Essayer OR - Gratuit
Could it be magic?
The Guardian Weekly
|February 06, 2026
As his latest series, Small Prophets, lands, Mackenzie Crook says he's 'fascinated by stories of ordinary people that something extraordinary happens to'
In Small Prophets, BBC Two’s new six-parter, Mackenzie Crook plays Gordon, the manager of a huge DIY store. Sometimes it feels like falling through time, because it’s like watching Gareth, Crook’s breakthrough part in The Office, a quarter of a century on. “Pedantic and jobsworthy, he could be Gareth grown up, just with more disappointment, without the West Country accent,” says Crook. “I wrote Gordon as a monster, but by the end, I was actually quite fond of him.” In person, Crook has a jumpy, modest energy that when he was young, on screen, used to look like nerves, but now looks more like curiosity.
Gordon isn’t the hero of Small Prophets; he's not even the antihero. This is the story of Michael, played by Pearce Quigley, in a performance so comically, subtly heartbreaking that you can rarely figure out what you’re melancholy about. Fiftyish, bearded, a twitcher and a hoarder, he works in the DIY store and visits his dad Brian (a lovely performance from Michael Palin) every afternoon. Michael has had a huge tragedy in the recent past - his girlfriend Clea disappeared without trace seven years earlier - but he would never make a song and dance about it.
At first sight, it could be a delicate and truthful rumination on middle age. “Of course it is,” says Crook. “I’m a little bit obsessed by being middle-aged. It crept up on me. Everything seems to have been 20 years ago. It’s a surprise to find myself with grownup children.”
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition February 06, 2026 de The Guardian Weekly.
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