अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंWry and obsessive DI Buchan is a cop on the edge; suave and self-assured Jack Harvey is a best-selling crime novelist with the world at his feet. As Buchan probes a 100-year-old cold case, h... सभी पढ़ेंWry and obsessive DI Buchan is a cop on the edge; suave and self-assured Jack Harvey is a best-selling crime novelist with the world at his feet. As Buchan probes a 100-year-old cold case, his investigation takes him on a journey into the Scottish capital's literary past that wil... सभी पढ़ेंWry and obsessive DI Buchan is a cop on the edge; suave and self-assured Jack Harvey is a best-selling crime novelist with the world at his feet. As Buchan probes a 100-year-old cold case, his investigation takes him on a journey into the Scottish capital's literary past that will cause him to question his very existence and set him on a collision course with his onet... सभी पढ़ें
- Man at book-signing.
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
At first, the hero Jim Buchan (Alec Newman) himself seems like the archetype grumpy cynical Scottish police inspector. He and his partner Sinead Burns (Nina Sosyana) are investigating a 100-year-old corpse discovered in a sealed-off section of the City's underground; the circumstances are suspicious and next to the body the letters A C I D are etched on to the rock.
But Buchan's haunted character begins to reveal some bizarre twists of it's own as the mystery unfolds. The whole detective story genre is turned over on it's head and the crescendo towards the conclusion is a well crafted piece of a surreal drama in itself.
If you're a fan of crime thrillers - on screen and in literature - then you will be in for a special treat; and a macabre fascination for the City of Edinburgh will probably grow in you as well.
Playing on the fictional tough detective genre, this weird little drama plays along quite easily for the first 10 minutes or so and then drifts off in to the challenging. Not that challenging is bad, in fact it makes it worth watching.
A troubled detective, his partner is gunned down, is sent into the depths of old Edinburgh (good travelogue) to investigate a 100 year old body. His past keeps catching up with him, not least the man who stole his wife off him, his best friend, now a very successful author. Lots of swearing and a bit of violence later we get to the snooker and revelations. Another success for BBC4.
The cast were very good. Laura Fraser and Nina Sosanya both worked on Casanova together and have appeared all over the place, they were good as usual, I have a soft spot for both. The lead male, Alec Newman I have not seen before and looking at his CV seems to done a lot of US TV, nevertheless he played a good drunk, troubled and rogue detective. John Sessions put in a John Sessions and the other roles were okay. But the award for the most outrageous false Scotish moustache goes to Richard Wilson who appears as, well that would be a spoiler.
Trivia: I once sat two rows in front of Richard Wilson at the Barbican for a performance of Romeo and Juliet, he wore a baseball cap all evening. The actor playing Romeo was David Tennant, see Casanova. Spooky or what. I had an awful cold and spent the entire performance trying not to cough or sneeze.
The title of course refers to the place where Sherlock Holmes and Moriarty once fell together to almost certain death and recognising that suggests that this film may appeal to you because of its literary foundation. Aside from the monologue in the first few seconds of the film, things appear pretty generic at first; hard nosed cop disliked by his peers, new partner, big criminal to stop, convoluted and complex case to solve etc etc. Even the dialogue is a bit clunky and obvious at first. This gradually subsides as the main mystery kicks in and the film does get more interesting with some very enjoyable (if not wholly successful) twists coming in the later stages.
The cast are mostly very good. Newman fits the clichéd character very easily at the start but he is also able to move past that as required he is a solid lead and is by far the main character in the film. Around him various others turn in good support, with Mackenzie a good foil as his former best friend and Fraser convincing as his ex-wife; neither have a lot of screen time but they do well with what they have. I wasn't sure about Sosanya at first. I think she is a great actress and is very attractive to boot, with her flirty and light character just making me love her more, but I didn't think she fitted in at all and it felt like she had been dumped with a rubbish character that she was just going to tease her way through. It is true she doesn't have much to do character wise, but this does make more sense in the context you'll see it looking back. Wilson is good in his small support role, even if his presence stretched my brain a little.
Some proper reviewers probably over praised this film because they felt it was so much better than other police thrillers. Although I agree it is better and more interesting than its peer group I didn't think it was perfect and the things that make the plot so engaging also make it a bit wobbly at times. That said though once you get through the rather clichéd start it is a clever film that is entertaining and engaging right down to the smart conclusion. Deserves a bigger audience that BBC4 screenings will bring it and has motivated me to check out Rankin's "The Acid Test" as well.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाIan Rankin named the character Jack Harvey after the pseudonym that he himself used as author of his early novels.
- गूफ़Towards the end, Clara reads from the book "42 feet per second per second" - gravity is closer to 32 feet per second to second.
- क्रेज़ी क्रेडिटAn actor, credited as The Monkey, was included in the credits. However this was an existing character, who had already been credited, in disguise.