QuikSand
02-14-2006, 09:10 AM
I have caught the first two episodes of this show, and for those who enjoy complex dramas, it looks pretty promising. I'm a big fan of The Wire from HBO... I know may here like The Shield... and generally a well-done ensemble cop show seems to be a pretty good setting for good television.
Conviction (http://www.bbcamerica.com/genre/drama_mysteries/conviction/conviction.jsp) fits the bill to some degree, as the central character seems to be Chrissy, a young member (detective or equivalent) of a British police force. His older brother is apparently his superior officer (Captain or equivalent, I'd guess) and their sister is a public defender. Their dad seems to be a retired former cop who lives with Chrissy but is in mental decline, to be charitable.
Anyway - rather than an episode-by-episode approach, the show seems to start out with one big case, and from the looks of things, it might follow from there a bit like the (intermittently brilliant) show Murder One, where the main case drives an entire season. Through two episodes, the plot has already gotten very thick, and I am hooked.
The third episode aired last night (I haven't watched it yet from TiVo) and I think they re-air them later in the week, maybe Tuesday nights. BBC America notoriously does "marathons" of their shows, affording chances to catch up o what you may have missed.
If this sounds like your cup of tea, it might be worth a search for a catch-up opportunity. (I would recommend trying to start at the beginning, rather than picking it up at Espidoe 3) It looks like a pretty deep, well done show that might appeal to those who like this sort of thing.
Conviction (http://www.bbcamerica.com/genre/drama_mysteries/conviction/conviction.jsp) fits the bill to some degree, as the central character seems to be Chrissy, a young member (detective or equivalent) of a British police force. His older brother is apparently his superior officer (Captain or equivalent, I'd guess) and their sister is a public defender. Their dad seems to be a retired former cop who lives with Chrissy but is in mental decline, to be charitable.
Anyway - rather than an episode-by-episode approach, the show seems to start out with one big case, and from the looks of things, it might follow from there a bit like the (intermittently brilliant) show Murder One, where the main case drives an entire season. Through two episodes, the plot has already gotten very thick, and I am hooked.
The third episode aired last night (I haven't watched it yet from TiVo) and I think they re-air them later in the week, maybe Tuesday nights. BBC America notoriously does "marathons" of their shows, affording chances to catch up o what you may have missed.
If this sounds like your cup of tea, it might be worth a search for a catch-up opportunity. (I would recommend trying to start at the beginning, rather than picking it up at Espidoe 3) It looks like a pretty deep, well done show that might appeal to those who like this sort of thing.