Bodyguard, BBC One, series finale review - gripping entertainment of the highest calibre | reviews, news & interviews
Bodyguard, BBC One, series finale review - gripping entertainment of the highest calibre
Bodyguard, BBC One, series finale review - gripping entertainment of the highest calibre
Was it the police, the government or MI5 who murdered Julia Montague? And was she really dead? CONTAINS SPOILERS
And breathe. Bodyguard – not, as even some careless BBC broadcasters keep calling it, "The Bodyguard" – careered to a conclusion as if hurtling around a booby-trapped assault course.
Except there were clues. In obedience to the whodunnit’s oldest rule of all, the finger of suspicion had been carefully pointed towards everyone but the actual culprit. And there were a lot of candidates lining up to look shifty – among them head of Scotland Yard Anne Sampson (Gina McKee, deemed by second-guessers on Twitter to be too good an actress not to be the traitor), acting Home Secretary Mike Travis (the wonderful, weaselly Vincent Franklin), MI5 chief Stephen Hunter-Dunn (a splendid, teak-like Stuart Bowman).
But when the music stopped it was none of the above. Instead the previously unsuspected Lorraine Craddock (Pippa Haywood, pictured below, whose measured, mumsy performance was a shrewd piece of misdirection) was left to look forward to an uncomfortable future at Her Majesty’s pleasure. Perhaps, banged up with other felons, she will be able to plead that she was always on their side. Suddenly it made perfect sense that Budd, fresh from the trauma of negotiating with a suicidal terrorist, was illogically promoted to become the personal bodyguard of the Home Secretary, and not stood down despite every new assault on his mental wellbeing. Or not until a concerned colleague spotted an alarming wound in his temple.The actual assassin of Julia Montague turned out to be gangland drug lord Luke Aitkens (Matt Stokoe), who was motivated to prevent RIPA, the new law enabling tighter surveillance of organised crime. "Just business," he nonchalantly explained as Budd fought the overpowering urge to impose vengeful summary justice. In other words, when boiled down to its essence, Mercurio offered a variation on a theme from Line of Duty: it was the corrupt copper pulling strings in the service of an untouchable crime boss.
But this familiar scenario was woven into a much bigger picture. Aitkens’s first attempt on the Home Secretary’s life found him recruiting a disaffected Afghan veteran as executioner. When that didn’t come off, he allied himself with the other side and used a bomb constructed by an Islamic terrorist. We must just hope that this lurid phantasmagoria is the product of Mercurio’s combustible imagination. Ditto his portrait of the deep state, about which he had a whole raft of intensely cynical things to say. It would also be nice to believe that the concept of kompromat is so alien to the British way of life that we have to import a word for it from Russian. The diverting subplot involving the past indiscretions of the prime minister turned out to be a red herring that plunged Budd into even hotter water. And it yielded an outcome as implausible as anything in the whole plot: a British politician driven from office by shame.Bodyguard has reportedly stimulated a spike in enquiries into police protection work. Aspiring bodyguards may think again after David Budd’s nailbiting odyssey on foot through London – captured on CCTV and then national TV. Budd, it goes without saying, couldn’t bite his own nails, what with one hand clutching a police walkie-talkie, the other a device euphemistically known as a DMS, or dead man’s switch. Only his trust in DCI Deepak Sharma (Ash Tandon), and the touching faith of his estranged wife Vicky (Sophie Rundle), prevented half a dozen sharpshooters letting off a so-called critical shot. The bravura sequence even found room for the odd moment of tension-easing levity. Explosives expert Daniel Chung was asked if he was happy to try defusing the IED vest. “I wouldn’t say happy,” he said. (Pictured above: Ash Tandon and Nina Toussaint-White)
The Bond-like Budd was perhaps a little too brilliant to be quite true. Before he went off for his assignation with posh gangster's moll Chanel Dyson (Stephanie Hyam), he resourcefully set a trap for Richard Longcross (Michael Shaeffer), and safely buried the evidence of his innocence. His intuition about the whereabouts of the compromising tablet – it shared a frame with David Cameron – was an amusing guess. And his ability to gain access to Chanel’s flat suggested a past life as a world-class cat burglar. While we’re on minor quibbles, if Aitken was so clever at not being caught, how come he allowed himself to be so clearly identified dropping Chanel off at the café? And how exactly did Nadia work up the opportunity to communicate with accomplices while incarcerated?
There were many top-drawer performances, none more than Richard Madden’s damaged hero. No one acted more convincingly than Nadia (Anjli Mohindra) whose eyes turned steely with cunning when she outed herself as a twisted avatar of jihadi girl power. Credit to directors Thomas Vincent and John Strickland for moving so fluidly between action and intimacy, and to whoever persuaded half the staff of BBC News to buy into the fiction.
Mercurio saved the most uncharacteristic reveal to the very last shot: a fast-tracked happy-ever-after outro for Budd. As he drove off into a healing future, did anyone else expect the car containing him and his family to explode? We've all been groomed to fear the twist of the knife. It’s been gripping entertainment of the highest calibre. Much more please, Jed.
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