The 'This Is Going To Hurt' Trailer Laughs So It Doesn't Cry

The 'This Is Going To Hurt' Trailer Laughs So It Doesn't Cry

Adam Kay's debut novel, This Is Going To Hurt, a comedic look at the dark side of the National Health Service focused on gynecology and obstetrics ward, was a national best-seller when it was released in the U.K. The TV adaptation, which premiered on the BBC earlier this year, snagged 6.1 million viewers for the premiere. The hit series now crosses the pond to arrive simultaneously on AMC+ and Sundance Now in June, and the first trailer for the series has major "laughing to keep from crying" energy.

Kay was already known in the entertainment world before spearheading the project based on his work, having written for Mitchell and Webb and Mrs. Brown's Boys. He was the lead member of the one-hit-wonder group Amateur Transplants, whose song "London Underground" was a parody hit in 2005. But he's most famous for This Is Going To Hurt, a collection of diary entries he kept as "reflective practice" during his NHS medical training. Kay quit the NHS in 2010 after a traumatizing stillborn experience was the last straw. He decided to publish his experiences after Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, Jeremy Hunt, made headlines for calling junior doctors "greedy" over their contract disputes with the NHS.

Sadly, Kay's book didn't arrive until after Hunt's victory, forcing junior doctors to accept the NHS contract. However, the protest impulse that led Kay to publish in the first place is present in the series and the first trailer. That's because Kay wrote and executive produced all seven episodes; Ben Whishaw (A Very English Scandal), who stars as Adam in the series, co-executive produced. Lucy Forbes (The End of the F***ing World) and Tom Kingsley (the U.K. version of Ghosts) split directing duties, with Forbes helming Episodes 1-4 and Kingsley helming the last three. The show is a co-production between the BBC and AMC Networks.