The search goes on, for something watchable. Ghosts, on CBS, streaming on Prime, is terrifically charming (and very light), and I’m not the only one to think so. A wide circle of my friends, a group with widely divergent tastes, are smitten with it. I’m also much taken with The Musketeers, although I aired some of my grievances in a Substack column a couple of weeks ago. But more narrowly, looking in the genre of criminal enterprise, I’ve been toggling back and forth between BritBox, Acorn, and MHz – I only allow myself one subscription at a time.
Shetland is
back, Season 9. Blue Lights kind of lost me, in the second season, I don’t quite
know why. Scott & Bailey ran five years, and I wish there were more: I
could watch Amelia Bullmore in damn near anything. Troppo
left me cold, even with Thomas Jane. I
took a flyer on The Jetty, because
Jenna Coleman, how could you not? (I was
a huge fan of
I’m
pleased, therefore, to give you Deadly
Tropics. (Not a great title, and the
original, Tropiques Criminels, isn’t
any better; you wonder why imagination failed.
They could have called it Martinique
Heat – almost anything would be better, to draw an initial audience.) What the series very definitely is not, is a French knock-off of Death in Paradise, to which it’s been
compared. Just for openers, Tropics is nowhere near as
annoying.
In
other words, the show starts with a concept, and then essentially discards
it. There’s a genuine chemistry between the
leads, Sonia Rolland and Béatrice
de la Boulaye, and the scripts are spry and tight. The scenery is lush, the locations feel
authentic, the politics and so on seem to fit.
I don’t know from sex tourism, or the music scene, say, but it all has a
gloss of reality. As with Candice Renoir, the police procedures
may or may not be exact, but you get a strong sense of the
The mysteries themselves aren’t taxing, but they’re not formula. About half the time, you can guess it’s the dad, or the ex, or the plastic surgeon. The storylines play fair, and they aren’t gimmicked. I’ll settle for plain old GBH, and a garden-variety blunt instrument.
Joyeux Noël!