David Tennant is interviewed in the latest edition of US magazine TV Guide about the new season of Broadchurch which begins on BBC America on Thursday. Read what he had to say here:
David: This season is a different type of thriller. It’s not 'Here’s a murder and off we go.'
Viewers were led to
believe your character, Detective Inspector Alec Hardy, and fellow cop Ellie
Miller (Olivia Colman) wouldn’t return for a second season, since the murder of
young Danny Latimer was solved and Hardy was near death. What happened?
Broadchurch was
very much conceived as a one-off, though we knew more than we let on. Halfway
through season 1, Chris Chibnall, the show’s creator, told us he had an idea
for a further story.
Which is a good
thing, since the series has become a global sensation.
I never thought it’d have a life on the other side of the
world. It’s being remade in many countries. I’m working on my Icelandic!
Are you disappointed
that Gracepoint didn’t take off?
I’m not. It would have been lovely if we had reached more of
an audience, but I think the viewers who did come for the ride were moved and
intrigued. Hopefully it will pique their interest and BBC America will get a
new audience.
Where do we find
Hardy and Miller when the second season opens?
They are both in desperate places. Hardy’s off the force and
very sick. We’ll discover early on why he’s still hanging around Broadchurch. Miller
is a cop in another town and she’s trying, unsuccessfully, to hold her family
together. She’s living with the terrible consequences of her husband Joe’s
(Matthew Gravelle) arrest for Danny’s murder.
Do we learn more
about the Sandbrook case, the unsolved murders of two young girls that haunted
Hardy last season?
Yes. Hardy still has those demons. And the chickens will
come home to roost!
Broadchurch returns to BBC America on Wednesday 4th March at 10/9c.
Many thanks to Kay for sending the scan.
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