Roadkill
- TV Mini Series
- 2020
- 57m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
6.2K
YOUR RATING
Politician Peter Laurence's private life is falling apart. Shamelessly untroubled by guilt or remorse, he seeks to further his own agenda while others plot to bring him down. Can he outrun h... Read allPolitician Peter Laurence's private life is falling apart. Shamelessly untroubled by guilt or remorse, he seeks to further his own agenda while others plot to bring him down. Can he outrun his own secrets to win the ultimate prize?Politician Peter Laurence's private life is falling apart. Shamelessly untroubled by guilt or remorse, he seeks to further his own agenda while others plot to bring him down. Can he outrun his own secrets to win the ultimate prize?
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
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Featured reviews
How wonderfully old fashioned this drama is, we haven't had a good Political drama for years, in 2020 we needed one.
It focuses on Peter Laurence, a Government Minister with Political ambition, and a checkered past. Everything in his private life seems to start spiralling out of control, at a time where opportunities for career development seem to be there.
It's good, it starts off fairly slow, but it gathers momentum as it progresses, you have expectations ahead of the finale, make your own minds up whether it succeeds or not.
Superbly acted throughout, Hugh Laurie is incredible, his ability to switch from conniving liar to Politician and man of the people is incredible. Other performances of note are Pippa Bennett-Warner, Pip Torrens and of course Helen McCrory.
I'm sure many will look at Helen McCrory's character Dawn, and be reminded of a former PM, possibly even two.
Beautifully produced, it's slick, sharp, with good music throughout.
The Politics, I say this as someone say in the centre, I'm not a Tory voter, and never have been, but.... There is a lot of political bias here, it's very anti Tory, we have Ministers wanting to sell of the NHS for one, Ministers in possession of I'll gotten gains, and we have the old boys network plotting against the female PM, it's not for me to comment, but come on, you need to be a little more impartial.
I would argue it's well worth seeing, but I know full well it will irritate some of a certain political persuasion 8/10.
It focuses on Peter Laurence, a Government Minister with Political ambition, and a checkered past. Everything in his private life seems to start spiralling out of control, at a time where opportunities for career development seem to be there.
It's good, it starts off fairly slow, but it gathers momentum as it progresses, you have expectations ahead of the finale, make your own minds up whether it succeeds or not.
Superbly acted throughout, Hugh Laurie is incredible, his ability to switch from conniving liar to Politician and man of the people is incredible. Other performances of note are Pippa Bennett-Warner, Pip Torrens and of course Helen McCrory.
I'm sure many will look at Helen McCrory's character Dawn, and be reminded of a former PM, possibly even two.
Beautifully produced, it's slick, sharp, with good music throughout.
The Politics, I say this as someone say in the centre, I'm not a Tory voter, and never have been, but.... There is a lot of political bias here, it's very anti Tory, we have Ministers wanting to sell of the NHS for one, Ministers in possession of I'll gotten gains, and we have the old boys network plotting against the female PM, it's not for me to comment, but come on, you need to be a little more impartial.
I would argue it's well worth seeing, but I know full well it will irritate some of a certain political persuasion 8/10.
It seems that some reviewers are basing their opinions on their political biases, rather than on the quality of the production, the plot or the acting. I binge-watched all 4 episodes. The performance of the main cast was convincing and the storyline wasn't too far-fetched to be believable. There were some minor weaknesses, such as the Prime Minister having no facial expressions due to a Botox overdrive (even though McCrory played the part well), but overall it's pretty good. The ending opens the possibility of a second series.
Ignore the ideological anti-BBC campaign here. This is well written and well performed political drama.
Roadkill, a British semi-Drama series with only 4 episodes!
Initially, I thought that it would be a compact, well-paced Drama pursuing to a second season whatever story it had.
Well, after watching it, it falls hard on the face.
A series to forget, besides the marvelous acting of Hugh Laurie.
- (+) Great acting by Hugh Laurie as always. The near-only very good performance here. Worth mentioning are Helen McCrory and Millie Brady too.
- (+) Some touching and funny moments relating to the main character's personal life.
- (+) Nice filming and instructive cinematography.
- (-) Slow, bland and uninteresting screenplay and developments.
- (-) Awful music and piano playing in the background. More like a score suitable for a light-hearted but depressed comedy series.
- (+-) Some interesting twists and turns, having the weight of five ping-pong balls.
A series to forget, besides the marvelous acting of Hugh Laurie.
I find it humorously ironic that the consumer reviews section highlights one of the main subtexts of this well crafted show. A lot of sensationalist polarised opinions based on political allegiance rather than acknowledgement of a well written script and some standout performances. I agree that the characters are a bit 2D but the show needs to form a base from which to develop. I hope the BBC comissioners give this show the future it deserves as there's a lot of interesting and engaging stuff here.
Did you know
- TriviaIt was the last role of Helen McCrory before her death of cancer at age 52.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Jeremy Vine: Episode #3.212 (2020)
Details
- Runtime
- 57m
- Color
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