What can you say about Broadchurch?
Just when you think that they can’t top an episode along comes another one that
is even better.
It’s eight weeks since Danny’s death, summer is turning to
autumn and the town is poised to pay its respects. Unfortunately it’s not to
Danny; with the crime still unsolved his body can’t be released, much to the
distress of his family. Instead it’s the funeral of Jack Marshall, the
newsagent and Sea Brigade leader who was hounded to his death by the community
in which he rebuilt his life after his own tragedies. Ironically, the church is
packed with many of those who were baying for his blood only recently, and it falls
to the Reverend Paul Coates (Arthur Darvill) to remind the town how they failed Jack, and Danny
too.
It’s a week of rediscovery and repositioning. There is much
gazing into mirrors as key figures try to work out what has become of their
lives and how they have changed since those catastrophic events at the start of
the summer. Olly (Jonathan Bailey) is troubled by his part in Jack’s death and even more so when
Karen (Vicky McClure) turns up on the day of the funeral like the Black Crow of Death to remind
him of his own culpability. Mark and Beth (Andrew Buchan and Jodie Whittaker) are looking ahead now, but their
first steps back into normality only too painfully remind them that normality
is something they might never have again. Mark finds the headline page of a
newspaper crumpled in a grate, his son’s death now yesterday’s news, good only
as kindling. Chloe (Charlotte Beaumont) can’t stand the pitying gazes of her school friends and
turns to boyfriend Dean (Jacob Anderson) who, far from being the bad egg that he’s been
portrayed as for the last few weeks, actually turns out to be a sensitive farm
boy who has created for her a place of respite. “I need a break from being the
dead boy’s sister,” she explains to her frantic parents who have driven cross
country to find her. Mark was certain that Chloe would be fine. “How can you
ever say that now?” Beth berates him. Her guard will never be down around her
daughter and her remaining family ever again.
Poor Beth is still seeking answers and closure. In
desperation she begs Karen to arrange a meeting with one of the parents from
the Sandbrook murders. If she wanted a sign that there will be light at the end
of the tunnel, sadly she isn’t going to find it here. She meets Cate (Amanda Drew) in a
roadside café, far from the soft focus golden haze of Broadchurch, this meeting
is drab, grey with car headlights melting by along the road outside. Cate has
no reassurances for Beth. DI Hardy is the worst man for the job, she says, and
failed her daughter through his incompetence. It’s a raw and honest scene, as
Kate recounts her bleak and hopeless days, divorced, her daughter dead, the
killer still walking free. Everything is pointless, whatever she does, the worst that can happen has already happened, so she drinks, cries, sleeps, and
watches mindless TV. “My life got stolen that day,” she declares to a horrified
Beth who can see a similar abyss opening up in front of her. She has a choice
now: she can continue to let events consume her or she can fight back and move
on with her life.
All is not good for detectives Hardy and Miller. With the
investigation not turning up results, resources are being cut. At the church gate before Jack’s funeral, they
scrutinise the mourners, assuming that one of these people will be the killer. Hardy (David Tennant) fixes the unpleasant Susan with an icy glare, but the main focus of his
suspicion is levelled at Paul Coates, especially after the latter’s
inflammatory sermon. Hardy has been trailing Paul and made his own discoveries
and jumped to conclusions. There’s an inevitable locking of horns as faith and
suspicion clash, and while Hardy delights in humiliating Paul, it is the vicar
that comes out top as their philosophies collide. Still, Hardy has his own
problems. His estranged daughter is apparently not returning his calls, his
mystery illness seems to be getting worse and the press have singled him out as
The Worst Cop In Britain. We find him tortured by a nightmare, with four of his
suspects, Steve Connolly, Nige Carter, Paul Coates and Mark Latimer, lined up
on the shoreline before mountainous waves – that fear of water again – that
leaves him gasping in pain and fumbling for his pills.
Ellie (Olivia Colman) finds even more that she is forced to see her friends
as suspects and she hates what she is becoming. Even husband Joe (Matthew Gravelle) has noticed
how distant she is has been. Yet she misses her own son’s suspicious behaviour
and Joe’s protectiveness of the boy, both right under her nose as she focuses
on the case. Tom (Adam Wilson) has claimed that he actually hated Danny and his worry over
the computer files has spilled over so that he takes drastic action to destroy evidence. You do question
his judgement though – surely a copper’s son wouldn’t wander off to a caravan
park with a stranger, not with a child murderer still on the loose. Meanwhile
Joe, Ellie’s perfect house husband, is starting to exude …what? Menace?
Something subtly sinister, anyway: he resents Hardy hovering around the boy and his jokey comments to Ellie about whom she suspects are almost as weighted as
his dinner table questioning of Hardy over the likelihood of catching the
killer.
So, while the police wrestle with their own personal demons
it is the press that do the actual detective work in this episode. Veteran
journalist Maggie (Carolyn Pickles) turns up enough about Susan Wright (Pauline Quirke) to set events into motion
to trigger the latter’s arrest. What Susan hoped to achieve by sending Tom home
with Danny’s skateboard isn’t clear, yet she made that choice as soon as she
learned who Tom’s mother was. Her arrest also gave her erstwhile collaborator
Nige (Joe Sims) the opportunity to strike back at her through something she loves, also
showing, for his part, a complete disregard for life.
As the police close in on their latest suspect and bring her into
custody, the Latimers are trying to make a fresh start. They pull their
fractured family back together and dare to laugh and have fun and even look
towards a future. Is this a sign that a corner has at last been turned by the
town and Broadchurch can settle back to something like routine? But events at
the hut indicate that the police still don’t have the right person. The fleeing
figure is an adult, possibly male, strong and physically fit enough to knock
Ellie aside twice, outrun Hardy and to scale a chain fence. The episode ends in
chaos and it looks for now that Ellie might be forced to move forward from this
on her own.
Broadchurch continues on Monday 15th April at 9pm on ITV
Click here for more information about the series
Broadchurch continues on Monday 15th April at 9pm on ITV
Click here for more information about the series
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