Posts Tagged ‘suspense’

TitleIt’s 1965 and a teenage schoolgirl from Oxford has disappeared and is presumed dead. A very young Constable Endeavour Morse, who dropped out of Oxford, is temporarily assigned to the Oxford branch to support the investigation.

The story opens with Morse typing up is resignation letter, ready to leave law enforcement. But he soon discovers that police work is what he’s made for. Though he’s not readily accepted by the more experienced police officers on the case (he ends up working alone for the most part), they soon discover that he knows what he’s talking about. His superior, Detective Inspector Fred Thursday, recognizes Morse’s talents and takes Endeavour under his wing.Morse and Thursday

Unfortunately, I have yet to see any episodes of Inspector Morse, the series of feature-length TV shows produced from 1987 to 2000 starring John Thaw. Not that I don’t want to, it’s just that there are so many British TV shows to write about, I just haven’t gotten to it yet. But after watching this prequel, I’m certainly interested in checking them out.

This show apparently contains a lot of references to Endeavour’s future self, including his love of opera and passion for crossword puzzles, both of which help him solve this case.

Since I had no preconceived ideas about the character of Endeavour Morse, I was able to watch this without comparing Shaun Evans’ portrayal to John Thaw’s. Although, even if you are a fan, the early Morse would be and should be very different from his older self anyway.

MAIN CAST:
Shaun Evans – Endeavour Morse
Roger Allam – Fred Thursday
James Bradshaw – Max DeBryn
Abigail Thaw – Dorothea Frazil

Total Seasons: 1 episode (90 minutes)
Seasons Available on US Formatted DVD: 1
In Production: 2012
Viewer Discretion: Violence

Title

Lovejoy is a divvie, a person with the extraordinary ability to recognize genuine antiques from fakes or forgeries. But even though Lovejoy is very skilled at his profession, he doesn’t seem to be able to keep himself afloat. He’s always strapped for cash, but his love for the hunt keeps him in the game. He says, “Among the bric-a-brac and tacky trinkets, there’s a gem.” And sometimes those gems have a mystery attached to them that Lovejoy cannot help but solve.

Lovejoy - Ian McShaneLovejoy, played by Ian McShane, is an exceptional forger, conniver and liar, but a totally likeable guy. He loves women and antiques, but not necessarily in that order. With the help of his friend, Lady Jane Felsham, his dim assistant Eric, and often intoxicated buddy Tinker, Lovejoy scours the countryside for hidden treasures.

The show was adapted from the novels by Jonathan Gash and was apparently created to take advantage of the great popularity of Antiques Roadshow. What’s a bit unusual about the show is that in every episode Lovejoy “breaks the fourth wall” and talks to camera, revealing his thoughts. I found it kind of odd, but it Castseemed appropriate for his character.

My first experience with Ian McShane was as the foul-mouthed brothel and saloon owner, Al Swearengen, on HBO’s Deadwood. To see him earlier in his career is entertaining. But the best part of the show for me was seeing a young Phyllis Logan as Lady Jane. She plays Mrs. Hughes on Downton Abbey.

In my opinion, this isn’t British TV at its absolute best. I’ve only watched the first two seasons, mainly because it really hasn’t grown on me. I’ll keep giving it a try. The show lasted 6 seasons, so it must have either gotten better, or at the time there wasn’t much else to watch!

MAIN CAST:
Ian McShane – Lovejoy
Phyllis Logan – Lady Jane Felsham
Dudley Sutton – Tinker Dill
Chris Jury – Eric Catchpole
Diane Parish – Beth Taylor
Malcolm Tierney – Charlie Gimbert

Total Seasons: 6 (71 episodes)
Seasons Available on US Formatted DVD: 6
In Production: 1986, 1991 – 1994
Viewer Discretion: Language, adult situations, brief nudity

Title

It’s 1889 and six months after Jack the Ripper’s crime spree in London’s East End Whitechapel district. H Division is the police precinct in charge of Whitechapel, one of the poorest sections of the city, home to factories, brothels and pubs. H Division failed to catch Jack the Ripper and when the series opens and more women are murdered in Whitechapel, it is thought that the Ripper has returned.

Edmund Reid - Matthew MacfaydenDetective Inspector Edmund Reid is in charge of H Division. He’s a man with a troubled marriage, due to the disappearance, and possible death, of his young daughter. He blames himself for this situation and it has taken a toll on his wife, Emily, and their relationship. Reid is joined by Detective Sergeant Bennet Drake and an American, Homer Jackson. Jackson is a former US Army surgeon, a man who seems to know his way around dead bodies. Together they police the Whitechapel district, trying to keep some semblance of Male Castlaw and order.

Ripper Street is dark, dirty, gritty and nasty, not unlike HBO’s Deadwood, of which I am a big fan. But I gather it’s an accurate representation of London’s East End at that time in history. It’s also a show that investigates the early days of forensic pathology. Many clues are gleaned through Jackson’s autopsies and experiments in his “lab.”

As I’ve said in previous posts, I adore Matthew Macfayden. And he’s the reason I tuned into the show. But I have to admit, though the production is excellent, writing and acting more so, it isn’t a “can’t wait until the next episode” kind of a show for me. I do look forward to the second series, which is scheduled to air in 2014, just to see how the show and the characters evolve.

MAIN CAST:
Matthew Macfayden – Edmund Reid
Jerome Flynn – Bennet Drake
Adam Rothenberg – Homer Jackson
MyAnna Buring – Long Susan
Charlene McKenna – Rose Erskine
Amanda Hale – Emily Reid

Total Seasons: 1 (8 episodes)
Seasons Available on US Formatted DVD: 1
In Production: 2012
Viewer Discretion: Violence, adult situations, language

Title

Dapper detective Joseph Chandler is a novice when it comes to murder, yet he’s been assigned to investigate one. A woman has been murdered in Whitechapel, her throat cut, the crime scene mimicking that of Jack the Ripper’s first kill.

CastBelieving East London to have a Jack the Ripper copycat on its hands, Chandler and his team of detectives, accompanied by Ripperologist, Edward Buchan, seek out the killer using the clues from the original 1888 case, along with modern technology and investigative techniques. If this killer is copying Jack the Ripper, they should be able to predict his every move and stop him before he kills again. At first, newbie Chandler receives little or no support Rupert Penry-Jonesfrom his squad of veteran coppers. But they soon learn that Chandler’s ideas seem to be spot on, leading them to the killer.

At first I thought this whole series was going to be about a modern day Jack the Ripper case, but that’s only the beginning. Whitechapel is more like several mini-series, each three episode series dealing with a different case. Series 2 and 3 cover other copycat cases: the Ratcliffe Highway Murders, the Thames Torso Murders, and the crimes of the Kray twins in the 1960s.

Like most British crime dramas, Whitechapel has well-developed characters, a suspenseful script and exceptional performances by the entire cast.

MAIN CAST:
Rupert Penry-Jones – Joseph Chandler
Phil Davis – Ray Miles
Steve Pemberton – Edward Buchan

Total Seasons: 3 (12 episodes)
Seasons Available on US Formatted DVD: 1
In Production: 2009 – 2012
Viewer Discretion: violence, adult situations

Blue Murder

TOP PICK

Janine Lewis has just been promoted to Detective Chief Inspector, but her excitement is quashed when she comes home to celebrate and finds her husband in bed with another woman. Janine now has to juggle her career and her three children – with a fourth on the way – all on her own.

DVD CoverJanine and her team of homicide detectives investigate the most gruesome crimes in Manchester. But even though the stories are dark and gritty, the show still has a touch of humor in it. The characters really click with each other and Janine’s team seems like a second family to her. She’s sometimes like a mother hen, keeping everyone in line and on task, while averting Janine and Richardconflicts between the detectives.

There are a lot of UK crime dramas with female leads and I like that. Shows like New Tricks, Vera and Prime Suspect have women in the role of commander. And in Blue Murder, the portrayal of a high ranking female police officer balancing her work life and full family life is nicely explored. What do you do when you’re trying to catch a killer, but your children need you at home?

I really like Caroline Quentin. This was the first show I saw her in. There are a couple of others she is equally great in that I have yet to write about: Jonathan Creek and Life Begins.

MAIN CAST:
Caroline Quentin – DCI Janine Lewis
Ian Kelsey – DI Richard Mayne
Nicholas Murchie – DS Tony Shap
Paul Loughran – DS Ian Butchers

Total Seasons: 5 (19 episodes)
Seasons Available on US Formatted DVD: 5
In Production: 2004 – 2009
Viewer Discretion: violence, language

Title

Jack Mowbray is a dedicated police officer in Bristol, England. He’s been able to balance his work life and home life easily, until he gets involved in the case of a sadistic serial killer who has taken the lives of several women in England and Wales. This case affects Jack deeply, but affects his wife even more, putting a strain on their relationship. The series contains some unexpected plot twists that will surprise you and keep you guessing about “Who done it.”

Ross Kemp-Jack Mowbray          Victim's family

This is the first UK crime drama that I’ve seen that deals with just one case over the course of the whole 12 episode series. The inquiry goes on for months and months before someone is finally caught and charged with the crime. Without Motive is also one of the few crime dramas to take an in-depth look at the personal as well as the professional lives of police officers and how the “job” can take a toll on their personal lives.

I also found it unusual that this was a show that featured many actors I had never seen before, and I like to think that I’ve seen quite a few British TV shows. Ross Kemp did appear in East Enders. And Karl Johnson, who was so brilliant as Twister in Lark Rise to Candleford, plays one of the suspects in Without Motive.

MAIN CAST:
Ross Kemp – Jack Mowbray
Jamie Foreman – Jim Boulter
Hazel Ellerby – Sally Mowbray
Kenneth Cranham – Derek Henderson
Karl Johnson – Robert Jackson
Ian Bartholomew – Ronnie Stocks
Jane Hazlegrove – Margaret Walkinshaw

Total Seasons: 2 (12 episodes)
Seasons Available on US Formatted DVD: 2
In Production: 2000-2002
Viewer Discretion: violence, language

Title

In 1963, 13-year old Alison Carter, from the remote village of Scardale in Northern England, goes out to walk her dog and never returns home.

More than forty years later, television journalist Catherine Heathcote is reinvestigating the story, The Coppersinterviewing the lead detective on the case, George Bennett. Back in 1963, this was young Bennett’s first major case, a chance to prove himself and possibly launch his career. But at the time of Alison’s disappearance, did Bennett follow protocol or did he do whatever it took to find out what happened to Alison? Did Bennett’s obsession with the case lead him to make some tragic mistakes? And what secrets is Catherine uncovering as she researches her documentary? What is the village of Scardale hiding? There are many more questions than answers surroundingGreg Wise as Philip Hawkin the missing girl’s case.

Place of Execution aired in the US in two episodes as part of the PBS Masterpiece series. What I found interesting was how the story was edited, cutting back and forth between the past, 1963, and present day, showing parallel storylines.

The story is based on the novel of the same name by Val McDermid, which won several book awards.

MAIN CAST:
Juliet Stevenson – Catherine Heathcote
Lee Ingleby – DI George Bennett (young)
Philip Jackson – George Bennett (old)
Emma Cunniffe – Ruth Hawkin
Elizabeth Day – Sasha Heathcote
Greg Wise – Philip Hawkin
Tony Maudsley – DS Tommy Clough
Poppy Goodburn – Alison Carter

Total Seasons: 1 (2 episodes)
Seasons Available on US Formatted DVD: 1
In Production: 2009
Viewer Discretion: Language

Off-duty police officer, Laurie Franklin, is on a train taking her mother to the hospital. Suddenly, the train comes to a halt when it appears that a Muslim woman has jumped off a bridge in front of the oncoming train, apparently committing suicide.

At the same time, a newborn baby has been abandoned in the hospital restroom. Are these two incidents related? Laurie is certain they are and is determined to prove it. She joins Mal Craig, Senior Investigating Officer with the British Transport Police, to help find out what happened.

Five Days follows the criminal investigation of both incidents. Each episode is one day in the course of the case and in the lives of the people involved, Days 1, 2, 8, 37 and 102.

Until I started researching this show, I didn’t realize that there was a mini-series from 2007 called Five Days which starred Hugh Bonneville (Downton Abbey). The 2010 version, although titled the same and with the same concept, is not a continuation of the same series with the same characters. It’s totally different.

The show builds slowly. It’s not a fast-paced story filled with lots of action sequences. It’s very character driven and that’s what I like about it. I also like storylines where seemingly unrelated characters become connected as the story plays out. Five Days does that.

I do have to say that there were a couple of plot points I wasn’t too keen on, but I thought the overall concept of this mini-series was quite original. I’d like to see the 2007 version as well.

MAIN CAST:
Suranne Jones – Laurie Franklin
Anne Reid – Jen Mason
David Morrissey – Mal Craig
Bernard Hill – Gerard Hopkirk
Hugo Speer – Jim Carpenter
Shaun Dooley – Don Parker
Derek Riddell – Nick Durden
Matthew McNulty – Danny Preston
Shivani Ghai – Nusrat Preston
Steve Evets – Pat Dowling

Total Seasons: 1 (5 episodes)
Seasons Available on US Formatted DVD:
In Production: 2010
Viewer Discretion: Language

I like to watch good crime dramas, not just British ones, American ones as well. And I tend to like to try and solve the crime along with the characters in the show. About a third of the time I’m spot on. But I tend to enjoy the shows more when I’m wrong, when the outcome is a complete surprise to me. That’s the case with several of the UK crime dramas I like, including Vera.

Vera is based on the novels of author Anne Cleeves. The title character, Detective Chief Inspector Vera Stanhope, is an obsessed investigator working in Northumberland, in Northern England, bordering Scotland. Vera is a feisty little woman who, as she says, sometimes “gets lost in the chase.” She doesn’t tiptoe around situations. She asks the hard questions to get the answers she needs to solve these crimes.

Vera is probably not the most likeable character. Some viewers might be put off by her unorthodox methods, bluntness and disheveled, frumpy appearance. She’s been compared to Columbo. But she’s a woman doing what’s considered a man’s job and her methods get results. Vera has no family. Her father just died. And she tends to spend her off hours, of which there are very few, with a whiskey bottle.

Vera’s partner is Joe Ashworth, a young father of three children who has trouble making time for his home life while working with his boss. In front of his family, Vera is referred to as “Mussolini.” Joe may butt heads with Vera, but he respects and trusts her completely.

To me, what’s most unique about his British crime drama is that it takes place in the English countryside, not in one of the big cities. These are very rural crime scenes. And the Northern England landscape is just beautiful enough, yet eerie enough, to create an atmosphere perfect for a crime drama.

A third series is going to be airing in the UK in 2013.

MAIN CAST:
Brenda Blethyn – Vera Stanhope
David Leon – Joe Ashworth
Paul Ritter – Billy Cartwright
Jon Morrison – Kenny Lockhart
Wunmi Mosaku – Holly Lawson

Total Seasons: 2 (8 episodes)
Seasons Available on US Formatted DVD: 2
In Production: 2011 – present
Viewer Discretion: Some adult situations

Next week, on November 28th, the second series of The Hour will be airing on BBC America. If you haven’t seen the first series, you should give it a try. Surely you can watch all 6 episodes in four days.

The Hour has been compared to Mad Men, but only because it’s a period drama – The Hour takes place in 1956, Mad Men in the mid-1960s. And they do a lot of smoking and drinking on both shows. But The Hour is not about advertising, it’s a behind-the-scenes look at the BBC’s new investigative TV news programme called, naturally, The Hour.

In the 1950s, newsreels were the primary way people learned about current events. Freddie Lyons is tired of doing fluffy newsreels about garden parties and the engagements of Mayfair debutantes. He wants to be a real journalist. His best mate, Bel Rowley, has been selected to produce the BBC’s new news programme. Freddie is asked to join the team along with Lix Storm (Anna Chancellor-Fortysomething) as the show’s foreign correspondent and expert in the Middle East; and Hector Madden (Dominic West-The Wire) as the news presenter, or anchorman, of The Hour.

Freddie, Bel, Lix and Hector believe that The Hour will be a revolutionary news programme and will change the face of television. It’s a chance for them to tell the truth, question the government, a government that does whatever it takes to avoid controversy. Angus McCain (Julian Rhind-Tutt-Green Wing) is the press secretary who constantly tries to control the content of The Hour. There’s a never-ending power struggle between the producers of the show and administration as to what stories will be broadcast.

After watching episode one, I wasn’t sure I was going to like this show. I thought it was going to be very political in nature, but that’s not the case. There’s a lot more going on here. It does take place during the Egypt/Suez Canal crisis when Britain, and the world, were possibly on the brink of World War III. But in addition to portraying the delicate political environment of the time, you’ve also got conspiracies, romance and a murder mystery all rolled into one.

This show really transports you to a different time and place. The attention to detail in all aspects of the production from sets and costumes to hairstyles and props is wonderful. The acting and writing are top-notch.

As Freddie himself says, it’s “The Hour that you can’t miss.”

MAIN CAST:
Ben Whishaw – Freddie Lyon
Romola Garai – Bel Rowley
Dominic West – Hector Madden
Anna Chancellor – Lix Storm
Anton Lesser – Clarence Fendley
Julian Rhind-Tutt – Angus McCain
Joshua McGuire – Isaac Wengrow
Lisa Greenwood – Sissy Cooper
Oona Chaplin – Marnie Madden

Total Seasons: 1 (6 episodes)
Seasons Available on US Formatted DVD: 1
In Production: 2011
Viewer Discretion: Adult situations, some nudity