Creamerie Explained

Genre:Dark comedy
Dramedy
Post-apocalyptic fiction
Dystopian fiction
Thriller
Director:Roseanne Liang
Music:Mahuia Bridgman-Cooper
Country:New Zealand
Language:English
Num Series:2
Num Episodes:12
Executive Producer:Tony Ayres
Producer:Bronwynn Bakker
Company:Flat 3 Productions[1]
Network:TVNZ OnDemand
TVNZ 2

Creamerie is a black comedy web series from New Zealand that launched in 2021 on TVNZ OnDemand. It explores a world in which nearly all men have died from a virus, and three friends, played by Perlina Lau, J.J. Fong, and Ally Xue, run a dairy farm under the watchful eye of Wellness, the local governing body. The series was created by Lau, Fong, Xue, and director Roseanne Liang.[2]

Plot

Alex, Jaime and Pip are three friends living on a New Zealand dairy farm eight years after all men on Earth have been killed by a mysterious virus. An organisation called Wellness now runs their community and controls repopulation via lottery, using sperm saved from old sperm banks. The friends' lives are thrown into disarray when they encounter a man whom they assume to be the last surviving man in the world. As season 1 concludes and season 2 begins, they stumble upon a laboratory where some of the very few surviving men are being held hostage, tied to their chairs, gagged and naked, with pumping devices attached to their genitalia, extracting their semen which will then be used to impregnate women.[3]

Cast

Main

Recurring

Episodes

Source:

Season 2

Production

NZ On Air announced funding for the series in May 2019.[4] Filming began in and around the Auckland region, including West Auckland, in 2020, but was paused after six weeks when lockdowns for the COVID-19 pandemic began. Filming resumed with the implementation of masks, social distancing, and other precautions, and was completed in September 2020.[5]

In May 2022, Creamerie was renewed for a second season, which filmed from October 2022 to February 2023.[6] This second season was released domestically on July 14, with Australian and US release dates later in the summer.

Reception

Since the programme's premiere it has received critical acclaim, with critics praising the programme's humour, casting,[7] unique premise, and for the programme's ability to maintain a deft balance between its humorous and dramatic aspects. Positive comparisons were made to Y: The Last Man and The Handmaid's Tale; with many critics calling the programme an inversion of the latter. Although recurring criticisms of the programme was that it needed to put a bit more emphasis on its dramatic moments given the nature of the story it is trying to tell and that it needed to provide more backstory.[8]

Writing for The Sydney Morning Herald, Kylie Northover called Creamerie "masterful, with deadpan humour and a terrific cast."[9] James Croot of Stuff NZ wrote a glowing review, stating "Creamerie delivers full-bodied and flavoured, adult humour with no trace of cheese."[10] Chelsea McLaughlin from Mamamia gave the programme a positive review writing that "Creamerie builds a fascinating world and introduces us to three incredibly real, well-rounded characters in Alex, Jamie and Pip. It tackles some really dark topics and seems to know exactly when to lean in and lean out of its hilarity... but you'll be left thinking about it long after the final credits."[11] In her rave review from ScreenHub, Mel Campbell said, "The plotting is surprisingly suspenseful, whipping up dollops of twists in every episode.... Ultimately, this speculative treat is intellectually substantial – and emotionally satisfying."[12]

In his commendatory second season review critic Mike Hale from The New York Times said "What distinguishes “Creamerie” is how seamlessly it incorporates the raunchy, silly, casually comic vibe of those online shorts (along with their female point of view) into a sci-fi-series framework. It’s a clever but unassuming show, which is why its package of laughs, sentiment, consciousness raising and low-budget Saturday-serial action has considerable appeal." He went on to praise actress Tandi Wright's performance stating that her acting was "Excellent".[13]

Awards

Creamerie won the NZ On Air Best Drama Series award at the 2021 New Zealand Television Awards.[14]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Creamerie . Flat 3 Productions . July 17, 2023.
  2. News: Greene . Steve . 'Creamerie' Brings a New Emotional Spin to a Fictional World Without Men . January 2, 2022 . IndieWire . December 9, 2021.
  3. Web site: Goldbart . Max . 2023-06-14 . ‘Creamerie’: Hulu/TVNZ Drop Trailer For Season 2 Of Dystopian Dramedy . 2023-06-16 . Deadline . en-US.
  4. Web site: A clean sweep for women creatives in latest NZ On Air drama and comedy funding . 2024-08-14 . www.nzonair.govt.nz . en.
  5. News: Kundu . Tamal . Where Is Creamerie Filmed? . January 10, 2022 . The Cinemaholic . December 8, 2021.
  6. Web site: 2022-06-02 . 'Culture Is On The Budgetary Margins' - Breaking Down Creative NZ's Investment Approach . 2022-11-05 . The Big Idea . en.
  7. News: TV review: Creamerie is ideal iso escapism . March 3, 2023 . InDaily.
  8. Web site: Review: Creamerie is the post-pandemic comedy we need right now . The Spinoff . April 19, 2021 . March 3, 2023.
  9. News: In a flip on Handmaid's Tale, women are in charge in this five-star series . January 2, 2022 . The Sydney Morning Herald . May 26, 2021.
  10. Web site: Creamerie: TVNZ's post-apocalyptic, anti-Handmaid's Tale offers up dark delights . Stuff (company) . April 20, 2021 . March 1, 2023.
  11. Web site: Should I Watch It? SBS on Demand's addictive new series Creamerie, where all the men are dead. . Mammamia . May 26, 2021 . March 1, 2023.
  12. Web site: Campbell . Mel . TV Review: Creamerie is a Kiwi treat . ScreenHub . 5 July 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230301123809/https://www.screenhub.com.au/news/reviews/tv-review-creamerie-is-a-kiwi-treat-262653-1429694/ . 1 March 2023 . 25 May 2021.
  13. News: ‘Creamerie’ Review: Where the Boys Aren’t. July 26, 2023. The New York Times . July 18, 2023.
  14. Web site: 2022-03-01 . 2021 New Zealand Television Winners Announced . 2022-11-05 . Scoop . en.