Catherine Cawood è il sergente di turno quando Kevin Weatherill, un contabile agitato e nervoso, entra nella sua stazione nel West Yorkshire per denunciare un crimine.Catherine Cawood è il sergente di turno quando Kevin Weatherill, un contabile agitato e nervoso, entra nella sua stazione nel West Yorkshire per denunciare un crimine.Catherine Cawood è il sergente di turno quando Kevin Weatherill, un contabile agitato e nervoso, entra nella sua stazione nel West Yorkshire per denunciare un crimine.
- Ha vinto 6 BAFTA Award
- 36 vittorie e 35 candidature totali
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Reviewers say 'Happy Valley' delves into grief, loss, and redemption, highlighting the blurred lines between good and evil. The series examines trauma's impact on characters, showcasing their complexities. Sarah Lancashire's resilient police sergeant, Catherine Cawood, and James Norton's sinister criminal, Tommy Lee Royce, create intense tension. Supporting characters enrich the narrative. The show's gritty realism and authentic portrayal of human nature receive frequent praise, though some find the dark tone challenging.
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I expected something slow paced, in the vein of The Killing. Not at all, but it's absorbing and tense from the start, very mainstream-accessible, and always intriguing. The acting from all involved is pretty excellent, especially Sarah Lancashire. An amazing performance, one that I hope gets serious awards recognition next year. I ultimately liked this more than I expected to, it's easy to get caught up in its plot and I also think that it does a great job moving it along at a surprisingly fast pace while also having some fantastic character moments. At times it gets a bit too over-the-top in its melodrama, but it never actually fails to emotionally hit home. I'm super ecstatic that it's coming back for a second season.
This was not a show that I expected to be blown away with, although I am a long term fan of Sarah Lancashire, and with Sally Wainwright involved I should have expected it to be good.
This is beyond good, if you don't get hooked and wanting more after the first episode you probably should not be watching.
There are so many good things to say about this show that I run out of words, but one word that sums up how I feel is gob-smacked.
Having watched 4 out of the 6 episodes so far, I have to say that it has been quite a while since I wished that the days would speed by so I can get my mitts on the next episode.
This is beyond good, if you don't get hooked and wanting more after the first episode you probably should not be watching.
There are so many good things to say about this show that I run out of words, but one word that sums up how I feel is gob-smacked.
Having watched 4 out of the 6 episodes so far, I have to say that it has been quite a while since I wished that the days would speed by so I can get my mitts on the next episode.
I cannot praise this series enough. It has an air of realism about it from its location to the main actors. The lead sergeant Catherine Cawood and her sister are so ordinary, preoccupied with ordinary things, (no trendy,smarmy,clever middle class media interpretations of what ordinary people speak like dialog). Without exception every character is believable. With master classes in acting from the lead, her sister, her grandson and Tommy the maniac. The criminals are believably cruel and stupid in measure. The damaged and unfortunate are portrayed realistically but with compassion. No left wing idealism or right wing coldness that usually invades these type of program. The setting is the bleakest place I've ever seen, a beautiful English valley shrouded in mist, dampness and high rises. The streets and buildings are claustrophobic. Most of all the story is credible, consistent and finely paced. raw emotions are not avoided and dysfunction is everywhere. And yet there's something noble in sergeant Catherine Cawood.
The fact that Sgt Catherine Cawood is not a real person but a character played by an actress is completely 100% inconceivable. The portrayal is SO real in every aspect. It's real in every mannerism, in the shift between her persona as a private person and police officer, in the way she dresses, the way she wears her hair, her make up, the choices she makes and how she behaves. I've never seen a performance like it in my life. So extremely vulnerable, yet so extremely strong and when push comes to shove so extremely brave and tough. I for one would not want to cross her, for she would surely kick my behind severely, at the same time I sure would want her to talk to if ever I was victimized.
As for the series, both one and two, the plot squeezes the characters so hard that it's sometimes unwatchable because you relate so intensely to the psychological pressures their under, both the good guys and the bad.
An absolute must to watch!
As for the series, both one and two, the plot squeezes the characters so hard that it's sometimes unwatchable because you relate so intensely to the psychological pressures their under, both the good guys and the bad.
An absolute must to watch!
I've been thoroughly enjoying this dark gritty drama. All the leads are excellent, but Sarah Lancashire as the main police officer with a tragic family history, is outstanding. It started well then just got better and better with each episode and twist of the plot (and screw) having me on the edge of my seat. I've just watched what must be the penultimate episode and it has left me physically shaking - it was that convincing and shocking. It's hard to credit the complaint of mumbling by one reviewer. I can't recall even one line of script I didn't follow and it's usually something that bugs me. I'm so glad I've watched this series, it's got to be one of (if not the) best TV dramas of 2014.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe show was written specifically for Sarah Lancashire, who had previously had a starring role in Sally Wainwright's Last Tango in Halifax (2012). Wainwright was so impressed by Lancashire's performance, she devised Happy Valley (2014) as a solo vehicle for Lancashire.
- BlooperCatherine and Clare are sisters, but they have different accents. Catherine has a fairly generic West Yorkshire accent, but Clare's is a much more unusual Sheffield accent, indicating that she must have been brought up in a different area. The difference is most obvious in the vowel sounds. Catherine pronounces the word 'know' as 'gnaw', in a standard Yorkshire way. Clare pronounces it as 'nerr', with a much flatter Sheffield vowel.
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Wright Stuff: Episodio #19.99 (2014)
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