The BD9 transfer is crisp. The South African location is lush, the night-vision confessionals are clear (no excessive pixelation), and the sound design—especially the creepy jungle ambiance—adds tension. You'll appreciate the high bitrate during water-based trials. What Doesn't Work 1. Pacing Drags in the Middle Episodes 6–9 feel repetitive. Same arguments about chores, same “I miss my family” confessionals, same types of trials. A 10-episode season could have been trimmed to 8 without losing much.
"I'm not a celebrity. I'm just a guy who kicked a ball and then got paid too much." — Barry Hall, during a particularly awful eating trial.
Without a strong comedic presence, the jungle can become a whinge-fest. Creasey serves as the audience's surrogate: he's dramatic, lazy, and hilariously honest about hating every second of being hungry and dirty. His commentary during food trials ("I'd rather eat my own foot") is priceless. The BD9 transfer is crisp
Julia Morris and Chris Brown are fine, but they're still finding their rhythm. Julia's puns land about 60% of the time; Chris is forgettable as the straight man. Later seasons improve their chemistry, but here, they sometimes talk over emotional moments.
Lauren Brant's homesickness feels real, not played for cameras. When Maureen McCormick talks about aging and feeling irrelevant after The Brady Bunch , it's unexpectedly touching. The show finds a balance between silly challenges and human vulnerability. What Doesn't Work 1
Warne enters midway as a "jungle intruder"—he immediately stirs up tension, flirts shamelessly, and teaches the camp how to play poker with rice grains. His larger-than-life personality injects energy just when the season needs it.
Note: "BD9" typically refers to a high-quality Blu-ray rip (often 720p or 1080p with efficient compression). This review covers the content of the season itself, with a technical note on the format. When I'm a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here! Australia premiered in 2015, it faced a unique challenge: the UK original was already a juggernaut, and Australian viewers were skeptical of a local version. Season 1 needed to prove that Aussie celebrities could be just as entertaining, vulnerable, and dramatic when dropped into the South African jungle (yes, the show films in South Africa, not Australia). The result? A surprisingly strong debut that balances gross-out trials, genuine camaraderie, and just enough conflict to keep things interesting. A 10-episode season could have been trimmed to
I'm a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here! Australia Season 1 is a rock-solid debut. It lacks the polish and star power of later seasons (or the UK original), but it nails the fundamentals: gross challenges, authentic camp dynamics, and a few unforgettable personalities. If you're a completionist or an Aussie reality fan, the BD9 is the best way to watch—clear, stable, and rewatchable. For casual viewers, start with Season 3 or 4, which are stronger. But Season 1 deserves credit for laying the groundwork.