Undertow. Oliver Brown. Unsuccessful estate agent Steven Hunt is suspected of killing several women. Grace works out he has a water fetish, and at one point he drowns a victim in a busy swimming pool without anyone noticing, even Spence and Stella, who are supposed to be keeping an eye on him. Mum Cheryl Campbell is over-protective, dad Peter Wight equivocal. When he finds the evidence the son did it, he drowns him in the bathtub.
Things pick up with Cold Fusion, an exciting tale in which Ed 'Tall Tales' Whitmore (largely) acquits himself. Young Spence was on the beat when he and colleague Mark Lewis Jones find a horrific double homicide of anti-nuclear protestors. It's now being re-examined. Stolen evidence suggests Spence had something to do with it; then Stella starts acting really suspiciously, so we have these good internal conflicts.
Then two things happen: a supposed nerve gas attack in the station, cut against Spence finding himself and suspect Paul Copley (Downton, Last Tango in Halifax) pursued by an assassin. All through this we're thinking 'top level MI5 cover up' and it turns out that Commander David Calder is highly involved. A slight failing is when we leave Spence isolated and injured, then go back to a debate about morality between Boyd and Calder - too long. It all ends thrillingly enough.
Richard Standeven directed.
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| Boyd 'assuring' the Commander of his cooperation |
In the Season 6 opener we notice with some relief that Spence is not dead (and Q reckons he's dressing more informally); also that Stella has not been fired; and there's a mysterious new pathologist, Tara Fitzgerald (with no explanation of where Felix went).
Wren Boys by Declan Croghan is one of those unfortunate ones that doesn't know what it is. We quickly cross cut between young nun with stigmata Carey Mulligan, ritualistic goings on the woods at night and bare knuckle boxing, all to percussive sound effects. Features alarmingly aggressive dogs, gypsies, men with silly animal heads on and psychedelic woad!
Great scene where Boyd makes thick boxer confess with the aid of a small skeleton and the suggestion that they don't talk about the 14 years the boxer is going to get if convicted, is small atonement.

















































