Rayting:
7.0/
10 4.1K votes
Language: English
While attending an online forensic course, young lab assistant discovers that the fictitious case study has a link to her past. With the help of two female professors she works on bringing a killer to justice.
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Watchseries; A Dundee-born young woman returns to her home town to take up a position as a technician at the local university laboratory which among other things, assists the police in drug-related cases and crime-scene analysis. As if coming back home after fifteen or so years to start a new job in her birthplace wasn't daunting enough, she's still haunted by memories of the unsolved murder and dismemberment of her own mother at a local beauty spot which caused her to leave originally. Her feckless, mild drug-habit natural dad isn't exactly welcoming nor does she appear to have much of a relationship with her mum's since remarried second husband so she's pretty much all alone in the big city, a regular babe in the woods.
On the last leg of her car journey home, she's held up in a traffic jam caused by a suicide leap from the Tay Bridge. This later coincidentally ties in with her initial assignment at the university as it turns out the jumper owned a local night club which has just burned down with three fatalities, one of which is established as a murder while the two other appear to be have been in the wrong place at the wrong time, so that she's soon investigating material from the crime scene as well as the supply of a newly enhanced ecstasy-type drug which was being peddled at the nightclub. She duly impresses her new boss and colleagues with her zeal and initiative but is then shocked to learn that the college's new on-line crime-scene educational tutorial called M.O.O.C. seems to be based on her own mother's case. Soon both cases become linked but while the present-day deaths are routinely explained, the real mystery involves her mother's cold case and whether she can solve it and obtain closure in the process.
One final complication is her romantic involvement with the young owner of the construction business which carried out repairs on the nightspot years before but did so on the cheap and in breach of health and safety regulations and which led to the innocent deaths of the two young employees trapped inside on the fateful night of the fire-raising. The current ownership of said business was however passed to his son by his tough-as-nails father who seems to inspire in him a mixture of hero-worship and fear and who ran the company with the son as foreman at the time of the fire. The events leading up to Emma's mother's murder are then gradually unfolded to a background of sex, drugs and infidelity, leading to the big reveal in the final episode.
I enjoyed the setting of Dundee, I think the first time the city has been the backdrop to a major national TV series and the plotting and characterisations were well-realised once you allowed sufficient artistic licence for the all-about-Emma coincidences which abound. A number of details jarred with me however, besides some too-obvious P.C.-casting choices, as well as the love-at-first-sight encounter between Emma and the at-least-ten-years-older construction company boss plus there was a pointless background romance played out between a member of the crime lab and her American girlfriend who just turns up out of nowhere.
There were however enough twists and turns on the way to the revealing of the old whodunit to make this a satisfying watch all the way through. I thought the best acting was done by Martin Compston as the conflicted construction manager, Laura Fraser as the clinical lab boss, John Gordon Sinclair as Emma's sleazy dad and Michael Nardone as the diligent police investigating officer and while
A Dundee-born young woman returns to her home town to take up a position as a technician at the local university laboratory which among other things, assists the police in drug-related cases and crime-scene analysis. As if coming back home after fifteen or so years to start a new job in her birthplace wasn't daunting enough, she's still haunted by memories of the unsolved murder and dismemberment of her own mother at a local beauty spot which caused her to leave originally. Her feckless, mild drug-habit natural dad isn't exactly welcoming nor does she appear to have much of a relationship with her mum's since remarried second husband so she's pretty much all alone in the big city, a regular babe in the woods.
On the last leg of her car journey home, she's held up in a traffic jam caused by a suicide leap from the Tay Bridge. This later coincidentally ties in with her initial assignment at the university as it turns out the jumper owned a local night club which has just burned down with three fatalities, one of which is established as a murder while the two other appear to be have been in the wrong place at the wrong time, so that she's soon investigating material from the crime scene as well as the supply of a newly enhanced ecstasy-type drug which was being peddled at the nightclub. She duly impresses her new boss and colleagues with her zeal and initiative but is then shocked to learn that the college's new on-line crime-scene educational tutorial called M.O.O.C. seems to be based on her own mother's case. Soon both cases become linked but while the present-day deaths are routinely explained, the real mystery involves her mother's cold case and whether she can solve it and obtain closure in the process.
One final complication is her romantic involvement with the young owner of the construction business which carried out repairs on the nightspot years before but did so on the cheap and in breach of health and safety regulations and which led to the innocent deaths of the two young employees trapped inside on the fateful night of the fire-raising. The current ownership of said business was however passed to his son by his tough-as-nails father who seems to inspire in him a mixture of hero-worship and fear and who ran the company with the son as foreman at the time of the fire. The events leading up to Emma's mother's murder are then gradually unfolded to a background of sex, drugs and infidelity, leading to the big reveal in the final episode.
I enjoyed the setting of Dundee, I think the first time the city has been the backdrop to a major national TV series and the plotting and characterisations were well-realised once you allowed sufficient artistic licence for the all-about-Emma coincidences which abound. A number of details jarred with me however, besides some too-obvious P.C.-casting choices, as well as the love-at-first-sight encounter between Emma and the at-least-ten-years-older construction company boss plus there was a pointless background romance played out between a member of the crime lab and her American girlfriend who just turns up out of nowhere.
There were however enough twists and turns on the way to the revealing of the old whodunit to make this a satisfying watch all the way through. I thought the best acting was done by Martin Compston as the conflicted construction manager, Laura Fraser as the clinical lab boss, John Gordon Sinclair as Emma's sleazy dad and Michael Nardone as the diligent police investigating officer and while
Traces watchseries. Not sure why anyone had a problem with female lead, thought she was one of the strengths in this rather average crime "not too credible" tale. Sure have unweildy spermatozoa in those parts!! And durable...18 years
Not sure why we had to endure the weirdly unlikely Kathy and Pia arc that no one looked comfy with.
Love the way the Scots say muh-dah :) others complained of sound & clarity, yes I'd not have watched it at all without closed captions.
This is fine for an easy few hours and no brain strain.
I've seen better British crime shows for sure. But I've also seen worse. If you look past the unbelievable love story and a few other little things it's a decent watch with a bit of mystery. Would recommend if you want a bit of Steve Arnott in between Line of Duty seasons.
I like crime dramas,I am Scottish (from Edinburgh) but I can't say this drama was that good.
I did not find the plot realistic and I felt some of the acting was poor.
Laura Fraser is usually good but her performance here was unconvincing.
The weakest performance is from Molly Windsor,this is a problem because she is the lead character.
This is set in Dundee a city I have often visited.
The city looks great in this,lots of new buildings on a dramatic river location.
Grtseries and molly was superb had to say hard to find on alibi when u dobt have sky etc but deffo should be on bbc or itv instead ofreality shite
This is an okay show with a good plot but the one glaring issue is the lead who plays Emma, she looks about 14 years old and can't act or at least very well, she's flat and emotionless.