Skip to main content

FOOLS RUSH IN (GUILT, SERIES ONE)

Madeline Albright once observed that it is the cover-up, rather than what is being covered up, that often trips people up.

That is the premise of BBC Scotland's four-part drama 'Guilt,' which centres on two brothers Mark Bonnar's Max and Jamie Sives' Jake trying to hide a connection between them and a hit and run.

The victim is a man out wandering his street late at night in a quiet, leafy suburban Edinburgh neighborhood.

Max is a successful solicitor in a stale marriage to Sian Brooke's Claire.

He also has a strained relationship with his younger brother Jake who owns a second hand record store.

After getting drunk and argumentative at a wedding, Max is unable to drive.

Jake takes his car keys and drives him home when they hit the pedestrian.

Panicking because he is uninsured and also has consumed some alcohol, Jake still nevertheless believes they should call the police.

Max, however, advises against it and the brothers instead carry the man into his house.

On discovering the victim, Walter is a cancer patient, they try to pass off his death as a natural consequence of his illness.

The police appear to buy the story and the brothers seem to be in the clear, until they realise Jake may have left his wallet on a shelf in the house.

Passing themselves off as friends of Walter at his wake, Jake and Max gain access and recover the wallet.

However Walter's niece from Chicago, Ruth Bradley's Angie is keen to find out more about her uncle who was a jazz enthusiast and she ends up chatting to Jake.

Max, however, realises they have a much bigger problem with one neighbour possibly having captured the removal of Walter's body on his security camera and another, Ellie Haddington's Sheila Gemmell potentially having witnessed their actions from her home.

The brothers' nerves are further frayed when Angie starts to ask some searching questions about bruises on the victim's body which appear inconsistent with the official line on how Walter died.

Max's solution is to hire a shambolic, alcoholic private eye, Emun Elliott's Kenny.

His attempt to silence Mrs Gemmell also backfires spectacularly, with her blackmailing him that she wants £20,000 in return for her silence.

When Kenny sobers up and goes clean, he also starts to take a keen interest in Walter's case.

Questions about Max's clientele also begin to surface as he borrows the money for Mrs Gemmell.

And while Angie and Jake hang about more and more before her return to the US, romantic feelings begin to develop.

And that leads Max to fear this could lead to the inadvertent exposure by Jake of critical information that could implicate them.

Claire, meanwhile, finds herself also attracted to Moyo Akande's friend Tina.

Lurking in the background too is Bill Paterson's gangland figure Roy Lynch who gets gradually sucked into events.

Written by Neil Forsyth and directed by Robert McKillop, 'Guilt' is an ambitious crime drama in the mould of the Coen Brothers' 'Fargo' and its TV series spin-off.

Like the film and the show, it's about stupid people doing stupid things but thinking they're too clever to get caught.

And like 'Fargo,' their deception compounds error after error.

With an eclectic soundtrack featuring tracks by Van Morrison's Them, Weval, Can, Eddy Arnold and Working Mens Club, the series is decently directed by McKillop.

It is also very well acted, with Bonnar excellent as the ducking and weaving anti-hero who is way over his head but doesn't really understand how much.

Sives engages our sympathy as an unwilling accomplice, while Bradley does a great job as the American visitor who stirs up a hornet's nest.

Elliott catches the eye as Kenny transforms from a sad sack into a quite skilful private investigator.

Haddington is mischievous, while Paterson is chilling.

Brooke and Akande release some of the tension when they are onscreen but Forsyth's writing is so knotty, you suspect their affair will tumble out as Max and Jake's deception unravels.

Not everything works as Forsyth tries to untie his Caledonian Coen Brothers-style plot.

Occasionally the pace slackens and you will find yourself wishing the characters would move on instead of musing on what might or might not be happening.

But these are rare blips in a decently told tale. 

And by the time it reaches its denouement, there's plenty to suggest that 'Guilt' has the legs to go a lot further.

Not short on ambition, it doesn't shy away from trying to reach great heights.

And that alone is worthy of applause.

(Series One of 'Guilt' was broadcast on BBC Scotland on September 5-12, 2019 and BBC2 on October 30-20, 2019)

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

HOUSE OF FUN (LOL: LAST ONE LAUGHING IRELAND)

© Amazon Prime Ever wondered what the 'Big Brother' house would have been like if it was populated just by comedians? No?  Neither had I. But Amazon Prime has tried to answer that question anyway with a new comedy show 'LOL: Last One Laughing Ireland'. © Amazon Prime Originally conceived by the Japanese comic Hitoshi Matsumoyo in 2016, the show throws 10 stand-ups together in a 'Big Brother' style living room for six hours with the strict instruction that they are not allowed to laugh, crack a smile or smirk at each other's jokes or anything else. If they do, the first time they falter they get a yellow card warning. The second time, they receive a red card and are out of the game. The comedian who outlasts the others wins. © Amazon Prime Versions have been produced in Mexico, Italy, Iran, Australia, Canada, Germany, India, Russia, Nigeria, Colombia and France. And with a UK version reportedly in the works, Amazon has decided to test the waters with an Irish...

BEING FRANK (THE NAKED GUN)

  THE NAKED GUN We all know Liam Neeson can do comedy. We've seen him do it before in small doses. The Northern Irish actor  had the best moment in Ricky Gervais' BBC sitcom 'Life's Too Short'  with his improv sketch. Then there was in  the cereal scene in Seth MacFarlane's 'Ted 2' . There have also been chances to test his comic chops in 'Derry Girls, '  on Stephen Colbert's chat show  and as  Good Cop/Bad Cop in 'The Lego Movie' . But can he carry a whole comic movie? Neeson gets the chance to find that out in Akiva Schaffer's 'The Naked Gun' - a reboot of  David Zucker's 1988 comedy classic with Leslie Nielsen, Priscilla Presley, George Kennedy and OJ Simpson . Produced by Seth MacFarlane and Erica Huggins and working from a script by Schaffer, Dan Gregor and Doug Mend, Neeson has a very high bar to clear - playing the son of Nielsen's bungling detective Frank Drebin. Like Frank Snr, Neeson's Frank Jr is an ...

LAST ONE STANDING (TRUELOVE)

© Channel 4 & Clerkenwell Films Channel 4 drama at its very best is edgy. Its finest miniseries are not afraid to tackle big issues or whip up controversy. Think Alan Bleasdale's ' GBH ,' Simon Moore's ' Traffik ,' Alan Plater and Chris Mullin's ' A Very British Coup ,' Jack Thorne's ' National Treasure ,' Dominic Savage's ' I Am ..' dramas,  Shane Meadows' ' The Virtues ' or Russell T Davies' ' It's A Sin .' These have tackled everything from the international drug trade to homophobia and AIDS, from sexual abuse to manipulation of the left wing. © Channel 4 & Clerkenwell Films 2024 has begun with another Channel 4, drama taking on a huge issue - assisted dying and the treatment of senior citizens. 'Truelove' is the creation of 'End of the F**king World' writer Charlie Lovell and Iain Wetherby and it raises uncomfortable questions. The six part miniseries begins with five fri...