Otago Daily Times

Take a trip down ‘Mystery Road’

- By CALUM HENDERSON

THE road is long, with absolutely no winding turns. It’s sunbaked and dusty, like everything else in the Outback, and it cuts right across a bloody big cattle station.

A ruggedlook­ing bloke in a cowboy hat and double denim is driving down it in a fourwheeld­rive — he’s the detective, and he’s there to investigat­e a case of suspected foul play.

This is all you could ever really ask for in a television series, isn’t it?

Mystery Road is a spinoff of director Ivan Sen’s 2013 film of the same name, and its followup, Goldstone.

A pair of slowburnin­g Outback crime classics, they boasted some stunning cinematogr­aphy and introduced a great lead character in Aaron Pedersen’s gritty detective, Jay Swan.

This new adaptation, with most of the key players back in front of and behind the lens, is one of the more true and satisfying spinoffs you’ll find. The case Det Swan is handed on arrival at Tony Ballantyne’s quarter millionacr­e cattle station is a proper mystery: two young farm hands are missing. All he has to work with is a ute, stranded in the middle of nowhere with all the doors open and the engine left running.

‘‘I called in a detective because I think something’s gone badly wrong here,’’ explains the local top cop Emma James, portrayed with swagger by Australian actress Judy Davis. Senior Sergeant James, whose sunglasses and blunt haircut make her look like she’d be better placed editing a fashion magazine, turns out to be the cattle station owner’s sister.

‘‘It was me or noone,’’ she explains to the taciturn Swan. ‘‘An Aboriginal kid and a backpacker, noone’s sending out their best and brightest . . . no offence.’’ The missing children are Marley Thompson, an upandcomin­g indigenous footy star, and Reese Dale, an Aussie backpacker who sounds dodgy as all hell. Swan saunters around what passes for a town like a sheriff in a Western trying to get answers, but it’s like getting blood from a stone.

The locals are tightlippe­d and untrusting of a bigcity detective — all his leads come second or thirdhand, mentioned in passing at the hotel or outside the tattoo parlour. His daughter shows up out of the blue and gets in a scrap with Marley’s girlfriend while I Put a Spell On You plays on the hotel jukebox. The place is crawling with crystal meth and shady backpacker­s. Cattle rustling is on the rise in the area ever since stock prices went up.

Pederson and Davis, as the detective and top cop, are the undeniable stars here, but the wider cast is strong too. Deborah Mailman, who seems to be in just about every Australian show made in the past 10 years, makes a brief appearance as Marley’s mum. There’s more to come from her, you have to suspect, and a lot more skeletons in a lot more closets.

Mystery Road screens Thursdays at 8.30pm on SoHo.

 ?? PHOTO: SKY TV ?? Judy Davis as Emma and Aaron Pedersen as Jay in Mystery Road.
PHOTO: SKY TV Judy Davis as Emma and Aaron Pedersen as Jay in Mystery Road.

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