Luther is a British psychological crime drama television series that premiered on BBC One in the UK on 4 May 2010. The series centres on DCI John Luther (played by Idris Elba), a highly talented detective working in London to solve a series of high-profile murders. Co-stars include Ruth Wilson as Alice Morgan, Warren Brown as DS Justin Ripley, Steven Mackintosh as DCI Ian Reed, and Saskia Reeves as Det Supt Rose Teller. As the series progresses Nikki Amuka-Bird joins as the recently promoted DCI Erin Gray, and Dermot Crowley is promoted to a starring role as Det Supt Martin Schenk, and Michael Smiley continues portraying Benny Silver. Patrick Malahide appears as George Cornelius in the fourth and fifth series.
As of 4 January 2019, [update] 20 episodes of Luther have aired, concluding the fifth series. A sequel film, Luther: The Fallen Sun , aired on 24 February 2023. All episodes and the film were written by series creator Neil Cross.
The first series tells a single crime story each episode for the first four episodes, and then ends with a two-part story, with other narrative elements developing across the series.
No. overall | Episode | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [1] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Episode 1 | Brian Kirk | Neil Cross | 4 May 2010 | 6.35 | |
DCI John Luther (Idris Elba) returns to active duty several months after suffering a nervous breakdown related to the capture of a serial kidnapper/murderer named Henry Madsen (Anton Saunders), whom he had allowed to fall from a great height and is now in a coma. On his first day back, Luther solves a double homicide by unravelling the bizarre behaviour of the murdered couple's daughter, Alice Morgan (Ruth Wilson). Despite pursuing her relentlessly, he is unable to prove her guilt. Luther also pursues his estranged wife Zoe (Indira Varma), whom he still loves, and ends up in a violent altercation with her new boyfriend, Mark (Paul McGann). | ||||||
2 | Episode 2 | Brian Kirk | Neil Cross | 11 May 2010 | 5.80 | |
A sniper begins targeting police officers all over London, and Luther must track him down. The sniper, traumatised by his experiences in war, is being driven to his brutal crimes by his father, who – despite being in prison – has complete control over his son's actions. Luther stages a television interview, insulting the sniper and drawing him out at great personal risk. Meanwhile, Alice continues to stalk Luther, becoming increasingly obsessive and threatening. | ||||||
3 | Episode 3 | Sam Miller | Neil Cross | 18 May 2010 | 4.56 | |
Luther pursues a serial killer and occult writer named Lucien Burgess (Paul Rhys), who kidnaps mothers every decade and drains them of their blood. Things become complicated when Burgess accuses Luther of having attacked him, making it difficult for Luther to continue the case through legal means. Luther continues to communicate with Alice, and forms an unusual friendship with her; she proceeds to hire a group of girls to beat up Mark in an attempt to emasculate him and drive Zoe back to Luther. Meanwhile, Henry Madsen awakens from his coma; though he is not yet able to testify, when he does so he will be able to destroy Luther's career. | ||||||
4 | Episode 4 | Sam Miller | Neil Cross | 25 May 2010 | 4.57 | |
A serial killer continues targeting women who are alone at night. He takes a piece of jewellery from each of them, and gives one of their lockets to his unknowing wife, as a birthday gift. He escalates rapidly, and Luther's team is forced to enlist the help of the killer's wife, in order to track him down. He is successfully taken alive, but his wife assaults him in a fit of rage, striking him with a hammer in the back of the head. In an attempt to win Luther's friendship, Alice impersonates a doctor and lights a fire in the hospital, taking advantage of the distraction to fatally smother Henry Madsen. | ||||||
5 | Episode 5 | Stefan Schwartz | Neil Cross | 1 June 2010 | 3.61 | |
An art dealer's wife is taken hostage, and the kidnappers demand a set of valuable diamonds in exchange for her life. The husband goes to the police for help, because his wife has swallowed the diamonds, and he fears that if this is revealed, the kidnappers will kill her to get them. Events spin rapidly out of control when it is revealed that Luther's colleague DCI Ian Reed (Steven Mackintosh) had knowledge of the robbery and allowed it to go ahead in exchange for a portion of the profits. Reed kills his criminal contact to cover his trail and then the kidnapper himself. He flees, finally killing Zoe in an attempt to draw Luther out, and frames Luther for the crime. | ||||||
6 | Episode 6 | Stefan Schwartz | Neil Cross | 8 June 2010 | 4.11 | |
Luther, framed for Zoe's murder, chooses to run from the police until he can prove his innocence. His boss, Det Supt Rose Teller (Saskia Reeves), has strong regrets for having taken Luther back from suspension, despite having received advice not to. Luther is almost shot by a Special Branch sniper at a meeting with Ian Reed. Teller believes in Reed, but her colleague, Det Supt Martin Schenk, initially does not. However, thanks to Schenk's interview with Mark, he soon realises that Reed may be the culprit rather than Luther. Luther plots to take revenge on Reed with the assistance of Alice and Mark. Luther disagrees with the means by which Alice and Mark vote to handle Reed. |
The second series consists of two two-part stories.
No. overall | Episode | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [1] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
7 | Episode 1 | Sam Miller | Neil Cross | 14 June 2011 | 6.48 | |
Luther, still plagued by Zoe's death, faces a serial killer wearing a Punch mask who wishes to emulate London Folklore figure Spring-heeled Jack, and Luther tries to rescue Jenny Jones, the daughter of an old acquaintance, from the dangerous world of drugs, pornography, and prostitution. | ||||||
8 | Episode 2 | Sam Miller | Neil Cross | 21 June 2011 | 6.11 | |
Luther must rescue Ripley before Cameron sets out his final murdering scheme: kidnapping, gassing, and disposing of the bodies of schoolchildren. Meanwhile, Jenny's ruthless and vengeful boss is demanding compensation for Luther's having stolen her "property". | ||||||
9 | Episode 3 | Sam Miller | Neil Cross | 28 June 2011 | 6.36 | |
What appears to be a deranged killer soon begins killing at random, but there is a larger twist than Luther thinks. Meanwhile, Jenny's tormentor Toby demands that Luther help him gain information about a rival's operation; when Luther can't deliver on time, Toby threatens Jenny's life. Detective Gray discovers Luther is hiding something and asks Ripley to help her. | ||||||
10 | Episode 4 | Sam Miller | Neil Cross | 5 July 2011 | 6.77 | |
The random killings are being carried out by twins, one of whom Luther has arrested, but the other is still on the loose. It is up to Luther to capture or kill the twin who is at-large. Meanwhile, Luther must try to keep Jenny's ex-boss from discovering Toby's death and his own colleagues from discovering his activities. |
Series 3 follows the structure of series 2, consisting of two two-part stories.
No. overall | Episode | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [1] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
11 | Episode 1 | Sam Miller | Neil Cross | 2 July 2013 | 6.43 | |
Luther hunts for a killer who lurks in his victims' houses before killing them and then steals their shoes. The killer is escalating, so Luther must try to find him before he strikes again. Meanwhile, Luther is distracted by an ongoing case concerning the murder of a cyber troll, but there are people watching Luther who have darker intents. | ||||||
12 | Episode 2 | Sam Miller | Neil Cross | 9 July 2013 | 5.95 | |
As the killer strikes again, the team works hard to try and track him down, which hunt leads them to a top criminal now residing in a retirement home. The team must stop the killer before he attacks a group of young female nurses having a night in. Luther and Ripley also hunt for the murderer of the cyber troll, but their sympathies threaten to cloud their professional judgement. Meanwhile, Luther realizes that a case is being built against him, by one of his very own, but Ripley might also be willing to help bring Luther down. | ||||||
13 | Episode 3 | Farren Blackburn | Neil Cross | 16 July 2013 | 5.57 | |
Luther is assigned to hunt a vigilante killer, Tom Marwood, who murders those he deems to have lost their right to life. The case probes the interests of the media, and soon the team has a political and criminal nightmare on their hands. When Marwood kidnaps Dennis Cochrane, a convicted child sex offender, with an intent to have the public vote to have him lynched, driving up his public support, the team puts themselves in danger to try and stop him from killing again. However, Ripley and the vigilante come face-to-face, and only one of them will survive the encounter. | ||||||
14 | Episode 4 | Farren Blackburn | Neil Cross | 23 July 2013 | 5.96 | |
After the murder of DS Ripley, everyone is hunting for Marwood, but the vigilante has now become a serial killer who will gun down anyone who gets in his way, including Luther's loved ones. However, in a cruel twist of fate Luther himself becomes a suspect, and suddenly his old friend Alice Morgan is back to help him clear his name. The case against Luther comes to a climax; is this really the end for the detective? |
Series 4 consists of one two-part story.
No. overall | Episode | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [1] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
15 | Episode 1 | Sam Miller | Neil Cross | 15 December 2015 | 8.19 | |
On a leave of absence from the police force, Luther is lying low in a rundown cottage on the English coast, but a visit from his old colleagues at the Met brings a shocking piece of news that draws him back to London in search of the truth. Meanwhile, a gruesome serial killer has struck the city. With a trail of clues leading from one crime scene to the next, Schenk and his team must work out the twisted logic that connects each victim but this murdering mastermind is more than a match for the police, outsmarting them at every step. It's not long before Luther is back in the Bullpen, determined to steal a march on the killer before it’s too late. | ||||||
16 | Episode 2 | Sam Miller | Neil Cross | 22 December 2015 | 7.64 | |
On the trail of a cannibalistic killer suffering from Cotard syndrome, Luther is dogged at every step by ghosts from his past. Isolated and on edge, it takes every fibre of his being to keep it together. Could a cold case help to unlock a mystery that's tormenting him? Meanwhile, the serial killer is still on the loose. Benny's hacking skills have revealed a list of hundreds of potential victims but, with a rapidly escalating number of crime scenes, Luther must use all his ingenuity to work out where the murderer is headed next. Discovering it's all part of a macabre end game, Luther is forced to put himself and his new colleague Emma into the heart of danger to try to stop the killing. |
Series 5 consists of a single, serialized narrative over four episodes.
No. overall | Episode | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [2] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
17 | Episode 1 | Jamie Payne | Neil Cross | 1 January 2019 | 10.36 | |
When a series of seemingly indiscriminate killings become ever more audacious, Luther and new recruit DS Catherine Halliday are confounded by a tangle of leads and misdirection that appears designed to protect an untouchable corruption. To make matters more complex, the son of Luther's old adversary George Cornelius has gone missing and he believes the detective has something to do with it. | ||||||
18 | Episode 2 | Jamie Payne | Neil Cross | 2 January 2019 | 9.39 | |
As various friends and foes descend on Luther's home, he's forced to hide a newly returned Alice. Her apparent resurrection and return to London sees her seeking revenge on Cornelius, but her personal mission soon plunges Luther's whole world into danger. What's more, Halliday is increasingly sure that the suicide of their apparent serial killer is not all it seems. | ||||||
19 | Episode 3 | Jamie Payne | Neil Cross | 3 January 2019 | 9.18 | |
As Luther works to rescue Benny from Cornelius' clutches, Alice adds fuel to the fire by striking back. With nowhere left to turn, Luther is forced to seek help from an old friend, but he's soon forced to abandon them when Halliday makes a startling realisation about the killer that's been stalking the capital. | ||||||
20 | Episode 4 | Jamie Payne | Neil Cross | 4 January 2019 | 8.87 | |
Luther's left reeling by tragic events, but must race to save the others from a killer determined to complete his macabre masterpiece. |
A feature film sequel, Luther: The Fallen Sun , was released in select cinemas on 24 February 2023, [3] before its streaming release on 10 March 2023, by Netflix. [4] [5] [6]
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Luther: The Fallen Sun | Jamie Payne | Neil Cross | 24 February 2023 | |
A serial killer terrorizes London while disgraced detective John Luther sits behind bars. Haunted by his failure to capture the cyber psychopath who now taunts him, Luther decides to break out of prison to finish the job by any means necessary. |
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org. |
Series | Episode number | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | ||
1 | 6.35 | 5.80 | 4.56 | 4.57 | 3.61 | 4.11 | |
2 | 6.48 | 6.11 | 6.36 | 6.77 | – | ||
3 | 6.43 | 5.95 | 5.57 | 5.96 | – | ||
4 | 8.19 | 7.64 | – | ||||
5 | 10.36 | 9.39 | 9.18 | 8.87 | – |
No. | Title | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
– | "Meet the Luthers" | Neil Cross | 18 March 2016 | |
A Sport Relief spoof that supposedly takes a look at DCI John Luther's life outside of the force. |
Idrissa Akuna Elba is an English actor, rapper, singer and DJ. An alumnus of the National Youth Music Theatre in London, he is known for roles including Stringer Bell in the HBO series The Wire (2002–2004), DCI John Luther in the BBC One series Luther (2010–2019), and Nelson Mandela in the biographical film Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom (2013). For Luther, he received four nominations each for a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor and a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor, winning one of the former.
Femi Oyeniran is a Nigerian-British actor and director who started his career in the cult classic Kidulthood, playing the role of "Moony" in 2006. It was followed by the 2008 sequel Adulthood. His first feature film as a director It's A Lot was released theatrically by Kaleidoscope Home Entertainment in 2013. Oyeniran sold his second movie The Intent to Netflix for a worldwide release; it appeared on the platform on 15 May 2017. The film had already peaked at number three on the iTunes Movie Chart and opened to sold out cinemas. It was funded, shot and distributed completely independently.
Luther may refer to:
Murder Prevention is a six-part British television crime drama series, written and created by Declan Croghan, that first broadcast on Five on 30 October 2004. Inspired by the real-life Homicide Prevention Unit within the Metropolitan Police, the series follows a unit headed up by DCI Patrick Goddard, who attempt to prevent murders from taking place by using modern scientific techniques and basic police instinct to gather enough evidence of intent to kill in order to arrest potential murderers before they offend. According to Croghan, "Murder Prevention is the first pre-crime drama ever, anywhere."
Neil Claude Cross is a British novelist and scriptwriter, best known as the creator of the drama series Luther and Hard Sun. He is also the showrunner for the TV adaptation of The Mosquito Coast, which began airing in 2021.
Luther is a British psychological crime thriller television series starring Idris Elba as DCI John Luther and Ruth Wilson as Alice Morgan, written by Neil Cross. The detective Luther must make cases against criminals while the murderer Morgan has a complicated relationship with him. The first series is composed of six episodes which ran in May and June 2010. A second series of four episodes aired on BBC One in June and July 2011, and a third was commissioned in 2012 composed of four episodes which aired in July 2013. A two-episode fourth series was broadcast in December 2015, and a fifth series of four episodes premiered on 1 January 2019. BBC Studios handled distribution for the TV series.
Stefan Schwartz is an English and Canadian film and television director, writer and actor, most known for the feature film Shooting Fish and his work on the BBC's Spooks and Luther, AMC's The Walking Dead and Fear The Walking Dead as well as The Americans and The Boys. He is also the creator of Talking Scripts with business partner Idris Elba - An IOS app that reads Film and TV scripts using different voices for the characters.
Neil Maskell is an English actor, writer and director who is known for his appearances in British crime and horror films. His credits include Nil by Mouth (1997), The Football Factory (2004), Rise of the Footsoldier (2007), Doghouse (2009), Bonded by Blood (2010), Kill List (2011), Wild Bill (2011), St George's Day and Piggy, The Great Train Robbery (2013), Raised by Wolves (2015), The Mummy (2017), King Arthur: Legend of the Sword (2017), Peaky Blinders (2019), Bull (2021), Litvinenko (2022), and Hijack (2023).
Shetland is a Scottish crime drama television series produced by ITV Studios for BBC Scotland. First broadcast on BBC One on 10 March 2013, it is originally based upon the novels of Ann Cleeves and adapted by David Kane. The first seven series starred Douglas Henshall as DI Jimmy Pérez, whilst Ashley Jensen stars as DI Ruth Calder from the eighth series. The cast also includes Alison O'Donnell as DS Alison "Tosh" McIntosh and Steven Robertson as DC Sandy Wilson, as well as Lewis Howden and Anne Kidd. Henshall won the 2016 BAFTA Scotland award for Best Actor and the series received the award for Best TV Drama.
Supply & Demand is a British television crime drama series, written and devised by Lynda La Plante, first broadcast as a single feature-length pilot on ITV on 5 February 1997. The series follows the work of ESUS, a crack team of detectives tasked with investigating some of the country's biggest criminal importers and smugglers. The pilot was written in 1996, the year that La Plante's most notable television series, Prime Suspect, went on hiatus. Adé Sapara, Eamonn Walker, Benedict Wong, Juliet Aubrey and Ramon Tikaram were credited as principal cast members for the pilot.
The Dark Tower is a 2017 American neo-Western science fantasy film directed and co-written by Nikolaj Arcel. Based on Stephen King's novel series of the same name, the film stars Idris Elba as Roland Deschain, a gunslinger on a quest to protect the Dark Tower—a mythical structure which supports all realities—while Matthew McConaughey plays his nemesis Walter Padick, and Tom Taylor stars as Jake Chambers, a boy who becomes Roland's apprentice.
David Ready is an American film producer and production executive, and an EVP at Chernin Entertainment.
Turn Up Charlie is a British comedy television series created by Idris Elba and Gary Reich. The series stars Elba as a disc jockey who reluctantly becomes the nanny for his famous friend's daughter; Piper Perabo, JJ Feild and Frankie Hervey also star. The series premiered on 15 March 2019 on Netflix. In April 2020, the series was cancelled after one season.
Fallen is a two-part British television crime drama, written by Steve Griffiths and directed by Omar Madha, first broadcast on ITV on 26 April 2004. The drama stars Jonathan Cake as Jason Shepherd, a police detective who wakes up in hospital in an amnesiac state after being subjected to a near fatal electrocution by members of a gang suspected to be involved in nuclear terrorism. Simone Lahbib stars as Shepherd's superior, DCI Kate Gunning, with Kerrie Taylor, Gary Love, David Gant and William Beck also among the principal cast members credited.
Idris Elba is an English actor. He is known for portraying drug trafficker Stringer Bell on the HBO series The Wire, DCI John Luther on the BBC One series Luther and Nelson Mandela in the biographical film Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom (2013). He has been nominated four times for a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Miniseries or Television Film, winning one and was nominated five times for a Primetime Emmy Award.
Kate Herron is an English director, writer, and producer. She is known for her female-led comedies. She directed and executive produced the first season of the Disney+ series Loki.
Luther: The Fallen Sun is a 2023 crime thriller film directed by Jamie Payne and written by Neil Cross. It serves as a film continuation of Luther. The film stars Idris Elba, reprising his role as police detective John Luther, with Cynthia Erivo and Andy Serkis. The film is about the detective's efforts to stop a wealthy serial killer's complex schemes.
Hijack is a thriller television series created by George Kay and Jim Field Smith, with Idris Elba starring in the lead role. It premiered on 28 June 2023 on Apple TV+. In January 2024, the series was renewed for a second season.