19 reviews
Although this series is basically a police drama with a case to solve the whole weird cult thing and the slightly creepy locals make this a bit different to the normal formula.
I'm not sure the welsh tourist board will be to enthralled with the idea that it has places where the locals are members of a religious cult and seem to be a few brain cells short of an amoeba.
Some class A hammy acting add to the fun and creepiness with the odd piece of gore to satisfy the horror lovers.
It isn't the fast paced sort of drama you get with modern police series, more a Midsommer Murders meets wicker man vibe.
All in all a decent binge watch and hopefully a second series will materialise.
I'm not sure the welsh tourist board will be to enthralled with the idea that it has places where the locals are members of a religious cult and seem to be a few brain cells short of an amoeba.
Some class A hammy acting add to the fun and creepiness with the odd piece of gore to satisfy the horror lovers.
It isn't the fast paced sort of drama you get with modern police series, more a Midsommer Murders meets wicker man vibe.
All in all a decent binge watch and hopefully a second series will materialise.
- stewartsmith-05568
- Apr 26, 2024
- Permalink
The set-up resembles 1973 British folk horror film The Wicker Man. But by Episode 2, you should have noticed that not all is the same. And things diverge from there.
I also found the 1973 film was spoiled by having Edward Woodward as the policeman. He was stamped on my mind as tough-guy Callan. It took time to realise that this was a very different sort of character. Not someone like Brownlow from The Bill, but fussy and pious. One reason why it was unpopular at the time.
Here, the police lady is quite tough, and shown to be a stickler for the rules. Sent to a bad posting from something that offended other police - just what comes out by stages.
Watch and enjoy.
I also found the 1973 film was spoiled by having Edward Woodward as the policeman. He was stamped on my mind as tough-guy Callan. It took time to realise that this was a very different sort of character. Not someone like Brownlow from The Bill, but fussy and pious. One reason why it was unpopular at the time.
Here, the police lady is quite tough, and shown to be a stickler for the rules. Sent to a bad posting from something that offended other police - just what comes out by stages.
Watch and enjoy.
After exposing two corrupt colleagues, Detective Grace Narayan is banished to a remote Welsh Islands. No sooner tbab she arrives, she hears of the disappearance of young Cai Pridaux, a year ago, Grace is keen to learn why the case was ignored.
Writer Toby Whithouse certainly has a degree of pedigree, and this series is another shining example of his talent.
Think Midsomer Murders meets The Wicker Man, it's very much a murder mystery, with a group of very strange locals. It held my attention from start to finish.
There are some excellent performances, Anjli Mohindra puts in a first class performance, she does a first rate job. Credit also to Mark Lewis Jones and Adjoa Andoh, the pair are excellent.
Part of me wishes it had actually been filmed in Wales, just to add that little bit of authenticity, although the location filming is tremendous.
Why was this not on one of the 'main' channels, makes no sense.
8/10.
Writer Toby Whithouse certainly has a degree of pedigree, and this series is another shining example of his talent.
Think Midsomer Murders meets The Wicker Man, it's very much a murder mystery, with a group of very strange locals. It held my attention from start to finish.
There are some excellent performances, Anjli Mohindra puts in a first class performance, she does a first rate job. Credit also to Mark Lewis Jones and Adjoa Andoh, the pair are excellent.
Part of me wishes it had actually been filmed in Wales, just to add that little bit of authenticity, although the location filming is tremendous.
Why was this not on one of the 'main' channels, makes no sense.
8/10.
- Sleepin_Dragon
- May 29, 2024
- Permalink
Grace, Anjli Mohindra, is a police sergeant transfered, as a punishment, to replace Guffud,Mark Lewis Jones, the recently retired sergeant on a remote island off the Welsh coast. She is in charge of the entire island force. That is her and a constable, Owen, played by James Bamford.
This series has obvious similarities to the classic film 'the Wicker Man' with a solitary outsider police officer and a local population unwelcoming to incomers, although in this case Grace does slowly get Owen on side in the investigation of a local boy who went missing a year previously. She conducts a search of the island and inevitably finds a body and challenges Guffud on his inept handling of the investigation when he was in charge.
Trying to get the truth from a population that all seem to be members of a weird cult and spend much of their time wearing strange masks. Full marks to Grace for taking up the challenge.
I enjoyed this series and found Anjili Mohindra a very engaging character and definitely wanted her to suceed.
This series has obvious similarities to the classic film 'the Wicker Man' with a solitary outsider police officer and a local population unwelcoming to incomers, although in this case Grace does slowly get Owen on side in the investigation of a local boy who went missing a year previously. She conducts a search of the island and inevitably finds a body and challenges Guffud on his inept handling of the investigation when he was in charge.
Trying to get the truth from a population that all seem to be members of a weird cult and spend much of their time wearing strange masks. Full marks to Grace for taking up the challenge.
I enjoyed this series and found Anjili Mohindra a very engaging character and definitely wanted her to suceed.
- iris-54551
- Apr 27, 2024
- Permalink
Thoroughly enjoyed this show, you will get the wicker man vibes mixed with Hot Fuzz. Basically police sergeant forced out of her division due to whistle blowing on two other officers gets a new posting on a fictional Welsh island but the island has a secret. Coming to terms with a clearly weird populus she has to figure out the disappearance of a local child but uncovers much more. It will keep you guessing till the final episode and split your moral stance on what would you do in that situation. This had my wife and I gripped and we both thoroughly enjoyed it. The only thing that confused me is her last posting is in Newcastle and she's posted to St Jory a fictional island off the cost of Wales (shot in Cranstan, Alnwick Northumberland) which is reinforced with Jill Halfpenny turning up help with forensic investigation. Yet it seems Newcastle police have influence over this Welsh island and not say local Swansea police.
- semaj-95339
- Apr 25, 2024
- Permalink
Not a bad creepy folk horror set on a Welsh island complete with weird rituals, cults and masks. Some parts of the script are pretty ropey but the main problem is the lead actress. Where the rest of the cast are good-servicable, the lead actress/detective is so wooden it's distracting. It's like she walked in off the street and each of her scenes were done in one take! This does lead to some unintentionally funny scenes though.
Having said that, I quite enjoyed it, it's fun and keeps you guessing and there aren't really any "filler episodes" where not much happens which seems to occur in a a lot of series these days.
Give it a go if your in the mood for a creepy, british whodunnit.
Having said that, I quite enjoyed it, it's fun and keeps you guessing and there aren't really any "filler episodes" where not much happens which seems to occur in a a lot of series these days.
Give it a go if your in the mood for a creepy, british whodunnit.
Who needs originality! This has every cliché known to man - accept that and just enjoy this near fabulous entertainment.
The plot isn't too dissimilar to HOT FUZZ - a strait laced, by-the-book police officer is posted to an idyllic yet decidedly weird isolated community. It's populated by a collection of marvellously over the top stereotypes who seemingly all hate the new arrival. There's weird rituals, lots of thunder and lightning, the predictable sound of crows squawking in the fog and then we get the murder.
It's a complete rip-off of every spooky police story from WICKER MAN to SCOOBY DOO but it does it so well it's almost fabulous. The team behind this really know what they're doing and have essentially made "a best of" every quirky suspense tv show in the last twenty years.
Once you've finished moaning about the utter unoriginality of this you'll probably love it. Although completely formulaic, it's really professionally made to be entertaining. The acting is spot on and very naturalistic making this nonsense seem entirely believable. Super-gorgeous Anjli Mohindra plays the Simon Pegg type up tight police officer complete with the usual issues all police detectives seem to have in every other tv show. She tackles her crazily over complicated character with gusto and although she's a real pain in the bum, she's such a superb actress that you're immediately on her side.
The plot isn't too dissimilar to HOT FUZZ - a strait laced, by-the-book police officer is posted to an idyllic yet decidedly weird isolated community. It's populated by a collection of marvellously over the top stereotypes who seemingly all hate the new arrival. There's weird rituals, lots of thunder and lightning, the predictable sound of crows squawking in the fog and then we get the murder.
It's a complete rip-off of every spooky police story from WICKER MAN to SCOOBY DOO but it does it so well it's almost fabulous. The team behind this really know what they're doing and have essentially made "a best of" every quirky suspense tv show in the last twenty years.
Once you've finished moaning about the utter unoriginality of this you'll probably love it. Although completely formulaic, it's really professionally made to be entertaining. The acting is spot on and very naturalistic making this nonsense seem entirely believable. Super-gorgeous Anjli Mohindra plays the Simon Pegg type up tight police officer complete with the usual issues all police detectives seem to have in every other tv show. She tackles her crazily over complicated character with gusto and although she's a real pain in the bum, she's such a superb actress that you're immediately on her side.
- Who_remembers_Dogtanian
- May 3, 2024
- Permalink
Mum and I watched this together and both felt it got off to a powerful start and then began to lag by about episode 3. The main part could have done with a better actress, let's be honest. We felt her character was also badly written; her running around like a bull in a China shop without any precaution or reserve soon became wearisome. Towards the end her character took a highly unbelievable full-turn. The plot-holes in the story became far more evident also, which meant the climax was not as exciting. Despite all of this criticism it was still worth a watch and was at least a far better alternative than the Hollywood sequel of the Wicker Man.
- krisfoxton
- Jun 22, 2024
- Permalink
It was bizarre reading through the IMDb reviews for The Red King, because there were so many very high ratings, and for a minute I wondered whether the reviews that I was reading were for the same show that I finished watching last night.
The first thing I thought, as the credits were rolling after the final episode was, well, there's five hours of my life which I wasted and will never get back.
The show started so well, and I was really intrigued after the first episode, keen to get to episode two, but things just went downhill from there, slowly at first, but speeding up towards the end, until I was left thinking what the actors and actresses had seen in the script to make them sign up for it. I watched it through to the final episode because I thought that it just HAD to get better. It didn't.
Anjli Mohindra plays her part well, but some of the words the script has her speaking, and some of the things she has to do, just reminded me of a poor B grade film. The rest of the cast were not great, in my opinion: Jill Halfpenny, Anjoa Andoh and Mark Lewis Jones were not believable as the characters they played, probably because of the script as well, and the whole thing just came across as being half baked.
Obviously, based on the positive reviews, I am amongst the minority in my opinion, but I, personally, got nothing from The Red King.
The first thing I thought, as the credits were rolling after the final episode was, well, there's five hours of my life which I wasted and will never get back.
The show started so well, and I was really intrigued after the first episode, keen to get to episode two, but things just went downhill from there, slowly at first, but speeding up towards the end, until I was left thinking what the actors and actresses had seen in the script to make them sign up for it. I watched it through to the final episode because I thought that it just HAD to get better. It didn't.
Anjli Mohindra plays her part well, but some of the words the script has her speaking, and some of the things she has to do, just reminded me of a poor B grade film. The rest of the cast were not great, in my opinion: Jill Halfpenny, Anjoa Andoh and Mark Lewis Jones were not believable as the characters they played, probably because of the script as well, and the whole thing just came across as being half baked.
Obviously, based on the positive reviews, I am amongst the minority in my opinion, but I, personally, got nothing from The Red King.
- robbiscargill
- Jun 1, 2024
- Permalink
"The Red King" emerges as a genre-defying series that intricately weaves elements of traditional police procedural with the eerie undertones of cult classics like "The Wicker Man." Set against the backdrop of a secluded Welsh island, the narrative follows Sergeant Grace, portrayed with compelling depth by Anjli Mohindra. Her character, a whistleblower ostracized from her previous post, finds herself grappling with the island's insular and mystifying ethos.
The series expertly employs a slow-burn narrative approach, reminiscent of "Midsomer Murders," yet infused with a palpable tension akin to "Hot Fuzz." This pacing allows the mysterious and slightly grotesque local customs to unfold with a rhythm that entices the viewer into its increasingly opaque world. The cinematography reinforces this mood, capturing the stark beauty of the Welsh landscape while accentuating the isolation that envelops Grace.
Supporting performances, particularly by James Bamford as Constable Owen, offer a nuanced counterbalance to Mohindra's intensity, enriching the dynamic between the outsider law enforcement and the wary local populace. The plot thickens around the disappearance of a local boy, unraveling over episodes peppered with subtle hints of gore and ritual, culminating in a finale that challenges the viewer's moral compass.
"The Red King" also deftly incorporates thematic elements of folklore and myth, portraying the local population's adherence to a cryptic cult. This motif is visualized through the use of symbolic and unsettling mask imagery, which serves as a constant reminder of the community's arcane secrets. The narrative complexity is further enhanced by the script's sharp dialogue and the characters' ambiguous moral alignments, creating a tapestry rich with thematic depth.
In sum, "The Red King" stands out as a meticulously crafted series that blends crime-solving with psychological horror, offering a fresh take on the detective genre. Its ability to maintain suspense while slowly peeling back layers of character and plot invites comparisons to the slow, menacing unravel of a classic Hitchcock thriller. For aficionados of finely tuned suspense and folklore-infused narratives, "The Red King" promises a uniquely haunting viewing experience.
The series expertly employs a slow-burn narrative approach, reminiscent of "Midsomer Murders," yet infused with a palpable tension akin to "Hot Fuzz." This pacing allows the mysterious and slightly grotesque local customs to unfold with a rhythm that entices the viewer into its increasingly opaque world. The cinematography reinforces this mood, capturing the stark beauty of the Welsh landscape while accentuating the isolation that envelops Grace.
Supporting performances, particularly by James Bamford as Constable Owen, offer a nuanced counterbalance to Mohindra's intensity, enriching the dynamic between the outsider law enforcement and the wary local populace. The plot thickens around the disappearance of a local boy, unraveling over episodes peppered with subtle hints of gore and ritual, culminating in a finale that challenges the viewer's moral compass.
"The Red King" also deftly incorporates thematic elements of folklore and myth, portraying the local population's adherence to a cryptic cult. This motif is visualized through the use of symbolic and unsettling mask imagery, which serves as a constant reminder of the community's arcane secrets. The narrative complexity is further enhanced by the script's sharp dialogue and the characters' ambiguous moral alignments, creating a tapestry rich with thematic depth.
In sum, "The Red King" stands out as a meticulously crafted series that blends crime-solving with psychological horror, offering a fresh take on the detective genre. Its ability to maintain suspense while slowly peeling back layers of character and plot invites comparisons to the slow, menacing unravel of a classic Hitchcock thriller. For aficionados of finely tuned suspense and folklore-infused narratives, "The Red King" promises a uniquely haunting viewing experience.
"The Red King" is generic in just about every way that matters. It's loaded with tropes - some very old and some very new - and all of them are bad. From the self-righteous cop fallen from grace and excised to a podunk assignment to the lavish conspiracy so obvious that the reveal is actually stunningly simplistic, Red King has next-to-no original thoughts and few compelling performances.
Red King seems to think that its audience hasn't seen Wicker Man or Midsommar, nor has read any British poetry or folklore. It also assumes that if you have, you're going to find a pub called "John Barleycorn" a snapping allusion. It's all quite embarrassing.
Marc Warren is serviceable the grieving drunk father and Mark Lewis gets to play his typical round-faced racist, but the problem lies in Anjli Mohindra's sergeant. We never quite get a beat on who she's supposed to be or why. It's not the actress's fault, but rather the scattered, threadbare characterization. And the script fails pretty much everyone.
In the end, it doesn't really matter who was murdered and why. It's all setup for an elaborately stupid gotcha that doesn't tickle the heart or the brain. It just lies there, stupid, on the rug, desperately wanting to be petted.
Red King seems to think that its audience hasn't seen Wicker Man or Midsommar, nor has read any British poetry or folklore. It also assumes that if you have, you're going to find a pub called "John Barleycorn" a snapping allusion. It's all quite embarrassing.
Marc Warren is serviceable the grieving drunk father and Mark Lewis gets to play his typical round-faced racist, but the problem lies in Anjli Mohindra's sergeant. We never quite get a beat on who she's supposed to be or why. It's not the actress's fault, but rather the scattered, threadbare characterization. And the script fails pretty much everyone.
In the end, it doesn't really matter who was murdered and why. It's all setup for an elaborately stupid gotcha that doesn't tickle the heart or the brain. It just lies there, stupid, on the rug, desperately wanting to be petted.
- grinningelvis
- Apr 27, 2024
- Permalink
The Red King: Very much a homage to The Wicker Man rather than a pastiche or a rip off. Sergeant Grace Narayan (Anjli Mohindra) is posted to the remote Welsh island St Jory after troubles in her Newcastle station where she was a whistleblower. Narayan is just as much by the rule book cop as Sergeant Neil Howie in The Wicker Man, it's not long before her inability to let anything pass has her at odds with many of the locals. And these are odd people, the island was once dominated by The True Way, a cult that carried out human sacrifices and worshiped Pagan Gods. That's all in the past thought, isn't it? When Narayan arrives there is a parade in progress, with the islanders masked up as they dance around tourists. Once the tourists have departed the cavorting locals stop and become sullen. The sergeant stays at The John Barleycorn inn, the landlady has a quirky daughter who takes more than a casual interest in Narayan, Then of course we have a missing youth, the islanders are generally silent about this. Things get stranger as the plot unfolds with murders and suicides, some violent gory scenes and a general feeling of unease infuses the story. The previous sergeant is still present and is obstructive. The Lady if the isle carries on as if it is her fiefdom. More of Narayan's back story is revealed and it looks as if a much wider conspiracy is at play. Everything which is happening might also be part of a ritual, Pagan motifs and imagery are ever present. A pretty good addition to the British Folk Horror TV Canon. Created & Written by Toby Whithouse, Directed by Daniel O'Hara. Six episodes on Alibi Channel. 8/10.
- donttouchmeprimate
- Apr 28, 2024
- Permalink
- matt-27768
- May 12, 2024
- Permalink
This series is set on a fictional Welsh island, The narrative follows Sergeant Grace, portrayed with empathy and great depth by Anjli Mohindra. A whistleblower ostracized from her previous post, she finds herself pondering the island's mystifying past.
As the story begins prosecutor Franck Siriani arrives in town to investigate what is going on; he finds himself working with Major Laurène Weiss of the local Gendarmerie and her small team. They are very different characters; Siriani is allergic to just about everything and Weiss is a tough woman who, when eighteen, cut off two fingers to escape after being chained up, in the vast forest that surrounds the town, by an unknown kidnapper. Each episode tends to include a 'case of the week' as well as ongoing investigations into the disappearance of the mayor's daughter, who went missing six months before the series started, and Weiss's attempts to discover what really happened to her in the forest all those years ago.
I really enjoyed this series; there is a great sense of mystery in the longer term story lines as well as the episodic stories. The location provides a great atmosphere; the characters are interesting and nicely varied and the cast does a fine job bringing these characters to life. Overall I'd definitely recommend this to fans of intriguing and slightly strange mysteries.
As the story begins prosecutor Franck Siriani arrives in town to investigate what is going on; he finds himself working with Major Laurène Weiss of the local Gendarmerie and her small team. They are very different characters; Siriani is allergic to just about everything and Weiss is a tough woman who, when eighteen, cut off two fingers to escape after being chained up, in the vast forest that surrounds the town, by an unknown kidnapper. Each episode tends to include a 'case of the week' as well as ongoing investigations into the disappearance of the mayor's daughter, who went missing six months before the series started, and Weiss's attempts to discover what really happened to her in the forest all those years ago.
I really enjoyed this series; there is a great sense of mystery in the longer term story lines as well as the episodic stories. The location provides a great atmosphere; the characters are interesting and nicely varied and the cast does a fine job bringing these characters to life. Overall I'd definitely recommend this to fans of intriguing and slightly strange mysteries.
The hallmark of good british crime dramas has always been roles being under played with dignity and respect for the viewers. In this one the lead actress gets a pass, just, but the important roles played by Adjoa Andoh and Mark Lewis Jones were unforgivably hamed up with a mix of amateur overacting and hyper theatrical speech that any director worth paying should have put a stop to immediately. That is what they are paid for. The younger cast members deported themselves well and I hope the self-indulgent performances of their elders does not rub off on them. Happy Valley and Marcella are modern examples of directors keeping tight reins on theatrical indulgence by actors, but casting should also answer for giving roles to those already guilty of overplaying roles in the past. Adjoa Andoh and Mark Lewis Jones have form.
- soundwright
- May 6, 2024
- Permalink
On the remote control is what you will reach after
Well this is drivel, script is awful , its like it cant decide beeing a comedy or crime drama, I would call it a schooltheatre and not in a good way, Its just so stupid with this police working toghetter with the locals, is this is how the british policeforce usually works ?
Acting is not that good, the story is of course stolen material from wickerman but not halfway that good, was there even a director in this show? Yet lots of people seems to like this, not sure why ? Perhaps the younger ones
This is garbage and now I have to push the red button on my remote control, that is the true way.
Well this is drivel, script is awful , its like it cant decide beeing a comedy or crime drama, I would call it a schooltheatre and not in a good way, Its just so stupid with this police working toghetter with the locals, is this is how the british policeforce usually works ?
Acting is not that good, the story is of course stolen material from wickerman but not halfway that good, was there even a director in this show? Yet lots of people seems to like this, not sure why ? Perhaps the younger ones
This is garbage and now I have to push the red button on my remote control, that is the true way.
- bjornrhein
- Jun 22, 2025
- Permalink