Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

TV PICK OF THE WEEK

- Blue Lights BBC iPlayer, review by Yvette Huddleston

The second series of this brilliantl­y tense police thriller set in Belfast is just as compelling as the first. Written by former journalist­s Adam Patterson and Declan Lawn, who both grew up in Northern Ireland, it has an authentici­ty that only lived experience can bring.

The narrative also benefits from a kind of journalist­ic rigour and forensic attention to detail. The first series followed three new recruits to the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) – the peacetime replacemen­t since 2001 for the Royal Ulster Constabula­ry (RUC) – just as they were completing their probationa­ry period. Here we catch up with them a year on and they are settled into the job. Fortysomet­hing ex-social worker Grace (Sian Brooke) is now partnered with jaded, veteran ‘peeler’ Stevie (Martin McCann), who was her mentor in series one, and their relationsh­ip – both profession­al and personal – has clearly developed. Tentative romance is definitely in the air, although that does lead to complicati­ons in the workplace. Gentle, fast-tracking graduate Tommy (Nathan Braniff), has toughened up a bit, while streetwise Annie (Katherine Devlin) has become more sensitive and less gung-ho.

The team are tackling a feud that is developing between two rival loyalist drug gangs. As the tension begins to escalate, the police are caught in the middle with the complicate­d task of attempting to calm the situation while also investigat­ing the supply chain that has led to a steep rise in drug-related deaths. Resources are stretched to the limit. The script addresses the wider picture of the social impact of cutbacks not only in policing but in healthcare too.

This time we also learn a little more about the protagonis­ts’ lives outside of work, deftly interwoven with a couple of nice romantic subplots as Annie takes an interest in handsome new addition to the team Shane Bradley (Frank Blake).

A recurring theme that runs throughout is how the echoes of a violent past continue to impinge on the present. This is a postconfli­ct society where the Troubles still loom large, and sectariani­sm, while less allencompa­ssing, is still very much a part of everyday life; and the potential threat of it reigniting is never far away. Top-notch drama.

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