Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

TV PICK OF THE WEEK

- Netflix, review by Yvette Huddleston

You will need to have your wits about you while watching this complex, compelling crime thriller, but it certainly rewards the effort many times over.

There are four different narrative strands, all set in the Whitechape­l area of London but taking place in four separate time frames – 1890, 1941, 2023 and 2053 – with four different police officers trying to solve an almost identical mystery. Thanks to the skilful script and storytelli­ng, this is not nearly as confusing as it sounds. It opens in the present day with detective sergeant Shahara Hasan (Amaka Okafor) on duty at a far-right march in the East End. When she notices a suspicious­looking young man lurking in the shadows with a gun, she gives chase and ends up in a back street alleyway where she discovers the naked body of a man who has apparently been shot through the eye.

We then move back in time to a noirish 1941 with charming ladies man detective Charles Whiteman (Jacob Fortune-Lloyd) who appears to be involved in some questionab­le, but lucrative, arrangemen­t with a shadowy organisati­on. Their latest requiremen­t of him is to pick up and dispose of the naked body of a man which has been left in a Whitechape­l alleyway… Meanwhile back in the Victorian era, police detective Alfred Hillinghea­d (Kyle Soller) investigat­es when a body is discovered, with the help of a photojourn­alist who may have inadverten­tly captured the image of the man’s killer. And in the near-future time period, police officer Iris Maplewood (Shira Haas), navigates the streets of London in her voice-activated AI electronic car, stumbling across the body in the now boarded up alleyway.

Apart from the unfortunat­e victim, there is something else that connects all four storylines – an enigmatic figure played by Stephen Graham across the centuries. The time shifts are well handled and the characteri­sation of the lead detectives satisfying­ly filled out. Hasan lives with her father and young son and is trying to balance being a single parent with a demanding work life. Whiteman’s moonlighti­ng means that he is constantly having to cover his tracks; as a closeted gay man Hillinghea­d has his own secrets to keep and Maplewood’s past has featured loss and trauma. Gripping stuff.

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