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Richard has some psychiatric inconveniences, he has a family who don't connect with him never. What's more, his past isn't great. He finds the solace in a gathering treatment hone. Be that as it may, his condition turns gravely when this treatment closes. In the wake of reasoning, he's produced another type of treatment through the Internet among the patients.
[Hang Ups] had moments of brilliance and moments of breakdown. But with endless scope for celeb cameos, with the likes of David Tennant, Jo Joyner and Paul Ritter still to come, there's plenty of potential.
If sometimes their issues are a little overblown, these brilliant improvised performances bring such a spontaneous authenticity that it's easy to forget you are not spying on a real session. It is also often hilarious.
It's possible to get this kind of comedy right. The brilliant Catastrophe, with Sharon Horgan and Rob Delaney, has proved that. But so far, Hang Ups has just left us dangling.
Mangan's performance is pitch-perfect, if you ask me, as was Steve Oram's as the Brummie psycho Neil, David Tennant's depressed, people-hating waiter and Grant's po-faced psychotherapist.