Daily Mail

Hilda Ogden in a headscarf? No, it’s La Lumley in Lacroix, dahling!

- CHRISTOPHE­R STEVENS

Cameramen are a heartless bunch. They followed Joanna Lumley into a lavish shopping mall in Tehran, to see her purchase a silk headscarf, the most expensive on display. ‘Christian Lacroix, sweetie,’ murmured La Lumley.

Women in Iran, even Western visitors, must cover their heads by law. The penalties for disobedien­ce are harsh. Joanna, with this diaphanous wisp of gold thread around her bonce, was making the best of it.

The cruel crew told her she looked like Coronation Street charwoman Hilda Ogden. For the rest of the trip she had just the hint of a sulk.

Joanna is so polite, of course, that it’s practicall­y impossible to tell whether she’s truly peeved or just mildly miffed. She has that oldfashion­ed and perfectly english knack of conveying disapprova­l by saying the opposite of whatever she’s thinking.

motoring across the Iranian desert in the third part of her Silk Road Adventure (ITV), on her way to Kashan, birthplace of the biblical Three Wise men, she took a gulp from a bottle of warm, pulpy fruit juice thickened with rancid lumps of coconut.

‘Very nice,’ she declared, though she looked like Patsy in ab Fab, swigging from a bottle of Bolly only to discover it’s Blue nun. most of different from anything we’ve seen countless times before.

From the opening shots of a grim industrial landscape, blighted with graffiti and peopled with drug addicts, this was familiar Scandi-noir territory.

a grinding synthesise­r soundtrack was punctuated by drums, battering away like a persistent headache. We met a corrupt cop, humanised by his affection for his disabled teenage son, and the cop’s new partner — a lesbian trying to live up to the expectatio­ns of her policeman father.

The villain is a chilling psychopath in a prison cell, who passes the time by smashing the fingers of informers with a hammer.

Similar characters have cropped up before, in serials such as the gritty Spiral from Paris and the nihilistic 13 Commandmen­ts, made in Belgium. The first few times we encountere­d them were sensationa­l, but repetition risks making their lives look formulaic.

The story perked up with a Starsky-&-Hutch- style chase which saw idealistic detective Frida Kanto (rakel Warmlander) throwing herself off buildings to land on car roofs.

But the best twist came at the end, as dirty cop alex Leko (Dragomir mrsic) discovered the true cost of turning his back on corruption. Gangsters took his wife hostage and forced him to watch a mock execution. now it’s livening up.

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