A new fly-on-the-wall series is an eye-opening study on whether the police are capable of investigating their own

The concept couldn’t have been sexier: a real-life Line of Duty. That’s how film-­makers Hugo Pettitt and Ashley Francis-Roy pitched their documentary series to Channel 4 commissioners and the top brass of Avon and Somerset police, whose corridors they wanted to shoot inside. It was late 2020, TV audiences were awaiting the final series of AC12 bent-copper hunting. In their docuseries, Pettitt and Francis-Roy would be embedded within Avon and Somerset’s very own professional standards department and counter-corruption unit – their cameras granted access for the first series of its kind involving a British police force.

“We expected secret squirrel-style cases,” Pettitt said, “maybe without the explosions and guns, but still an enjoyable journey of officers solving cases and crimes, rooting out individual officers.” While precise formats differ, access-driven law-enforcement shows like this have become a mainstay of modern British television. Major returning series including 24 Hours in Police Custody (also Channel 4), BBC One’s The Met, Special Ops: Crime Squad (UKTV) and Sky’s The Forcealongside a constant stream of limited series and single documentaries – ever-popular with audiences, drawing out drama by following criminal investigations, or bobbies on the beat.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

The Guardian view on the Nobel prize in literature: beauty out of universal loss | Editorial

Abdulrazak Gurnah may be writing about leaving Zanzibar for Britain, but he…

Wales ban Josh Adams for first two Six Nations games after Covid breach

Pivac ‘disappointed’ with player for attending family event ‘I was wrong to…

Daly snatches win for Saracens while Harlequins rue Smith’s absence

Harlequins 27-30 Saracens England back secures points with long-range penalty It is…

Elena Rybakina storms back to beat Ons Jabeur in Wimbledon final

The 17th seed wraps up 3-6, 6-2, 6-2 win in women’s singles…