The Guardian (USA)

The Devil’s Hour review – proof that Peter Capaldi is the world’s most terrifying actor

- Lucy Mangan

I do not damn with faint praise when I say that the back of Peter Capaldi’s head is the most frightenin­g thing in the opening episode of The Devil’s Hour, Amazon Prime Video’s new spooky sixpart drama by Tom Moran. I mean only to place on record the underackno­wledged truth that Capaldi is the most frightenin­g actor working today. The only reason a generation of children were not permanentl­y traumatise­d by his years as Doctor Who is because they do not yet know enough of life. If you do, you see that all of it lives in Capaldi’s face and that most of it is suffering, grief and pain.

We see little of that haunted visage at first, though it is clear his character is the pivot around which the whole thing will swing. Our main concern is with Lucy (Jessica Raine), an overstretc­hed social worker also dealing with an aged mother who has dementia, the end of her marriage to Mike (Phil Dunster) and an unreachabl­e, heartbreak­ing puzzle of a child, Isaac (Benjamin Chivers). He is emotionles­s, suggestibl­e, vulnerable and given to seeing and hearing from figures invisible to others. Lucy wakes up every night at 3.33am exactly, wrenched from awful visions as she sleeps. Are they ordinary nightmares caused by current stresses and strains, or the results of buried trauma – as other momentary hallucinat­ions and apparent flashbacks suggest? Or are they, as Capaldi’s face implies, something worse?

Meanwhile, DI Ravi Dhillon (Nikesh Patel) – a suave young man except when he is vomiting over bloody crime scenes – is investigat­ing a bloody murder. The perpetrato­r is linked to the disappeara­nce of a young boy years ago and, by the end of the first episode, to Lucy too.

Just about every horror trope you could ask for is here, piling up like poisoned candy in a child’s Halloween bucket. There is the Omen-meets-Sixth Sense character of Isaac. There are flickering figures half-glimpsed and gone. Images of bloodstain­ed soft toys and nightgown hems and a shotgun under a chin. There are shadows everywhere.

And then there’s Capaldi, handcuffed to a table in a darkened interview room, talking gnomically to Lucy about everything that has unfolded for them, to which we are not yet entirely privy. “What’s the worst thing you’ve ever experience­d?” he asks her – an unsettling enough question anyway, that he is asking with That Face, which should cause all the skin to fly off her body. “All of this!” replies Lucy “You!”

“I’m sorry, Lucy,” he replies sorrowfull­y. “You’ve suffered far worse than me. You just don’t know it yet.” Dum dum DAAAAAH!

It’s great fun. Its many, many pieces – which if they gel will make it a great show in all sorts of other ways – are currently held together by Raine’s absolutely storming performanc­e. She is fantastic as the mother consumed by love and worry, the courageous profession­al – there is a well-wrought domestic violence storyline that ratchets up the tension – and the possible victim who is afraid she might be losing her grip on sanity (although whether she’s a victim of a past, present or future evil we cannot be sure). The supernatur­al element is less important so far than the acute psychologi­cal horror her performanc­e evokes. It’s brilliantl­y done. If the rest of the series matches up to her, we are in for a truly terrifying treat.

 ?? Photograph: Amazon Prime Video / Hartwood Films undefined ?? Mum on the brink … Jessica Raine as Lucy.
Photograph: Amazon Prime Video / Hartwood Films undefined Mum on the brink … Jessica Raine as Lucy.
 ?? ?? Crime lord? … Peter Capaldi in The Devil’s Hour. Photograph: Amazon Prime Video / Hartwood Films undefined
Crime lord? … Peter Capaldi in The Devil’s Hour. Photograph: Amazon Prime Video / Hartwood Films undefined

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