New York Post

‘TROUBLES’ AHEAD

Past political strife in Northern Ireland colors crime thriller

- — Michael Starr

BLOODLANDS Monday on Acorn TV

THE crime thriller “Bloodlands” is framed against the backdrop of Northern Ireland’s historical­ly stormy political landscape — known as “The Troubles” between Protestant­s and Catholics.

Veteran actor James Nesbitt stars as Detective Chief Inspector Tom Brannick who, as the four-part series opens, is investigat­ing the kidnapping of Patrick Keenan, a ’90s-era IRA leader now running a trucking business. Brannick and his younger partner, DS Niamh McGovern (Charlene McKenna), believe Keenan’s disappeara­nce is tied to “Goliath,” an assassin who, 20 years earlier, targeted four victims: two IRA members, a priest and Brannick’s wife, Emma. The mysterious killer was suspected of being a police insider working alongside Brannick, who has a daughter, Izzy (Lola Petticrew), a third-year medical student.

Nesbitt, 56 — born and raised in Northern Ireland — is involved with the WAVE Trauma Centre, establishe­d by widows on both sides of the Protestant-Catholic conflict to offer counseling to those who lost loved ones during “The Troubles,” which lasted for roughly 30 years until 1998. Lately, it’s focused on relocating victims’ remains — a storyline mirrored in “Bloodlands.”

Nesbitt spoke to The Post about “Bloodlands,” which premiered on BBC One and debuts Monday on Acorn TV.

Was it important to shoot the series on location?

It makes a big difference to me. I left Northern Ireland in 1985 to go to drama school but it’s still very much home. A lot of the work I consider the most important to me — [the 2002 movie] “Bloody Sunday,” “Five Minutes of Heaven,” which I did with Liam Neeson, and “The Secret,” about a reallife murder case — were all shot in Northern Ireland.

Did “The Troubles” impact you growing up?

I was able to grow up in Northern Ireland distanced from it even though it was happening just up the road. I had a very happy childhood. I grew up in the countrysid­e… but was involved in an incident when I was very young. My father had taken my sister and I — I was about 7 — to the local city hall to pay his taxes. He parked the car and we stayed inside [the car] as he went in. We both fell asleep and were woken up by this old caretaker man yelling “Get Out! Get Out! There’s a bomb!” As we got out of the car and he taking us up the hill to safety we could see my father running out and looking for us. A warning had been given by the IRA 15 minutes before, and the car beside ours exploded. We returned to a car that had been blown to smithereen­s.

When I did “Bloody Sunday” [starring as civil rights activist Ivan Cooper]... Paul Greengrass, the director, said to me, “For many of the Irish actors from the North, ‘The Troubles’ is kind of their King Lear. They have to tackle it at some point.”

How would you describe Tom Brannick?

We’re similar in age. I’m a father and have two daughters [while] Tom has one. It was getting inside this man who’s been compromise­d in his life and has gone through a lot of pain and loss. He’s someone who’s prepared to do everything to protect not only the peace, but, more importantl­y, his daughter. He’s flawed and has made questionab­le decisions but he’s always tried to do the right thing — and then, somehow, things slipped through his hands.

 ??  ?? James Nesbitt and Charlene McKenna as Brannick and McGovern in “Bloodlands.”
James Nesbitt and Charlene McKenna as Brannick and McGovern in “Bloodlands.”

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