The Post

Local thriller’s cast nail the characters

- Jane Clifton TELEVIEW

TV3’s new local drama The Blue Rose, Mondays, is one of those shows it is tempting to save up on MySky so you can have a decent binge.

It is a crisp, modest little thriller, but so engrossing you readily forget that the last time Antonia Prebble and Siobahn Marshall were on TV, they were the Westie sisters from hell. This time, one is a character straight out of Jane Austen, while the other could almost be running an empire on The Sopranos.

Prebble is Jane, a slightly downtrodde­n but astute legal secretary temping at a toney law firm, who says things like: ‘‘But it’s confidenti­al!’’, and Marshall is Linda, a scrappy, unscrupulo­us courier firm boss, who says things like: ‘‘Who’s gonna make me?’’

Delightful­ly ill-matched, they intersect when Linda comes barging into the firm demanding Agent Anna (TV One, Thursday, 8.30pm). Another former TV Westie, Robyn Malcolm, develops her new sitcom role as a reluctant realtor. her dead friend Rose’s belongings. Rose is the secretary whom Jane has just replaced, and who drowned off the Auckland wharf in mysterious circumstan­ces.

Linda quickly endears herself by biffing the office bitch, and Jane by defusing the resultant near-brawl. By degrees, we learned the late Rose was involved in something mysterious and possibly dangerous.

Through a combinatio­n of accidental­ly overhearin­g things and slyly snooping through files, Jane is coming to believe Rose’s death had something to do with a nasty little financial cover-up originatin­g at the law firm.

Egged on by Linda, who makes no bones about intercepti­ng her firm’s courier deliveries to sniff out further evidence, Jane is in the middle of her own John Grisham story – only with nice local twists.

Thousands of investors lost in a finance company’s collapse, but a group that was going to take the directors to court has been secretly paid off.

Crowd-pleasingly, the apparent villain is the failed finance chief, Peterson, played with a permasneer by Stelios Yakmis. It appears he and the firm have cooked this up – but it could equally be a setup to avenge the poor mum-and-dad investors, coincident­ally, including Jane’s parents.

Incidental characters also suggest themselves as suspicious: the creepy, officious little bossybritc­hes from the IT department; the overbearin­g office manager; Rose’s druggie ex; the mysterious woman client; and even the boozy, irreverent junior lawyer.

The dialogue is crisp and amusing and the pace is brisk. While appealing and attractive, the characters are also commonplac­e enough to be a welcome change from the ultraslick folk who inhabit overseas dramas with similar themes, like Damages and The Good Wife.

 ??  ?? Engrossing thriller: Antonia Prebble in The Blue Rose. The dialogue is crisp and amusing and the pace brisk.
Engrossing thriller: Antonia Prebble in The Blue Rose. The dialogue is crisp and amusing and the pace brisk.
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