I first noticed Caroline Quentin as the female Watson in the comic British mystery series, Jonathan Creek, a role she inhabited so distinctly that when she left the show and was replaced by Ab Fab's Julia Sawalha, it never quite recovered. In Blue Murder, an ITV series currently being released in its second DVD boxed set via Acorn Media, she's graduated to the lead detective role - which none too surprisingly suits the actress/comedian's no-nonsense delivery and smarts.
As Manchester DCI Janine Lewis, Quentin's character balances the tension of police work with the stressors of single motherhood. She's a younger sister to Prime Suspect's Jane Tennison, only without the hard edges that character necessarily had to bring to the job. Two decades later, Lewis' DCI doesn't have to push as emphatically against the Old Boys' Club.
Unlike Creek, which specialized in old-fashioned locked room howdunits, Blue is a police investigation series, with Quentin's Janine riding over a team of appealingly bickersome types (most prominently, Nicholas Murchie and Paul Loughran's Detective Sergeants Shaps and Butchers) and bantering with her handsome second-in-command, DI Richard Mayne (Ian Kelsey), in between trying to find the proper nanny for her kids. Though the prime focus remains on the crimes, the series' writers work to blend the personal with the procedural. In one episode, for example, the murder of a local thug known for bullying and terrorizing his victims is paralleled by Janine's young son's struggles with a pack of school bullies and the bantering putdowns that DS Shaps aims at his portly partner Butchers. It's all part of the same continuum of male pack dominance.
Acorn's second set features four ninety-minute episodes from the series' third season; of these, the strongest entry is arguably "Make Believe." Written by series creator Cath Staincliffe, the episode centers around a missing child - and the found body of yet another young boy - and the devastating effects both have on their respective families. A far cry from the puzzle-piece mysteries and Clue card suspects of Creek.








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