Iceland Foods: Life in the Freezer Cabinet

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Iceland Foods:
Life in the Freezer Cabinet
Iceland Foods.png
Genre Factual
Directed by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • James Rogan
  • Max Shapira
Starring Malcolm Walker
Narrated by Ashley Jensen
Composer(s) Mat Davidson
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 1
No. of episodes 3 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Lucy Hillman
  • Samantha Anstiss
Producer(s) <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Alisa Pomeroy
  • Max Shapira
Running time 60 minutes
Production company(s) Films of Record
Release
Original network <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Original release 21 October (2013-10-21) –
4 November 2013 (2013-11-04)
External links
Website
Production website

Iceland Foods: Life in the Freezer Cabinet is a British documentary television series about the Iceland supermarket chain that was first broadcast on BBC Two on 21 October 2013. The three-part series was co-produced with the Open University.

Production

On 6 June 2013 Janice Hadlow, controller of BBC Two, announced the series along with several other documentaries.[1] Filming took place for around a year and includes the supermarket's reaction to the 2013 meat adulteration scandal.[2]

Lucy Hillman, an executive producer for the series, said:

Films of Record has a strong reputation for obtaining exclusive access to the subjects of its documentaries, and after 30 years in the business the company is trusted more than ever with unlimited access to organisations to portray them responsibly.[3]

Episode list

# Title Directed by Original air date UK viewers
(millions)[4]
1 "Episode 1" James Rogan 21 October 2013 (2013-10-21) 2.43
Malcolm Walker, the CEO of Iceland, shows the importance of a happy workforce to Iceland. He delivers a £10,000 prize to the best-performing stores.[5][6]
2 "Episode 2" James Rogan 28 October 2013 (2013-10-28) 2.34
Iceland deals with the 2013 meat adulteration scandal. A new store opens in Treorchy, Wales, and Alastair Crimp tries to come up with a good name for his product.[7]
3 "Episode 3" James Rogan 4 November 2013 (2013-11-04) 2.39
Iceland embarks on 'refresh' to boost sales following a slow start to the year. The company attempts to create a new advert but are undecided which line to take. Malcolm tries to simplify the stores and a couple get married, serving an Iceland buffet.[8]

Reception

File:Iceland shop in Jersey.JPG
An Iceland store in Jersey

Ratings

Overnight figures show that the first episode was watched by 2.06 million viewers on BBC Two.[9] Official ratings raised the figure to 2.43 million.[4] It was watched by 8.7% of the television viewers during broadcast.[9] The second and third episodes had 9.7% and 9.8% audience shares respectively.[10][11]

Critical reception

Gerard Gilbert, writing for The Independent, called Malcolm Walker "a television natural."[12][13] Andrew Collins of The Guardian called the series a "reasonably fair-minded, hierarchically democratic and only quasi-promotional snapshot of Iceland's working life".[14] The Daily Mail called it a "hilarious new reality show" and added that the first episode "deliver a few laughs".[15] Time Out gave the first episode three stars out of five and said: "It’s a successful structure that creates tension and intrigue, but unless forthcoming episodes look at potentially uncomfortable issues, this is in danger of being little more than a three-hour advert."[16]

The Metro's Keith Watson said it "would have made a fine sketch show" and also gave it three out of five stars.[17] Sam Wollaston of The Guardian wrote in his review:

I think I'm making it – the programme – sound better than it is. This kind of docusoap about an institution – with a hint of sarcasm in the actor's narration (Ashley Jensen here) to ward off accusations that it's little more than a promotional film – feels very (at least) 10 years ago. The recent call centre one maybe just got away with it because the boss there, Nev Wilshire, was so colourful and appalling [sic]. Malcolm Walker simply doesn't have the personality to carry it. Too grey, like Alastair's prawns in bacon.[18]

Radio Times said Walker "doesn't build himself up as a personality".[19] Emma Willis, the head of documentary commissioning at the BBC, said this documentary was one to look out for.[3] The Independent said there "won't have time to fully explore the relationship between food and class in the coming episodes."[20] New Statesman contributor Rachel Cooke said she found all the "details fascinating and funny. But beyond the comedy, this series has blazed with real pathos and insight."[21]

References

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External links