Inside Man | |
---|---|
Genre | |
Created by | Steven Moffat |
Directed by | Paul McGuigan |
Starring | |
Composer | David Arnold |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 1 |
No. of episodes | 4 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers |
|
Producer | Sue Vertue |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Production company | Hartswood Films |
Original release | |
Network | BBC One |
Release | 26 September – 4 October 2022 |
Inside Man is a thriller drama television serial developed by Steven Moffat. The four-episode series premiered on 26 September 2022, and was broadcast on BBC One. It was released on Netflix in the US on 31 October 2022. [1]
Filming locations included St Andrew's Church in Farnham, Godalming Railway Station, Godalming, outside the Beehive Pub in Bedfont Middlesex, Broad Street in Wokingham, John Hanson Community School in Andover and Welcome Break Fleet Services in Fleet. [2]
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date | UK viewers (millions) | |
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1 | "Episode 1" | Paul McGuigan | Steven Moffat | 26 September 2022 | 3.93 | |
British crime journalist Beth Davenport is harassed on the London Tube by a predator rider and is helped escape the situation by Mathematics tutor Janice Fife. A friendship results. In a United States prison, former law lecturer Jefferson Grieff is on death row for brutally killing his wife. He gives advice to journalists about cold murder cases including to writer Davenport. His repeated advisory is, "Everyone is a murderer." Back in England, village Vicar Reverend Harry Watling picks up Fife, his teenage son’s tutor, at the Tube station to bring her to his home. Watling has in his pocket a memory stick containing porn made by Edgar, –a young suicidal parishioner, who wants it hidden from his mother. When back home along with Janice (Fife), he drops his keys and absently the memory stick into a hall dish. His son Ben finds and gives the stick to Janice when she has computer problems, and she sees the porn, which includes child sexual molestation material (CSAM). Stunned, Ben asks for the stick back, pretending that it's his memory stick and not his father's, but Janice, enraged, confronts Watling, who says that the stick doesn't belong to Ben, but he won't explain whose it is. Janice insists that she will report Ben to the police. Not wanting his son to be accused of being a pedophile, Watling assaults Janice in preventing her from leaving the house, she violently falls down the cellar stairs, and he then locks her in the cellar including handcuffing her to a pipe. | ||||||
2 | "Episode 2" | Paul McGuigan | Steven Moffat | 27 September 2022 | 3.09 | |
Journalist Beth goes to the United States to interview death-row Grieff in prison as research for an article, but she returns to London when she gets an odd message from Janice, who seems to have disappeared. When leaving, Grieff says she can observe the next case and write about it as long as she never mentions Janice to him again. Beth reluctantly agrees and is given tasks relating to another case. Harry and his wife, Mary, don't know what to do with Janice in their basement. Surprisingly, Janice offers suggestions on how to get away with murder; they need her help. She has also cut herself and bled all over the cellar, so when the police investigate and find her diary and see her last appointment was at the vicarage, there will be evidence. Harry tries to get Edgar to confess that the CSAM memory stick is his, but Edgar, fearing his mother, lies. Harry decides to take the blame for the memory stick to spare Ben and Edgar from being investigated, but Edgar goes home and hangs himself, leaving a note that says, "Don't believe the vicar is a paedo. He's protecting someone else." | ||||||
3 | "Episode 3" | Paul McGuigan | Steven Moffat | 3 October 2022 | 3.32 | |
Grieff is informed that his execution date has been set. Beth returns to the UK and meets a contact of Grieff's to follow up leads on Janice. Watling is visited by the police regarding Edgar's suicide note, but the note is ambiguous as to whether he was protecting/accusing Ben, Edgar or someone else. With access to Janice's password, Mary drafts an e-mail to Janice's sister with an excuse for the cancellation of their next Skype call. Grieff volunteers to provide the location of his wife's head - having mutilated her body and hidden the head in an undisclosed location - in exchange for a stay of execution. Harry forces his wife to leave the house, intending to kill Janice by suffocating her with a leaking gas heater, but he is unaware that Ben has found Janice in the basement and is now locked in with her. Mary realizes that she has played into Janice's hands by sending the alibi e-mail. | ||||||
4 | "Episode 4" | Paul McGuigan | Steven Moffat | 4 October 2022 | 3.18 | |
Grieff approaches his ex-father-in-law, offering the location of his daughter's head in exchange for using his criminal connections to delay the execution. Grieff's confession is manipulated by the warden to secure an extension. Janice urges Ben to call the police. Mary contacts Harry, discussing the need to handle incriminating laptop evidence. In passing the laptop to Mary, Harry inadvertently connects her to Janice's flat. Confronted by Beth, Mary's heated exchange ends tragically as she steps into the road and is fatally struck by a truck. In the basement, Ben's questioning of Janice escalates as both suffer the effects of a carbon monoxide leak. He strikes her with a hammer, but fails to deliver a fatal blow. Beth intervenes, saving Janice. In a final Skype call, Grieff deduces Harry's involvement, hinting at the motive behind his own wife's death. With two weeks left before execution, Grieff hints at revealing the truth behind his actions to Harry, highlighting their shared connection and the vicar's role in events. In a post-credits scene, Grieff is visited by Janice, who asks for his help in murdering her husband, who is implied to have faked his death and/or wronged her. When Janice points out that Grieff is unsurprised by her request, he acknowledges that, on death row, everyone is a murderer. |
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Inside Man was rated 67% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 24 reviews, with a score of 6.9 out of 10. The website's critics consensus reads, "Inside Man's ambitions are undercut by clunky and predictable plotting, although Stanley Tucci and David Tennant's performances are welcome compensations for viewers who enjoy twisty thrillers." [3] Top critic Graeme Blundell from The Australian writes, "It's superbly acted by a bunch of experienced actors who know just what kind of heightened style is required here, directed in immersive style by the accomplished McGuigan, and thoroughly enjoyable. Just hold that wine glass." Charles Hartford from A Geek Community writes, "Inside Man Season 1 delivers a gripping tale that is well worth its short, four-hour runtime...The series pulls the viewer into its depths as it explores how far people will go when they are caught in the wrong place at the wrong time." The Guardian described it as being a "funny and typically meaty mystery from Steven Moffat". [4] Pat Stacey, writing in the Irish Independent said, "Probably the most foolish scene of all came in Tuesday’s finale when Mary threatens journalist Beth (Lydia West) ... with a breadknife while making 'whoosh' sounds. This nudged Inside Man into full-blown sitcom territory. Strange, that, since Moffat seemed to want to say something serious about human nature and people's capacity for violence." [5] Anita Singh of The Daily Telegraph said, "Moffat can throw any amount of good lines or clever little plot twists into this show, but it is built on a flaw so fundamental that it's impossible to get past it." [6]
The series features Steven Moffat's own son, Louis Oliver, whose performance as Ben, the vicar's son, was described by Radio Times as "show stealing". [5] [7]
The first episode was watched 5,028,000 times on iPlayer alone during 2022, making it the 7th most viewed individual programme on the platform that year. [8]
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