• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

British miniseries "Five Days" a gripping saga

Mon Oct 1, 2007 1:50am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - The miniseries genre might have fallen on hard times here in America, but it has never really gone out of style in the U.K.

Television

Case in point is "Five Days," an extraordinary, wrenching mystery co-produced by HBO Films and the BBC. It ropes you in and refuses to let go -- over the course of five Tuesdays throughout October, one agonizing hour at a time.

The fact that this is shot in southeast England and everyone has a British accent makes the HBO original no less immediate and relatable, with the tables turning and the subplots growing more deliciously convoluted with each passing installment. All of that, plus it boasts a brilliant cast including the likes of Oscar nominee Janet McTeer and "The Equalizer" star Edward Woodward to boot.

What's particularly intriguing about "Five Days" is the stylistic conceit itself. It doesn't merely cover five consecutive days in the lives of people (a la, say, "7 Days in May") but builds to a fever pitch in tracing the ripple effects of a three-month investigation involving a young woman's abduction.

The fictitious event is shown unfolding on Days 1, 3, 28, 33 and 79 of a case that grows into a media sensation, and we see how things impact her family, the police and the public at large on this series of seemingly random days that really aren't all that random. In fact, each of the five hours depicts a watershed day in the investigation and its resultant fallout, and the writing (from Gwyneth Hughes) is both brilliantly concise and impressively consistent.

The story starts off seemingly straightforward. A beautiful young wife and mother (Christine Tremarco) living in Hertfordshire outside of London is suddenly abducted while purchasing flowers from a stand man selling them beside the highway. Her two young children and a just-adopted dog are waiting in the car not 30 feet from where she's making the buy. Just then, a truck comes along and blocks everyone's view -- and when the truck pulls away, the woman isn't there. The frightened kids set off with the dog to find her but wind up also missing.

From nearly the first moment of the disappearance, the events start into motion, and her husband (David Oyelowo) is himself not above suspicion. In fact, nobody really is. Things are simply too weird to hold any theory out as preposterous.

As the days pile up in "Five Days," so do the questions, beginning with what someone would want with this seemingly mild-mannered young mother. And if he wasn't involved himself, how could the man selling flowers not have seen what was happening and instead act as if nothing had happened?

It becomes clear that nobody here is all that they seem. Not the grieving husband or the investigating detective (Hugh Bonneville) or the cynical sergeant (McTeer) or even the abducted woman's parents (Penelope Wilton and Patrick Malahide). This mini holds you in its thrall from beginning to end, and the twists along the way are seemingly endless. A riveting ride, indeed.

Cast:

Matt Willings: David Oyelowo

Leann Wellings: Christine Tremarco

PC Simone Farnes: Nikki Amuka-Bird

DSI Barclay: Hugh Bonneville

DS Amy Foster: Janet McTeer

DC Stephen Beam: Charlie Creed-Miles

Mic Danes: Phil Davis

Tanya Wellings: Lucinda Dryzek

Rosie Wellings: Tyler Anthony

Ethan Wellings: Lee Massey

John Poole: Patrick Malahide

Sarah Wheeler: Sarah Smart

Barbara Poole: Penelope Wilton

Kyle Betts: Rory Kinnear

Vic Marsham: Edward Woodward

Executive producers: Simon Curtis, Hilary Salmon; Producer: Paul Rutman; Teleplay: Gwyneth Hughes; Directors: Otto Bathurst, Simon Curtis; Director of photography: Florian Hoffmeister; Production designer: John Stevenson; Costume designer: Lorna Marie Mugan; Film editor: Sarah Brewerton; Music: Magnue Fiennes; Sound: Rudi Buckle; Casting: Suzanne Crowley, Gilly Poole.

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter



More from Reuters

visits a condominium for sale with her real estate agents in Somerville, Massachusetts April 2, 2009.  REUTERS/Brian Snyder

On shaky ground

The bubble has burst and the economy is bottoming out. So why are Americans still hesitant to buy new homes?  Full Article 

Cannabis sativa plant is seen in Buenos Aires, August 21, 2009. REUTERS/Enrique Marcarian
Bernd Debusmann:

Obama, drugs, common sense

American attitudes towards drug prohibition – and above all, punitive laws on marijuana – are changing too fast for policymakers and legislators to ignore.  Commentary