The Field of Blood is a Scottish crime drama television series, broadcast between 8 May 2011 and 9 August 2013, adapting the novels of Denise Mina. Jayd Johnson stars as the protagonist, Paddy Meehan, working for a Glasgow newspaper in the 1980s.
The Field of Blood | |
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Genre | Crime drama |
Created by | Denise Mina |
Written by | David Kane |
Directed by | David Kane |
Starring | Jayd Johnson Matt Costello Bronagh Gallagher Ford Kiernan Kesley Griffin David Morrissey Brian Pettifer |
Country of origin | Scotland |
Original language | Scots/English |
No. of series | 2 |
No. of episodes | 4 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producer | Alan J Wands |
Running time | 60 mins. |
Production company | Slate Films North |
Original release | |
Network | |
Release | 8 May 2011 9 August 2013 | –
Plot
editThe first series of The Field of Blood adapts the novel of the same name, which is set in 1982. This series comprised two episodes, broadcast on BBC One on 8 and 9 May 2011, respectively. The second series adapts the follow-up novel, The Dead Hour, which is set later in the same decade. The second series was commissioned by the BBC in 2012,[1] again containing two episodes, which aired on 8 and 9 August 2013, respectively. Set in Glasgow, Scotland, in 1982, a young female reporter sees an opportunity for a riveting story for her slowly dying city newspaper when a young boy is kidnapped from a Glasgow park and later is found murdered. She sees connections to a year-old prior murder with similar characteristics that nobody else wants to see, and she is determined to connect them and convince the police.
Reception
editTime Out gave the second series four out of five stars and said "It’s good to see this grubby Glaswegian crime drama get another run – it slipped under the radar somewhat when it first appeared in 2011."[2] Sarah Hughes of The Independent said "While the television version of The Field of Blood lacks the sense of human fraility of the Denise Mina books on which it's based, occasionally seeming clunky in comparison, its great strength lies in the accurate portrayal of a distant, darker time."[3] Sarah Rainey of The Daily Telegraph also gave it four out of five stars and said "The opening half was bleak but authentic, from the clack-clack of the Olympia typewriters to the obligatory Irn Bru advert. ... The camerawork was clever – just the right amount of jumpy hand-held shots and haunting close-ups – and the dialogue was witty."[4]
Sarah Hughes, also writing for The Guardian, called the first series "impressive" and said it was "a cut above the usual summer schedule-filling fare."[5] Lucy Mangan, another journalist for The Guardian said "this potent brew of corruption, conflict and car coats is nevertheless a waste of David Morrissey's talents" when talking about the second series.[6]
Cast
edit
Main castedit
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Recurring casteditSeries 1edit
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Series 2edit
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Episode list
editSeries 1 (2011)
edit# | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "The Field of Blood (Part One)" | David Kane | David Kane | 8 May 2011 | N/A | |
In 1982, Patricia "Paddy" Meehan, a lowly Irish-Scots Girl Friday at the Glasgow Daily Post, has journalistic aspirations beyond being a copy editor, despite her male colleagues' sexist remarks. When three-year-old Brian Wilcox is murdered, the chief suspect is Calum, Paddy's cousin's ten-year-old son. When details of Calum's family's shock is published in the paper, the family wrongly blame Paddy. Unconvinced of Calum's guilt, Paddy links the murder to that of another little boy, Thomas Dempsie, some years earlier, allegedly killed by his father, Alfie, who has just hanged himself in prison. Paddy interviews Thomas' mother and Alfie's widow, using the name of a colleague, Heather, who is later murdered. | ||||||
2 | "The Field of Blood (Part Two)" | David Kane | David Kane | 9 May 2011 | N/A | |
The police interview the journalists following Heather's death. When Paddy tries to persuade them that Brian's murder has the same hallmarks as that of little Thomas Dempsie, whose mother she interviewed using Heather's name, the police are not interested. Paddy speaks to alcoholic veteran hack Pete Walker, who is sure Dempsie never murdered his son. Then, with young reporter Terry, she finds evidence to suggest that mobile grocery van driver Henry Naismith, a witness in the recent case and Dempsie's cellmate, is the culprit; a fact seemingly borne out when she speaks to Calum. Further investigations lead to a dangerous encounter before she gets her wish to become a fully-fledged reporter. |
Series 2 (2013)
edit# | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions)[7] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3 | "The Dead Hour (Part One)" | David Kane | David Kane | 8 August 2013 | 4.06 | |
In 1984, the miners are on strike, and in Glasgow, NUM leader Red Willie McDade is suspected of hiding their assets so that the government cannot freeze them. Paddy Meehan and George McVie, reporters for the Glasgow Daily News, arrive at the scene of a disturbance with police in attendance. However, an Irishman assures the journalists that everything is alright and gives them money to leave. The alleged victim, left-wing lawyer Mhairi[a] Burnett, declines to press charges, but the next day Paddy learns that Mhairi was murdered. Later, the corpse of another lawyer Mark Thillingly, who supported the miners, is pulled from the river. Suicide is assumed, his widow claiming that he had been depressed and behaving oddly before his death. Paddy hands the police the money the Irishman gave her, on which fingerprints of the Irish gangster Lafferty are found – though he is not the man Paddy saw at the house. New editor-in-chief Maloney arrives, announcing redundancies to streamline the paper and make it more populist. Gangsters firebomb the car in which Mcvie is staked out waiting for Meehan. | ||||||
4 | "The Dead Hour (Part Two)" | David Kane | David Kane | 9 August 2013 | 2.43 (overnight)[8] | |
McVie survives and, with Paddy, establishes that Thillingly was most likely murdered. They visit McDade to ask about his connection to the dead lawyers. He tells them that Mhairi had evidence to expose government dirty tricks in accusing the NUM of fraud, though Maloney presents Devlin with supposed fraud by the union. He realizes that she is colluding with the government to discredit the NUM and boost newspaper sales. Soon afterwards he is beaten up but this incites him to rally the staff to defy Maloney. Paddy and McVie rescue Karen – to whom Mhairi passed on her information – from her abductors, Lafferty and Neilson, the man Paddy saw at Mhairi’s house. They take her to the newspaper office where she reveals the government conspiracy. The News prints a front page exposing the government and police collusion and Maloney is forced to back off. However, Paddy discovers that she is pregnant by married policeman Dan Burns, with whom she had a single encounter in the back of a car. |
- ^ In Gaelic, the letters MH – when they appear together – are pronounced V in English.
DVD
editThe first series was released on DVD on 5 September 2011.[9] A box set of both series was released in the United States on 30 September 2014.[10]
References
edit- ^ "In production - New The Field of Blood series". BBC. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
- ^ Harrison, Phil (1 August 2013). "The Field of Blood". Time Out. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
- ^ Hughes, Sarah (9 August 2013). "Last Night's Viewing: The Men Who Made Us Thin, BBC2 The Field of Blood, BBC1". The Independent. Archived from the original on 18 June 2022. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
- ^ Rainey, Sarah (8 August 2013). "The Field of Blood, episode one, BBC One, review". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
- ^ Hughes, Sarah (5 September 2011). "The Field of Blood joins the ranks of classy crime adaptations". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
- ^ Mangan, Lucy (9 August 2013). "The Field of Blood; The Men Who Made Us Thin – TV review". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
- ^ "BARB Top 30s".
- ^ Hilton, Beth (10 August 2013). "'Field of Blood' sheds nearly 1m viewers for second episode". Digital Spy. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
- ^ "Robot Check". Amazon UK. 5 September 2011.
- ^ "The Field of Blood, Set 1". Amazon. 30 September 2014.