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Topic: JACK WESTON has been sent to the naughty corner.... DISCUSS!

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JACK WESTON has been sent to the naughty corner.... DISCUSS!
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Hi Molonians! 

  let's talk Jack Weston and the journey that ended up with him being advised to take a 6 week holiday at the end of Suspects Series 2.

~

A detective with 'Killer instinct', 'emotional intelligence' and 'easy charm'  Jack often has very good gut instinct and intuition when it comes to the right suspect for a crime. He is passionate and driven and effective in his job, but this blinds him sometimes both in terms of his judgement of suspects and in terms of precedure. He can be very hot headed and insensitive to victims of crime sometimes, but he does get results!

During the last 2 episodes of Series 2 we saw Jack frustrated that he instinctively knew who the prime suspect was, Edward Shaffer, but there was not enough evidence to convict him, or even keep him in for questioning. We then saw him secretly remove evidence from a crime scene, (the grey towel from the Shaffer dance studio) and plan to plant it in another, in Shaffer's bin,  to make sure that he could be caught.

suspects2ep3-66.jpg

He did not go through with his plan because he was interrupted by Edward Shaffer - who shortly after was pushed off a balcony and died. In the meantime other evidence had been found anyway, so Jack's plan would not even have been necessary.

Jack then submitted the towel as evidence, but with a significant delay.

suspects2ep4-8.jpg

suspects2ep4-9.jpg

suspects2ep4-12.jpg

 

The fact that he was already at the Shaffer's when Edward was pushed off the balcony and the delay in handing in the towel as evidence were both called to question, by DI Martha Bellamy and above - both of which Martha smoothed over for Jack so he did not get into the serious trouble that he could have done.

At the end of series 2 we saw Martha telling Jack that he was right on the edge and she had a good mind to give him a push, and she was fed up with holding his hand. But she had pulled some strings used up some favours in smoothing things over, for him. Instead of any action being taken against him Martha told him to take 6 weeks holiday.

suspects2ep4-65.jpg

 

Was Jack's punishment fitting to his actions? Did he get off lightly? or was that too severe?

Is it ok to bend the rules sometimes to get results?

Would Jack be a more effective Detective if he played by the rules?

Does Jack seem remorseful about his actions?

Is Martha fair?

What do you think Jack should do on his 6 week holiday?!

 

DISCUSS!!



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Damien's tweets from the naughty corner!

suspects2damientweet2.jpg

 

suspects2damientweet1.jpg

suspects2damientweet.jpg

 

 

here is the original photo posted by Fay Ripley, 20 June! 

suspects2-21.jpg

 



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An interesting tidbit to share with you all that seem relevant to this discussion.... you may have noticed the strip of paper stuck to the front of Jack's monitor?

During my virtual Suspects set tour over the summer, I asked what it was. 

It is the police procedure on post-contact care for victims of crime.

It somehow seems relevant Jack should have this reminder!

suspectsjackwestonpoliceprocedure.jpg

 



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Did Jack feel he had done anything wrong when Martha called him into her office....

suspects2ep4-19.jpg

suspects2ep4-21.jpg

 

or here

suspects2ep4-43.jpg

 

 

or here...

suspects2ep4-63.jpg



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No, he felt he was doing the right thing.  They were sure of the man's guilt, just needed the evidence and Jack was desperate to make sure Shaffer was not out there hurting more kids.  By Jack's words, no, more by his tone, I don't think he felt any guilt/second guessing/sense of transgression.  And he screwed up not telling the mom a good reason why they couldn't do the press conference, but I don't think he feels he was wrong in that situation either.  He's pissed at Martha at the end for making him take the holiday.



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Good assessment Whimsy, I am in agreement with you.

Did he mess up not telling the Mum the reason about the press conference? One of the reasons Edward Shaffer was going to make a formal complaint about him was that he had told Kelly Freeman (Rose's sister) too much about the case. So I wasn't sure of procedure there. I do feel Martha has every right to be angry with Jack though because it has been an accumulation of transgressions on Jack's part.... and we've only seen 9 of their cases, Charlie and Martha have worked with him on so many more!

However - I always admire the maverick who is willing to take risks for justice. Jack has that verve about him - like all good heroes do - unfortunately there is that little thing called The Law - which he in his job is supposed to enforce to the letter!

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He wanted to catch the bad guy so much, he broke the rules. It was fascinating twist in the plot. 

Sassy Jack..

Martha trust him, and he's is very important to her, everybody makes mistakes. I don't think he got off lightly, he could have been fired unless Martha could have saved him from trouble. Still that knowledge that you made big mistake and got 6 week forced vacation..

He is one of those people who follow their instincts, sometimes that is good thing. I don't know if he could be better detective if he could follow every rule there is.. But he shouldn't lie to his boss ! Naughty, naughty Jack.

Martha did the right thing and Jack feels guilt even he doesn't want to show it! 



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Brilliant topic, domino. lol!  I've been itching to get on here....but I haven't got round to a rewatch(!!) and there's some stuff around this that I haven't got straight in my head yet.

I think the thing with the mum was just a bit of arrogance on Jack's part...he thought that he didn't need to give a reason.  I'm also not sure that him talking to Rose's sister about Shaffer was particularly unprofessional (although the way he went about it might have been)  Surely that's what the police do?...talk to victims and witnesses about possible suspects?  BUT Shaffer made a complaint against him.....and I would expect him to have been taken off the case and reassigned because of that?

The question in my mind is what was he being reprimanded for?    Now we, the audience, know that the only reason he went to Shaffer's was to plant evidence.....not to confront Shaffer.  But the police didn't know that.  As far as the police were concerned he was at the house of man who had made a complaint about him....who turned up dead - another reason to have been reassigned....at the very least?  Surely he looked like a prime suspect - motive, opportunity...... Admittedly they discovered pretty quickly who did push Shaffer off the roof.   

I reckon that as he 'knew' Shaffer was guilty he probably believes the end justifies the means as far as planting evidence is concerned and he was pissed off that he was sent off on 6 weeks leave because he was caught out, rather than because he thought it was unfair....and because Martha had a go at him.

I don't know why it bothers me...but I did feel that Martha should've sat him down in her office to bollock him - it felt too......unoffical doing it on the roof, somehow - it was personal rather than professional.  She did seem more bothered by the fact that he lied to her....

 

"However - I always admire the maverick who is willing to take risks for justice. Jack has that verve about him - like all good heroes do - unfortunately there is that little thing called The Law - which he in his job is supposed to enforce to the letter"

 

I agree with this completely, domino.  Although I'm feeling very much as if Jack's primary motive is to solve the case....I'm not sure that he's in the job to persue justice for victims, or even to uphold the law; I don't think he's in it for personal glory either.....I think it's all about the satisfaction of solving the crime and catching the bad guys - maybe by any means and at any cost.

And, ultimately, it makes for damn good tv!!

 



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I am not sure Shaffer had put in a formal complaint but had threatened to do so, but events took over and he was killed. I might, of course, be wrong about that.

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I've just finished rewatching these 2 eps....and you're right, Pearl - he didn't actually make the complaint.  I still feel as though I've missed a lot of what happened in this series....there's just so much going on!

Thanks for the little tidbit about the bit of paper on Jack's computer screen, domino.  It's a lovely detail...and it seems to me that Jack does need the reminder!

 



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Oooh.. Great discussion everyone, thanks for getting stuck in.. !

 

Jozie, agree with you, Martha does trust him and also, she could have acted differently but in the end protected him.

Do you mean he did get off lightly? because as you say it could have been far far worse for him and his career!

Yes he is an instinctive detective.. but instincts don't determine actions, just knowledge... that is where he seems to veer off course slightly.

Martha did do the right thing, by him, but not the right thing by the book!

The very ending of the last episode is ambiguous for me... is this Jack feeling guilty? or is Jack pissed off? He is still quite cocky when Martha asks him to apologise, but when she tells him how it really is, and that he has to take the enforced holiday... that changes.

suspects2ep4-79.jpg

suspects2ep4-82.jpg

When he goes back into the office and Charlie asks him about going for a drink, he seems angry and upset,  the way he says "No".... choked up a little, but is he upset because he think's it is unfair? or upset with himself?

suspects2ep4-83.jpg

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suspects2ep4-85.jpg

 

fifi - you raise some interesting points and questions. I guess in terms of red tape, Jack was being reprimanded because there was evidence he was at a prime suspects house, during a high profile investigation - a suspect who was making a lot of fuss and threatening to make a complaint against him, which was known about 'higher up' and had been mentioed in the news report at the beginning of the programme  - when he had no reason to be there and before the Icall had come through AND at the time of the suspects murder. That evidence also makes Jack a potential suspect!

Also Martha had worked out what Jack had planned to do and although he didn't go through with it (because he was interrupted, not because he changed his mind!) add that in to the fact that there were quite a few little minor Jack incidents accumulating and as a boss, she has reason to be concerned. I do agree with you about the way she dealt with it, but because Martha in fact covered up the facts or atleast provided explanations for Jack to protect him, I guess it was a more off the record conversation than an official one? 

your last point: "I'm feeling very much as if Jack's primary motive is to solve the case....I'm not sure that he's in the job to persue justice for victims, or even to uphold the law; I don't think he's in it for personal glory either.....I think it's all about the satisfaction of solving the crime and catching the bad guys"

I agree with completely, he is not in it to uphold the law, but unfortunately that can get him into trouble.. and def not in it for the personal glory. I do think he is in it to get justice.. not necessarily for the victims but to get the baddie off the streets, and has a strong sense of justice...perhaps that is just semantics though and I mean his moral compass towards what is right and what is wrong... and he is strongly driven to act on that. 

 

Pearl, yes i think the formal complaint had not gone through the official channels but it was known about higher up than the DI and was even mentioned at the opening of the final episode in the news report, on an already high profile case...and so when evidence appeared that Jack was  at the wrong place at the wrong time....

 



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The writers are so clever not to have Jack actually taking the law into his own hands in the end.... ironically what he so strongly criticised the pedophile hunter for doing:

"Yeh, well the guy's got what was coming to him"

"When you take the law into your own hands you take the risks" .....



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Marvellous Molonian Moderator
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I wondered about the official complaint too.

I think Martha must feel that Jack has so much potential to be a great detective if she is prepared to stick her neck out to help him. What he did was wrong for so many reasons and could totally have jeopardised the abuse case if it had come to court rather than Edward being killed.

I don't think Jack feels he's done anything wrong as he was reacting instinctively. I also think he was trying to maintain his lie with Martha so as not incriminate himself not knowing that she already knew what he had done. Everyone gets upset being reprimanded by their boss when they think they've done a good job. I think he would have been more apologetic and accepting if he had thought he had been in the wrong.

I think he is shocked and angry that it has come to this (the enforced break) but I get the feeling he would probably do the same thing again if it came to it.

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He didn't plant the evidence because he didn't get the opportunity....but the fact is he didn't actually do it - so I guess that he couldn't be officially reprimanded for it....only for the intention.  And I agree, Rosie.....I don't believe that he admits to it at any point so it's still just supposition as far as Martha is concerned (however certain she is)......that is possibly why he is so defensive when she confronts him about it.....he can't apologise for something which he is unprepared to admit to - even in the context of an unofficial reprimand.  And he is so pissed off because he's in trouble for something he didn't actually do (whatever his intention)....but I do think he would act the same way again.

He does have a strong sense of justice.....but it's his own version of justice which is primarily concerned with (as I said before) catching the bad guys - it doesn't necessarily coincide with the law.

"When you take the law into your own hands you take the risks" ..... I'd missed this, domino!  Makes me wonder if he feels he has more justification taking the law into his own hands because of being a DS?

 

So much more to say....  But things to do.....so I'll have to come back.

I will just say - it did make me laugh a bit that he had 6 weeks holiday owed to him!  Do you think he ever takes holidays?

 

 



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It doesn't sound like he does take holiday if he has 6 weeks owing! Jack is clearly very dedicated to his job and is very determined. Does it seem like perhaps his work is his life or there is something very powerful driving him. He always reacts emotionally and instinctively which gives him the determination the see each case through but means that he treads a fine line in terms of the law. I agree fifi, Jack does seem to think his position gives him leeway to behave differently. His behaviour does seem to have got increasingly more erratic and on the edge of the line of right and wrong in terms of the law. Perhaps a nice long holiday would do him some good - it has to be up there as one of the most stressful jobs.

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fifi I agree with Rosie, Jack doesn't seem like the taking a holiday type - he's incredibly dedicated and committed to his job and I think that's what I meant about being driven.. a workaholic almost? which must make his holiday almost painful... Jack strikes me as the kind of man who works so hard that if he stops he's go insane... and without wanting to over psychologise, the recent series perhaps suggests that is because he's escaping a lot of angst inside himself?

that quality if being so driven like a dog with a bone, must be why he has made it to being a detective in the first place and a very good one at that, coupled with his killer instinct, which is often right!

"I think he is shocked and angry that it has come to this (the enforced break) but I get the feeling he would probably do the same thing again if it came to it. " Ooh that is interesting Rosie... you mean he would do the same but be more careful? more secretive? cover his tracks better?

I am just remembering Martha saying "You're a liar Jack", strong words but ultimately he was completely secretive and was prepared to take the law into his own hands.

I have to come back to my argument earlier, there is a sense of admiration that i feel for characters who go out on a limb and break rules to ensure the right and just outcome. If I am honest, I was thinking 'no Jack don't do it!" when he removed the towel from the crime scene, but possibly more because i didn't want him to get caught or in trouble. Not because i was thinking "well, that is wrong you are breaking the law". What actually irked me more about Jack as a person in this last episode was his insensitivity to the victims.



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I'm also just now remembering something Martha said to Charlie like " we're not superheroes"...it seems relevant somehow to this discussion. Jack is a detective bound by the law. he cannot act like a superhero. but he would make a great superhero, outside of the law! (someone please draw Jack in a cape, quick!)

 

JACK WESTON

Special powers

heightened emotional intelligence 

laser sharp killer gut instinct (borderline precognicance)

disarming charm and wit

 

Special Weapons

hypnotic twirling pen

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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I really think that if Jack believed the ends justified the means he would consider doing something similar again. I was angry with him that he would do something he knew could put the case at risk and also something that would put his career at risk too. He is too good a detective for the force to lose him. He's always pushed things to the limit of right/wrong but this seems to be a real escalation of this sort of behaviour. I wonder if his break will give him time to take stock of his actions/behaviour - will we see a changed Jack?

Yes it is admirable that he is prepared to step up but as a policeman he knows that there are clear legal boundaries he must work within. Too many cases fall apart because of legal loopholes, for example, the police not following the correct procedures. Jack works too hard to see the 'baddies' get away with it because he messed up.

I see a bit of a similarity with Flight - secretive, driven, focussed on work to avoid facing up to emotional issues , letting down his boss who had trusted him...

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Wow I have so much to catch up on, I think just about everything's been said...

Here is Jack's own analysis of himself.  And I'm not putting this here just an excuse to watch it again... and again... 

 

 

Also en excerpt from his interview during S1

http://www.channel5.com/shows/suspects/cast-interviews/damien-molony-as-ds-jack-weston

There have been a few times where Jack gets taken in and reprimanded for that. But you can’t really teach an old dog new tricks. Jack is too instinctive, and while he knows he’s not done the ‘right’ thing, getting in trouble with his superiors is not going to worry him too much if he’s the one who solves the case. Jack is emotional: his emotions often dictate his actions.

 

There's no doubt in my mind that Jack feels no guilt about what happened at the end there.  He's just pissed that 1) he got caught and had to try to explain himself - something as everyone else has said he didn't want to admit to - and 2) he got taken off of active duty.  Jack has his own sense of justice and I feel often it has little to do with justice for the victims themselves and more to do with being the one who gets the bad guy.  Don't get me wrong, of course he has empathy for the victims, but mostly for him it's the chase and the satisfaction of putting away the bad guy.  As he says, he's very aggressive, so while he empathizes with the victims, his main priority is not to coddle them.  He will use them to help in his investigation (like asking the girls about the Shaffers, or when he asked Martha why they couldn't ask the rape victim in S1E3 more direct questions).  He really is a workaholic, driven to this job, and I think an imposed 6 wk holiday will probably drive him insane.  Perhaps at some point he will see how this time he didn't just sidestep the rules, he came dangerously close to fucking everything up, but honestly, I doubt it.  I think he doesn't think he did wrong, and he'll come back more determined to catch bad guys and will fall into his normal patterns of doing whatever it takes, in his mind, to do that.  As he says himself, he's a caped crusader.  And caped crusaders are usually borne out of a need to work outside the law, when the law can only go so far and more direct/aggressive means have to be employed.



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My attempt at a Jack-centric review of Suspects 2 - with emphasis on the naughty corner!

 

SUSPECTS SERIES 2 REVIEW: JACK WESTON REPORTS FROM THE NAUGHTY CORNER

 
© Channel 5

© Channel 5


Suspects concluded its second series last week, after two gripping double-bill specials and two new investigations for DS Jack Weston (Damien), DI Martha Bellamy (Fay Ripley) andDC Charlie Steele (Clare-Hope Ashitey).

The new series was a high impact affair and an extraordinarily arresting bit of crime drama, so rich in twisty-turny plots and character intrigue, so fast paced with multi-layered, complex and galvanising storylines, so well executed by the three leads and so ultra realistic, that watching it was a heightened, all consuming and immersive televisual experience, leaving you buzzing, breathless and in awe.

As series 1 confirmed, the thing that sets Suspects apart from other cop dramas is its unique formula: documentary style filming techniques + dialogue entirely improvised by the actors based on a plot description + no contextual / personal character details = innovative, real, engaging drama. Story arcs are completely case driven and the ‘no going home with the detectives’ principle was not compromised in series 2 – a good thing too because not only is it integral to the show’s USP, but it adds a goodly amount of intrigue and makes the tiny insights we are given into the characters all the more compelling and tantalising. But the new storylines had an added dimension (excitingly for us Damien fans) revolving around Detective Sergeant Jack Weston and living up to its rep for gritty, dark subject matter, the episodes brought two tough cases for the team but particularly for Jack, who became over-involved in both.

 

The first 2 part special, (Episodes 1 and 2) opens with an investigation into a brutal attack on Jonathan Moxton, found at the scene by paranoid schizophrenic Saul Hammond (Dominic Power), who becomes the team’s first suspect. Particularly Jack’s, who has his sights set so firmly on Saul as the attacker it clouds his judgement, causing his usual uncanny intuition to misfire, even when more evidence appears and more names are added to the suspects board.

© Channel 5

© Channel 5

His tunnel vision and consequent hot-headedness causes problems with the case and tensions within the team, resulting in some firey exchanges with colleague Charlie..

suspects2ep1-32

..and some concerned words and warnings from “Boss” Martha, even asking if she needs to take him off the case.

suspects2ep2-31

It transpires that Jack has mental health issues in his family, his brother was a paranoid schizophrenic and in the past had attacked his Mother, later going on to commit suicide. Jack does not want his personal history to affect his detective work, but it is only further down the road in the investigation when more attacks occur and it becomes undeniable that Saul could not have been the perpetrator, that he manages to let his fixation go.

suspects2ep2-15

In the end, it is Saul’s ‘responsible adult’ Sadie Burns (Katie Jarvis) who has committed the attacks, and Saul himself becomes one of her victims. The story’s conclusion sees Charlie finding a concerned off duty Jack sitting at the hospital checking Saul’s outlook for recovery.

suspects2ep2-62

 

The second 2-part special (Episodes 3 and 4) opens with a news report on an amateur paedophile hunter (Scott Freeman) having been attacked and now in a critical condition in hospital. When his daughter Rose (Frieda Thiel) is pulled in for questioning she tells the detectives she had been raped 8 years earlier. Both strands of the case ultimately lead the team to a dance studio run by Edward (Alexander Kirk) and Tamsin Shaffer (Gillian Kearney).

On first meeting Edward Shaffer, Jack’s killer instinct kicks in, convinced from the get-go that he is the bad guy. Shaffer becomes Jack’s one and only target, and he is so focussed on getting the collar that he over steps the mark, and resulting in Shaffer threatening to make a formal complaint against him.

Suspects II

But when Jack’s prime suspect is released due to insufficient evidence, he decides to take matters into his own hands by removing evidence (a grey towel from the dance studio) from a crime scene and planting it in Edward Shaffer’s bin. Interrupted in the act before he can carry it out, Jack doesn’t carry through with his intention.

suspects2ep3-66

In the end it turns out Jack’s gut feeling is right about Shaffer, and that the crime is far bigger and more hideous than even he first imagined, but enough solid evidence comes to light to convict him anyway.

As if Jack wasn’t already appearing to be taking the law into his own hands, we then see him leaning over Shaffer’s dead body, with blood on his hands, and for one moment we wonder, would his killer instinct go that far?

suspects2ep3-69

The fact that the question even crosses our minds is a reality check, how far would Jack go to get justice? So driven to achieve the end goal by increasingly less appropriate means, it is beginning to affect his approach to victims, attitude to suspects and his relationship with Charlie and Martha, and Jack seems to be heading closer to the point of no return.

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After a change of clothes back at HQ and an alone moment where his facial expression betrays his secrecy, and how shady his actions could potentially have become, Jack finally hands over the evidence.

suspects2ep4-10

Martha questions why he left it so late, calling him into her office later on to ask why he was already at the Shaffers’ house at the time of the murder, before the call came through about the new evidence. By this time, it has become a high profile case and the Detective Chief Inspector also wants to know why the car tracker shows Jack arrived prematurely at what ended up being a murder scene.

Jack claims he went to apologise to Edward to try and smooth things over, and avoid the formal complaint.

suspects2ep4-3
“You are a liar Jack”
“What do you want me to say?”

 

Once the case is solved, we are left wondering if there will be any consequences for Jack and his career. In a private chat on the rooftop, Martha tells him in no uncertain terms that she knows he had planned to plant evidence, that he is right on the edge and she has a good mind to give him a push. She is fed up with holding his hand, but had pulled strings and used up some favours to cover his back.
suspects2ep4-65

Jack humours her with an insincere apology and ends up with an enforced 6 week holiday instead of any action being taken against him. He seems less than happy with the outcome, but whether he feels any regret for his actions or intentions is hard to tell, a fascinating ambiguity played superbly by Damien.

suspects2ep4-80

 

Damien himself is not giving anything away, reporting on his Twitter page as Jack Weston from ‘the naughty corner’ after the final episode of the series had aired.

We get the feeling Martha knew exactly where she would be sending Jack, when Fay Ripleyposted the mirror photo on her Twitter page earlier in the year, during summer filming for the latest series:

 

At just four episodes it may have been short, but Suspects Series 2 was perfectly formed. We cannot wait for the show to return with series 3 in 2015, and to find out what Jack got up to in the naughty corner. Will he have thought long and hard about what he has done? Will he come back a changed detective?

We hope not, because watching his wild Weston ways and enjoying the scope it allows the actor who brings them to life is our big guilty pleasure, and being drawn a little deeper in to Jack’s world with an extra focus on (and complexity in) his character adds even greater power to an already absorbing, edgy, dynamic show.

Now the dust has settled after the series, we are left with an indelible knowing we’ve been blessed with something overwhelmingly amazing and new, by a show that knows it leaves us wanting more.

 

Suspects Series 2 is available on Demand 5 until August 2015.

 
 

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Damiac
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An excellent review, domino.

"....watching his wild Weston ways and enjoying the scope it allows the actor who brings them to life is our big guilty pleasure, and being drawn a little deeper in to Jack’s world with an extra focus on (and complexity in) his character adds even greater power to an already absorbing, edgy, dynamic show."

I love this!  I'm still reeling from the fact that it was so Jack-centric....and I do love a bit of character development!  There was definately a different edge to Jack in this series....for both storylines.  It seems there was less banter, and more antagonism between Jack and the others.  As you say...

"His tunnel vision and consequent hot-headedness causes problems with the case and tensions within the team, resulting in some firey exchanges with colleague Charlie.."

Seemed to me as if Charlie spent a lot of this series looking at Jack with a WTF expression on her face....in the first story she actually asks Martha what his problem is - and eventually gets an explanation......but in the 2nd she is just as bemused by Jack's behavour, and there really is no reason apart from his own stress and impatience!   I especially love the scene in ep3 when Jack had flounced out of Martha's office with a "why do I even fucking bother doing this fucking bullshit job" (possibly my favouite Jack line...) - I love the fact that she makes him turn straight round and come back in -  and then, when he says that the Shaffer's have grey towels she answers....almost with contempt - "I have grey towels"!!

Thanks for re-posting that clip, whimsy(!) - I'd forgotten Jack described himself as the caped crusader.....as you said - "caped crusaders are usually borne out of a need to work outside the law, when the law can only go so far and more direct/aggressive means have to be employed."

In s1 we saw Jack pushing the boundaries, but in this series he was completely prepared to step over the line and work outside the law.  It'll be interesting to see how it all pans out in s3....especially as much of it was filmed before these eps were - I guess his relationship with Charlie will be less antagonistic, and (hopefully) we'll get more light-hearted banter.  I wonder if the remaining ep(s?) which was filmed this summer will address his 'holiday' in any way....

 



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Yes!  thank you fifi for saying so much of what I wanted to say in a much better way I could ever put it!  

The tone of S2 was definitely more serious, intense.  The edginess they introduced in S1 upped so many notches and I was floored by the end of each hour.  I found myself mesmerized as the stories unfolded, gripping a pillow most of the time, my heart beating fast.  By the end it was a bit dizzying, with all the twists and turns, so exciting to watch everyone's fantastic performances (especially Damien's, obvs.)  I am thrilled that we were treated to the Jack-centric storylines as I have been hungering to know more about his character, and these cases hitting such sensitive spots really gave Damien room to delve into Jack's emotions.  In S1 we could see the frustration simmering under the surface, you could see Jack holding himself back. This time he let it out and it was a wonderful thing to behold, to see him push and break rules because I wanted him to get the bad guys too without having to deal with all the red tape.  I was worried at the end of E3, having really become invested in his character, but even then the adrenaline fueled part of me wanted him to have succeeded in planting the evidence.  Part of me hoped he had killed Shaffer.  I wanted to see how he would get out of it.  But of course, Jack is one of the good guys.  He wouldn't go that far...

And yet, having said that I like how intense S2 got, my favorite moment has to be the hug between Jack and Saul, and at the end when Charlie caught him at the hospital making sure Saul would be alright.  Heartwarming. And I feel that Jack needed that, something a bit good to come out of it.

I did miss the banter between the team from S1 and too wonder how the episodes filmed last fall will will slot into S3 after such an intense S2.  How much was planned for ahead of time.  S1 were stand alone episodes, really very few moments were shown that would have relied on previous knowledge. (the one that comes to mind is Charlie commenting on Jack having quit smoking, and now in S2 we see he's taken it up again)  I also feel a bit that Charlie got the wrong end of the stick in S2.  As you said fifi, she spent most of the time with a WTF expression on her face. In S1 she held her own and I do hope we get some more background for her as well.  I really like Clare-Hope.

Domino, phenomenal review.  You should do Damo's PR.  Oh wait...



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DMF
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Thank you both, there is so much more to say... but I had to stop somewhere.

In terms of the context of his job, Jack could not have just got away with everything without consequence... but if we look at the cold hard facts, in the end did he break any rules? did he follow through?

No he didn't... but we saw as the audience, the process, what Jack had planned, where he was at the wrong time, and we were one step ahead of Martha and Charlie on that... watching Martha uncover all that was a fab subplot, almost not a subplot as so integral to the story and so well done, in scenes a matter of seconds. He had planned to do the wrong thing for the right reasons but did not in the end. Had he done so, things may have been very different for him on that rooftop. The holiday is a 'punishment' but I also feel that Martha cares for Jack and knows he is a "bloody good detective" as she said at the end of series 1 on their roof top chat then. But, her tolerance is being tested more and more.

Agree with your assessment fifi and whimsy, a more serious tone, less banter with Jack Charlie and Martha (although there were moments- Irish dancing anyone?) and as you say Charlie was bemused with Jack's behaviour at first in this series, but things got a bit nasty when he pulled rank on her when he lost in near the end of episode 1 throwing his notebook:

"for fuck sake Charlie, jesus christ"
"excuse me?"
"We've wasted enough time listening to what Saul has had to say, he's got zero credibility, there's not a fucking jury in the country that's going to believe a word he says if you put him in a witness box"
"sorry? what's he done to fuck you off so much that you're.."
"Ok, ok, wind your fucking neck back in, wind your fucking neck in, ok? I don't buy into the ranking system too much, but I'm not your fucking friend, I'm your line manager ok? I have got three stripes, you have got zero"

and then when Martha interrupts completely covering up and changing his tone.
"thankyou, yes boss?"

I love Jack. But at that point I didn't like him very much.




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