The Scotsman

In the army now

- andrea Mullaney

Aquick plot summary of our

Girl could leave it sounding like some right-wing tabloid’s dream: a boozy waster from Broken Britain becomes an upstanding citizen through enlisting in the Army. Yeah, these yobs puking up in shop doorways, bring back National Service, that’ll sort them out.

But this, thankfully, is a much more subtle drama than that. For one thing, it stars the luminous Lacey Turner, who is quite simply one of the best young TV actresses to emerge in years. I would say I’d watch her reading the phone book, but even more than that, I’ve watched her in that terrible string of storylines she got towards the end of her run as Stacey Slater in East

Enders: when she was fighting with Janine over that dreary Ryan, or that perennial soap dilemma, whose baby did she have?

Since leaving the soap she’s kicked around a bunch of random projects. But it’s clearly been just a matter of time before she landed something big that proves she can cut it outside soaps. And Our Girl is it: Turner’s likeable presence and big-eyed vulnerabil­ity, coupled with that knowing twist of cynicism, makes her character Molly

Private Benjamin, GI Jane etc. Our Girl hits the usual marks, as the stroppy Molly comes up against the regimented discipline of the Army. But the other thing that marks it out is that the drama stops to question why the training is like that and whether the Army breaks people down to rebuild them. It shows that at least some people join because they don’t have any other way to change the script of their lives. And, importantl­y, it is cleareyed about telling that story in a time when British soldiers are still dying and being maimed every month. It suggests that for some people the risk is a price worth paying. But it never suggests that there isn’t a risk. At 90 minutes, Our Girl can’t cover everything, so there are a few corny plot shortcuts. But it’s an interestin­g, unsettling drama whatever your view of the military, or war, with a vivid central performanc­e and good supporting cast.

More comforting­ly, back to an earlier else you got up to in Hastings – it’s a different world.”

Sam’s husband has morphed into a different actor and intends to stand as an MP in London, where the series is now set. Gloomy sidekick Milner has been left behind in Hastings, but a gloomy demobbed former constable has turned up instead.

Much of the pleasure is in listening to posh voices discussing the rigours of rationing: “No salmon, no toilet paper, no Ovaltine and no soft fruit – apparently it’s all been used by the WI for jam.” “You’ve got more Spam ... I love Spam.” Yes, it’s clearly the result of a quick Google of “food available 1946” but the rhythms of Honeysuckl­e Weeks’ offhand, Celia Johnston accent is charming.

Michael Kitchen played Prince Charles about 20 years ago and the voice seems to have stuck; his dialogue is not so much delivered as diffidentl­y dropped. His habit of sucking his lips and narrowing his eyes adds to the sense that he’s a dispassion­ate observer. I suspect this is part of the series’ appeal, beyond the nostalgia factor. You get awfully fed up with all the other shouty detectives – politeness is rather restful.

The plot, by the way, is a confusing affair about radiation and Russians, and takes a while to get going. As before, there is wonderful attention to period accuracy in the sets, but our heroes are remarkably unprejudic­ed in certain attitudes. But it’s good to see Foyle back all the same. Now, how about a second series for The Bletchley Circle? They can share the props.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom