Cold Lazarus is a television play written by Dennis Potter shortly before his death, and broadcast after it in 1994. It forms a pair with the television play Karaoke. The two plays were filmed as a single production by the same team; both were directed by Renny Rye and feature Albert Finney as the writer Daniel Feeld. Both plays were unique in being co-productions between the BBC and their rivals Channel 4, something Potter had expressly requested before his death.
In a distant dystopian future, researchers study the cryonically-preserved head of Daniel Feeld, a twentieth-century writer, attempting to extract and record his memories in a form that can be broadcast as the latest version of reality television.
As they seek out the writer's most explicit and painful (and therefore most marketable) memories, one of the researchers becomes convinced that the head is regaining consciousness during their experiments.
Meanwhile, beyond the laboratory, other forces gather.
ColdLazarus is the companion piece to Karaoke (see our review), and the last work Dennis Potter wrote as he struggled against his fatal illness.
ColdLazarus is set in the year 2368.
A group of scientists at a cryogenic laboratory have come close to being able to revive the memories of a preserved brain, projecting it in fits and spurts on a huge screen at the lab.