Empire (UK)

SHARP OBJECTS

- AMY WEST

★★★★ OUT NOW / HBO EPISODES VIEWED 1-7

CREATED BY Marti Noxon

CAST Amy Adams, April Brinson, Eliza Scanlen, Patricia Clarkson, Matt Craven

PLOT Chicago-based journalist Camille Preaker (Adams) returns to her hometown to report on a murder. But as the present triggers memories from her past, she finds it difficult to overcome her inner demons. SHARP OBJECTS HAS all the ingredient­s for a classic ‘whodunnit’ — a grisly, suspicious death, a small town chock-full of sinful secrets, and a big-city reporter sent in to cover the crime. But, as hinted at in the show’s first episode (“This isn’t going to be exploitati­ve; more like a think piece on how something like this can affect a town,” says the newspaper’s editor), it plays out rather differentl­y on screen. This is no mere murder mystery — it is, in fact, a bleak, slow-paced character study hidden within one.

Based on the novel of the same name by Gone Girl author Gillian Flynn, it centres on Amy Adams’ Camille Preaker, a journalist sent to cover a story in her small hometown of Wind Gap, Missouri. Her homecoming, however, triggers memories of a traumatic past, ripping open emotional wounds she’s long tried to hide.

Adams — all Midwestern drawl and sorrowful eyes — is predictabl­y superb, effortless­ly expressing everything the dialogue leaves out, be it relief, charm or utter devastatio­n. It’s a powerful performanc­e, and one from which we aren’t permitted to escape

— the camera rarely strays from her, her emotions becoming ours. And in that process we uncover more truths about Camille than she does about the case.

In fact, it soon becomes clear that planting clues to the killer’s identity isn’t the priority. As suspects prove their innocence, tips prove less than fruitful and the crime begins to occupy less screen time. Camille is actually the puzzle being pieced together. It’s a bold choice — viewers lured in by the expectatio­n of a more convention­al crime drama, one featuring something more like the breadcrumb trail of clues laid down in Gone Girl, perhaps, will find this adaptation is a very different propositio­n.

Characters are introduced who seem as though they may be important — an out-of-town detective, a family friend, Camille’s rebellious halfsister Amma (Scanlen), her vitriolic mother Adora (Clarkson) — but their appearance­s are fleeting. The focus always returns to Camille, her mental wellbeing, and the secrets she has buried in her past.

And on that front, it delivers.

Sharp Objects dares not to provide the easy, endorphin-rush thrills of so many murder investigat­ion shows. As thorny as it is unconventi­onal, it’s a hard-hitting, distressin­gly realistic exploratio­n of both mental health and the heartbreak­ing reality of being forced to confront scars that haven’t — and may never — heal.

VERDICT Character being prioritise­d over clues will put some off, but this is a hard-hitting and compelling depiction of how difficult it is to shake psychologi­cal trauma.

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Shoreditch’s latest boho joint hadn’t quite got the usual buzz.

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