WARNING: CONTAINS SPOILERS. Still catching up on Bodyguard episode 6? Read Steve’s review of episode 5 here.
“Who’s that?” “Who do they work for?” “Reckon it could be her behind it all?” “Who’s that bloke?” “What’s he doing that for?!”
If there’s one thing a Jed Mercurio drama does, it’s make you ask questions. Going into this sixth and final big slice of the Line of Duty writer’s latest wildly successful new BBC drama, Bodyguard, we had more than a few questions that demanded answers, including:
– Is Julia really dead?
– Who’s behind the RIPA ‘18 conference bombing?
– Who swapped out the bullets in David’s gun?
– Who’s dodgier – the security service or the police chiefs?
– Is David secretly a bad guy?
– Will we be left with a cliffhanger?
– Will there be scope left for a follow-up series?
– Is it just us that always thinks David calls female superiors ‘Mum’?
More than ten million Brits tuned in to see if they were to get all or some of those questions answered on Sunday night. It’s safe to say that Bodyguard has been the kind of runaway smash hit that commissioners dream about. Not since perhaps The Night Manager or Broadchurch has the UK public been treated to such unmissable and discussion-worthy watercooler telly. Did the sixth of the country that watched Bodyguard episode 6 get their answers? Well, yes. And no. But mostly yes.
Let us explain.
A lot has been said already – by us and plenty of others – about just how surprising this series has been. There have been twists and turns at every corner and just when you think you know how to read the thing and get into its flow, the rug is pulled on you once again. We started Bodyguard with two frenetic episodes of action; as though we were living in Robert Ludlum’s world of Jason Bourne. Then things got seriously steamy between Keeley Hawes’ Julia and Richard Madden’s David Budd (think less Ludlum and more Jilly Cooper). Then sad, then action-y again. Then they killed off one of the leads. After all that business, we had two full episodes (4 and 5) of plotting, espionage, detective work and exposition. Few people could predict what the finale would have in store, though…
And what was in store? Well, it turned out that the answer, very briefly, was this: ‘A little storyline, an almost insensibly long real-time(ish) ‘action’ scene, a baddie reveal, another much more surprising baddie reveal and then a quite sweet little bow-tying ending.’
Pedants and fans of detail may have winced slightly as the credits rolled, however. Quite a few of the smaller plot points and teasers went unanswered and there were more than a couple of times we were asked to suspend our disbelief or gloss over finer points. Only, rather than explain exactly what had been going on these past five weeks, Bodyguard instead opted to cover the basics, but return to its roots of high drama, dedicating more than 40 of its 75-minute running time to a scene when David had to negotiate his way out of a suicide vest.
Compared to the opening episode’s bomb-on-a-train action scene, the van attack on the primary school, the Thornton Square shoot ‘em up and the Home Secretary-killing bomb blast, this one was built on tension rather than incident, gunfire or explosion. For the most part, it worked – but to be brutally honest, there were times where the scene dragged and the high drama dipped into low drama and almost to the point where we considered making a cup of tea without even bothering to pause the TV.
As we theorised in our review of episode 5, this big finish was all about David being set up as a convenient fall guy, a patsy. His – and in turn our – job was to work out who was behind it all. As it turned out, facilitated by our protagonist’s very own boss, Lorraine Craddock’s (Pippa Haywood), organised crime boss Luke Aitken killed Julia Montague to stop her pushing through her Snooper’s Charter-style bill. In a bid to keep the law off his organisation’s back. And that was that. Well, that was almost that, anyway.
While this reveal made sense and seemed to make sense, it wasn’t quite satisfying enough. There was a distinct feeling that we’d been let down a little. We were served up nearly three-quarters of an hour of Richard Madden walking backwards through a park and fiddling about with masking tape, only to be told that it was just that meathead in the 4×4 and his manager in collusion. It’s not enough to get anyone writing into Points of View, but it felt ever-so-slightly disappointing.
Until the real twist…
Of course, there had to be another surprise. We’d been daft to assume otherwise. We knew who planted the bomb. We knew how they got away with it. But we didn’t know who was making and supplying the bombs, did we? Who could it be? Well, in true whodunnit mode, they picked out an early character we all inherently trusted and could never suspect. Who David inherently trusted and could never suspect… Nadia, the ‘suicide’ bomber from the first episode’s opener. Shamed by her inability to blow herself and the train from the opening week to smithereens, Nadia ‘atoned’ by making David’s children’s school the next target and creating further IEDs. She wasn’t just the weak and pushed-around little wife we’d all dismissed her as. She was a true Jihadi. Albeit one who admits to her crimes a little too easily.
Nadia, Luke and Craddock in prison, Longcross and his boss out of work, we wrapped things up with David taking some much-needed downtime with his family. But only after a quick and seemingly miraculously visit to Occupational Health (what an advert for work-based therapy that was, eh?).
Bodyguard will be back for a second series, of that we’re almost certain. Julia won’t be there. And nor, we suspect, will David Budd. Our suspicion is that an anthology could be the future of the show. Here’s hoping for a flip reverse with a female bodyguard protecting, say, a male rock star, perhaps?
Our suggestions for casting? How about Keeley Hawes and Richard Madden?
Did you tune in for Bodyguard episode 6? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!
It’s edge of the seat viewing. Simple hooked on this series.
Enjoying it so far, loved Line of Duty too! ??
It’s a gripping drama, great acting from the two main characters… it was such a shock when the bomb went off, I didn’t see that coming! I hope the Home Secretary isn’t too badly hurt & that she can continue her job & relationship with her Bodyguard! xxx