first five episodes focus on, in order:
2x01 Tony and Maxxie (joint ep)
2x02 Sketch
2x03 Sid
2x04 Michelle
2x05 Chris
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von Poffel
#434958
was soll der mist, warum vernachlässigen sie cassie so, schon in S1 hatte sie die wenigste screentime :-(
von Plem
#435092
Irgendwie hab ich das komische Gefühl, dass
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Chris mit Effy
zusammenkommt :?.
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von Poffel
#435094
glaub ich nicht, würde ich aber gutheißen. [spoil]chris is toll und effy süß [/spoil]:-)
Zuletzt geändert von Poffel am So 13. Jan 2008, 22:51, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.
von Waterboy
#436784
erster Bericht von jemanden der das Vergnügen hatte die erste Folge mit dem Cast zusammen zu sehen



versteckter Inhalt:
We've just been to a screening of episode one of Skins, Series Two. And we have to report that it more than lives up to the brilliance of the first series. To start with, we were a bit taken aback. The story has taken a pretty glum, intense turn, with previously ultra-cocky Tony (Nicholas Hoult) changing his personality completely after a bad run-in with a bus. His body doesn't work properly, he forgets things and can barely even write his own name. And all his mates are acting very oddly around him, because they can't come to terms with the loss of the maverick Tony they knew before. But worry not: the show is still as sharp and entertaining as before. We soon see that the only one who seems to be able to deal with the New Tony is Maxxie, who we see in a dazzling dance sequence at the start of the episode and who stays centre stage for the rest of the opening hour. We get to meet his eccentric dad (played splendidly by comedian Bill Bailey), we meet his stupid doofus neighbours who try to bully him for being gay, and we find out that he wants to drop out of college and become a professional dancer. Mitch Hewer does a brilliant job fleshing out the character of Maxxie, and he gets a phenomenally exciting, funny and sexy scene towards the end. All we can say is: don't miss the return of Skins, E4 AND Channel 4 in February. We promise you will not be disappointed
von Waterboy
#438073
Hannah spricht über die Dreharbeiten an ihrer Episode.

These days, at the moment, we are filming my episode (along with the finale), which is absolutely my favourite time of doing a series of Skins. Being at work all day, every day, and then coming home too tired to do anything other than eat, learn your lines and then go to bed ready to get up at 6 the next morning is, quite honestly, the most glorious thing.

Directing this,
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my episode 9
,is Charles Martin. Although we all tend to get on really well with all the directors we've had, on both series, you do tend to form a slightly closer relationship with the director who does your episode. I definitely remember Kaya referring to Adam Smith, who directed episode 8 last year, as her director, and there's quite a lot of accuracy in that (though of course he was also Larissa's and Joe’s). So the person who directs your episode is going to be a very important part of your enjoyment of and success in working on it, and so obviously I wanted Charles Martin to be wonderful. And he is.

The fact that he won a Bafta the other weekend and brought it into work on my second day filming with him (I got to hold it – they’re very heavy) was certainly very impressive, but really is only the icing on the cake. I’m learning from an incredible amount and he’s kind of forcing me not to be so scared of the camera as I am. I generally have this tendency to sort of hide my face and find things to fiddle with because I get nervous, and I find it very hard to properly hold a gaze towards someone if the camera is in my peripheral vision. But he’s stopping me from doing that, and sometimes even putting the camera right in my face and really not letting me shy away from it. It’s so great to be taken out of my comfort zone and hopefully to give a better performance as a result.

I'm really really really enjoying this final block.
von Waterboy
#440949
bin ich hier alleinunterhalter ^^ :lol: :shock:



okay offzielle ( laut Britischen News )


SKINS SERIES 2 returns to E4 on 14th February 2008 - 10.00 pm

das übrigens pünktlich zum Tag der liebe :lol:

also noch 24 Tage 8)
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von Poffel
#440953
danke für diese news :-) *mitunterhalt*
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von Florixx
#440961
Supi :)
Da bin ich sogar noch im Lande :)
von Waterboy
#442417
Skins Series 2 startet jetzt doch schon am 11.Februar :wink:
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von Florixx
#442439
Noch besser :D
von Waterboy
#444828
Skins Artikel

The kids are alright

The cult tv drama Skins had us open-mouthed last year – were teens really this insouciant, this cool, this knowing? On the eve of the new series, Paul Flynn reports on a cast that gets to the heart of the youth of today


Nick is sitting on a sofa, topless, fiddling his way through an iPod. Joseph and Mike are tucking into a Domino’s pizza.

Larissa is tying up an impressive, limited-edition Nike high-top, and Hannah is fiddling with her hair. As 18-year-olds go, the Skins cast are pretty much behaving to type.

On screen, the story is more dramatic: they pop pills, trash their parents’ houses, drive cars into lakes, struggle with anorexia and develop uncontrollable crushes on one another. Yup, they’re badly behaved teens, but they are also bright, beautiful and cool – and the show is surprising not for what they get up to, but for the insouciant, knowing and frighteningly assured way they behave. They are questioning, perceptive and nonconformist. If you’ve encountered any teenagers recently, you’ll recognise the type.

With the first series of Skins last year, Channel 4 took a bold step on behalf of teenage Britain. It set about creating a show that would not just reflect a generation, but also refuse to patronise it – characters who not only looked like Bristol teenagers, but spoke, dressed, had casual sex and socialised like them. Postwatershed, they were allowed liberal measures of partying, a groovy soundtrack and a vernacular that was shaped with their peer group in mind. What This Life did a decade ago for 1990s metropolitan twentysomethings, Skins is now doing for Noughties teens. It has become its own moment.

Of the actual teens, Nicholas Hoult was the only “name” attached to the project, having previously starred as Hugh Grant’s odd-looking child friend in the adaptation of Nick Hornby’s About a Boy. Hoult swaggers his way through Skins series one as Tony, the amoral, cocksure lothario. He plays the sort of urban male who has matured under the pop-cultural preeminence of Robbie Williams and David Beckham: the type who appears to be able to make sexual advances to a table leg, if the fancy takes him. Hoult might be Skins’ most recognisable face, but this was a group effort. And as the season aired, the group started to recognise that the show didn’t just appeal to, but actually meant something to their peers. “You’d find yourself at a party with your friends, and someone would say, ‘Oh, this is a bit Skins,’ ’’ Hoult says.

“There was a time before Skins when teenagers only had American drama to watch,” says Hannah Murray. “But in programmes like The OC, you see the edgy characters talking about smoking, rather than doing it. It can’t deliver, which leaves it in a strange place.”

Murray gave a head-turning performance as Cassie, a messy anorexic who ended up with Sid, a full 10 notches below her in the looks stakes. “I read the script and fell in love with it. I thought, this isn’t about a girl who is anorexic. You don’t have to be anorexic to get it, you only have to understand what it is to be lonely. It was a brilliant piece about loneliness.” And what current teenager, or former teenager, doesn’t know that feeling?

The series invited a similarly casual relationship with narcotics. Joseph Dempsie was cast as Chris, the pill-popping party boy. “Chris is supposed to be a huge druggie, but doing loads of pills just touches on an aspect of him,” he says. “If this had been made 10 years ago, there probably would have been some moral obligation for the TV producers to give him a bad pill and put him in hospital. But it’s different now, and Skins just gets that. People do go out and have good nights on pills without dying. Teen life isn’t quite as bad as tabloid morality has it. That’s why teenagers like Skins. Not that we’re trying to encourage that stuff or anything, but it’s part of reality.”

The cast love this about Skins. Rightly so – it elevates them above the black-and-white moralising of soap, without stinting on the fun. “There aren’t warning adverts after the show, which I think is important,” says Mike Bailey, who plays Sid. “There isn’t some voice coming on after the credits saying, ‘If you’re affected by these issues, then phone this number.’ That’s patronising to the audience. It isn’t issue-led, it’s led by the characters.”
versteckter Inhalt:
For series two, things have become a whole lot darker. “It is about boys and girls turning into men and women,” says Bailey.

Tony had been knocked down by a bus in the gripping finale of the first series. He isn’t dead, but he is altered – partially handicapped mentally and physically. Again, his redemption is located in a moral grey area. “I don’t even know if I like Tony as a person,” Hoult muses. “He is cocky, difficult, arrogant. I love the way that being hit by a bus doesn’t redeem him; it doesn’t make him a good person. It’s more complicated than that.” Life, you might say, is more complicated than that.

All the cast agree that the show has hit a recognition button for its audience, which, aside from the rollicking drama and rapid editing, is ultimately its triumph. “It doesn’t try to be hip and young,” says Larissa Wilson, who plays the uptight Jal. “It just is. Everyone would trail off if it was trying too hard.”

Hoult pinpoints it more sharply. “As I read the scripts and learnt about the characters, I realised I could point to somebody I knew and say ‘Yep, they’re like that.’ ’’

Skins series two starts on E4 on Monday, February 11, at 10pm. It is repeated on Channel 4 on Thursdays at 10.30pm

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von Waterboy
#445382
Großes Update für SKINS Series 2


es viel neues für Skins Series 2


Skins Series 2 - Trailer 2x01


ACHTUNG extreme Spoiler !!!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fMk-AD4vWwk



Michelle/Sid Szene 2x01

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDl0e7HfvTc



MAxxies Dad SZene 2x01

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YW8FL7bOTSw



Maxxie Dancing SZene 2x01

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VMuBXiQNMYA



The Lost Weeks: Chris

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UAG9EYjG9Os


The Lost Weeks: Anwar

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gx0bgy6hIms


Skins gewinnt Award

BROADCAST AWARDS 2008 – WINNERS

Best Drama Series or Serial

Skins, Company Pictures for E4
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von MeGaBlitz
#445435
Ooooh supi danke Waterboy für die vielen Infos. Der Trailer ist besonders gut. Es macht den Anschein als würde sich extrem viel tun. Boah ich freu mich schon sooo sehr auf die neue Staffel. unglaublich.

mvg, meGa
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von Valleyman
#445460
hab die lost weeks von michelle vorher auch nochnicht gesehen gehabt ... das sieht aus als wuerde der director Andrew Blake heissen :twisted: :lol:
von Waterboy
#446002
Neue Spoiler und Series 2 Gesamttext

INTRODUCTION BY JAMIE BRITTAIN, SERIES CO-CREATOR AND WRITER

So. It's been almost exactly a year since series one of Skins launched on E4. The first episode of the series attracted one of the biggest audiences ever seen on a digital channel and inspired reviews both damning (one) and glowing (the rest). Since then we've seen Skins grow into something entirely unexpected. We've watched the internet community expand into fan sites, forums, and Facebook groups. We've put on crazy parties, invited the fans along and filmed the results. We've been shown on Channel 4. We've released a soundtrack album, a calendar. We've seen the once-unknown stars of the show mobbed by fans. And we've been shown on television in France, Australia, Italy and Slovenia.

Not bad going for a low-budget show cooked up in my Dad's kitchen. Now all we had to do was make the second series of Skins even bigger, even better. Pretty much as soon as series two was commissioned, co-creator Bryan Elsley and I were back in the office with the creative team, scribbling away on a white board. With a year’s worth of experience, we knew we could match if not better the first series. Changes needed to be made though. The creative team needed to be expanded. We had more shows to do this year (ten episodes), and we wanted to fully exploit our investment in new and emerging British talent.

This paid off in the shape Daniel Kaluuya, now 18, from Camden. He was quickly commissioned to write a script after spending a year in our writers group and has turned out episode eight, one of my favourites of the year. I'm pretty sure he's one of the youngest people, if not the youngest, ever to have written an hour of television drama. Other additions included Sally Tatchell, a ferociously talented writer fresh from working on The Bill, and Lucy Kirkwood, a witty and sharp young playwright whose work is soon to be put on at the Bush Theatre. Both have written superb scripts for us this year. They join myself, Ben Schiffer, Jack Thorne and Bryan Elsley to make up the core writing team behind Skins. We also have our brilliant young contributors, not to mention the comedians Josie Long and Robin Ince. In other words, one of the most diverse teams working in television drama.
versteckter Inhalt:
Other changes this year are new cast member Aimee-Ffion Edwards, playing the mysterious and conflicted Sketch. There are also a ton of new guest actors and comedians; Bill Bailey, Harry Enfield, Shane Richie, Sean Pertwee, Geoff Hughes, Mark Heap, John Thomson, Fiona Allen, Peter Capaldi, Josie Lawrence, Arabella Weir, Josie Long, Mark Monero and Kevin Eldon. We didn’t ever dream we’d persuade such a talented bunch join our show. And this series sees new directors including BAFTA award-winning Charles Martin, and Harry Enfield who is making his television directing debut.
So. What is series two about?
versteckter Inhalt:
Well, there’s arguments, make ups, make outs, violence, deaths, songs, rapping, music, dancing, drugs, sex, tears, smiles, laughter, posh kids, white kids, black kids, exam results, parents, relatives, holidays and Bill Bailey dancing with a dog. Sometimes light, sometimes dark, always funny, series two is ten hours of ambitious, emotionally-charged television drama that portrays the complex and vivid lives of a group of characters on the edge of adulthood, as they grow and develop.
It’s been an immense amount of fun to make, and it will be even more fun to see how it is received by our much-loved fans who drive a very active and responsive online community, and those beyond.


die neuen Skins Personen

versteckter Inhalt:
Sketch will be played by Aimee-Ffion Edwards

SKETCH (Aimee-Ffion Edwards) What do little girl's dream of? Sugar and Spice and all things Maxxie. So what if he's gay? In Sketch's world, dreams do come true. Even if you have to force them a little. The geek who no-one notices, Sketch has plans for everyone.


Scarlett will be played by Sia Berkeley
Scarlett will be Michelle's new stepsister and she gonna be trying it on with her friends, watch out Sid!
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von Danny
#447325
Waterboy hat geschrieben:Skins Series 2 startet jetzt doch schon am 11.Februar :wink:
Sehr schön, dann werde ich am Samstag doch glatt mal wieder mit 1x01 anfangen um mich wieder reinzufinden :D
von Waterboy
#447425
jeep ich werd mir auch nochmal alle Folgen an nem WE anschauen und in guten alten Erinnerungen weilen


wobei ich mir wohl bis zum 11 nicht sicher sein werd ob ich die Staffel wirklich jetzt schon schaue und sie mir nicht lieber aufhebe, ich werds aus dem Bauch heraus entscheiden :wink: ^


SKINS PROMO

(richtige Größe sehen - klick rauf :wink: )

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von Waterboy
#448229
Noch 10 Tage .....

extrem viel Presse stuff kommt jetzt raus und das durchlesen lohnt sich :lol: und irgendwer könnt auch ruhig mal schreiben :D


Behind The Scenes On E4's Series 2 Trailer!

Skins starts on E4 on Mon 11 Feb at 10pm.

The return of Skins is marked by a moody, cinematic trailer. Take an exclusive peek behind the scenes for a few hints on what's to come in series 2.

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Mike Bailey Interview
Sometimes people get lucky. Plucked from obscurity at a college audition, Mike Bailey landed the role of hapless, lovable Sid and has enjoyed considerable acclaim since cutting edge teen drama Skins hit screens last year. Refreshingly though, the young actor keeps his feet on the ground.

Were you expecting Skins to be such a success?
No. I must admit it's kind of a weird thing, seeing as it was my first thing as well, you don't know what it's going to be like when it comes out. It did really well for itself and I'm very happy.

Has the series had a big impact on your life?
It's definitely made my life a bit different; you know walking down the street is kind of a different thing nowadays. But it's been nice to have people come up to you and say "I really like the show" and everything. You get the occasional t**t coming up to you, but yeah...

What's it like to work with the guest actors?
Wicked. Obviously everyone has their own special friendship with the actors that play their parents. It's a really good laugh. I really wanted to meet Bill Bailey but I didn't get a chance to.

What's the atmosphere like on set?
We all get along really well. We all see each other outside of filming and we all talk to each other since it's finished. Even though it is a job, it doesn't feel like one, we have too much of a laugh.


There are claims that some of the cast won't be returning for series 3.
Yeah. Funny isn't it? I read that in The Daily Star that we'd all been fired by Channel 4. I did laugh. It's one of those things, you know. Our contracts haven't been renewed because we haven't been commissioned yet.


It's also been reported that you're embarking on a singing career.
Yeah I read that in The Sun as well. No. No. Hell no.

Was it you singing 'Wild World' in the final episode?
It was. It was 100% me. Jo Whiley played it on Radio 1 and said it wasn't me and I was very unhappy with her.

So there's always a back up plan…
Well, I hate my voice. I couldn't watch that bit so I don't think I'll jump onto the singing bandwagon anytime soon.

What's next for you? Have you got anything else in the pipeline?
No, I don't. I'm doing this and then I'm unemployed. But that's the whole thing with acting. I'll audition and see what happens. I had a few offers at the end of series one but I wanted to finish off college. If it doesn't happen I'll be signing on at the job centre.

Interview: Mike Bailey #2


Skins Up
Packed full of drugs, sex and controversy, Skins brings something new to teen-based television. Far from the cliché-ridden Hollyoaks or the drama of The O.C, this show is honest and raw. As an edgier second series hits screens, can the success continue?

Mike Bailey has enjoyed critical acclaim for his portrayal of hapless, lovable Sid. We caught up with him during filming to find out what's in store for our favourite troubled teens.

Set six months after series one's musical finale, it's clear from the outset that Skins is darker than before. [spoiler]Everyone's lives are falling apart while leading man Tony desperately struggles to recover from his run-in with a bus. Mentally and physically altered, the role is a departure not only for the character, but also for the actor playing him.[/spoiler] "It was a big change for Nick [Hoult]," explains Mike, "he had to go through some classes, he dealt with it very well."

[spoiler]While Tony's friends attempt to be supportive, two in particular can't handle the situation leading to inevitable stupidity. How stupid? "Very," Mike promised, "There's a little Sid and Michelle story line coming up." Viewers were on tenterhooks waiting for one of TV's oddest couples to get it on; surely Sid can't have forgotten about Cassie so soon? "Cassie's in Scotland," says Mike, "The whole long distance thing never works. In episode three, which is Sid's episode, you kind of see what happens with these two."[/spoiler]

Continuing its tradition of adding big names to the mix, Bill Bailey (who appears as Maxxie's dad), Shane Richie, Sean Pertwee and John Thompson are on the roster of guest actors. Harry Enfield returns to his role as Tony's dad whilst also taking a step behind the camera to direct an episode (a "very, very surreal" experience apparently).

[spoiler]"Last year there was a lot more messing around, this time you're doing more emotional stuff." Mike confessed. In the first few episodes alone characters are faced with homophobia, emotional breakdowns, stalkers and abandonment issues. And the controversy continues; "I think [the writers] are trying to get away with a lot more. There's a musical in episode two which is basically called 'Osama: The Musical'. It's f***ing awesome." :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: 8) [/spoiler]

An already innovative approach to teen angst and rebellion takes another twist, but the balance of humour with the harsh reality of entering adult life remains - and a little dramatic license is thrown in for good measure. Undoubtedly, Skins will continue to be a success – along with the talent behind the show. Unfortunately, series like this will always be accused of glamourising the Noughties-teen lifestyle, yet it's popularity demonstrates that the show delivers an accurate, if a little ironic, representation of life at 18.

Don't miss Skins series 2 on E4 from Mon 11 Feb, 10pm.


Skins Presse Artikel

Sex, drugs, raves: it's Skins!

THE second series of Skins is coming soon to E4 and it is set to be as thrilling and shocking as the first.

Season one ended with Tony being hit by a bus and season two saw his family and pals plunged into further disarray.

The first episode focuses on the ambitions of gay Maxxie, who wants to be a dancer. But the show is stolen by Bill Bailey as Maxxie’s dad, a gruff Bristol builder whose hobby is line-dancing with his trained dog!

And the show is set to propel its star Nicholas Hoult, who plays Tony, further into mainstream fame as one of Britain’s brightest young actors.

“People do come up to you and say they like the show, which is great,” he said. “But you do get the odd weirdo who doesn’t like the character and he’ll start shouting at you and swearing!”

And it looks like Nicholas, who shot to fame as a young lad playing opposite Hugh Grant in About A Boy, is taking fame in his stride.

“You do get some strange things happening. I was in Reading station the other day and some bloke was trying to film me buying a ticket.

“I busted him and he tried to make out that he was filming the ticket machine!”

The first episode in season two centres on Maxxie’s battles with his dad (Bill Bailey). He wants his son to follow him into the building trade, but Maxxie has other ideas.

“Bill Bailey was hilarious,” said Mitch Hewer. “You’d be about to do a serious scene and he would say something and you would be trying not to laugh on camera.

“It was great working with him.”
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