The episode began with a pair of young lovers,
specifically a pair of young telegram messenger boys, discussing their plans to
run away together- away from a society which does not accept them. Soon,
however, we find ourselves in a case of mistaken identity, as another telegram boy
is killed in one of the lovers’ places. Upon further, well inspection I
suppose, of the victim, Inspector Reid (Matthew Macfadyen) and his team discover,
through some potentially grisly post mortem examination from Jackson (Adam
Rothenberg) that this boy, and presumably several of the others, were selling
themselves to business men for a bit of money on the side. And so the plot
thickens, leading our trio to the doors of the men who used the services of the
telegram boys, particularly as one likely client, or companion as he seemed to
prefer to think of himself, is now also dead. Reid and his men must consider
the business affairs surrounding the situation in order to surmise what may be
happening, leading them to the characteristically shady world of Whitechapel’s
banking system. Presumably not a banking system much more reputable than the UK
banking system of today.
There was much potential here. The social context
of homosexual relationships in Victorian London, in a time when to love a
member of your own sex was a harshly punished crime, was an interesting one to
choose, particularly after the equally weighty themed ‘Become Man’. The show’s
basis in contextual fact had a human face here, especially as the issue
seemingly so troubled Captain Serious himself, our humble leader, Inspector
Reid. Sadly, as is so often the case with Ripper
Street, and I do tire of banging on about it (believe me) it felt like a
wasted opportunity. There was no real spark to the episode (well there was, but
it had nothing whatsoever to do with main plot – more on this shortly), nothing
to incite the passionate response this issue so sorely deserved. It was left to
Jerome Flynn’s thoughtful, respectful silence in the presence of the bereaved
boy, towards the end of the episode, to convey all the sympathy and respect the
episode just didn’t quite manage by itself. Don’t get me wrong, he did it
rather well, we just needed more than one look from him and several moments of sympathetic
blustering from his boss to feel that this had been executed efficiently.
Meanwhile, the loyal and trustworthy Reid was having
problems of his own. Since it was revealed to the audience that his wife,
Emily, has now been institutionalised due to her prolonged and ultimately
delayed grief over the death of their daughter, not to mention the ‘false hope’
and betrayal from her husband, Reid has, in a staggering event of chronological
convenience, been, well, flirting,
frankly, with ‘Become Man’ MP Jane Cobden (Leanne Best). Much as the analytical
nerd in my enjoyed the fact that the character featured in two episodes which
make sense as a pair, particularly in terms of sexuality and character development,
appearing the second to bring this theme to fruition, the whole thing just didn’t
feel very Reid-like. Whilst he did have an affair in Series One, he was at
least a tiny bit traumatised by guilt over that one, whereas now by contrast it
seems that 30 seconds worth of dialogue about his poor (forgotten!) wife is the
only license he needs to play tonsil tennis with another dark haired beauty.
Given that the man struggles to make any decision with pondering it later over
whisky with Bennett, seemingly wracked by something akin to guilt (although
that may just be the earnestness again), this rapid emotional rebound just didn’t
sit right with me.
On though, to the spark of the episode I mentioned
earlier. Out of nowhere, almost at the end of the episode, after The Scene
where all is revealed very quickly in hushed voices against an overly loud
musical backdrop, came a scene the like of which I dare say we have not seen in
Ripper Street before. Packing a huge,
not to mention unexpected, emotional punch, came the seeming demise of the
marriage between Long Susan (MyAnna Buring) and Jackson. Having discovered that
he has gambled away what was left of her money in a misguided attempt to help
her, Susan doesn’t rant, doesn’t rail, doesn’t throw a heavy household object
at his head as we’ve seen her do before and like he expects, even asks her to,
but simply, quietly, tells him to ‘get out’. Following on from her new found
opinions and strength of character from Become Man, an episode I now definitely
consider to definitely be the episode’s pair (if such decisions are indeed made
at Ripper Street towers), this was a
fascinating development.
In fact, ladies and gentlemen, I think that moment
is a likely contender for the accolade I’ve just made up – moment of the series
so far. It’s just a shame the rest of it was such a tangled mess of telegram
uniforms, actors with confusingly similar haircuts and a devastating lack of thread
– silk and gold or otherwise.
Ripper
Street is next on Monday night, 9pm BBC One.
Jen
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