Detective Superintendent Steve Fulcher beabsichtigt, einen Mörder einer vermissten Frau zu fangen, auch wenn ihm das seine Karriere und seinen Ruf kosten könnte.Detective Superintendent Steve Fulcher beabsichtigt, einen Mörder einer vermissten Frau zu fangen, auch wenn ihm das seine Karriere und seinen Ruf kosten könnte.Detective Superintendent Steve Fulcher beabsichtigt, einen Mörder einer vermissten Frau zu fangen, auch wenn ihm das seine Karriere und seinen Ruf kosten könnte.
- Nominiert für 2 BAFTA Awards
- 4 Nominierungen insgesamt
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I know Steve Fulcher and know the police. This is a 'good' story and a solid representation of how poor the management levels of the British Police are. Steve was totally screwed over by his supervisors, which in-turn led to failures in the case. Anyway! It's good TV and worth a look as it is pretty real to life and based around Steve's book about this part of his life.
I agree that the idiot who came up with shaky camera work should be drummed out of film and I thought it had gone the way of the dodo but the negative reviews here are overdoing it.
There is some very good, understated, acting here. I also suspect some of the styling is intended to reflect the era.
It's also a long time since I've seen a film with the trailer "This is a true story" as opposed to the fatuous "Based on true events". I recall the story and this appears fairly accurate.
I agree, it's not as well made as it could be, but it's a lot better than some of the reviews here make out.
There is some very good, understated, acting here. I also suspect some of the styling is intended to reflect the era.
It's also a long time since I've seen a film with the trailer "This is a true story" as opposed to the fatuous "Based on true events". I recall the story and this appears fairly accurate.
I agree, it's not as well made as it could be, but it's a lot better than some of the reviews here make out.
Imagine speaking to a customer service representative on the phone. You have a genuine problem. You don't have answers. You want help. You are desperate. You are human. Yet, the person you're speaking to sounds like a robot. He or she is trained to be formal and follow a rulebook. The person speaks in script. This frustrates you more. You want the person capable of solving your problem to empathize with you first. You want the person to have a personality. You want to shake the person out of automated mode - innovate a little, lower the guard, react, be human. You blame the "higher-ups," the company, for being so inflexible.
A Confession, a six-part mini-series, examines that one 'representative' who decides to break script for the greater good. It tells the true story of a man who, in the heat of the moment, places instinct over procedure to preserve the humanity of the situation. That he is an officer of the law - a Detective Superintendent investigating the case of a missing girl - only heightens the honesty of what is quite an unusual narrative. The rules here are literally set in stone; they form an unemotional system that is designed to solve emotional conflict. (Notice, for example, the way a police officer delivers bad news to a family; every stoic expression is rehearsed.). As a result, A Confession is a police procedural about the deficiencies of procedure - a rare beast that distinguishes, and walks the fragile bridge, between truth and justice.
DS Steve Fulcher (Martin Freeman; going from Watson to Sherlock) launches a search mission for 22-year-old Sian O'Callaghan, who has disappeared after a night at the local pub. Her family, led by her mother (Siobhan Finneran), hopes for a miracle. Fulcher makes difficult decisions, like choosing to shadow a suspect instead of instantly arresting him; he presumes this will lead them to an alive Sian, while his superiors expect her to be dead. Most of all, he improvises in a tense interrogation sequence: a moment that, over time, will define his career. Some may view his thinking - as a father, not a hardened cop - as a careless mistake, while others may appreciate it as an act of inherent humanity. In a way, the series is a sadder, less revolutionary version of Clint Eastwood's Sully, where Tom Hanks played the heroic American pilot who successfully landed an airplane in the Hudson only to be hauled to an National Transportation and Safety Board (NTSB) hearing about suspected "pilot error". His employers look at him as a defaulter; the passengers look at him as a God. Sometimes, the line is blurred between the two, and it's the Captain's self-doubt - or lack of it - that pulls focus. The film exaggerates the close-mindedness of the NTSB, but A Confession looks at PACE (Police and Criminal Evidence Act) with a similarly critical but less sensational gaze. It doesn't forget that, in the end, it's always about the victims and survivors. In the end, the hero is often relegated to the epilogue of history.
A Confession, a six-part mini-series, examines that one 'representative' who decides to break script for the greater good. It tells the true story of a man who, in the heat of the moment, places instinct over procedure to preserve the humanity of the situation. That he is an officer of the law - a Detective Superintendent investigating the case of a missing girl - only heightens the honesty of what is quite an unusual narrative. The rules here are literally set in stone; they form an unemotional system that is designed to solve emotional conflict. (Notice, for example, the way a police officer delivers bad news to a family; every stoic expression is rehearsed.). As a result, A Confession is a police procedural about the deficiencies of procedure - a rare beast that distinguishes, and walks the fragile bridge, between truth and justice.
DS Steve Fulcher (Martin Freeman; going from Watson to Sherlock) launches a search mission for 22-year-old Sian O'Callaghan, who has disappeared after a night at the local pub. Her family, led by her mother (Siobhan Finneran), hopes for a miracle. Fulcher makes difficult decisions, like choosing to shadow a suspect instead of instantly arresting him; he presumes this will lead them to an alive Sian, while his superiors expect her to be dead. Most of all, he improvises in a tense interrogation sequence: a moment that, over time, will define his career. Some may view his thinking - as a father, not a hardened cop - as a careless mistake, while others may appreciate it as an act of inherent humanity. In a way, the series is a sadder, less revolutionary version of Clint Eastwood's Sully, where Tom Hanks played the heroic American pilot who successfully landed an airplane in the Hudson only to be hauled to an National Transportation and Safety Board (NTSB) hearing about suspected "pilot error". His employers look at him as a defaulter; the passengers look at him as a God. Sometimes, the line is blurred between the two, and it's the Captain's self-doubt - or lack of it - that pulls focus. The film exaggerates the close-mindedness of the NTSB, but A Confession looks at PACE (Police and Criminal Evidence Act) with a similarly critical but less sensational gaze. It doesn't forget that, in the end, it's always about the victims and survivors. In the end, the hero is often relegated to the epilogue of history.
This is superb television drama. Don't know what the reviews talking about the camera motion are talking about-didn't notice a problem. Martin Freeman performance was outstanding as I expected and Imelda Staunton's performance as the untiring mother of the victim was truly award winning in every way. I thoroughly enjoyed this series and highly recommend it.
A confession is a gritty six part drama, telling the real life crimes of Christopher Halliwell, the murders of Sian and Becky.
The fact that the crimes are still relatively recent, I found there to be a certain sensitivity in the way the story was told, it's presented as factual, rather then sensational, it's dramatic, but not stretched beyond belief.
I wondered how they could stretch this show over six episodes, but they do, it goes from the crime to the events of the trial.
You will learn the ins and outs of PACE and its right procedures.
Terrific performances, Martin Freeman and Imelda Staunton especially are both superb. It contains some real life footage.
The main talking point, the camera work, initially it irritated me, jumping about and zooming, after a few episodes I stopped noticing.
It's excellent. 9/10.
The fact that the crimes are still relatively recent, I found there to be a certain sensitivity in the way the story was told, it's presented as factual, rather then sensational, it's dramatic, but not stretched beyond belief.
I wondered how they could stretch this show over six episodes, but they do, it goes from the crime to the events of the trial.
You will learn the ins and outs of PACE and its right procedures.
Terrific performances, Martin Freeman and Imelda Staunton especially are both superb. It contains some real life footage.
The main talking point, the camera work, initially it irritated me, jumping about and zooming, after a few episodes I stopped noticing.
It's excellent. 9/10.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesDespite being set in Swindon some of the scenes are filmed in the Hemel Hempstead area as can be seen in episode 2 where they are tailing Chris it is visibly Adeyfield retail park in Hemel Hempstead.
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