The Scotsman

End of the line for TV police drama?

- By AIDAN SMITH aidan.smith@jpress.co.uk

Oh, the symbolism! Hastings, Fleming and arnott were coming to the end of the line. Just one more journey, in the AC-12 lift, travelling downwards ...

Past the floor marked Honesty, missing out Trust, Integrity and Accountabi­lity and hurtling beyond Truth. The next stops would all be subterrane­an: Fudge, Coverup, Redacted, Under the Carpet and - hello, darkness, my old friend-Wholesale Institutio­nalised Police Corruption.

Where were these three headed? Search me. To get ready for another season of Line of Duty? Maybe. Is there work still to be done? As sure as the wee donkey never shuffles far from the feet of Jesus, Mary and Joseph yes. Will they get to do it? No comment.

What a finale. Some of you may have been disappoint­ed; I can sense this. Because Line of Duty has become an event, because this really could have been the last we will ever see of them, possibly you were expecting a big shootout, a big capture, a big speech. But the show stayed true to itself and held its nerve, leaving the grandstand­ing and pyrotechni­cs to others.

Check the cast: Tom Cruise isn’t there. So Adrian Dunbar wasn’t about to outrun a getaway car, Vicky Mcclure wasn’t about to swap her polo neck for a catsuit and our own Martin Compston was always going to continue resembling - his descriptio­n to Jonathan Ross the previous night - “the overdresse­d w ***** in the call centre”.

Still, Ian Buckles was a surprise. To our musketeers as well. “All the time we thought we were chasing some criminal mastermind … ” groaned an exasperate­d Ted. Kate remembered the three occasions she’d worked with him: “Always the same crap suits, dad cars, never putting your hand in your pocket when it was your round …” He’ d made a good job of concealing the OCGS’ brown envelopes but in every other respect he was an incompeten­t, a blundering fool and not to denigrate the ass world - a wee donkey.

“How some people can fail upwards beggars belief,” wailed Ted. This echoed a Tedism from earlier in the series and his all-time greatest: “A bare-faced liar promoted to the highest office in the land.” It’s generally assumed Jed Mercurio was thinking of someone else when he wrote that, but who?

Line of Duty pays having stuck in at school. You need good concentrat­ion and the ability to retain informatio­n given out back in season two. Buckles clearly didn’t apply himself - “definately” was evidence of that and the misspellin­g proved fatal. But, lips quivering under little boy curls, he couldn’t be the only bad apple, could he? Mother of God, no. Ted blasted away at the “wilful blindness of those in power” and, in Carmichael’s office, snarled at Osborne pronouncin­g on TV, but his smug successor didn’t want to know. So he made his own confession, a tragic of judgment, and got in the lift with the others.

Is that it? Mercurio has made his points about power, corruption and lies and may want to draw a line under Line of Duty. Or he might look at our real-life leaders and decide there’s always scope for another kick. I’d be up for that.

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 ??  ?? 0 Arnott (Martin Compston) and Hastings (Adrian Dunbar) with Chloe (Shalom Brune-franklin), a valuable addition to the team
0 Arnott (Martin Compston) and Hastings (Adrian Dunbar) with Chloe (Shalom Brune-franklin), a valuable addition to the team

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