Still catching up on Trigger Point episode 2? Read Steve’s review of episode 1 here.
After a thoroughly action packed and unrelenting opener, ITV’s newest Sunday night drama Trigger Point has dropped its octane levels a little and settled down.
last week we’d briefly wondered whether this Jed Mercurio-produced bomb disposal thriller might attempt to keep the tension ramped all the way up for its entire six-week run. That might not be good for our collective blood pressure, though, and so this second part saw a noticeable drop in nail-biting scenes.
We opened in the wake of last week’s shocking explosion, with Lana ‘Wash’ Washington (Vicki McClure) grieving the loss of her partner and best friend Joel ‘Nut’ Nutkins (Adrian Lester). She’s now been upped to his position as the senior in the team, something which seems to rankle colleague John (Kris Hitchin). That’ll likely be a plot point in the coming weeks.
Now involved in high level meetings to help identify who’s behind the ‘Westhaven Terror Attack’, Wash doesn’t have much time to cry for her partner because she’s got work to do – just without her pal by her side.
With Nut gone – and the dynamic between Wash and Nut gone with it – this second part does feel a tiny bit lost. It’s not quite clear yet if we’re now just following the mourning figure of Wash on her own, or if she might team up with any of her colleagues to progress the investigation, defuse the bombs and catch the man or men responsible. If she is to, her co-workers might need a little more writing and development. Particularly poor Danny (Eric Shango), who, so far, has been given less personality and responsibility than the now twice-deployed bomb disposal robot.
There is something else a wee bit off-putting about Trigger Point, we have to say. It comes in the shape of the show’s casting. And in a few different ways too.
There are just a few too many ‘who’s that?!’ and ‘Oh, that’s so-and-so from such-and-such!’ moments here. We’re not talking about the show’s lead being from Line of Duty, either. We mean more about how DI Thom Youngblood is played by Mark Stanley, who’s currently appearing in another ITV crime drama showing now, The Bay. And Warren Brown is Karl Maguire, while also being Raymond Mullen on The Responder on BBC One this week.
Then there’s the addition of former EastEnders actor Nabil Elouahabi, famous for playing ‘Gary’ in Only Fools and Horses. Now, the 47-year-old is a fine character actor, but in the last few weeks alone Elouahabi has had parts in two other ITV crime dramas, Vera and The Tower. Oh, and Kris Hitchin was in three of the four episodes of the recently-broadcast Stephen Port drama Four Lives. Mostly quirks of scheduling and partially explained by Covid delays to filming and broadcasting, we’re sure.
Finally, we can sprinkle on the fact that not only does UK TV comedy great Kevin Eldon appear as Lana’s father Jeff, but After Life’s Kerry Godliman is Sonya Reeves from the Bomb Data Centre. Oh, and then there’s the extremely distinctive looking and sounding Ralph Ineson (Finchy from The Office), who pops up as everyone’s boss, the shady and we’re assuming corrupt – or somehow involved with the bad guys – Commander Bergman.
We’re not saying a drama needs to cast unknown faces. Not at all. However, a balance has to be found. We’d argue that a slightly distracting number of recognisable faces have been hired here. Still, we’ll get over it.
This second episode was still kind of wobbling a little from the events of its opener. With no big bomb set piece, it needed to develop the characters. Which it didn’t, really. So next Sunday’s slice of Trigger Point has to either do just that or deliver us another tense defusing scene.
Part three, we’re imagining, will see Wash grow close to the charming (seeming) Karl. He’s a bit suspect though, isn’t he? Our guess is that he’s also an embedded baddie. The bad guys seem to be radicalised far-right extremists associated with the fictional ‘British Flag’ movement, using terrorism to incite racial hatred – which is a plot-line a little too similar to Baptiste’s second series from Autumn of 2021. Still, we’ll get over that too.
We left with Wash called to defuse a bomb in a mosque. It quickly became clear to her that it was a nail bomb, the sort made by amateurs, not pros. So this isn’t the same bomber. What it is, we’ll likely find, is a revenge attack. Proof that the incitement part of the main terrorists’ plan is working.
This Sunday’s Trigger Point felt a little wobbly and unfocused, but we’re convinced there’s enough here to justify watching on. A strong third part and we’ll be back on track.
Found it unbelievable that she had to show streamers nerves when defusing bombs. People who do this for their job, who have done it for years, are extremely cautious and take things as seriously as you’d expect but they aren’t shaking and sweating. If you were like that you would not have done it for years. You’d either have quit or be exploded.
Wooden script leads to struggling acting. Waste of time and talent.
Terrible acting, dire script, struggling to watch.
Absolutely unrealistic rubbish, bad script , bad acting.
Slow pace at the start but the tension build up was good. The end was worth the wait. Looking forward to episode 2.