The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Friends reunited turned brothers at war? Stars remember their schooldays as they return to old stomping ground for TV drama

Twin Peaks meets Trainspott­ing as childhood pals revisit home turf together in darkly comic hit-and-run thriller

- By Bill Gibb mail@sundaypost.com Guilt, BBC Scotland, October 24, 10pm

Dark drama Guilt was a step back into an even darker past for actor Jamie Sives.

The first big drama from the new BBC Scotland channel is set in Edinburgh, the city where Jamie grew up.

But filming in Leith, where he went to school, brought back very different memories for the Game Of Thrones star.

“I’m from Lochend and I lived in Leith for a while,” said Jamie, 46.

“When I grew up, Leith was empty. All these trendy buildings down by the shore were just shells. I remember trucks being lined up on all the streets, HGVS with guys sleeping in the cabs.

“You would never go down there – that was bandit country, especially if you were from Lochend. I used to sign on in Leith, it’s now Mimi’s Bakehouse.

“Because my name starts with an S and a lot of the wild men from Leith’s names started with an S or a T, I was always on the same day as them. All for 18 quid a week – it wasn’t worth it.”

The four-part drama, which will go out Uk-wide on BBC Two after its Scottish screening, stars Jamie and fellow Edinburgh actor Mark Bonnar.

They play brothers Jake and Max who accidental­ly run over and kill an old man while driving home from a wedding. They make a panicked decision to cover their tracks but after initially seeming to get away with it, their increasing­ly desperate attempts to conceal the truth leads them to discover they can trust no one, not even one another. Despite the bleakness of the storyline, there’s a seam of dark humour running through the series.

“What’s great about this is that a lot of the characters, including some of the peripheral ones, have some sense of guilt,” said Jamie, who moved back to his home city a couple of years back after spending 20 years living in London, Madrid and Paris.

“What’s lovely about this is there’s a weird kind of Twin Peaks-type thing. It looks like a movie and it’s got a quirky, non-specific feel to it.

“The humour comes out of an awkwardnes­s. It’s not knockabout or belly laugh.”

The series didn’t only take Jamie back to Edinburgh but also reunited him with childhood pal Mark, with whom he was at Leith Academy from the age of 11.

“Mark and I had different groups of friends but we liked each other and stayed close by so we’d often walk each other to school,” said Jamie, already seen in a couple of this year’s most talked-about dramas, The Victim and Chernobyl.

“After that we went our separate ways and I didn’t see him for years. About 15 years ago we bumped into each other at a casting, exchanged numbers and we’ve been in touch ever since. But we’ve never worked together before.”

The two brothers could hardly be more different, with Jake the wistful wannabe rock star who now runs a record shop and Bonnar’s Max the driven, ruthless high flyer who treats Jake like a lackey. Getting to work with his old pal in what was going to be the new channel’s inaugural drama meant saying yes was a “no-brainer” for Jamie.

Interior scenes were shot at Parkhouse Business Park in Glasgow, nicknamed Possilwood because of the popularity with TV and film production companies.

It was familiar territory for Jamie who had already worked there on The Victim, Wild Rose, Moon Dogs and Outlaw King. His efforts on the latter big-budget historical effort never saw the light of day, though.

“I played William Wallace and thought there was no way Wallace was going to get cut,” said Jamie. “They showed Outlaw King at the Toronto Film Festival and the director David Mackenzie then decided to cut 20 minutes out of it for the actual release.

“He very kindly emailed me and said I’m very sorry but we’re going to have to cut William Wallace. I think I was the first Scotsman to play him as an adult but I just had to take it on the chin. I’ve been cut from three or four films – I’m starting to get the message.”

Jamie starred as Jory

Cassel in Game Of

Thrones before being killed off. He admits he hadn’t a clue when he started on the fantasy series that it would go on to be a global blockbuste­r.

“I didn’t know George

RR Martin was America’s

Tolkien,” said

Jamie. “They were desperate to make a new

Rome. I had no idea it was going to be that popular.”

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