The Chronicle

MURDER, SHE WROTE

Female-led crime shows are having a moment thanks to nuanced characters, writes Siobhan Duck

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MISS Marple had to wait nearly 30 years before she made the leap from the pages of Agatha Christie’s novels to the screen. And it would be decades more again before seeing women solve crimes for a living rather than as a hobby, like the meddling Marple, became commonplac­e.

Vigil, the latest crime drama from the team behind celebrated British police procedural series Line Of Duty, puts women front and centre in the quest to solve a murder at sea.

Suranne Jones plays Amy Silva, a talented detective charged with investigat­ing a death on board a British submarine while her partner – in life and at work – Kirsten (Game Of Thrones’ Rose Leslie) does the legwork on land.

Award-winning suspense writer Gabriel Bergmoser is unsurprise­d to see so many of today’s most talked-about crime dramas with women as their central figures. Shows like Mare Of Easttown (Binge), The Fall (SBS On Demand) and Unbelievab­le (Netflix) have all received critical acclaim and feature police investigat­ions spearheade­d by women.

“I think it speaks to an overall cultural shift but also to the fact that there are stories that can be told with women that can’t with men, or at least told in different ways,” Bergmoser says.

“At a time when it sometimes feels like we’re running out of new stories, that’s a really powerful thing.”

Bergmoser says Vigil will appeal to viewers not just for its strong female characters, but also because it’s a fresh spin on a welltrodde­n genre.

“A high-stakes, claustroph­obic mystery that takes a troubled detective into the heart of darkness that is a submarine full of secrets,” he says. “DCI Amy Silva is a great addition to the pantheon of scarred-yet-brilliant female detectives up against seemingly impossible odds.”

Bergmoser says there’s something both “refreshing and terrifying in seeing the kind of character we’re used to being in charge thrust into a world where the rules are both incomprehe­nsible and, apparently, designed to work against her at every turn.

“The best detectives combine being believable with being aspiration­al,” he says. “Having real flaws but also skills, tenacity, drive and intelligen­ce that most of us can only dream of.”

VIGIL

STREAMING, BINGE

The Inheritanc­e by Gabriel Bergmoser (Harper-Collins, $29.99) is out now

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