Trespasses
- Série télévisée
- 2025–
Dans cette adaptation du roman primé de L. Kennedy, une enseignante catholique et un avocat protestant défendant des membres de l'IRA nouent une relation interdite au milieu des tensions de ... Tout lireDans cette adaptation du roman primé de L. Kennedy, une enseignante catholique et un avocat protestant défendant des membres de l'IRA nouent une relation interdite au milieu des tensions de l'Irlande du Nord des années 1970.Dans cette adaptation du roman primé de L. Kennedy, une enseignante catholique et un avocat protestant défendant des membres de l'IRA nouent une relation interdite au milieu des tensions de l'Irlande du Nord des années 1970.
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There's a lot to like in 'Trespasses', a drama set in Northern Ireland of the 1970s: good acting, and a tough but believable story about love and hate across the sectarian divide. In spite of the appearance of Gillian Anderson in the cast, the budget was obviously low, but everything is put together skilfully. There are also weaknesses: a tendency to show everything in that time and place as relentlessly grim, and a story that doesn't quite go anywhere in the end. One reason for this is that the troubles break over the head of the central character, but she herself has no personal investment in them; it's thus fundamentally a story about the madness of others. I still liked it; but other stories have moved me more.
Gritty, authentic with a first class cast (Lola Pettigrew & Gillian Anderson & Co are brilliant.)The story line excellent with heart wrenching moments all the more poignant in light of its truth. It's obvious that a Very Considerable time, effort & finance went into this production. Fantastic work by everyone involved. I loved it.
Full disclosure, I grew up outside Belfast during the Troubles. I even went to RUC Blue Lamp discos at school.
The series is well-made and the feel of the period is correct, but the characters are pretty two-dimensional, with some straight out of Troubles central casting. The political situation is reduced to clichés which didn't engage me. I can't help but make comparisons with dramas such as Angel, Cal and Harry's Game as the high bar.
The high point for me is Martin McCann, who although in a supporting role brings a quiet authenticity to every scene he is in.
Watchable, but nothing to write home about.
The series is well-made and the feel of the period is correct, but the characters are pretty two-dimensional, with some straight out of Troubles central casting. The political situation is reduced to clichés which didn't engage me. I can't help but make comparisons with dramas such as Angel, Cal and Harry's Game as the high bar.
The high point for me is Martin McCann, who although in a supporting role brings a quiet authenticity to every scene he is in.
Watchable, but nothing to write home about.
This provocative, far-reaching four-part Channel 4 drama focuses on an illicit love-affair between a young female primary school teacher Cushla and an older Protestant human rights solicitor, Michael Agnew, who has chosen to represent three IRA members who claim police brutality against them. They meet in a popular Belfast bar owned and managed by Cushla's brother where Michael is counted as one of the locals, although it's also frequented by off-duty soldiers from the occupying/peacekeeping British Army, depending on your political point of view.
Although she has another fellow-teacher, the on-the-surface bland and unexciting Gerry, pursuing her, she's soon headlong into an intensely passionate and physical affair with Michael, even as she knows he's married with a son. They're soon making trysts in his city centre love-nest, but the deeper the affair goes, the more strain their burgeoning relationship will come under.
Cushla has other worries too. Her recently widowed mother has hit the bottle hard and is becoming increasingly difficult to live with while the sympathy she shows to the family of one of her young pupils, the offspring of a mixed-religion couple, also brings her trouble.
It all comes to a head with the shocking climax to episode three, leaving Cushla to pick up the pieces and try to deal with the aftermath of her affair. Personally, I found the fourth and final episode to be somewhat anti-climactic in terms of tying up the loose ends, while the tag-on sugar-coated epilogue likewise also seemed unnecessary.
The evocation of mid-70's Northern Ireland was certainly captured in terms of the fashions, cars and domestic and public house interiors, although the choices of background and incidental music had me reaching for the mute button. The bitterness between the two sides of the religious divide and especially those caught in the middle by entering into mixed religion relationships was well brought out. Lola Petticrew as Cushla came over well as the unwitting party caught literally in the cross-hairs of sectarian hatred, Tom Cullen was good too as the handsome charming adulterer, but the real eye-opening performance was by Gi(llia)n Anderson as Cushla's "Gin, gin, everywhere" waste-of-space mother.
For the most part then, this was a gritty and believable series, all the more so as I grew up in Glasgow at around this time. Although I was aware of religious prejudice around me, I couldn't begin to comprehend living with its ugly, tribal manifestation as represented here just across the Irish Sea at the very same time.
Although she has another fellow-teacher, the on-the-surface bland and unexciting Gerry, pursuing her, she's soon headlong into an intensely passionate and physical affair with Michael, even as she knows he's married with a son. They're soon making trysts in his city centre love-nest, but the deeper the affair goes, the more strain their burgeoning relationship will come under.
Cushla has other worries too. Her recently widowed mother has hit the bottle hard and is becoming increasingly difficult to live with while the sympathy she shows to the family of one of her young pupils, the offspring of a mixed-religion couple, also brings her trouble.
It all comes to a head with the shocking climax to episode three, leaving Cushla to pick up the pieces and try to deal with the aftermath of her affair. Personally, I found the fourth and final episode to be somewhat anti-climactic in terms of tying up the loose ends, while the tag-on sugar-coated epilogue likewise also seemed unnecessary.
The evocation of mid-70's Northern Ireland was certainly captured in terms of the fashions, cars and domestic and public house interiors, although the choices of background and incidental music had me reaching for the mute button. The bitterness between the two sides of the religious divide and especially those caught in the middle by entering into mixed religion relationships was well brought out. Lola Petticrew as Cushla came over well as the unwitting party caught literally in the cross-hairs of sectarian hatred, Tom Cullen was good too as the handsome charming adulterer, but the real eye-opening performance was by Gi(llia)n Anderson as Cushla's "Gin, gin, everywhere" waste-of-space mother.
For the most part then, this was a gritty and believable series, all the more so as I grew up in Glasgow at around this time. Although I was aware of religious prejudice around me, I couldn't begin to comprehend living with its ugly, tribal manifestation as represented here just across the Irish Sea at the very same time.
Just finished episode 3 and this is a stunning watch. You'll be drawn in to all of Cushna's relationships not just with Michael- The family with a protestant & a Catholic parent, the teacher who tries to woo her and of course her mother- brilliant catatonic performance by Gillian Anderson. The menace of the Troubles is constantly there, sometimes subtley weaved in, sometimes in your face. Compelling may be a bog standard description but Trespasses really really is. Absolutely loved it. Props also on the soundtrack. Into the Mystic conveying the magic of the start of Cushna & Michael's relationship. Wish the series was more than 4 eps. Its very worth your time.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesParts filmed in The Ladysmith pub, Ballymena, Northern Ireland, UK.
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