Daily Mail

Most nakedly political drama on primetime TV for 40 years

- By Christophe­r Stevens MAIL TV CRITIC

Michael Sheen’s vision of a workers’ uprising in South Wales is the most nakedly political drama screened on primetime British TV for 40 years. The Way, a three-part drama starting tonight on BBc1 at 9pm, depicts blood on the streets after an oppressive government sends in riot squads, then private security squads armed with automatic rifles, and finally the army – complete with helicopter­s – to crush peaceful demonstrat­ors.

it is an open call to insurrecti­on and a general strike, set around the steelworks of Port Talbot, where Sheen grew up.

Nothing so clearly partisan has aired since Boys From The Blackstuff, alan Bleasdale’s depiction of recession Britain in 1982. That was also a BBc production – but at least auntie did not first broadcast it in an election year.

in Sheen’s dystopian vision, after the works are taken over by foreign investors, conditions become so horrific that one young worker slips and plunges into a vat of molten metal.

The town is reliant on these jobs, and many people are afraid to protest. One outspoken firebrand, a grandmothe­r named Dee (Mali harries) galvanises them with a speech at a union meeting, and a strike is called. capitalism is the enemy, anarchy is the answer.

Dee has to drag her family with her. ex-husband Geoff (Steffan Rhodri) is a moderate who believes the workers can negotiate and find middle ground with their bosses (boo, shame!).

Daughter Thea (Sophie Melville) is a policewoma­n (class traitor!) and son Owen (callum Scott howells) is a druggie who discovers the workers’ struggle is something worth living for (sob!).

The backlash, both from a draconian police force and from neoNazi thugs, is bone- crunching. One man who attempts to film the march on his phone is punched and dragged to the ground by coppers on their commander’s order: ‘You two! Take him out!’

‘We are enforcing total lockdown,’ declares the army chief. as foreign workers are bussed in, tear gas canisters fly and skulls are smashed with riot shields.

EVEN gullible Geoff abandons compromise and grows a backbone, smashing a glass case in the museum to seize an ancient Welsh sword for the battle (there’s a lot of that mythical celtic imagery, what with the steel works’ eternal flame and what have you).

Sheen himself, who co- created and directed the series, plays the ghost of a union hero from an earlier era. in a mealy-mouthed interview with the BBc, he denied this is a battle plan for the far left. ‘it is not like we’re saying, “This is what you should do,” by any means,’ he claimed, ‘but i have huge sympathy for the steelworke­rs.’

The drama comes after, in real life, unions at Port Talbot’s Tata Steel were told earlier this month that more than 1,900 jobs are at risk, with the phased closure of two blast furnaces.

‘in no way is this a blueprint to how people should react,’ Sheen said at the premiere screening last week, ‘but you don’t know, do you? i think inevitably this was going to be a political story.’

The ultimate political villain is identified in an early scene at a four- year- old’s birthday party, where children are given masks of horrifying politician­s to wear.

They sit on the sofa watching cartoons – Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin, Boris Johnson and Kim Jong Un. But the most evil of this bunch is Maggie Thatcher.

That mask is ripped from the child’s face and hurled from a window, only to be caught by the wind and hang over the town, haunting the inhabitant­s. ‘Witch!’ spits one character.

SHEEN’S Welsh nationalis­t politics are underlined when the local assembly member calls for ‘borders within kingdoms’, to a chorus of cheers. When white supremacis­ts storm in later, they wave the Union flag – a hated symbol to those who want an independen­t Wales.

This isn’t a fantasy where the battles of the miners’ strike are refought and this time the workers win. instead, South Wales degenerate­s into a war zone and families are forced to flee through refugee escape routes.

The message is unmistakab­le: Britain has failed to welcome illegal migrants with open arms. Now natural justice demands we should all suffer the same fate, and see how we like it.

There ought to be an announceme­nt at the end: ‘if you have been affected by any of the issues shown in this programme, further informatio­n is available from the Socialist Workers Party.’

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 ?? ?? Insurrecti­on: Workers protest in a scene from the BBC’s new three-part series The Way
Insurrecti­on: Workers protest in a scene from the BBC’s new three-part series The Way

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