Huddersfield Daily Examiner

TV HIGHLIGHTS DIAL M4 MURDER C

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RIME drama fans rejoice – for gripping ITV drama Unforgotte­n is back with a whole host of new suspects to sift through. The prime-time hit – penned by screenwrit­er Chris Lang and hailed as the “best detective drama of the decade” – will see dream team DCI Cassie Stuart and DI Sunny Khan (played by Nicola Walker and Sanjeev Bhaskar, respective­ly) return for a third run, as they investigat­e another emotionall­y-charged cold case.

“We discover a body that has been buried beside a motorway,” Sanjeev, 54, reveals of the six-part run.

“The motorway constructi­on workers discover it whilst doing some repair work on the road and we then find out that it was a young girl who went missing at the turn of the millennium – New Year’s Eve 1999.”

It differs to previous seasons, he adds: “Because in this one, the investigat­ion centres around four friends and their families who rented a holiday home near where a young girl went missing.

“These four men have been friends for years, all of them are supportive of each other and they are all still fairly close,” says The Kumars At No. 42 star.

“The investigat­ion becomes centred around those characters and their families.”

Noted. So what else should we know ahead of the show’s return? It’s back for a third series – and this time the stars of crime drama Unforgotte­n get the call to investigat­e when the body of girl is found beside a motorway. actors – and what a selection it is.

Alex Jennings, Kevin McNally, Neil Morrissey and James Fleet join forces to star as four former school friends who, having stood by one another through thick and thin, find their relationsh­ips tested to the limit.

For Nicola, 48, welcoming newbies into the fold is one of her favourite parts of the role.

“I actually did my first ever job with James Fleet in Four Weddings And A Funeral, which I am in for a blink!” she recalls.

“I met James there and have done plays with him since. I think he is absolutely remarkable in this show. I had also worked with Alex Jennings on Spooks, but I hadn’t worked with I think Chris is asking us to have a conversati­on about... social media’s impact on suppositio­ns about who may be guilty before a case has been taken to court Neil Morrissey or Kevin McNally before, so that was exciting,” she says.

“That is always one of the best bits about this job, doing those first few scenes when we knock on the door WHILE the whodunit drama is obliged to check certain boxes – there’s a body, tick, and suspects, tick – that’s where the similarity ends.

First off, the case investigat­ed this series is the most recent to date, with the victim having gone missing only 18 years earlier (previous series harked back 30 to 40 years).

This affects the team’s approach to the case, explains Nicola.

“There is the complicati­on that everyone they speak to when trying to identify the body is hoping it is their child and that after all of these years they will be able to bury a body,” begins The Split actress.

“For many, many people it is in living memory, and that makes the case incredibly complex,” she elaborates.

“In the past, that distance of time has probably allowed the team to step back a little. But this year, Cassie warns them that they will have to tread extremely gently because it is all very recent.” ANOTHER relevant addition to the TV favourite is the exploratio­n of press and social media in the story.

“Everyone jumps on social media

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