National Post (National Edition)

Bodyguard supplies intrigue and bombs galore

- Mike hale

British writer Jed Mercurio builds television shows the way the Cenobites build puzzle boxes in the Hellraiser movies. Get too close to one, and its intricate mechanism shoots its hooks into you, pulling you through a portal into a gyre of suspense from which there is no escape.

Mercurio’s most successful medium is a mash-up of the police procedural and the political conspiracy thriller, and his storytelli­ng trademarks include severe psychologi­cal duress, inappropri­ate sex among public servants and the ease with which major characters are killed off. Most noticeably, he strives to keep every conspirato­rial option open and every possible suspect in play for as long as possible. There are definite heroes and villains, but you might not know which is which until just before the final credits.

The latest example of his infernal abilities is Bodyguard, a six-episode BBC potboiler whose finale was, according to different measuremen­ts, the highest-rated British drama since either the Downton Abbey Season 2 finale in 2011 or a Doctor Who Christmas special in 2008. Viewers in the rest of the world, including Canada, can now see what the fuss is about with the series comes to Netflix. (A second season has not been announced but seems inevitable.)

Bodyguard stars Richard Madden, who played the sad, short-lived Robb Stark on Game of Thrones, as David Budd, a war veteran now serving in a police unit that provides protection details. A long, tense, highly effective opening scene involving a suicide bomber on a train establishe­s Budd’s bona fides — he is capable and compassion­ate in a crisis, but he has got a twitch, a crack in his armour presumably caused by post-traumatic stress and associated problems with his marriage.

That vein of weakness is central to the progress of the plot and to the web of suspicions that engulf Budd after he is promoted to head of security for the home secretary, Julia Montague. (She’s played by Keeley Hawes, a mainstay of British TV who appeared in Mercurio’s hit series Line of Duty.)

The hawkish, ruthlessly ambitious Montague is a target, or perhaps the target is Budd, or someone else, but in any case the threat levels are through the roof. There are bomb vests, truck bombs, regular bombs and a conspirato­rial stew pitting the police, the security services and the government against one another, and all against Budd.

As in Line of Duty, which follows a police internalaf­fairs unit, Mercurio is concerned with the revelation of character under pressure. But in Bodyguard he has not done the work of building a credible character before putting it through the wringer. Budd is hazily sketched, and the extreme measures the story takes to extend its mystery and keep his motives in question have the effect of making it hard to really care about until the season is almost up.

Stuck with this cipher of a role — he is stress personifie­d — Madden gives a performanc­e that is alternatel­y robotic and slightly unhinged. Unlike Martin Compston, who plays a comparable character in Line of Duty, or Lennie James, who was excellent as the villain in that show’s first season, Madden does not do enough to distract us when Mercurio’s plot twists veer from reality or his characters refuse to act like rational humans.

In Bodyguard, Mercurio’s breakneck story feels, at every moment, both carefully constructe­d and made up on the spot. It is difficult to go into any further detail because the constant revelation­s and reversals make the show an all-spoilers affair.

It can also be a blast, if you are all about the mystery and the forward momentum and your requiremen­ts for plausibili­ty and psychologi­cal realism are not high. Whether U.S. viewers will be sucked in the way British viewers were is a question that won’t get a definitive answer, since Netflix releases no numbers. British shows that hit it big in America tend to be raucous comedies (Absolutely Fabulous), genteel soap operas (Downton Abbey) or historical reenactmen­ts (The Crown), not thrillers. But maybe Mercurio’s puzzle box can buck the trend.

 ?? DES WILLIE / NETFLIX ?? Richard Madden and Keeley Hawes in Bodyguard. A big hit in Britain, the thriller arrives on Netflix on Wednesday.
DES WILLIE / NETFLIX Richard Madden and Keeley Hawes in Bodyguard. A big hit in Britain, the thriller arrives on Netflix on Wednesday.

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