Tuesday, 16 July 2013

TV REVIEW: Luther - Episode Two


Following on from last week's nailbiting terror of an episode, Luther (Idris Elba) finds himself investigating the murder of the woman and her husband and attempting to track down the fetish killer before he strikes again. He also had a successful date with Mary Day (Sienna Guillory), though spends most of the episode trying to get back in touch with her. DS Ripley (Warren Brown) is still working with DCI Erin Gray (Nikki Amuka-Bird) and DSU Stark (David O'Hara) to bring down Luther by observing his unorthodox methods and reporting back to the pair of solemn investigators. Ripley is also trying to wrap up the murder of Jared Cass on his own whilst Luther busies himself with the other killer.

Anyone worried that the second episode of Luther couldn't live up to the sheer thriller that was the opening needn't have bothered. The same tension was not present at the beginning of the episode but writer Neil Cross and director Sam Miller kept up the chilling atmosphere throughout before ramping it up to near-unbearable levels once again as we followed the two nurses around their home, knowing that the killer was in there. Miller is an assured hand and let the lengthy POV shots speak for themselves, lingering on the victims and teasing the audience for what seemed like an age before the killer reveal. 

The link back to the previous cases proved to be an interesting development and the scenes between the fetish killer and cancer-suffering murderer William Carney (Ned Dennehy) were creepy to say the least. It also leant an interesting development to Paul Ellis, the killer, and rather than being the silent absolute of a serial killer, the audience was granted an insight into his past as well as his current life. Clearly we are never meant to empathise with him (the dependence on murdering women in their homes puts paid to that), but it is always refreshing to find villains presented as multi-dimensional characters too, building into the believability of Luther's already heightened version of reality. 

Elba is, as ever, the dependable centre of the show, brings such presence to Luther; he's the strong centre of the show, yet, as evidenced here, that comes with a certain level of self-doubt. His relationship with Ripley has been the one constant throughout the three series and watching it fracture in last week's episode was an odd development, as I discussed previously. However, it seems that my fears were unfounded as Ripley, recorded on a dictaphone, gave an impassioned defence of his boss. Elba's performance in this particular scene was wonderfully understated and his sense of relief is palpable. 

Speaking of Ripley, Warren Brown's performance over the last two episodes has been excellent, particularly in this instalment as he faces pressure to wrap up the Jared Cass murder as well as rat on his boss. His scenes with Lucian Msamati as the grieving and now one-handed Mr Barnaby were the calmest moments in the episode, yet imbued with that same sense of dread. It takes someone very special to be able to deliver a line like "your hand is now with our forensics team" and not even blink. 

Elsewhere in the episode, we also had the developing romance between Luther and Mary, who thankfully toned down the Manic Pixie Dream Girl aspect of her character this week, just enough for me to start liking her. However, it is also looking likely that she has something to do with the vendetta that is keeping our DCU Stark so dogged on the trail for Luther. The women in Luther's life are always an interesting study, though it seems we've finally escaped the shadow of his deceased wife Zoe. I'm still rooting for Alice to appear though because Mary may be lovely, but there is nothing like the chemistry between Elba and Ruth Wilson.

- Becky

You can read Becky's review of Luther's first episode here.

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