Ripper Street

Ripper Street: Some reviews

It seems that Ripper Street is less controversial in the US than it was in the UK.  BBC America didn't have to pander to the Downton Abbey crowd as fangoria.com was commenting (it's an insightful review of Ripper Street as well)

The series’ premiere in Blighty was met with mixed reviews, derided most notably by those Sunday night costume-drama aficionados who found its particular brand of spectacle to be uncomfortably grim and misogynistic (DOWNTON ABBEY, this ain’t).

It should be noted that BBC America did smudge out the ladies "naughty bits", but not necessarily the male posterior.

IGN had the following to say about Ripper Street

The first few episodes were sent out for review, and the series does have somewhat of a Law & Order: Special East End Unit feel to it in that it is a procedural, case-of-the-week structure. There are, however, overarching themes and character throughlines bridging the self-contained, per-episode stories. The inclusion of which adds a sense of investment in the characters that the lion's share of network procedurals lack. The chemistry between the three men is palpable, the acting superlative and the seeds of each of their backstories intriguing enough to warrant a consistent week-to-week tune in to see how they unfold.

Ripper Street: Case closed: London's Top 10 Detectives

Yep, that's right. Ripper Street's Edmund Reid has made the list!

10. Edmund Reid ‘Ripper Street’

Stoic, gifted and struggling with a difficult past, Matthew Macfadyen’s Victorian policeman is the latest addition to our list and an amalgam of his predecessors, all the way down to the bickering sidekicks, skeptical boss and copycat killer. Television’s well of maverick lawmen who don’t play by the rules shows no sign of running dry: our fictional streets, at least, are safe for a while longer. ‘Ripper Street’, BBC1, Sun, 9pm.

'Ripper Street': Matthew Macfadyen Previews BBC America's Mystery Drama (THR Interview)

The Hollywood Reporter has done an interview with Matthew Macfadyen for the upcoming premier of Ripper Street. You can read the interview HERE.

Ripper Street: Matthew Macfadyen - Ripper Street is a Strong Drama

What's on TV has comments made by Matthew Macfadyen, who is responding to complaints that Ripper Street is violent.

Matthew MacFadyen has once again defended his new show Ripper Street, saying there is more to the BBC One drama than blood and guts.

The Spooks actor, who plays detective inspector Edmund Reid in the Victorian-era show, praised it for the quality of its drama and strong narrative.

"You have all that richness, and it has a thumping good narrative as well as blood and guts," he said.

"I had a few months of nothing, then a load of scripts all came at once, and this was by far the best. It's such terrific writing; it just barrelled along. I saw the title and thought, 'This has been done before', but it was so fresh, and it had all the qualities, interest and depth of a period drama."

Matthew added that he did not have a favourite episode of the show, saying they were "all brilliant".

"Apart from there being a story of the week, which worked really well, there's a narrative that goes over the whole eight episodes, certainly with my character," he said, "and without giving too much away, there's an emotive thing about my character's daughter,"

"I thought that worked very well, and I liked exploring that, but there's stuff about dockers' strikes, politics, child gangs, and they were just on the verge of great advances in forensics. Fingerprinting hadn't come in yet, so they were sort of on the cusp of really moving forward."

Did you like Episode 1 of Ripper Street "I Need Light"

Yes
97% (241 votes)
No
2% (5 votes)
Maybe
1% (2 votes)
Total votes: 248
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