Critical reviews Reviews for episode 1 were mixed, commenting that it was milder in its satire than they expected; Ed Cumming in
The Telegraph stated "Perhaps it just needs some time to settle. Though it was very funny in parts, the first episode of
Twenty Twelve suggests that the series, like the actual cost of the Olympics, might hit slightly wide of its ample target." Likewise, Sam Wollaston in
The Guardian suggested that due to the participation of Seb Coe it was "on song": "Biting satire this isn't. It's nibbling satire, delivered by
Garra Rufa fish...
The Thick of It is a lot more entertaining...I don't think that politicians were removing their shoes, rolling up their trousers and queuing up for cameos in
The Thick of It".
Brian Viner, writing in
The Independent was more impressed by Coe's cameo: "There is surely no other country in the world that would laugh at itself in this way, even persuading the vast project's principal mover-and-shaker, in our case the Rt Hon Lord Coe KBE, to participate in the joke". He went on to commend the series "...I was hooked anyway, by the mischief in John Morton's script and the beautifully nuanced performances of, in particular, Hugh Bonneville and Jessica Hynes". Reviewing the series as a whole, Viner stated that the series was "always amusing and sporadically very funny... It's hard to think of a spoof documentary that has been more fortuitously timed than
Twenty Twelve."
Real-life similarities It was widely commented upon in the press that the day after the broadcast of the first episode, which features problems with the 1,000-day countdown clock, the real-life clock in
Trafalgar Square broke soon after it had been launched by
Lord Coe and London mayor
Boris Johnson. An additional coincidence occurred when some of the first athletes to arrive in London for the Olympics suffered delays; their bus drivers were unfamiliar with London and unable to find the Olympic Park, in scenes that closely resembled the plot of episode 2.
The Games plagiarism accusation Twenty Twelve has been criticised as bearing a strong resemblance to the Australian mockumentary series
The Games, a similar series set before the 2000 Sydney Olympics. Writer of
The Games John Clarke said, "We worked very hard on that project and we had long conversations with these people who've now done a show like that in Britain". The BBC denied claims of plagiarism. "It is a very different show, the only similarities between them are that they are both set around the Olympics," a corporation source said. Clarke's own website later made a reference to the dispute by describing himself and writing partner as "run[ning] a charitable institute supplying formats to British television". ==Awards and nominations==