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IMDbPro

See No Evil: The Moors Murders

  • Mini-série télévisée
  • 2006
  • 1h 9min
NOTE IMDb
7,0/10
2,2 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
4 658
4 932
See No Evil: The Moors Murders (2006)
Crime véritableDocudrameCriminalitéDrameThriller

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA vivid drama which documents the notorious Moors murderers; Ian Brady and Myra Hindley.A vivid drama which documents the notorious Moors murderers; Ian Brady and Myra Hindley.A vivid drama which documents the notorious Moors murderers; Ian Brady and Myra Hindley.

  • Casting principal
    • Joanne Froggatt
    • Maxine Peake
    • Sean Harris
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,0/10
    2,2 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    4 658
    4 932
    • Casting principal
      • Joanne Froggatt
      • Maxine Peake
      • Sean Harris
    • 34avis d'utilisateurs
    • 4avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Victoire aux 1 BAFTA Award
      • 4 victoires au total

    Épisodes3

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux notés1 saison2006

    Photos4

    Voir l'affiche
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    Rôles principaux37

    Modifier
    Joanne Froggatt
    Joanne Froggatt
    • Maureen Smith
    • 2006
    Maxine Peake
    Maxine Peake
    • Myra Hindley
    • 2006
    Sean Harris
    Sean Harris
    • Ian Brady
    • 2006
    Matthew McNulty
    Matthew McNulty
    • Dave Smith
    • 2006
    George Costigan
    George Costigan
    • DCI Joe Mounsey
    • 2006
    Charlotte Emmerson
    • WDC Pat Clayton
    • 2006
    John Henshaw
    John Henshaw
    • DCS Arthur Benfield
    • 2006
    James Quinn
    James Quinn
    • Supt Bob Talbot
    • 2006
    Gordon Brown
    Gordon Brown
    • DS Jock Carr
    • 2006
    Susan Twist
    Susan Twist
    • Nellie Hindley
    • 2006
    Steve Evets
    Steve Evets
    • Jack Smith
    • 2006
    Colin Connor
    • Pat Kilbride
    • 2006
    Orla Cottingham
    • Sheila Kilbride
    • 2006
    Andy Quine
    • Desk Sergeant
    • 2006
    Henry Cox
    • Danny Kilbride
    • 2006
    Kelli Hollis
    • Ann West
    • 2006
    Cyriack Stevenson
    • Alan West
    • 2006
    Malcolm Scates
    • DC Mike Masheder
    • 2006
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs34

    7,02.2K
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    Avis à la une

    7Soeli2

    A story of the affected, but not the murdered.

    It's odd how dated historical dramas can become. It's just shy of twenty years since this was aired and at the time I remember how brave it was for daring to show the story of her sister and brother-in-law.

    I still think it's brave, but I think a more updated telling would give more time to the victims and the obvious nonsense with the various police forces' investigations.

    This was a quality drama at the time and I still think it holds weight. Maxine Peake is always phenomenal. The fella who plays Brady though, I knew I always had him pinned for a baddie. Was it because of this? Did he do it too well? I know full well I've seen him in all the wrong 'un roles since.

    Anyway, RIP their victims and may the two awful creatures responsible be damned for eternity.
    7Conti15

    Definitely worth a viewing

    This show was recently shown as a two part mini-series . Some fine performances here from Maxine Peake as Myra Hindley and Mike McNulty as David Smith . Though the truly horrible events of the Moors Murders are dealt with in a manner sympathetic to the victims and victims' families ( no blood gore and detail here ) . You do discover a side to Hindley and Brady that has rarely been shown - both may have been monsters and inherently evil but also both were highly manipulative and believable . Some very daring performances , particularly by Peake as Myra Hindley and Sean Harris as Brady , this together with a haunting soundtrack , rare levels of authenticity and the bleak but beautiful Moors setting make this a reasonable thing to watch .
    8wellthatswhatithinkanyway

    As haunting and disturbing as it could have been, despite some flaws

    STAR RATING: ***** The Works **** Just Misses the Mark *** That Little Bit In Between ** Lagging Behind * The Pits

    To mark the 40th anniversary of Ian Brady and Myra Hindley's convictions for the horrific 'Moors Murders', ITV1 has produced this dramatization of their hunt, capture and conviction, charting their friendship with Dave Smith (Michael McNulty), boyfriend of Hindley's sister, whom Brady tried to warp into his twisted little world. It was only when he saw Brady butchering 17 year old Edward Evans to death that it all came out and the pair were caught.

    People reacted to this production with the expected mixed emotions. It was always going to be one of the most controversial productions the station had ever green-lighted, and there was understandable out-rage, offense and shock from some when it went ahead. But the families of the victims were okay with it and this drama does manage to be as realistic yet sensitive as it could possibly be.

    This can hardly be described as 'entertaining', but by telling the dark true story that it is, it does play out with the required haunting gusto, with some dark camera shots and a few quiet, reflective scenes.

    Performances wise, Sean Harris and Maxine Peake as the two main characters are highly effective, as are some of the supporting cast including George Costigan as the detective who lead the investigation that brought the pair to justice. Some of the others might need to brush up on their craft a bit, but they do not stop what is generally a well made and very effective timely re-telling of events nobody wanted to know but had to hear. ****
    10beresfordjd

    Chilling and absorbing

    Sean Harris and Maxine Peake really bring the monsters that were the Moors Murderers to life. Harris is fantastically disturbing,chilling and creepy as the ultimate manipulator and chief instigator of the most infamous series of murders in the last century. George Costigan as the policeman is also seen performing at the top of his game. I was worried about the way this extremely sensitive subject was going to be handled but it was perfectly done. Still shocking but not graphic apart from one scene of the murder of Eric Evans. That shocked me and I thought I was unshockable after a lifetime of watching all genres of movie. I never imagined that anyone would tackle this gruesome story for many more years but it is a story crying out to be dramatised. We never learn about why the couple did what they did but we do see the devastating effect it had on the people surrounding them. I do not think I will see anything which will stay with me for so long as this will.
    redskiesmaxx

    "Does a dog have a soul?"

    Having read most of the literature on the Moors Murders, I was looking forward to seeing this. But when it was over, I was left feeling a bit underwhelmed. Suffice to say, "See No Evil" seems more or less like an extended episode of "Prime Suspect" or "Cracker" set in the 1960s. The story begins in medias res with not a whole lot of context provided for what we're seeing. More often than not, things are awkwardly explained by characters after the fact; and the banal, obvious dialogue tends to emphasize this problem a bit too much.

    While I was watching I was struck by all of the things that weren't or couldn't be shown in the film (such as the kidnappings of the children and the disposal of their bodies on the moors, as well as the infamous photographs and tape recording of Lesley Ann Downey's torture and murder). These omissions tend to throw the viewer off a bit since there is barely anything that suggests the killers' motivations. Too many important facts and details are mentioned in the past tense, and not enough is dramatized and shown as happening in the present moment -- this circuitous approach tends to blunt the impact of the story as a whole.

    As the psychopath Ian Brady, Sean Harris is a fine actor with an interesting, enigmatic presence, and his performance is more or less adequate. But strangely, he doesn't seem to project enough menace in the role. He scowls and looks pale and ghastly and speaks in a soft-spoken Scots accent -- which, to my ears, sounds a little forced and put-on. For the most part (and the limitations of the script may be partly to blame for this), he comes across as an actor merely playing at being a psychopath, rather than a man genuinely unhinged -- someone who feels compelled to commit senseless, heinous acts of violence. He is at his most convincing (and scary) when he sees that Dave Smith (Michael McNulty) has given him up to the police, and he flashes his young friend a condescending smirk. Harris is also quite believable when he has a battle of wits with George Costigan, who plays police DCI, Joe Mounsey -- giving defiant, insolent non-answers to the detective's incisive, probing questions.

    As the notorious Myra Hindley, Maxine Peake probably delivers the best performance, but the script seems to undermine and shortchange her character. We never really learn very much about her -- such as what her life was like before she met Ian Brady and what attracted her to him, what the dynamic of their relationship was, as well as how her personality changed as a result. We certainly don't learn anything about why she participated in the sadistic murder of young children. The movie also makes the mistake of trying to replicate Myra's infamous 1965 mug shot and it only serves to emphasize that, apart from the clothes and the hair, Maxine Peake really doesn't look that much like the actual person she's portraying.

    As David Smith, Michael McNulty does indeed look a great deal like the actual person he is meant to be. Although, I got a sense that the writer sanded the rough edges off his character a bit too much -- especially Smith's putative alcoholism and spousal abuse -- in order to make him more palatable and sympathetic to the audience.

    Joanne Frogatt plays Maureen Hindley, Myra's kid sister and Dave Smith's shotgun bride, and the film takes her point of view. While the filmmakers were clearly trying to preserve a little taste by maintaining a slight distance from the two killers and their crimes, adopting Maureen's perspective (especially as played by Frogatt) seems a mistake. Indeed, it turns out to be a rather unrevealing vantage point that yields precious little insight about events.

    Not surprisingly, Frogatt's Maureen turns out to be the sole straight arrow amidst this otherwise unsavory quartet, and the movie seems partly intended as a rehabilitation of both her and David Smith's public image in connection with the murders. Unfortunately, Frogatt is as dull as ditchwater in the role, and with her pasty, angular, dark-haired features and de rigueur beehive hairdo, Frogatt looks like she could be one of Sean Harris' siblings rather than Maxine Peake's. By the end of the movie, despite all of my prior knowledge about the case, I was left feeling just as bewildered and in the dark about everything as Maureen did. With Frogatt's character as the story's center of gravity, the moral sense of the movie seems rather uncertain and hesitant and vaguely apologetic. An earnest, token effort is also made to show the suffering of the relatives of the victims, so as not to run the risk of inadvertently valorizing the two killers. These people -- in particular, the actors playing John Kilbride's father and Lesley Ann Downey's mother -- often come across more vividly than the two criminals and their close relations do. This aspect of the movie focuses on the efforts of Detective Mounsey and as such, "See No Evil" awkwardly tries to tell two converging stories from two different outside points of view at the same time.

    In the end, I just didn't feel that this production really did justice to the Moors Murders (pardon the pun). The only time that the grisliness and horror of the killings are really felt is when the police search team digging on Saddleworth Moor retrieves Lesley Ann Downey's body from her grave in the middle of a foggy night. A story like this demands a more detailed narrative context and a stronger viewpoint (even if this necessitates a bit of speculation and guesswork) or it risks wishy-washy banality. This subject would be served by a proper feature film treatment, even though the serial murder genre has practically been done to death in the movies (again, pardon the pun).

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    Centres d’intérêt connexes

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    Crime véritable
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    Docudrame
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    Criminalité
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    Drame
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    Thriller

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The photos shown of the missing children are those of the real victims.
    • Gaffes
      The police use Maglite® torches which did not exist until 1979.
    • Citations

      [talking about Myra, several years after her conviction and imprisonment]

      Maureen Smith: I have to believe what my heart tells me, Dave. And my heart tells me whatever Myra did in the past, she's a different person now.

      Dave Smith: She's worse than Brady, Maureen. I mean, he's just a sicko, a sex case - the king of the sex cases. But Myra - she's human: she had feelings. Remember the tears when Angela Dawn died? That card she gave us? "Another little flower for God's fucking garden"! Jesus! She was killing kids at the same time.

      Maureen Smith: All right. All right. You believe what you want to - but please, please, can't you let me do the same?

      Dave Smith: Of course. Sorry, Maureen.

      Maureen Smith: If we can't put it behind us...

      Dave Smith: We've got to, for the kids' sake. We can do it, girl.

    • Connexions
      Referenced in The Graham Norton Show: Seth Rogen/Paul Rudd/Martin Freeman/Maxine Peake/Birdy (2016)

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    FAQ18

    • How many seasons does See No Evil: The Moors Murders have?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 14 mai 2006 (Royaume-Uni)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Не вижу зла: Болотные убийства
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Manchester, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni
    • Société de production
      • Granada Television
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 9min(69 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.78 : 1

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