Chasing Shadows
- Mini-série télévisée
- 2014
- 45min
NOTE IMDb
7,4/10
3,7 k
MA NOTE
Une unité des personnes disparues enquête sur les tueurs en série.Une unité des personnes disparues enquête sur les tueurs en série.Une unité des personnes disparues enquête sur les tueurs en série.
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Interesting premise, fine performances. I have no idea why ITV cancelled this series after only 4 episodes, and on a cliffhanger, at that. The user ratings for this are all between 7 and 8. The show never missed a beat, was entirely plausible and the audience became invested in the characters, which made the last, unresolved, missing person especially heartbreaking. This was a missed opportunity ITV. I give this series an 8 (great) out of 10. {Police Procedural with a twist}. Just a side note for Whovians, two of the principal players were Mickey Smith (2005-2010) and River Song (2008-2017).
I'm so sad that this is only one season long! It was refreshingly different than the normal DI series.
'Chasing Shadows' is a new crime drama starring Reece Shearsmith (The league of gentlemen) and Alex Kingston (Doctor Who) based around the missing persons unit.
Reece plays Ds Sean Stone, a detective who has little trouble working with the people around him and who needs to hire someone to remind him to eat, clean his clothes etc.. but other then that he has a brilliant mind and is always focused on the case. After having embarrassed the station during a live TV interview, he his reassigned a new partner Ruth Hattersley played by Alex Kingston how is recently divorced and is now back living with her mother as well as having a son who takes too much interest in her work for her liking.
Reece is exceptional, playing Sean must have been one of his most difficult roles as he has to try to avoid natural acting instincts like looking people in the eye. At points you want to slap him and other times you want to give him a hug.
'Chasing Shadows' is gripping, intelligent, funny and worthy of a second season, trust me you'll want another after watching the final episode.
Reece plays Ds Sean Stone, a detective who has little trouble working with the people around him and who needs to hire someone to remind him to eat, clean his clothes etc.. but other then that he has a brilliant mind and is always focused on the case. After having embarrassed the station during a live TV interview, he his reassigned a new partner Ruth Hattersley played by Alex Kingston how is recently divorced and is now back living with her mother as well as having a son who takes too much interest in her work for her liking.
Reece is exceptional, playing Sean must have been one of his most difficult roles as he has to try to avoid natural acting instincts like looking people in the eye. At points you want to slap him and other times you want to give him a hug.
'Chasing Shadows' is gripping, intelligent, funny and worthy of a second season, trust me you'll want another after watching the final episode.
CHASING SHADOWS is a four part mini-series that should have become a regular series!
Both Alex Kingston and Reece Shearsmith are superb in their roles, with Ms. Kingston playing the Missing Persons Bureau's warm, approachable Ruth Hattersley to Shearsmith's socially inept, psychologically detached, yet brilliant DS Sean Stone.
As the story progresses, we learn more about these two, making them all the more intriguing and watchable. The supporting characters are equally well-drawn. As with other, superior British cop shows, each episode plays like a theatrical release.
Since this was apparently meant as a pilot for a series, the whole thing ends with a cliffhanger, begging for a resolution! Dammit! This is maddening!
Thankfully, it's highly rewatchable, but still quite frustrating!...
Both Alex Kingston and Reece Shearsmith are superb in their roles, with Ms. Kingston playing the Missing Persons Bureau's warm, approachable Ruth Hattersley to Shearsmith's socially inept, psychologically detached, yet brilliant DS Sean Stone.
As the story progresses, we learn more about these two, making them all the more intriguing and watchable. The supporting characters are equally well-drawn. As with other, superior British cop shows, each episode plays like a theatrical release.
Since this was apparently meant as a pilot for a series, the whole thing ends with a cliffhanger, begging for a resolution! Dammit! This is maddening!
Thankfully, it's highly rewatchable, but still quite frustrating!...
I like Alex (Dr. Who) a lot, and the lead Reece, I warmed up to quickly. and Clark, the only Missing Person's Detective to relate to Reece/Sean. I don't know why the PD would be so against Sean even if he is an oddball bec. he solves crimes and catches serial killers (his specialty).
He thinks there isn't enough communication between missing persons and homicide, And winds up as a demotion in Missing persons. Ruth/Alex is able to relate to him. and so he finds a home.
A viewer complained there isn't enough depth of character. I disagree.
that some of the police methods were questionable. yes but that is always the case with these dramas.
another premise with a detective with a problem, here it's autism, Ashberger, as he is very smart and skilled. so yes, there are holes in the plot- show me 1 series without flaws. sometimes, the police work is sketchy.
they left #4 with a big, to be solved next crime, but after 5 years, I have to expect no more.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAt one point DS Stone asks Ruth if she's started wearing lipstick. One role Alex Kingston is known for is River Song on Doctor Who (2005) who is an archaeologist/murderer/thief whose modus operandi is wearing hallucinogenic lipstick and kissing her target.
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- How many seasons does Chasing Shadows have?Alimenté par Alexa
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