The Prestige TV Podcast - Netflix’s Hit Show ‘Dept. Q’: Peak Sad Boy Detective TV
Episode Date: June 18, 2025Jo and Rob dig through the case files of ‘Dept. Q’, Netflix’s grimy crime drama about a Scottish cold case unit. 00:00 START 01:50 Initial impressions 07:07 Jo’s grades for the show... 09:37 Entrance points 13:29 Production design 15:33 **SPOILERS** 23:52 Mathew Goode’s performance 31:37 Akram stealing the show 35:17 Grading TV therapists 42:45 Casting shout-outs 52:26 Merritt Lingard’s performance 1:02:08 Final thoughts Email us! prestigetv@spotify.com Subscribe to the Ringer TV YouTube channel here for full episodes of ‘The Prestige TV Podcast’ and so much more! Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Rob Mahoney Producers: Kai Grady and Donnie Beacham Jr. Additional Production Support: Justin Sayles Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, welcome back to the Prestige TV podcast feed.
I'm Joanna Robinson.
I'm Rob Mahoney.
We are here at your request, at your behest to talk about department queue.
Here we are.
The listeners wrote in.
They certainly did, Joe.
Where can they clamor, demand, we cover certain things, Rob Mahoney?
You can clamor, demand, submit questions, give us funding for massive new undertakings in which we buy big flat screen monitors for ourselves and stock our new police headquarters at
prestige TV at Spotify.com. As always, Joe.
Our listener Ben wrote in and said this.
The fits, the brogue, the wigs, the ocean, the specificity of place.
I'm three episodes in and this seems like a lock for the pod. I really hope it finishes strong.
Great email from Ben.
Our listener, Neil, called it a slightly bloated descendant of slow horses.
But while at the same time asking for this podcast.
So here we are.
Couple weeks late to talk to you about Netflix's crime show Department Q.
I thought we would do like a little spoiler-free section at the top just to say sort of whether or not we like it, who we think this would be for.
Yep.
And then we will get into it full spoilers.
There's nine episodes.
I don't think there's any point in us sort of doing half the pod and then getting to the finale or whatever.
So we will do like a short spoiler-free section and then it's just full spoilers all the way.
So Rahmohoney, having spent the last 24 hours or so with the fine folks of the department
queue, did you like this show?
Would you recommend it to our listeners?
Definitely.
Really enjoyed it.
I think it's just like a pretty captivating mystery show that, yes, maybe is a little bloated
in spots, ultimately is longer than your season of slow horses or most of your British crime shows
that you'll run into, but manages to thread it by.
by juggling, I don't know, four different mysteries at the same time.
And I think kind of throwing you off the scent just enough that I felt like I was always playing
catch up in a really wonderful way.
I, on the other hand, I really liked the show.
Had a great time with it.
I think Matthew Good as Carl Mork is like a top tier TV detective.
I love.
And something I want to get into a little bit later is we talked a lot in our coverage of
your friends and neighbors about how we were like,
I don't care about all these side characters we constantly follow, and that is not the case.
This is already on my list to talk about it, and then Chris just tweeted out on the watch.
He talked about on the watch.
But every time they added a new side character, I was interested in spending time with them on this show.
They did a really good job flushing out this world.
This is based on a book series by a Danish writer.
I believe it's pronounced U.C. Adler Olson.
And you can tell it's quite bleak.
I wouldn't say this is like a jaunty little detective show.
No, no. Well, it is in Scotland.
In Scotland, things are quite dreary. Like, it's very tough. It's very, there's some, like, I had someone asked me recently, like, can I wash this with my kids? I was like, no. I don't think so. Maybe not.
No, because I would say there's some, like, Silence of the Lambs level, like, almost torture porn level sort of stuff going on in a part of the plot that is just like, nothing like explicit,
but just psychologically tough, I would say.
Harrowing is a great word for it.
So not fun for all ages, but fun for adults.
Yeah, yeah, I would say so.
And, you know, I think the reason it gets comped to slow horses in a bunch of the emails
that we got and around is A, it's, you know, a UK show, B, it's based on a series of, you know,
successful novels.
And C, it's sort of like a band of misfifference.
detective similar to Slough House and So Horses.
It doesn't have the same
inventive
cursing. Yeah, that's sort of like
linguistic flare that I would say
Slow Horses has. I'll say this.
I did learn a lot of Scottish slang.
Oh, did you? It may have not have been an invention,
but it was certainly new to me.
But it
I think has a
slightly, I would say a greater depth
of character, I think.
than slow horses has.
Just because slow horses both are set in
both of them are aiming for that
procedural sort of we could do a case
every season kind of world.
We talked about this a lot with slow horses
in terms of like who do you go home with on this show
and who do not.
In this case,
what we learn about the home life
of all of these people
feels like it's more importantly impactful
on the rest of the story.
and woven into the larger story it's trying to tell.
And so I feel more emotionally attached to a lot of these characters.
Definitely.
I mean, that becomes like such a big structural element of the show that Carl lays out pretty explicitly.
Like there are two mes.
There are these two worlds and there is that bleed over between them.
But you're right.
In terms of the treatment and the characterization,
it's almost like all of these characters big and small are a river cartwright level
investment of time and plot.
And some of that is like you just have more space and more time to spend with these
characters as we're chasing down all of these various threads, many of which might seem very
minor but become very major, of course, by the end, you know, the, the yarn on the board just gets
ever more bold and beautiful as we go.
Tangled. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Certainly tangled. But, like, I think that's such a huge element of it,
is having all of these characters and having all these red herrings. Like, that's what holds the
show, I think, pretty taught throughout its entire run. I have, I have some caveats about that.
Just, I think, so something that, if you haven't listened to yet, Kristen did a great
interview with Scott Frank, the showrunner of the show, and who also has done a million
incredible is a screenwriter of great note. Rob and I were looking at his CV and we're like,
oh, he wrote all the movies we love. That's great. Also did Godless and Queens Gambit and a
bunch of other phenomenally. Monsieur Spade, which I did not watch, but of course is one of C.R.'s
It's one of C.R.'s favorite shows. It's ever existed. So this is a very watch core show.
C.R. was the one who told me to watch this like weeks ago. And like every time C.R.
tells me to watch a show when I ignore him. I usually have to end up like binging it at the last
minute for prestige anyway. So always listen to Chris Ryan. That's that's the lesson here,
especially when it comes to UK shows. But, um, but, uh, you know, something that Scott Frank
has talked about in that interview and other interviews is that he wasn't interested in reinventing
the detective story. It's just a, he loves a detective show, specifically a UK detective show.
And so he's like, I just want to do those.
but do them really well.
And I would give this, I had a great time with this show.
I almost want to get two different grades.
Okay.
Let's hear it.
Like, I would say on average is a B plus for me.
But I would say, because I would say the answer to the mystery is kind of a B minus for me.
Because I felt like they were trying really hard to hide the ball in a way that I felt like
the ball was pretty obvious earlier than I think the show thought it was.
Yeah.
But as is often the case with these things.
True.
And then in terms of the formation of Department Q, which is this department of cold cases that is formed and the merry band of people that our detective amasses around him, his home life, crossing the line at therapy, all that sort of stuff.
That's like an A minus to me.
That is like all really, really works for me.
So overall, I had a great time.
Some questions on the mystery front, but everything or all the infrastructure around it is just like solid as a rock and made it really enjoyable for me to watch.
Yeah, I would say that's one area where I think the structure of this show works pretty well, where if you are, say you do come across like the answer to the big mystery early enough that it might fizzle out your enjoyment of another show.
In this one, we're also trying to figure out like this inciting incident where Carl and his partner and another officer got shot and what the circumstances are behind that.
We're also delving into possible corruption.
We're also trying to get to the bottom of like this family trauma involving this victim of this other case they're trying to solve.
And so there's so many things happening that I feel like, again, even if you are zeroed in on, hey, that's a very conspicuous, you know, I'm going.
I'm going to omit the specific references to the clues, but there's some very specific things out there that's like, okay, yeah, I think I see where this is going.
Yeah.
But I just want to spend time with these people and I want to spend on time packing them.
You know, as usual, Joe, I want the detectives to solve themselves.
Yeah, the greatest answer to mystery is a person. And I think that, you know, the greatest cases we're trying to solve is like Carl Mork, as played by Matthew Good, who is he. But like, you know, Akram Salim, who is his sort of main partner in the show, who is wonderful. Hardy, who is his sort of former partner who is struggling after the incident, the inciting shooting that you were talking about at the start of the show. You know, this, this character Rose, who joins his department. Like all of these people, what are they here for?
what is their pain? What are they trying to figure out? All of that is incredibly interesting to me.
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to craft since 1905 anything else you want to talk about in a spoiler-free way before we get into
spoilers well i guess just like let's talk about i guess other interest points like if you're not
sold on this show yet to me we've talked about slow horses that's such an easy comp i also think like
If you were into broad church at all, David Tennant stubbled so that Matthew Good could beard.
Like, we're really riffing on the like damage, sad boy detective.
Yeah.
You know, as you mentioned was Scott Franklin.
Like, this is not reinventing the wheel.
We're just kind of iterating on a thing that does work and can work very effectively.
And so if you like that sort of moodiness and a big old mystery, and especially I would say if you like the,
the unsparing wit of the greater United Kingdom, this is a series that can work really well.
for you. Like some of the subject matter that you're alluding to, Joe,
it's not just like on screen in terms of the harrowing things that are happening to characters,
but in these characters' backstories as well, there's a lot of really, really heavy stuff
that I think if an American show tried to handle in a similar fashion would probably fall flat on its face
just because the tonal sensibility is so different.
But there's something about talking about, for example,
one of the characters attempting suicide previously,
and it can just be handled in a way where it's like heavy and emotional and empathetic in the moment,
but also later played for some laughs in a way that I think kind of works within the world of the show.
I think Broadchurch is a great comp.
Happy Valley is another quite popular in the U.S. show.
One that I think hasn't broken as big in the U.S. that I actually see the biggest overlap with is a show called Shetland,
which, you know, is set in similarly bleak northern Scharlander.
And it's not just because Mark Bannar, who plays the Lord Advocate and Kate Dickey, who plays their supervisor,
are also on Shetland. And it's not just that Matthew Good is wearing basically exactly what the lead
detective in Shetland always wears, which is a nice sweater and a pair of jeans and boots. But that might
just be the uniform up there. That's fine. Yeah. Joe, the sweater budget on this show. This might be
our zone. You know, we're constantly talking about like what, what are we covering here in prestige?
Yeah. You know, the ringer is a big, is a big network. Things are being covered all over the place.
What is our zone? I think it might be sweater shows. I think that might be where we live.
And here's the problem, Rob, is like we live in California, which is just like...
Well, northern California, though.
Not knitwear friendly necessarily.
But, you know, if life could be a cozy sweater.
Yeah, I think that...
And Shetland is a show that I actually have, like, loved and tried to, you know, preach to people.
But all of those shows, Happy Valley, Broadchurch, Shetland, do not shy away from very, very dark things.
And I would say specifically Happy Valley and something like Scott Frank's...
work on Queen's Gambit, not afraid of women who are incredibly difficult, but nonetheless
deserve your sympathy or empathy or, you know, are compelling and root forable, but allowed to be
assholes too. You know, that's something that he's been able to pull off in a few of his properties.
And I think it shouldn't be hard to do, you know, if we lived in a equality, in an equal utopia.
but we talk so often about likeability when it comes to female characters.
And we've got a character, Merritt Lingard, played by Chloe Piri, and like endlessly compelling.
Yeah.
But, you know, even the, even the bare bones Wikipedia description of her character starts with ruthless, ruthless and ambitious.
It's quite a difficult woman, Jill.
You know, and, you know, so I like difficult women.
So I enjoyed her here.
But that is something that this show really pulls off really well.
Anything else?
Oh, production design-wise, I will say this.
Yeah.
There is a set piece that I don't really necessarily want to get into because it feels like a spoiler.
But there's a very, very visually stunning set that is used for a lot of this show.
And it is echoed by the setting for this new cold case apartment, which is in the basement of,
the police building.
Yeah.
Headquarters.
Headquarters.
There you go.
And it is supposed to be, you know, the shower quarters.
Right.
Like, there's supposed to be smelly toilet center and stuff like that.
Unlike slow horses, this doesn't, like, you can't, you're not like, oh, what a, what a crime to be here.
Beautiful greens.
It almost looks like the TVA from Loki.
Like the production design makes it.
Yeah, the oranges and the greens.
and then these skylights that people are walking across because they're underground
meant to mirror this other set piece just gives it at all this heightened
almost genre, even though it's detective genre or not Loki time travel genre
look to it that I thought was really fun.
And Queen's Gambit, I think, had a similar pop sensibility to it.
I mean, you can see the bones of that bathroom and how it could turn into an amazing office space.
if you could just clear out some of the urinals,
you know, like, if we could only do that,
again, like, part of the effect of that lighting
of, like, basically getting secondhand fluorescent light
from the floor above is that you're just creating this spotlight
for these characters in the middle of the floor
for a lot of, like, what turns into very dynamic,
bantering investigation.
Yeah, exactly.
That is, like, of course, there's, like,
actual boots on the ground action in this show.
These are cops who are going out in the world,
busting down doors with and without warrants, et cetera, et cetera.
living by their own rules.
Parking wherever they damn well, please, Joe.
That's how you know that Carl is a real rebel.
Yeah, ACAB, but here we are.
Okay, so anything else you want to say before we get into spoilers?
Let's get into it.
All right, let's do it.
No, seriously, stop.
If you have continued this far and you have any interest in watching the show,
just stop and go back.
Here comes the spoilers.
The spoilers are coming.
We're going to talk about all of the fundamental mysteries
of a single season of television.
You have time to watch it.
I promise you do.
You're busy, but you're not that busy.
You can watch the partner queue.
Rob did it in like a day.
Yeah, and the NBA finals are going on, you know?
I believe in you.
Okay, here we go.
Spoilers, but seriously, spoilers.
Yes.
Here's what I'll say, listening to Scott Frank
talked to Kristen Andy about how he was sort of like writing this
as he was going to a certain degree.
I was kind of like, yeah.
Okay, I can see that.
It's based, you know, it's based on a book.
I will say this.
Doing my prestige TV thing, I was trying to get a hold of a copy of this book so that I could do some compare contrast and look at the, because there's, there are movies, a series of movies set in, you know, its original language and, but you can buy U.S. translations of the books.
But my library is all out of these books, and that I think just speaks to how popular show is right now.
Flying off the shelves.
Yeah, the whole list is long for these books right now.
So, but I did read a synopsis of the movie.
Yeah.
And it's, it talks about, you know, Merritt Lingard, you know, trapped in this hyperbaric chamber by a vengeful chef is how it is described in the description of the movie I saw.
And then Scott was talking about how sort of esoteric and weird it is in the book that it's like there was a car crash and it was blamed on Merritt's family because Merritt's family was happening.
and this other car was distracted by how happy their family was and they crashed their car.
That's how Scott Frank described it.
And so he basically had to come up with what's the more reasonable reason that someone
would put someone in a hyperbaric chamber for four years.
But here's the problem with this, the way this mystery is arranged, as far as I'm concerned,
is there is no reason that anyone would put her in that chamber if they didn't have just a very
long standing issue with her. So it had to be connected, like, to her child. It couldn't have anything to do
with this mob stuff that we are embroiled with. Like, there was no, there was no, the mob would just kill her.
There's no way it had anything to do with that. And so, like, I was a little frustrated by,
you know, the, the red herrings that we were following, because I was like, they're not connected.
If Meritlingard is still alive, because Akram has decided she is still alive.
then it has to be a long-standing grudge.
And so it can't be this fresh, you know,
embroilment that they are following.
Do you know what I mean?
That was like my main issue with how it was constructed.
I do and I don't.
I mean, why does it have to be an old world grudge
to put someone in a hyperbaric chamber?
For four years?
For four years?
Clearly there is an investment of time involved.
And so it does have to be something of a certain weight and substance.
but I think there's enough sort of off-shooting threads.
And most importantly, we just don't have a clear enough vision for, I would say, the first half of
the season especially, of what the threads even are and where they are separate and where
they are intertwining, where it's tough to tell like, okay, of course the things that happened
decades ago, like that's in its own category.
But other than that, these other things are overlapping just enough, or at least plausibly
overlapping just enough, that I was able to talk myself into some other possibilities along
the way, even with, you know,
the ominous wisps of hair that are just like, okay, well, it must, it simply must be this guy.
Oh, oh, the, the little proto-mullet.
I will, I will say this.
They did give me, actually, they did give me on that.
Sam Hague, the journalist.
Yes.
Being Lyle Jennings.
Little identity swap.
That, that did get me.
But that was also, like, part.
But then why do we watch Lyle for like a million years kill the real Sam Hague?
I was like, I know what happened.
He killed him.
Why do we have to watch the whole thing?
We don't need to see the ropes in his bag.
Like, I don't need to see all of that, do you know?
That was one of the details that got me.
You know, like, again, the story hinges on, I would say,
a couple of leaps that you have to make.
Yeah.
One of them is that Merritt just, like, would not recognize someone she grew up with.
Basically, like, the younger brother of her, her boyfriend, when she was younger,
that she would not recognize him years and years later.
Well, it's a different actor, Ross.
It's a different actor.
A different actor for her, too, because.
Not only do you just recast it, you got to put the blue streak in her hair.
That's how you tell the passage of time.
Rob, I have a whole lot to talk to you about wigs, but we'll come back to that.
There's a lot of hair.
But so you have to buy that she would not recognize this person if she saw him and knew him intimately much later in life.
Right.
That's okay.
You also have to buy that some of the preliminary investigations with the original cold case or cold cases were just kind of botched.
And this is one area in which I think the show does a great job.
I agree.
Kind of throwing us off the scent of like how much of this is institutional, how much of this is botched on purpose.
We meet and spend time with like the previous investigator and we're given like very different impressions of him at different points in the story in a way that I think really work.
But the actual murder of the actual Sam Hague throwing him off the crag when we see it happen, which as you said, it's not something we need to see.
Like we get it.
We put it together.
He's dead.
That guy is dead.
It's accomplished by dragging the body.
and leaving yards and yards and yards of blood trail all the way to the edge of the cliff
and then throwing him off in broad daylight.
There is a detail.
The broad daylight thing is tough.
There is a detail that it was heavily raining.
Oh, that's true.
You're right.
You know?
That's fair.
When they found the body.
But also, I would say, when he caves his face in with a rock, I just feel like.
That's blunt force.
That could be off a fall.
I feel like the forensic department was not doing their job if they were like, I don't think,
having your face hit with a rock several times is the same as you fell from a great height.
I don't think it's the same.
But I'm not a forensic expert.
Well, to your point show, the forensics department in Montgomery, Alabama on poker face
was able to discern that this death came from a fastball that exceeded 100 miles an hour.
And here we are not able to differentiate a dude hitting a do with a rock versus falling off of a cliff face.
I don't understand why he couldn't have just pushed him off.
why did it have to be like Sam came back from his climb and then thought he saw Lyle and then followed Lyle and there was this whole thing.
It was like, why isn't Sam was out for a climb and Lyle just pushed him off?
End of story.
That's so easy.
I am glad though that the Sam that we knew, which of course turns out to be Lyle, was not an actual investigative journalist because his methods of convincing a source are just like, let me strip down and jump this woman.
I did text you while I was watching the show and I was like, Rob, I'm really loving this show,
zero out of ten for journalism. And that was before I knew that we were watching a fake
journalist. But I was like, what are all these, like, it wasn't just that it was the other
journalist who basically attacks Matthew Good's character in the newsroom. I was like,
what are we doing here? This isn't, anyway. Journalism, guys, if you're thinking of becoming a
journalist, this is not what journalism is. I promise you.
Robin, I promise.
Well, to be fair, the lens of journalism in this movie is mostly an actual investigative journalist who somehow drives a Porsche.
That's a whole separate conversation.
Well, he's a corrupt journalist, is he not?
Isn't he, like, feeding information to the mob lawyer?
But was that the, that was the action?
See, this is where I'm confused.
What is the actual Sam and what is fake Sam Lyle?
Yeah, it's a great question.
I honestly don't know where one ends and the other begins, which credit to merit.
I get why she's confused.
I wasn't sure if like, she's like, I saw you at the trial.
And it's because he looks enough like, because there's that flashback where Sam is talking to Lyle and the bearded Lyle up so that he looks much more like Sam than he does elsewhere.
Okay, anyway, this is getting caught in the weeds.
Let's zoom back and say, I just want to shout out Matthew Good, who I've enjoyed his entire career, whether or not he's, you know,
tasting wine around the world or whatever it is he's doing.
I just love that he spent three seasons quite recently playing a like time traveling
swoony vampire and mostly people didn't care that much with love and respect to the
discovery of witches people.
Put a beard on him, put some salt and pepper on him, put some trauma on him, put a slight
haggard on his like the world's most hands.
some face. And this is the female gays. This is, this is it. I'm just telling you, this is,
well, let me tell you, we're crossing lines, Joe. This is the everybody. I don't know how you
look upon Matthew Good and say, like, that guy doesn't have it. Like, of course he does. And he,
he's had it in so many ways for so many years. But to your point, I think he's, in most of the things
that I've seen him in been much more suave, much more put together. Like this is a different,
like a single man match point. I mean, even in the crown, which like his arrival in season two of the
crown. If you have not seen it, honestly, I think you could teleport into just those episodes. And they're
almost like a standalone romantic experience in which you, viewer, will fall in love with Matthew Good.
I assure you. Like, it just will be part of your experience. It's true. But like him being charming is
obviously a huge part of this show works. I also think his character is enough of an asshole that he
really, really needs Akram to have the balance. Like, their buddy cop dynamic is I think what drives
so much of this. And if this were just
the Carl Mork show, I think
we would be talking about it very differently. I think it would get
weighed down in its subject matter a lot
more. Well, I think there are
multiple very clever, and again, this is
where the show was an A, A minus to me,
multiple clever ways to bolster up a character
like this. There is
the Akram element,
which is very important.
There is
the therapy element, which we'll get to
in a second. And then there's
Jasper, like the
stepson. And what I think is so smart about that, giving the cantankerous detective, you know,
someone to care about could come off as, as transparently as, say, giving John Ham's character
a sister with, you know, who needs a little bit of extra help. Like, you know.
Theoretically. Theoretically. Just in theory. Just in theory. But what works so well with
the with his stepson Jasper who we don't find out as his stepson until a little bit later the
the the lodger who lives with him like all of that stuff is that it's not he does have that
speech where he's like there's two different me's but actually like when he goes home he's at
conflict with Jeff it's not like this is the softer side of Carl Morque there is there is he is
the worst he's an almost like Cumberbatchie and Sherlock arrogant
you know, asshole, but the fact that he is taking care of this kid who is not biologically
his kid, whose mom just abandoned him. And not just he can't get in touch with her because she visits
over the course of this season. It tells you so much about who his character is without hitting,
it's just a huge reveal of a part of who his character is. And you see that happen again with Rose or
with Akram or, you know, with these various people that he is like helping without helping.
Yeah.
And without softening any of the tough edges that he's put up.
So I think the show parcels out that sort of like character background exposition stuff.
So definitely.
And again, this is another reason why like it feels like you're being pulled into all these
different mysteries is you're just trying to figure out like, who are these people to each other?
Like who are these people that Carl is living with?
Is this his son?
Is this his stepson?
is this just like some 20-something college-age roommate who he has led into his house?
Like it's not exactly clear those things until much later.
And like we're obviously getting into different versions of Carl as we go.
Like or really a softening, I will say over time.
This is in a really interesting way, like a very therapist show.
And I don't mean that just in the sense of he is going to therapy.
But there are people constantly talking about Carl's state of mental health or unhealth to him,
trying to help him, trying to encourage him to be like live a health.
or to at least confront some of these things,
or God forbid, have a conversation with his son.
And I think Carl's, like, I'm very glad for those elements.
I'm also very glad that Carl is somewhat resistant to them.
And you get that tension in that character where it isn't until seven episodes in
that they have the conversation, right?
Like, it isn't until much later in the series that you're seeing more hard-earned growth
in that character.
And I think that works because you open the show with this inciting incident, with the, you know,
getting shot in the line of duty and his friend and his partner.
getting at least temporarily paralyzed and maybe paralyzed for life.
We'll have to kind of see what his trajectory health-wise ends up being
and the death of this other patrolman,
all while Carl is doing the smart-ass detective thing.
Like he's right about the clues and the crime scene.
He's very cocky.
And in doing so, leaves him and these other two people, like,
open to being attacked in this way.
Now, like, does he put more of that on himself than he probably should?
Of course, this is a sad boy detective in a sad boy detective show.
this is what we're doing here.
But I think it really helps that it opens with him being right about a lot of little things,
but kind of like wrong in a macro sense about that crime scene.
And so then we get to sort of tear him down and see him sort of build himself back up.
But the way he starts to build himself back up is just by making a big facade of a wall
and pretending to be all good, obviously, and kind of finding his way over the course of the show.
I think the rebel, excuse me, I'm going to take that again.
Sorry, Donnie.
Yeah, I think the revelation that this, you know, young patrolman who we watch him essentially
berate into his death in this body cam footage that opens the show is such a tough, and I think
quite brave introduction of a character.
This is our main character who we're going to have to like be with and care about for
the entire of the series.
And we watch him do this thing where we're like, Jesus fucking Christ.
Like, and then the revelation later on that this patrolman might.
might be, you know, part of this larger conspiracy that's not solved inside of this season.
But, like, I don't need that to be true, but it is interesting that that is true.
It doesn't absolve Carl somewhat, but not entirely.
Yeah.
Because, like, you know, he doesn't know.
He didn't know at the time that that was the case.
And he was ready to break that guy into, you know, this thing that happened.
And frankly, if he's wrong, and it's just sort of him grasping at straws to rationalize what happened, that could be even more interesting.
And so it leaves you lots of good.
character work to deal with. And at the same time, like, this is a show that has a sense
of humor about Carl. Like, this is a guy who has been through a lot, who is incredibly
arrogant, who looks down on basically everyone around him, although not Akram over time, like,
comes to respect him pretty quickly, to be honest with you. But, like, the interrogation
scene where he is describing, like, I'm trying to remember. I think he might be talking about
merit and kind of like her background, how, like, she keeps all these secrets and she's so
standoffish and she's so, like, overconfident and arrogant. And the camera just, just, like,
soft focuses from him to Akram like raising his eyebrows in the background.
I just,
I really appreciate the placement and the treatment of this character.
Yeah,
yeah, yeah.
Akram,
we should say,
just an absolutely incredible creation.
What a legend.
I would take a bullet for him.
Absolutely.
But what a wonderful character.
Absolutely.
And I think the line,
when Carl asked him,
like,
if he worked for the good guys or the bad guys in Syria,
and when he says,
if you could, when you can tell me who those are, like, let me know.
Yeah.
Such a good line.
I will say, and again, I don't know, maybe I've watched too many mystery shows.
This is definitely I've watched too many mystery shows, but I'm like, his dead wife.
I like, that I clocked very, that had to be a dead wife.
But like, just the way I don't mind it, but it's just like the way it's revealed is this big, like,
what do you mean?
And I'm like, this isn't the sixth sense.
Like, I felt, you know, anyway.
Here's the thing about that.
Like, I think there are reveals in the show that are meant.
to be big reveals for the audience. There are also things that are reveals for Carl. And even in that
one, it's sort of like played for a laugh. Like, I think I already told you this. Like, I think you
just weren't paying attention because you don't actually care about other people that much. Right. Right.
But like, ultimately, Akram, I really hope we don't get a full backstory deep dive. Like,
I don't want the full view of who he's been, but I love. Don't put a flashback wig out on this man,
I beg him you. You don't have the budget for it. Please don't do it. You don't have the budget for.
it. I don't want to see how it happens. But ultimately for these sorts of detective pairings,
this is a really interesting one because you do get the fish out of water elements in some respects,
just because he's in a different place from the world in which he has policed previously or whatever
his previous job was. But it's a cool dynamic because he has a whole life of relevant experience.
He's not like the newbie on the force who's being coached up by Carl along the way. If anything,
that's more kind of rose getting back onto the scene and back into action, I would say, after her
her kind of episode.
But he is in a lot of ways,
like a broken femur here or there aside,
like more of a by the book cop than Carl in a lot of respects,
like waiting for the warrant.
Maybe we should stop here.
Are you sure you want to do this?
Like he's at least doing the gut check thing in a way where this is not a character
who doesn't know what he's doing.
He's just a character who is not taken seriously because of the circumstances.
And in that way,
they're basically like sort of double Watsoning Akram and Rose.
Yeah.
in terms of like you are giving this version of Sherlock the ability to be somewhat condescending
or or actually a bit more actually instructive of Rose, you know, when he is asking her
questions and leading her to ask the right questions, etc.
But then you also have in Akram, like someone who is just actually more capable than
Carl and in many, many respects.
And that is really deeply enjoyable to watch at the same.
Well, and we might even have the rare triple Watson if you want to include Hardy in that camp as well.
He's a little bit more out of remove because of his injury and his health during the season,
but you can tell we're getting him back up and moving.
We're getting him down into the office by the end of the season.
Here's one of my unsolved mysteries for you, Joe.
These two other cops who we spend a lot of time with on the top floor, I have nicknamed.
The haircuts?
Yeah, I have nicknamed Blondie and Fringe.
Okay, I just called them the haircuts.
Are the haircuts going to join department Q or are they meant to be our liaisons to the rest of the force?
I think we need them above ground. I think they need to be above ground to sort of be skeptical.
But when they showed up at the ferry, I was like, that was great at the end.
I was like, oh, the haircuts are here. This is great.
Phenomenal ending to that.
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Let's talk about some therapy.
You talked about how Therapies the show is, but we literally have a TV therapist here.
In what I have shared with you is, like, can be one of my least favorite TV tropes.
Yeah.
Works extremely well here for a couple of reasons.
Number one, they hired Kelly McDonald's.
So, you know, it's a good call.
It's just going to work no matter what.
And then two, I don't know if anyone listening to this, listen to our episode on
stick, but we're just basically back in tin cup territory where we are disrespecting the doctor-patient
boundaries.
I wanted to run through some of the TV detectives that you and I have encountered in our time
together here on the Prestige TV podcast feed.
And I want you to give them a letter grade.
And you can base that on efficacy in terms of plot.
Okay.
Or are they actually good therapists?
Your call.
Thank you for that freedom, Joe.
Thank you for the open prompt.
You're welcome.
So, I mean, like, we'll start Dr. Rachel Irving, played by Kelly McDonald, in this show.
Yeah.
What letter grade are you giving her?
I think I might be a little more mixed on this plot line than you are.
I'm like, with, like, what is this character?
Like, I, this is how it felt to me.
It felt like they wanted Carl to have some sort of vaguely romantic interest, but couldn't drum up a reason why in the middle of all this other shit, he would just be like talking to a random woman at a
And so they made it a department mandate for him to get hot for therapist instead.
I have the flip side to that.
Okay.
Dr. Karlmork is such a maverick.
The man does not park.
It doesn't care where he parks.
He doesn't.
That even if he had department mandated therapy, he would not go to it unless the woman were extremely hot.
That much is made very clear.
He is one foot in the elevator.
Yeah.
Really two feet and then has to put one foot back in to stop it.
Yeah.
And then when it's not.
her when her, when the other therapist comes back, he's like, bye, I'm not doing this. So,
um, her being extremely attractive, I felt was a reason to keep Carl, uh, in therapy. But
I think that is true. So what letter greater you giving, Dr. Rachel Irving a maybe too
thinly constructed a character for you? I'm going to give her both as a character and in terms
of her therapeutic efficacy. Like, C minus. Oh, tough. Okay.
The great Catherine.
Also shares, I gotta say, shares way too much.
Like, she is trying to engage with him in a way that, yes, I understand like what is happening here and why the lines are being blurred in the way they are.
But like, ma'am, you got to relax.
In terms of Scott Frank was writing this as he went.
Do you think he decided one episode she's married and then later he's like, no, she just wears a ring sometimes because she almost got married once?
These are like the Roy grandkids just like disappearing from the plot line.
Yeah, that's a question I have.
Um, okay.
Catherine O'Hara, The Last of Us.
Gail on The Last of Us.
See, I think she is a much more effective therapist in very unconventional times.
Okay.
So maybe not as, maybe honestly, similarly unserved by the plot, but better as I would say,
she's probably like C plus plot character wise, but maybe a solid like B plus for a
post-apocalyptic therapist.
Okay.
Gets paid in weed and booze, but, uh,
and is willing to write off a character as just like a liar and not worth saving.
But like, but these are trying time.
So that's okay.
Desperate time.
Seriously.
Like I think, look, once the zombies start coming out, you can call people on their bullshit in a more, like in a quicker way.
Like more, you can be more upfront.
You can be more direct.
Like we just don't have time, you know?
Okay.
Dr.
Rachel Blake played by Harriet Sansom Harris, who was on the agency.
And if you didn't watch the agency or listen to us, cover the agency.
she is a strong plot device who shows up not only to
therapist Michael Fossbinder's character, but also to just ask
dummy questions in a room about the procedures of how to be a spy
in certain cases. So Dr. Rachel Blake, what do you think?
She is a plot device. There's no doubt about it, but a plot device that worked on me.
Okay.
I think maybe a BB plus range for her.
In that part of her role in that show is like she is acting the soundboard.
she's acting the dummy. She's almost like making Martian
therapies and debate against himself in order like coax out
the real him within the layers of various personalities he's created. I think
I think the bug is the feature in a lot of ways in the agency.
Okay. Ms. Casey Severance.
Is she a therapist? Life coach. Inspiration.
Yeah? I mean, A plus. A plus for everything Miss Casey related.
A plus for Miss Casey.
Brian E, adolescence.
What's higher than A-plus, frankly?
I know, exactly. A-plus with five goal stars after it.
A-Bitchland rating, like, whatever we can do.
I jump too fast.
Maybe I should have left the A-plus just for Brini, but, yeah, I mean, powerhouse episode within a powerhouse season.
Like, to stand out in that season of adolescence really says something.
Okay.
Only two more to go.
And this is, again, how many...
I went through all the shows we've covered, and these are...
There haven't been that many, to be honest with you.
They just all have a therapist in them.
Lily Rape, who played Dr. Liz Rush on presumed innocent, who decided not only to be a therapist for one member of the family, but kind of every member of the family.
That's going to be an F for me.
It's a terrible decision.
Don't do that, especially when one of them turns out to be a murderer.
It's just not good.
It's not good.
It's not the one you think.
Okay, and last and last not least.
I'm counting it
the Linda episode of Fargo
Season 5
That counts as therapy
We're making dolls
We're doing therapy
Via puppets
Yes
You know I'm
I'm gonna say a solid
Again I'm gonna go in the B plus range
And the only reason I'm not going higher than X
I love that episode
Yeah you did
Is mostly that it is a mental construction
Of what you think your therapy
Is gonna be in like an imagined format
It's true
It's not actual therapy, it's dream therapy.
And that's a kind of therapy in and of itself, especially when there's puppets involved.
But here we go.
Okay.
That has been.
Oh, my God, Joe.
I cannot believe there's been that many.
Therapy Corner with Rob and Joanna.
We got to do better.
Would you like to revise your grade for Dr. Rachel Irving, given everything you just heard?
You know what?
I think I might.
I think I'm willing to go as far as B minus.
Yeah.
But not for the, again, a first.
effectiveness of her actual therapy, even though, like, Carl is someone who needs, I think,
a bit of a more adversarial relationship with his therapist. Like, he needs someone who will
poke and prod him in the way that many people do. There's some people who just need to be
heard. And there's some people who, like Carl, need, you got to cut through some layers to really
get to anything meaningful. You got to sit his ass in the chair because he wants to get out. He's
looking to bounce at any opportunity. You got to peel through a lot of defensiveness and
knitwear to get to the heart of detective chief inspector. And that is thick.
netware.
Thick netware.
The, you know, the cables,
that's just, scissors aren't even going to get the job done.
You need like bolt cutters for that thing.
It's true.
Okay.
On the casting front, I want to say,
here are two main,
I've already mentioned Shetland as like a source for the cast here.
Yeah.
We've also got some strong Game of Thrones presence.
Jamie Sivs, I want to say,
his name who plays Hardy,
Morque's former partner.
Um, Jory Cassell on Game of Thrones got a knife through the eye in season one.
Great to see Jory here.
Um, it's just great to an endorsement of you and your visage that you just keep
getting cast as like, you're the reliable right hand guy.
I can implicitly trust.
Yeah.
And we'll be really bummed that he's injured.
Totally.
Um, slash dead.
Okay.
Um, Kate Dickey, of course.
Yeah.
The legend, um, as their commanding officer, uh, aka Liza Aaron.
Um, how did Kate, I love Kate Dickey anytime she shows up.
and anything. Even on Loki where she was not used very well, I still just really like spending
time with Kate Dickey and her wonderful accent. So how did, how did she work in this role for you?
Quite effectively. You know, like the, again, the Diana Tavernor comp is like right there for us as
we come off of Slow Horses and eventually back into the next season of Slow Horses very soon.
Yeah. You know, this character has some similarities in terms of the dynamic, but is not, like,
I think maybe a little bit political, much less political than Diana Tavernor is at least Cravenly
so just kind of pragmatic as an actual leader and manager to the extent that you have to just
like play this game. Like I like I think the balance they walk with her in terms of again,
trying to prod Carl into actual healthy directions for himself as someone who clearly is like
invested in him as a person. But the ways in which that manifests in the workplace feeling
adversarial to him, I just think creates like a great running through line for this show.
And similar to Tavernor, of course, there is the from the beginning, there is the misallocating
of funds, right? Because she is tasked to create this department with a healthy budget. And we see she shoves them down in the basement with no resources and all the sudden upstairs, everyone gets new phones and big screen TVs and whatever. So let's say, I think that's just a smart play by her. I think that's well, well done police work in terms of getting resources for the bulk of the department and not like your big game hunting you're doing downstairs on a long show.
So Craven misallocation of funds, but, um, and then.
But pragmatic allocation of funds.
Um, and then, uh, okay, if you want to defend bad bosses, I will defend bad therapies.
Bad boss.
And that's just where we will be.
Well, there's also the implication at the end when we get this whole strange arachnophobia sequence that happens at the end of the season.
Let's, let's pause right there.
What is going on with the arachnophobia?
I don't know, but isn't the implication of all of that that she is somehow involved?
in the corruption surrounding the inciting incident that put Carl in the hospital and Hardy in the in the crutches?
My read on that sequence is that she has an actual fear of spiders.
Yes.
And is listening to a once again, therapy comes through.
She's listening to a self-help tape on how to deal with your arachnophobia.
She is.
And she was very panicked earlier in the season when she visited the therapist's office and found that there were cobwebs involved.
It was like, how could this be a therapeutic environment?
And she's looking to apply that fear and surprise of seeing a spider to seeing something that I guess is just like not as alarming to her in some way with these crime scene investigations.
Like is she trying to drum up the Pavlovian response of some kind of fear from something that she's actually not that afraid of?
I don't know.
It felt like a dramatic way to have her look through the case file and communicate to us that she might have her hands dirty on this and that.
the net is closing in around her because Carl is helping with this investigation now,
even though he's not supposed to be.
And so they're getting the correct answers on this case that she seems to have been implicated in.
See, I just don't think you would cast Kate Dickey for such a character.
I think you only cast her for very straightforward positive influences on,
especially our main character's lives.
A kindly good-hearted person.
And she so often is.
last but not least on the thrones front
Clive Russell
who is who is
playing Jamie Lindgard
Mary's father
the Blackfish himself
has to wear
one of the worst wigs
I think I've ever seen
in a flashback that is full of truly
terrible wigs for no discernible
reason
I don't know why
I really feel like if he had just had gray hair
in the flashback I wouldn't have been that distressed
about it. And
Young Merritt having
like a party city
but make it like early 2000
scene girl blue hair.
This is one of the,
genuinely one of the worst wigs I've ever seen in my life.
And like I know they can do better than this.
I feel it in my bones.
I don't know what happened here.
They definitely can.
Again,
they must have blown the budget on sweaters.
Like it's the only plausible explanation because
this is your world, Jill.
I am mostly quite wig blind.
Like it just does not bother me.
I don't usually call.
pocket, these were upsetting.
Just genuinely took you out of these sequences that I think otherwise flashbacks that
work quite well.
And yet I'm just like watching this jet black wig on this man's head wriggle around.
It doesn't make any sense.
And hers is like basically shiny.
I'm just like, I just, uh, it was, it was really tough for me.
And then last one on least, I want to say, uh, we've already covered the Thrones.
Uh, I would just want to say that half of the cast of the Doctor Who episode,
tooth and claw, which is the Queen Victoria
Werewolf episode. Of course.
Is also here. And I just want to shout them out,
specifically the woman who's playing the vain,
rich, villainous head of the mental institution.
Again, what a construction. That's when you're going
like really deep into like almost Agatha Christie territory,
just like cartoonish like baroness of a benefactor woman.
Yeah.
fucking wonderful, wonderful stuff.
Like, this is part of what I love about specifically like British and in this case
like Scottish or originated like police procedurals.
The interrogation scenes are just so different.
Like the amount of time like you get in that little zone and you can feel the bubble
forming around you and the characters as you're like, oh, we're just going to spend
six minutes here having this conversation.
Like this is just what this is going to be.
And we're going to read their faces as they do like the two, like the double interpretation
reaction shots to basically everything.
And that's a huge part of the fun.
And I think a huge part of what makes this season so fun, even as we're delving into murder and disappearance and suicide attempt.
And, like, it's, again, very, very bleak stuff.
But it really, really does work.
And I think it feels, it feels breezier than it probably is.
And I think to go back to this production design question, I think, like, when you think about her office and the setup there, the, like, gilded details of her office.
When you think about the church with the rainbow color stained glass where we find, you know, the cop who was previously on the case, again, these are just very like poppy visuals, which is different from the color palette of a broad church, Happy Valley Shetland or even any of these like bleak Scandinavian detective stories, which, you know, is the origin of this particular story, those are very washed out, like, gray.
sort of environments. And so to take that world and put it in this sort of very candy-colored sometimes
vision, you know, Scott Frank is saying, I'm not here to blow up this genre. I'm just here to do
this genre very well. And in many ways, wigs and some twist and turns aside, I think he did. I think he did
a really great job. But he is also putting like an American stamp on it.
Yeah.
In a certain way.
He's, you know, he's said that originally they thought they might set this in Boston or Vancouver.
He was like somewhere with a ferry.
And then they decided, he got him a ferry.
But they decided to do Edinburgh.
They decided to do Scotland.
And I love that they did Scotland.
I think it makes the show.
I don't know that I wanted to watch the Boston version of this show.
I'm good, respectfully.
But, you know, to take Scotland and Edinburgh,
a beautiful place, but a beautiful place that is like old world and, you know, stone and all of the sort of stuff and make it just popier and more colorful is just like a really interesting thing to do.
That I thought, you know, makes this show stand out from the other shows that it is trying to be in lockstep with, I guess.
It's not like the other girls, Joe.
I don't like, I don't want to tell you.
But yeah, I think it's, and it's big city versus like small town village as well.
differentiation immediately of all those locations.
And this is another classic sort of mystery trope in a like where in the world is Carmen
San Diego kind of way where it's like when you need to reinterrogate the previous
investigator who's now running the rehab out of the church, like you go back to the church.
You just go back to those locations.
And so you create this visual shorthand that I think makes a lot of sense.
It makes the whole story feel very, very intelligible.
I was I was super impressed.
And like we should probably devote a little bit of time talking about merit specifically and the
hyperbaric.
chamber tube that she is like trapped in old boy style basically throughout this season yeah uh that
storyline is yo-yoing through time and there's not one kairon on screen saying day one year one
i was surprised that we didn't get a year uh i know on anywhere on netflix of all places well they know
you're not looking at the screen so they you know they're saying it out loud that's the important
part they won't be reading so don't bother giving them numbers or uh yeah anyway sorry go ahead
But of all this stuff that's happening in this show,
like Chloe Perry's performance as merit,
like she is acting opposite.
Mostly no one, sometimes various hallucinations,
sometimes performing dental surgery on herself.
It's a tough gig.
And I think she mostly really nails it.
Like those scenes feel really interesting.
Obviously, you're pulled by the central mystery of what's happening.
But she also just has like a great silent film actor kind of expressiveness
that really, really work.
for these scenes in which she's absolutely saying nothing at all.
I thought her performance was so good. Once again, you know, similar to, let's say, a John Ham-esque,
you know, she has a brother who draws out this other side of her that is, you know, part of her story.
But I love how we meet her. I think the timeline trickery that
they play in the first episode actually is done quite well, especially since they mentioned a number
of times when talking about the establishment of Department Q that like you can have a special
connection in the advocate, you know, like, so you're like, oh, merit's going to be their lawyer
that they're connected to or something like that. Let's Avengers this shit up like we're getting the
team together. Yeah. And then flash to, uh, you know, her wig and you're like, no, that lady has
been in that hyperbaric chamber for four years.
So all of that works really well.
And I love how we meet her.
And I think she's really believable as someone who has had to hard scrabble her way out of a tough place.
I love when I think, yeah, it's Hardy who's like looking at her car, her watch, all the stuff like that.
Yes, it's generally, it's family money.
But he's like, good job.
merit. Like you got yourself into a better life. You did that for yourself. I find her like believable in all the
scenes when men are like, yeah, I lost my mind, was willing to throw away my family for her. I find
her compelling enough to be believable for that. And she does have this incredibly sort of similar to
Anya Taylor Joy, like a very compellingly interesting, different face that is really, really fun,
endlessly watchable, not fun. I'm not having a fun time in the hyperbaric chamber, but endlessly watchable.
to me. She's clearly not having much fun. And upon that very interesting, very watchable face,
I mean, particular salute to the makeup team who make her look like she has not seen the sun
in four years. Do not drop the skincare regimen. We don't want it. It's really tough scenes down
there. I will say, shout out to Andy Greenwald, who dropped a really impressive Scottish accent
when he was talking about how it only takes her three months to be like, fine.
Yeah, looking great. Fully well adjust.
The hair is glossy.
Everything looks fine.
But yeah, that's, you know, yeah.
Chloe Perry is wonderful.
And like, the show does not need to have her in its future.
It does set up this world where we have characters like the Lord Advocate or Kate Dickie's character,
Moira, all these characters can come back as touch points around the department if they just
want to take on the next book and do a different case.
We don't need to have Merit Lindgard in the future, though we could, you know, in theory.
If I were her, I'd be like, I'm not going back to being an attorney.
No, thank you.
Absolutely not.
But with all that family money, like, again, she doesn't really need it at this point.
Yeah.
So, yeah.
Okay.
Anything else you want to talk about?
I think just as far as the merit mystery goes, like the whole, again, her whole plot
line is based on the idea that she's been trapped in this hyperbaric chamber and meant to
recount the people that she's felt that she has wrong to find the one right answer that
will satisfy her captors, which, again, it's like kind of silly, ridiculous in terms of who
ended up capturing her, but also kind of silly ridiculous in the way that these mysteries often are.
So I'm very much here for it.
I love the idea that she is reliving all of these mistakes, most of which are like oriented
to her job, right?
Like people she has wronged potential informants who she did not protect.
get injured while in prison, like those kinds of things.
And the one thing she's actually being held for is something that she really isn't responsible
for at all.
Like, is really not her fault.
And the idea of couching like this twisted form of like revenge in personal justice,
this idea of like you're trying to get justice for your son who died or your brother who
died.
And in doing so are like really misinterpreting any sense of that word or any sense of what
justice actually is, I think it's such a smart.
riff on this idea and this character who's obviously a prosecutor in her own right.
And it kind of takes a lot of the assumptions about this kind of story and flips them on their
head in a way that I really, really appreciate.
It's interesting.
This is like the third duck in a row of stories that have covered recently, the last of us being one of them.
And then Mallory and I did a Batman Begins Anniversary Pod over on House of Arm.
Both of those two properties talked about the difference between justice and revenge.
What is revenge and what is justice?
And putting a woman in a hyperic chamber for four years, I'm going to say it's not justice.
It's revenge.
But this idea of like what is pure justice.
Justice is about like, you know, what making things right, serving what is for the greater good of the community.
And then vengeance is this personal punitive thing, which is different.
Somebody to think about in these trying times we live in.
We have gotten all the way here and we have not mentioned Shirley Henderson.
And that's mostly because they did not use the great Shirley Henderson very much to her ability.
But she's here and she's great as always.
But she can do, she can always do more.
That was like, I agree.
Andy said this in the interview with Scott Frank.
He was like, I was sure she was the murderer.
And I felt, I was like, at the very beginning, I was like, how is it not?
In the first episode, it's like, how is it not Shirley Henderson?
because why is she here just playing like a kindly woman?
You don't cast Shirley Henderson to do that.
Scott Frank's like I do.
And that's what he did.
So, you know.
They got to round out the cast with enough people you're at least looking at, right?
And again, it's like maybe even for an episode or two.
And specifically the fact that she is in the opening of Merritt's backstory,
where you're like, this must be a character of import.
And she is in her way, just not in the way that we might have anticipated coming into that scene.
It is, she is a safe harbor for William.
And also I really liked how the William character was portrayed.
This person who has, who suffered this terrible trauma is, you know, obviously quite dependent on people taking care of him, but also has this whole sequence where he is making things happen himself and playing a key part in rescuing his sister, his sister who is taking care of him.
And I thought that was really, really wonderful.
The wordless reunion between Merritt and William is really something to the point that even Carl, who just got shot, is like, hold on, hold off on the medical attention. I need to watch this. And I get it.
He's like, I'm in a sling. It's all I need. I've got it. My stories are on. The shot of Chloe Perry in the, in the casket, the hyperbaric casket, whatever.
The hyperbaric stretcher? Yeah, stretcher. There you go. It's not a casket. That's grim. When she's putting.
her hand up to the window. And so basically she put her hand up to the camera. So the camera is just
like right on her hand looking down in her face. I thought that was a really, really, really good
shot. And you're right to call out. I thought I thought it was really smart for something like the church
to be such a recognizable place that when we go back there, we don't have a minute of like,
wait, who's this guy again. We're like, oh, it's the guy who is only ever in that church. That's fine.
And the little visual reveals within that scene of like, you see him in the church and he's
drinking and you're like, oh my God, there's something happened. And then, yeah, you get that reveal
turning his head where he's been beaten to all shit by these three other like muscle guys effectively
like in the, again, the organized crime subplot that is kind of humming underneath this story.
Yeah. Which I imagine we are going to revisit, Joe. As the seasons roll on, as we get into other
stories, like, it has to be baked into some element of a season two, right? I don't think you cast
someone as distinctive looking as Douglas Russell as Graham Finch.
if you don't plan to bring that love back.
You don't put a character named Graham Finch in your story if he doesn't have some bigger
part to play.
And if he doesn't have goons who are willing to say the worst thing possible to a teenager
in an ice cream shop.
Yet another argument in favor of not letting your kids watch this show.
There you go.
Okay.
Anything else you want to say about this show?
Overall, I just want to praise Department Q4, I think in the end especially.
It gives us just the right amount of.
post-script indulgence where we get we get those moments like with meron and william ultimately
we get this moment where mer like kind of comes out of the elevator and bumps into carl not really
knowing who he is as she's like trying to find him and he doesn't say anything he doesn't say anything
and so it's like we get and she gets to look at her own investigation board and so you get these like
little emotional payoffs but no big speech no like saccharine line no like not not even like a knowing
like a knowing glance necessarily.
It's all thrown off like really, really effectively.
And after a story like this, like that's kind of what I want.
It's like the quiet resolution.
Yeah.
And then we're getting back to work.
All right.
Scott Frank,
if you're listening and I hope you're not,
because just because I hope you live your life and don't listen to podcasts about
your own show.
But we'd love a season two.
Yeah.
More problematic therapy for Joanna.
More mean bosses for Rob.
and we'll have a great time.
Anything else you want to say, Rob?
I guess just email us at
Prestige TV at Spotify.com with whatever
further demands you may have for our future coverage, Joe.
We're trying to figure out what's next on the agenda.
This one snuck up on us,
and I'm really glad we caught up to it.
Absolutely.
We have something cooking, a plan for this odd contentless summer.
We have some ideas, but...
Yeah.
Is it cooking?
I would say it's like on the counter, dough is rising.
You know, like, we're not in the oven yet.
Do you cook bread, Rob?
You don't.
You bake bread.
But yes, the stir fry is still being assembled, and then we will hopefully dish it up to you.
Thanks to Donnie Beach, him for his work on this.
It's late on a Tuesday for Donnie on the East Coast.
So thank you so much.
And we will be back with something for you soon.
Bye.
Hey, Mama.
Thanks for making all my favorite recipes.
Hi, Ma.
Thanks for your unfiltered advice.
Hi, Mom.
Mom, thanks for always being by the phone.
Hey, Mom. Happy Mother's Day.
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