Posts Tagged ‘Crime’

Review: Identity

Monday, July 12th, 2010

British drama has a bad rap round here, it has been a long time since a British show grabbed my attention, however in fairness it has not been since the second episode of Breaking Bad that I have really felt hooked on a new show. ITV’s latest offering is Identity, a drama that follows the investigators involved in identity fraud.

The series opens with a bang, a policeman lying in the street having been shot during a tense stand off in a suburban street. The man responsible for the shooting claims he is the victim of identity fraud and that someone else has committed the crimes he is accused of, of course that doesn’t explain why he shot a policeman. Anyway when the siege has ended the Identity Fraud squad enter and start to chase down leads to find the man responsible. Paper trials and witness interviews all climax in an action chase scene around a school.

The problem with bad cop shows is that the protagonist can be a bit of a mystery, this is a classic example of not knowing who we are suppose to care about. Do we care about the man who had his identity stolen, but then shot a cop? Do we care about the investigators who are just doing their job? Do we care about the identity thief who had his own life taken from him? Me personally I didn’t care about any of them, no one really had to make a tough choice and there was no stake raising towards the end, nothing to lose and nothing to gain. Even though the camera kept whizzing around, at the end of the day it was all about following receipts and making connections that is all pretty dull when that is being spoon fed to you and crazy action chases mean nothing if you are not emotionally involved. In the end we learn that one of the Fraud Squad is leading a double life in a Turkish criminal gang, so we can presume that this will provide the series arc, but why just throw it in in the last three minutes of the show? It comes from nowhere and feels like an after thought.

Identity fraud can screw up your life, there is no doubt about that, but trying to capture that from the point of view of the investigators is just dull, no matter how many chases you throw in. With another five episodes to go it is unclear what more they can throw at the screen to fool me into thinking that identity fraud is a ticking time bomb of destruction. Watch the trailer below to see just how overblown this is…

Created / Written by: Ed Whitmore
Directed by: Brendan Maher
Starring: Aidan Gillen, Keeley Hawes, Holly Aird, Elyes Gabel, Shaun, Patrick Baladi
Date premièred: 5 July 2010 – ITV1

Review: White Collar

Saturday, February 27th, 2010

When it comes to greenlighting new drama, networks love two areas, crime and hospitals; of course it is a constant struggle to find a new a way to tell tired old stories. We have already explored the hospital dramas with Nurse Jackie and network light clone Mercy, but now we will look at the new trend in crime drama. Cops and detectives and forensics have all been done so now writers are looking elsewhere. The Mentalist burst onto the scene in 2008 with the idea of teaming a man with a unique skill (in the case a reformed TV psychic) with a bunch of detectives (now it can be argued that the idea for The Mentalist was stolen from comedy drama Psych – a fact not gone unnoticed by the show.) This was followed a few months later by Castle which saw a crime novelist team up with detectives to solve crime. Finally we have White Collar, this time the guy with a skill is a expert conman Neal Caffrey, rescued from prison to help the FBI solve crimes.

When I first heard the pitch for the show it felt like it picked up where Catch Me If You Can left off. But, this is no catch me if you can, there is no background to this guy’s amazing abilities in identifying fraud just everyone says that he is the best. The first episode sees him escape from prison to stop his girlfriend leaving him.. The cop who put him away originally tracks him down but on discovering that he as knowledge of a crime is deputised to help solve such a crime.  Tagged and housed up in a crappy hotel room it does not take Caffrey too long to con his way into more upscale digs with a rich widow. Ultimately his insight proves more useful than the entire resources of FBI and they find the people responsible for a large counterfeit operation. This seals the trust between conman and cop and the start of many new adventures, of course Caffrey still hasn’t reunited with his ex and working with the police may just be a stop gag position until he finds out where she is.

There was much to like in this caper led pilot and I certainly found it more engaging that Castle, but lacked the insider tricks provided by the Mentalist. I wonder would happen if they teamed up these guys as the legit law enforcement seems wholly incapable of solving a crime without these quirky outsiders. This is where these shows fall down, just because you have a unique skill it does not make you the life saver of every operation, however since he is the life saver people should just stop doubting him.

The first series received a 14 episode order with a news of a second series being picked up too.

Created / Written by: Jeff Eastin
Directed by: Bronwen Hughes
Starring: Matt Bomer, Tim DeKay, Willie Garson, Natalie Morales, Tiffani Thiessen
Date premièred: 23rd October 2009
UK Details: TBC


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