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The series' premise is that in the mid- 1980s, Garth Marenghi and his publisher Dean Learner made their own TV series on a shoestring budget. Set in Darkplace Hospital in Romford, Garth Marenghi's Darkplace tells of the adventures of Dr Rick Dagless, MD, as he fights the forces of darkness while simultaneously coping with the pressures of running a modern hospital. In spite of the programme's obvious flaws - wooden acting, cringe-making scripts and amazingly poor special effects, to name but three - both Marenghi and Learner still regard the series as a masterpiece. But nobody else does, which is why it's taken nearly 20 years to reach the screen.
Of course, in reality the series is a deliberate send-up both of the horror genre and of 1980s TV production. Each episode also includes interview sections set in the present-day, in which Marenghi and his co-stars comment on the show-within-the-show, which provides an extra layer of character comedy.
The show's stars are:
A few of other actors have recurring roles in the show-within-the-show: Kim Noble appears in every episode as "Jim", a hospital worker whose main function is simply to listen to Dagless reel off a lengthy speech and respond with a "yes" or other monosyllabic reply, and Julian Barratt appears in several episodes as the hospital's padre. Graham Linehan and Stephen Merchant also have minor recurring roles as the hospital porter and chef respectively.
Many of the show's jokes rely on the viewer recognising that the script reflects the views of the Garth Marenghi character, for example the characterisation of Dr Ascher as a frail woman liable to burst into tears at the slightest provocation, or the bizarre portrayal of the Scottish people in Scotch Mist.
The episodes broadcast to date are as follows (all written by Matthew Holness and Richard Ayoade, and directed by Richard Ayoade):