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TV Shows & Series: Best "alcoholic" TV Shows/Series


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11 TV shows/series found (page 1/1):

Prime Suspect(1991-2006)

3.9/5 (with 38 votes)

Highly skilled Detective Inspector Jane Tennison battles to prove herself in a male dominated world.

Directed by Christopher Menaul - With Helen Mirren

Time Gentlemen Please(2000-2002)

30min per episode | Comedy
3.6/5 (with 6 votes)

The Pub Landlord’s rules are a pint for the fella and a glass of white wine or fruit based drink for the lady. It might be the 21st century but the landlord’s gaff is the last bastion of all things normal. He ain’t interested in change. It’s just the way things are, and don’t you or anybody else go questioning it.

Bottom(1991-1995)

FSK: 18+ years
| 30min per episode | Comedy
4.0/5 (with 56 votes)

Richie Richard (socially awkward, sexually inexperienced) and Eddie Hitler (carefree alcoholic) are two social outcasts living on the dole. Trapped together in a squalid flat in Hammersmith, London they are perpetually skint, bored and sexually frustrated. They spend their days scheming, bickering, and being nasty and sadistic to each other.

Time(2021-2023)

FSK: 16+ years
| 58min per episode | Drama
3.8/5 (with 81 votes)

Guilt, violence and impossible choices – what does it take to survive? Tense, gritty and heartbreaking – Jimmy McGovern's award-winning prison drama, with an all-star cast.

Rab C. Nesbitt(1990-2011)

30min per episode | Comedy
3.4/5 (with 12 votes)

BBC comedy series about Rab C. Nesbitt, a drunken, string vested layabout who lives with his long suffering wife Mary and his two sons in the working class area of Govan in Glasgow. When he's not getting drunk with his pals that include the devious, womanizing Jamesie Cotter. He's offering his philosophical outlook on life to whoever will listen.

With Gregor Fisher, Elaine Constance Smith, Andrew Fairlie, Eric Cullen, Tony Roper, Barbara Rafferty, ...

The Book of Daniel(2006)

1h per episode | Drama
3.6/5 (with 6 votes)

Rev. Daniel Webster, an unconventional Episcopalian priest who not only believes in Jesus, but actually sees him and discusses life with him, is challenged on many levels as he struggles to be a good husband, father and minister, while navigating an often rocky relationship with the church hierarchy.

Work Later, Drink Now(2021-2023)

38min per episode | Drama, Comedy
4.0/5 (with 13 votes)

Three single women in 30s gather and talk about everyday life from work to love. Nothing is more important to them than enjoying a drink after work.

London Irish(2013)

30min per episode | Comedy
3.8/5 (with 6 votes)

Old enough to know better… Young enough to do it anyway. Conor, his older sister Bronagh, best friend Packy and Niamh have just moved from Ireland to London, ready to shake this drunken haze and start life afresh with a clear head. The days of forgotten nights out, regrettable bedfellows and alcohol fueled bad decisions are over. Cheers to the adult life! Which starts now… soon… just as soon as they shake this hangover.

The Green Man(1990)

50min per episode
3.4/5 (with 4 votes)

An alcoholic pub landlord has visions of a 17th-century doctor of the occult, beginning a monumental clash between good and evil. Adapted from the novel by Kingsley Amis.

Inspector Koo(2021)

1h 10min per episode | Action & Adventure, Comedy, Drama, Mystery, Crime
3.6/5 (with 74 votes)

A reclusive ex-cop reenters the game as an insurance investigator, searching for clues in crime scenes perfectly staged by a serial killer in her midst.

Directed by Lee Jung-hum - With Lee Young-ae, Kim Hye-jun, Kim Hae-suk, Kwak Sun-young, Baek Sung-chul, Cho Hyun-chul, ...

Crapston Villas(1995-1998)

4.0/5 (with 2 votes)

Crapston Villas was a British animated television series, in which the characters were made from plasticine and filmed with stop motion clay animation. It was a comedy satire on inner-city London life, directed at a mature audience. It featured a set of characters, living in a grim apartment building in the fictional postcode of SE69, who were plagued by various dilemmas. Foul language, sex and violence are present.

Directed by Sarah Ann Kennedy