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Jericho

  • TV Mini Series
  • 2005
  • Not Rated
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
617
YOUR RATING
Jericho (2005)
Jericho Of Scotland Yard 2-Disc 2
Play trailer0:31
3 Videos
6 Photos
CrimeDrama

Detective Chief Inspector Michael Jericho of Scotland Yard is a respected, uncompromising and forward thinking detective investigating high-profile murders in 1950s London.Detective Chief Inspector Michael Jericho of Scotland Yard is a respected, uncompromising and forward thinking detective investigating high-profile murders in 1950s London.Detective Chief Inspector Michael Jericho of Scotland Yard is a respected, uncompromising and forward thinking detective investigating high-profile murders in 1950s London.

  • Stars
    • David Troughton
    • Robert Lindsay
    • Ciarán McMenamin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    617
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • David Troughton
      • Robert Lindsay
      • Ciarán McMenamin
    • 17User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 nominations total

    Episodes4

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season2005

    Videos3

    Jericho Of Scotland Yard 2-Disc 2
    Trailer 0:31
    Jericho Of Scotland Yard 2-Disc 2
    Jericho Of Scotland Yard 2
    Trailer 0:30
    Jericho Of Scotland Yard 2
    Jericho Of Scotland Yard 2
    Trailer 0:30
    Jericho Of Scotland Yard 2
    Jericho Of Scotland Yard 2 (Trailer 1)
    Trailer 0:30
    Jericho Of Scotland Yard 2 (Trailer 1)

    Photos5

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    Top cast80

    Edit
    David Troughton
    David Troughton
    • Sgt. Clive Harvey
    • 2005
    Robert Lindsay
    Robert Lindsay
    • D.I. Michael Jericho
    • 2005
    Ciarán McMenamin
    Ciarán McMenamin
    • DC John Caldicott…
    • 2005
    Nicholas Jones
    Nicholas Jones
    • AC Graham Cherry…
    • 2005
    Lydia Leonard
    Lydia Leonard
    • Angela
    • 2005
    Lee Ross
    Lee Ross
    • Louis
    • 2005
    Kellie Bright
    Kellie Bright
    • WPC Penny Collins
    • 2005
    Eve Matheson
    • Rita Harvey
    • 2005
    Aurélie Bargème
    • Juliette
    • 2005
    Brendan Coyle
    Brendan Coyle
    • Christie
    • 2005
    Zoe Colton
    • Jenny Harvey
    • 2005
    Aran Bell
    • Jericho's Father
    • 2005
    Andrew Thorpe
    • Young Jericho
    • 2005
    Peter Bowles
    Peter Bowles
    • Fleming
    • 2005
    Grant Davis
    • Grace
    • 2005
    Jane Horrocks
    Jane Horrocks
    • Sadie Swettenham
    • 2005
    William Ash
    William Ash
    • Johnny Swan
    • 2005
    Philip Rham
    • TV Director
    • 2005
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    7.4617
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    Featured reviews

    10Thorsten-Krings

    Perfect!

    Jericho's name alludes to THE classic Scotland Yard detective, Gideon. Gideon's Way was the best cop show on British television before the Sweeney. The main reason was the excellent writing and the great characters. Jericho picks these high standards up and develops them further by giving the series a dark touch. Also in terms of cinematography Jericho looks more like neo-noir than TV. So all in all it's a very classy production. Robert Lindsay proves to be not only one of the best actors of his generation but in the UK. He does high brow and entertainment with the same ease and elegance. After about 10 minutes you don't evcen remember that there ever was a series called My family. His Jericho is dark and brooding. The other great performance in this series comes from Peter Bowles. We know him as suave man about town from many TV productions but here he gives the performance of a life time as dark, menacing crime lord. Perfect!
    9charlotteford

    LA Confidential, Not Foyle's War

    Another reviewer has compared Jericho unfavorably with Foyle's War. I, too, am a fan of Foyle's War, but Jericho appears to be striving much more for LA Confidential.

    Robert Linsday is a wonderful, Tony Awarding-winning actor and one of the best new TV detectives I've seen in a while. The casting of the secondary and guest roles is very fine. I generally hate conspicuous music tracks, but I was immediately sucked into the first episode by the theme music, which also seems to owe a debt to the LA Confidential sound track.

    I know nothing about London in the 1950's but I enjoyed this imagined version of it very much.
    10tommymax

    Another hit for the Mystery! series

    Mystery! has done it again with this series, which is quite different than most of what's gone before. And that helps to make this one another hit.

    I'm a long-time fan of the Mystery! series and a particular fan of Inspector Morse. Anyone familiar with that series knows the high quality product that long-running series consistently put out. So I'm not an easy audience, given my perspective.

    But Robert Lindsay has made DI Michael Jericho his own. He IS Jericho. In the same way that the late great John Thaw made Morse his own character, Lindsay has grabbed Jericho by the throat and taken his identity from him. I haven't read any of the books so I don't know how the character comes across there, but Lindsay's interpretation is "spot on" from a television perspective.

    I'm currently in the midst of re-watching the first episode on DVD (thanks for that) after having caught at least 2 of the original airings last Fall (Ragged Claws and Johnny Swan). I was hooked from the start; and like Morse, Jericho holds up well on repeated re-watchings. So even after you know who done it, you're nevertheless caught up in the drama.

    The musical score and overall style of this series do indeed make it unique. It's all a bit "X-Files-esq," but I find both quite enjoyable and fitting, and, in my humble opinion, they help make the series stand out.

    Like Morse, Jericho has a solid side-kick who compliments his character perfectly. It seems they have an endless supply of fine "character actors" over there in the UK, and I'm thankful I get to see them when I can. Even the "bit parts" get solid treatment from fine British actors. One of my favs in the first episode is Shorty. He's a hoot -- and he's not even around all that long.

    Lindsay is currently also on my TV in his "My Family" series, but I refuse to watch him in that. I'm sure he's good (and I have seen some of it) but I don't want to lose that Jericho edge that I'm currently working on with him.

    I've given this series a 10, which is not to say it's an equal to Morse. But 10 to me means it's a standout with little or nothing to criticize. Beyond that, it's simply a matter of taste. I only hope they keep this series going for quite a long time.

    Thanks Gawd for Mystery! and all the rest of the great Brit shows. And, of course, also PBS. And thanks Gawd also for DVD so's I can have something to watch (and re-watch) when the mood moves me and PBS is into something else less enjoyable to me. Because if I had to live with only American TV, I'd give the medium up completely.
    7rushfan74

    All the Proper Props...But at What Speed?

    In my home, we are long time "Mystery" and "Masterpiece Theater" fans. And, I absolutely loved Robert Lindsay in all of the "Hornblower" series.

    My only beef with "Jericho"--which we are currently viewing in the States, now--is that the program format seems too choppy, too breakneck and--dare I say it?--too "Americanized" in its filming style.

    For example, some of the traditional blisses of watching British television over American television are the LACK OF: overly-numerous, screechy, noisy car chases/crashes/explosions; characters emoting choppy, stale love/hate dialogues about as spontaneous and mature as Saturday night in dead bar, and the endless "bedhopping" on American television shows that seems to come (no pun intended) into play every ten minutes. On British television, intimate relations do appear to occur because they are ESSENTIAL to a plot; and when they do happen, British television is surprisingly honest in hiding nothing and revealing everything (Good Show, I Say!).

    These having been stated, one of the joys of watching "Foyle's War," for example, is the almost subconsciously-leisured pace of each mystery. Even when explosions do occur, Inspector Foyle takes his own time to ruminate upon all of the evidence, the suspects and the motives for the crime. If Inspector Foyle has to visit London, nothing changes--he continues his proved thought-processes, even while the city's activities roil around him. And, he takes you along for the ride...at a good digestive pace.

    However, I do understand that Inspector Jericho is a "high-energy" character. Like Inspector Foyle, he has very little supervisory support, very little time--and probably funding--for his constabulatory efforts, and he appears to be in an uphill battle to continually prove his investigatory worth to the outside world. In personality, he certainly is very extroverted...not an Inspector Foyle, at all. Hence, the rush-around pace of things on the show.

    Fine. Almost...

    But, as we "Mystery" fans know, even extrovert/introverts like Hercule Poirot, or Sherlock Holmes, never abandoned that "thought process" link with their viewers, in exchange for overly-clipped scenes and a high speed chase--even when our heroes were forced to really "hoof it" through London streets. There was always time for the viewer to ABSORB the facts and ENJOY the absorption: to soak up conflicting character reactions; taste the atmosphere of a crime scene and ponder any family crises/relationships that might wreak effect upon "the criminal act." In short, television viewers were allowed the luxury of thought with time.

    That's the problem with "Jericho." The plot is sound, the atmosphere--what I have time to see and feel of it--is very accurate for the period that it's depicting and--yes--the empathy is there to care about Inspector Jericho, both publicly and privately. But, that's about all that there is time for. Main characters and supporting characters are not allowed the time to really SHOW their emotional and physical depths. So, by the time the program's over, you feel like you rode 300 miles with Michael Schumacher at a steady 395 miles per hour.

    Which brings me to a final plea: if there are writers and producers of British television reading this, you do not have to Americanize/"short attention span" my British programming; if I liked the former, I wouldn't bother watching the latter. I know all of the Aaron Spellings of America would disagree with me, but that's why I don't watch their shows in my own country! If traditionally-paced British television wasn't my sort of style, I wouldn't be pleading and critiquing with this letter! That having been said, if you were forced to speed through the production of a program because of a deadline, or lack of funding...well that's out of everyone's control, isn't it? Just ask Inspector Jericho.
    10gilliann

    Rave Review

    I just saw the first two episodes of Jericho, and I can't believe this show never made it to a second series! I read that the audience was smaller after the first episode aired, but it seems like there are definitely shows that keep getting made even if they're insipid & nobody watches them, so why does a genius program like this get canceled? Jericho's definitely as compelling as Foyle was, and the 50's style is so wonderfully atmospheric, so well-done, I felt like I was watching something made in that decade. The plots are powerful, the acting's great, and the cinematography gorgeous -- what's the downside? There isn't one -- so who do I petition to get them to pick it up again and make more episodes? I'm looking forward to seeing Eps. 3 and 4, but already sad that there aren't any more after that!

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    Related interests

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    Crime
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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Episode 1.1 (A Pair of Ragged Claws (2005)) was dedicated to the memory of N'Deaye Ba (aka Inday Ba) who played Martha Sorin. She died on 26 April 2005, shortly after she finished filming for her role in Jericho (2005).
    • Connections
      Featured in Comedy Connections: To the Manor Born (2006)

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    FAQ17

    • How many seasons does Jericho have?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 16, 2005 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Jericho of Scotland Yard
    • Filming locations
      • State Theatre, George Street, Grays, Essex, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Granada Television
      • WGBH
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h(120 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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