Daily Mirror

Too close to home

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YOU know it’s a good crime drama when it starts with a cop chase and someone pointlessl­y shouting “Police, stop!” until the suspect is cornered down an alleyway.

Ripper Street’s MyAnna Buring is Detective Helen Weeks who, puffing and panting, moans: “How many times do I have to tell you I hate giving chase. I’ve got sweat dripping off me now.”

Her banter doesn’t go down well though, and the woman punches her in the stomach leaving her keeled over and calling for help.

This is TV drama’s way of telling us that Helen is pregnant of course, although she hasn’t told anyone yet. Stoic detectives never do.

This is the new four-parter from Ordinary Lies writer Danny Brocklehur­st, adapted from the books by bestsellin­g novelist Mark Billingham – who incidental­ly has a cameo as a court usher.

And it’s got everything you’d hope for – a maverick female cop with a dark past, a gripping mystery, red herrings, a few weird flashbacks and a whole lot of bad weather.

The main case is that of two missing school girls. Helen is following it closely because they are from her home town in Derbyshire and is stunned to discover the main suspect is the husband of her childhood friend Linda.

So, of course, she decides to return home to help Linda (Emma Fryer) against all advice from her partner and fellow cop Paul (Ben Batt). But once there, Helen’s behaviour becomes a little bit odd. We’re sensing there are a number of skeletons in that particular closet. The mystery ramps up and, by the end of the episode, you’ll realise you’ve been clenching your teeth with tension all the way through.

 ??  ?? ON THE CASE MyAnna Buring and Ben Batt
ON THE CASE MyAnna Buring and Ben Batt

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