We’ve had Scandi-Noir. We’ve had Welsh Noir. Now it’s time for Northern Irish Noir (Noir-thern Irish? No(rthern)ir(ish)?).
Bloodlands is the BBC’s latest flagship Sunday night crime drama. While it’s written by actor-turned-screenwriter Chris Brandon, there’s no getting away from the fact that this is a Jed Mercurio production. Whether Brandon was inspired by the Bodyguard and Line of Duty man or this new four-part series has been tweaked by Mercurio, is unclear. What is clear is that this is designed to be a Line of Duty-style series aired to scratch the AC-12 itch of fans waiting for the sixth run of the hit show, due on screen later this year.
DCI Tom Brannick (James Nesbitt, The Missing) is a stony-faced Belfast detective called to investigate a prominent former IRA member’s disappearance. The case is soon linked to a set of abductions/presumed murders from 1998. The ‘Goliath’ case, we soon learn, has a rather personal connection to Brannick.
Goliath, named after the big yellow Harland & Wolff cranes that feature throughout, is a serial killer. Well, he’s an assassin. Okay, more of a kidnapper, really. And maybe a cop. He’s a kidnapping serial killer assassin potential cop.
The stakes are high here. This isn’t just a missing persons case; peace in Northern Ireland is potentially at risk. Brannick’s assignment needs to be investigated and a resolution needs to come quickly and quietly, so says his boss Jackie Twomey (Lorcan Cranitch). Of course, that’s not to be…
One of the troubles with the Troubles, from a dramatic point of view, is that there’s a heck of a lot of history and politics to unfurl. Thankfully Bloodlands is careful not to throw its viewers into the deep end, instead preferring to guide us into the water slowly via the shallow end. There’s plenty of talk of the Good Friday Agreement, paramilitary groups, Loyalists and the IRA, but you don’t need to have a particularly deep understanding of Northern Irish politics and its recent history to be able to follow what’s going on.
For anyone who does struggle with that side of things – it’s worth a quick Wikipedia session perhaps before the second episode next Sunday night. Firstly, it might help with understanding the context within which the drama exists. Secondly, perhaps more crucially, the Troubles were an important part of British history that can teach us a lot about Northern Ireland – and the United Kingdom – as countries.
As for Bloodlands’ star, well, who else was going to be cast as a craggy-faced grieving middle-aged Northern Irish police detective on the hunt for a bad guy? Okay, given the Line of Duty connection, Adrian Dunbar may have considered turning up for the audition, but he’d have done so knowing full well that the job was always going to be Jimmy Nesbitt’s.
The question the audience is being asked is ‘who’s the baddie?’ Who is ‘Goliath’? It seems likely that DCI Brannick will work it out. If he struggles though, you can almost imagine him picking up the phone to Dunbar’s Line of Duty character Ted Hastings. Such is the similarity between the shows, the two dramas feel like they exist in the same universe. Brannick and Hastings could have been bobbies on the Belfast beat together. Two old pals whose careers went in different directions.
The inevitable comparisons between the two shows might not benefit Bloodlands too much, given it’s not going to be able to build as much tension in its limited run. It also doesn’t seem quite as obsessed with big action set pieces or weekly plot twists. What it lacks in car chases, shoot-outs and unexpected character deaths, it makes up for with its intriguing premise and blackly comic script, with Charlene McKenna’s DS Niamh McGovern getting most of the best lines. And, of course, the easy charisma of Jimmy Nesbitt.
This might not go down as a Goliath of crime dramas, but it stands pretty tall. We’ll be looking forward to the second instalment next weekend. Join us back here for our review after it airs.
I have just rewatched series 1 to reacquaint myself with the history behind Series 2. It was very helpful.
I agree that Twomey is a brilliant character. Brannick certainly behaves extremely stupidly in Episode 3 – sleeping with the blond ( all in the line of duty?), getting ridiculously over excited finding the gold in the top of the grave with the blond etc. etc.
But can’t wait till Episode 4 for hopefully a big reveal!
Love this show and I love Steve’s reviews. Just the right tone. Can’t wait to see what happens in the final episode!
Found this synopsis helpful, but agree there’s too much brow furrowing. ( Not waving but frowning?) Will watch tonight’s episode to find out why the hell Brannick shot Corry if he, Brannick, isn’t Goliath. Does he think Emma was the killer, or helping the IRA? Hardly a motive, if she was two-timing him…Hmm.
Good. When you think of all the twist and turns in NI this is believable.
I genuinely thought it was awful and unbelievable in the worst sense. Needed more acting than frowning Gave up after ep 2