Still not
really feeling this season. The trial is
turning into a total bust for me – way too soapy – although the Sandbrook stuff
is a little more interesting. On that
front, there’s a bit of investigating going on with the promise of more, which
I hope bodes well for the story going forward.
Jocelyn
wraps up the prosecution’s case, and Sharon gets started on the defense,
dropping a couple of her usual dramatic bombs in the process. Here, we get testimony from a character we’ve
not seen in a while as Sharon tries to undermine the plausibility of the
killer’s guilt. Hardy returns to
Sandbrook with Ellie in tow, and along the way, the seeds begin to be planted
that he may have been wrong about the person he’s suspected of the murders all
along.
I don’t
know why I keep hoping for the trial scenes to be compelling. Maybe because of the way the reveal of the
killer shook up so much at the end of series 1, I figured the show would have
to have big plans for that continuing story in series 2. Not so.
It annoys me that Sharon spouts all this drama-baiting nonsense in court
and the judge just keeps allowing it, like it’s a reasoned argument well within
legal parameters and not a farce. And
granted, this isn’t the most outrageous legal stuff I’ve seen on a TV show, but
it just doesn’t feel right for Broadchurch. It feels like we cut regularly to Jerry Springer with fancy lawyer wigs –
come on.
But as I
said, I like the Sandbrook stuff better.
I’m not sure how it’s going to shake out, if the killer really is
someone different or if this new digging is ultimately going to lead Hardy to
the conclusive evidence he’s been looking for on the same person. Either way, I’m welcoming the questions he
and Ellie ask here. (Less welcome is
what I perceive as some weirdness in the dynamic between Ellie and Hardy – I
hope the show doesn’t mess with them too much.)
It’s a
fairly light episode for Beth. As far as
her home life goes, it’s a bit of a “calm after
the storm” vibe, with the family taking a breather after some recent big
changes. And with the trial, it’s
starting to get into a rut with her character:
Beth is nervous but determined as she prepares to go into court, Sharon
says something shocking and basically unfounded, Beth is horrified at the
possibility of the trial crumbling beneath them and the killer slithering
free. Rinse, repeat. It doesn’t give Jodie Whittaker much of a
chance to stretch her muscles.
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