crime
Agatha Christie's Crooked House, Channel 5 review - actresses chew furniture for funMonday, 18 December 2017![]() Crooked House is being released as a film in various territories, but has already been shown on television in America and has now surfaced as a drama on Channel 5 bearing the title Agatha Christie’s Crooked House. It duly falls in with a recent... Read more... |
Bancroft, ITV review - Sarah Parish's very cold caseThursday, 14 December 2017This week we were all meant to be gripped by a bunch of ancient geezers nicking diamonds in Hatton Gardens. The postponement of ITV’s nightly four-part drama – the second of four (four!!) different versions of the infamous burglary – is a bit of a... Read more... |
Witnesses: A Frozen Death, BBC Four review - plummeting temperatures in the Pas de CalaisSunday, 26 November 2017![]() A thankless task, perhaps, to find oneself following in the footsteps of the berserk Spanish melodrama I Know Who You Are (theartsdesk passim). However, BBC Four’s new Saturday night import, whose first series was shown on Channel 4 a couple of... Read more... |
I Know Who You Are, series 2 finale, BBC Four review - Spanish drama literally took no prisonersSunday, 19 November 2017![]() So, if you’re reading this you probably trudged all the weary way to the very end of I Know Who You Are. Or you didn’t but still want to find out what the hell happened. After 20-plus hours of twisting, turning, overblown drama, long-service medals... Read more... |
Peaky Blinders, series 4, BBC Two review - new threats, same thrillsThursday, 16 November 2017![]() BBC Two’s flagship crime drama Peaky Blinders returns for another guilty dose of slo-mo walking, flying sparks and anachronistic soundtracks. In the opening episode “The Noose”, we’re served a familiar course of family disputes, sinister threats and... Read more... |
Good Time review - heist movie with stand-out performance by Robert PattinsonWednesday, 15 November 2017![]() This is not a movie to see in the front row – intrusive close-ups, hand-held camerawork, colour saturated night shots and a relentless synthesiser score all conspire to make Good Time a wild ride. An unrecognisable Robert Pattinson plays Connie... Read more... |
theartsdesk Q&A: Steven Knight and Cillian Murphy of Peaky BlindersSaturday, 11 November 2017![]() Like a lot of people, I came late to Peaky Blinders, bingeing on the first two brutal, but undeniably brilliant, series like the proverbial box-set sensation it quickly became. With its focus on the turmoil and fortunes of a particularly unruly... Read more... |
I Know Who You Are, Series 2, BBC Four review - get on with it, por favorSunday, 05 November 2017![]() Here we go again then. The “first series”, as the BBC are calling it after the fact, of I Know Who You Are slammed the brakes on and juddered to a bewildering halt back in the middle of August. Almost everyone who’d sat through the plot dodgems of... Read more... |
Murder on the Orient Express review - lushly upholstered, lightly remodelled rideFriday, 03 November 2017![]() Kenneth Branagh, like his Poirot, cares about cutlery. The director and detective’s fastidiousness both find their ideal home on the Orient Express, where waiters measure fork placement with the precision of Poirot’s sacred monster of a moustache.... Read more... |
Inspector George Gently, BBC One review - power, corruption and lies in his last-ever caseTuesday, 31 October 2017![]() And now the end is near… and so Inspector George Gently faces his final case. Deemed too political to be broadcast in its original slot in May – 10 days before the General Election – Gently and the New Age was postponed until 8.30pm last... Read more... |
Witness for the Prosecution, London County Hall review - favourable verdict on Agatha Christie classicTuesday, 24 October 2017![]() Some site-specific theatre feels like a really good fit. You could say, in this case, that it seems like poetic justice. Agatha Christie’s 1953 play, Witness for the Prosecution, used to be a rep standard, and now gets a compelling new production in... Read more... |
Henning Mankell: After the Fire review - of death and redemptionSunday, 08 October 2017![]() The dour, reclusive disgraced doctor Fredrik Welin has appeared once before in Henning Mankell’s work, in The Italian Shoes. The shoes appear early on in After the Fire as ghosts, referred to as bespoke luxuries made by an admired craftsman, and... Read more... |
