Warning: May contain spoilers. Still need to catch up on Crime episode 4? Read Steve’s review of episode 3 here.
“How do we catch him?” DS Amanda Drummond asks her partner towards the end of this fourth part of this first series of Crime, ITV’s adaptation of Irvine Welsh’s novel.
“We don’t,” DI Ray Lennox replies. “He’s coming to us.”
Skip forward to the very final scene and Ray’s prediction comes true. Staking out the fresh grave of the latest victim, young Britney Hamil’s killer shows himself.
Lennox knows who he’s looking for after visiting the man wrongly imprisoned for the murder, who tips him off. He saw the real killer at the graveside and could offer up a description.
Ray and Amanda’s breakthrough at the end of episode four came to very little when they discovered the van missing from the Leeds lock-up. All that was left was a mocking smiley face drawn on yellow note paper.
Meanwhile, away from the main investigation, we’ve all sorts of other plot threads being sewn. Dougie Gillman decided to go AWOL just as his and Louis Leblanc’s French murderer Georges Fournier surfaced. With Dougie otherwise occupied at a local brothel, Amanda and Ray stepped in to help take down the holidaying killer. A bungled arrest saw Fournier in handcuffs – but also had him drenched in boiling hot oil, with DS Drummond headbutted and Leblanc at the wrong end of a steak knife. Merde.
We saw a brief snippet of some comeuppance for Dougie too: the odious sexist was handed divorce papers by his estranged wife in a short but enjoyable sequence.
We also heard a little about Amanda’s recent past, including her split from a boyfriend and subsequent sessions with a therapist – a therapist whom, she’s surprised to find out, Ray wants the telephone number of. We’re hoping to have his therapy discussions uncover more about his traumatic past with ‘a beast’ in the final two parts.
Elsewhere, Ray’s girlfriend Trudi sought advice from her crime-solving other half about the best way to deal with the toxic sexual harassment situation at her work. Ray’s advice (“if you want to beat the system, you have to operate like the system”) helps Trudi formulate a dastardly plan that works like a charm.
While it was refreshing to explore other storyline avenues, which came as something of a welcome detour, we think (and hope) the rest of the series will prioritise the newly-arrested killer.
As the credits prepared to roll, we got a look at ‘Parka Man’ (who is almost certainly also ‘Mr. Confectioner’). Greying, unassuming and creepy, we discover our main bad guy is played by none other than Life on Mars and Grace star John Simm. He’s given a damaged eye to further underline his credentials – a slightly hacky trope as it’s been employed so many times by the James Bond film franchise, amongst others.
Where’s the excitement coming from, though, if the murderer has surrendered himself à la John Doe in Se7en? Well, as with David Fincher’s iconic serial killer film, it’s not quite as simple as that. Before he basically put the cuffs on himself, Mr. Confectioner took out an insurance policy. He’s kidnapped another victim, young Kylie Jones. Ray and the team will have to tread carefully if they want their man to reveal her whereabouts before it’s too late.
Crime is still a superior crime drama, with some razor-sharp writing and a few memorable performances. It needs a little extra to be considered one of the best of its kind in recent years. Two tense final episodes with an eye-catching cameo by Simm and it could very well manage it. Let’s see how the final third plays out.
Still enjoying this Irvine Welsh adaptation? How do you see the case playing out? Let us know what you think in the comments below…
I enjoyed this series also! I had had enough of The Confectioner and wanted to see him experience what those young girls had to endure! So even though Dougie was trash I was on his side, sick as that sounds.
But I agree with above comment about the pigeon “was a step too far” and “Please bear in mind that a few sick people may copy this action.”
I really hope there are lots of policemen like Dougie in real life
Overall, disappointing for me, thought it would be much bettter. The closing interview scenes were unbelievable, too much psycho babble between the villain and hero and the tea towel retribution scene (which was being witnessed by police officers in the observation room) went past being stupid.
Agree with you
I enjoyed this series, but thought the capture and burning alive a pigeon was a step too far.
Please bear in mind that a few sick people may copy this action.