The comedy series tells of a man named Warren, who was forced to move from the south to Preston when his father, Ann, was sick to take care of him. It looks like a new life for this man where he suddenly finds himself living in an area he does not like, doing something he does not like in a city he does not like. Warren loves Ann, and somehow, sees Ann is always good at Warren where the life goes on between them dramatically where they turn into different positions.
It starred Martin Clunes as a grouchy middle-aged driving instructor and he was just as resistible here as he had been in the awful Men Behaving Badly nearly three decades ago.
There's no political message, no right-on characters, no urban edge. There are, however, plenty of straightforward laughs. If you still chuckle at repeats of George And Mildred, you'll enjoy Warren.
Warren is at once underwritten and, worse, overwritten. There is a failure to follow through with the comic potential in a southerner trapped in the north.