April 7 1991 saw the broadcast of the first instalment of Prime
Suspect, a new crime series by screenwriter Lynda La Plante, starring
Helen Mirren as DCI Jane Tennison. The drama focused on the desperate
efforts of the Metropolitan Police to catch and convict a serial
killer targeting women in a series of particularly gruesome attacks,
while Tennison battles male colleagues who resent her taking charge of
the case. Over seven series, Prime Suspect went on to tackle issues
such as racism, homophobia and child abuse, establishing La Plante as
a leading TV dramatist; winning multiple industry accolades for its
stars and production team (including a clutch of BAFTAs and EMMYs) and
gaining distribution all over the world. Deborah Jermyn's study
examines exactly what made Prime Suspect so distinctive and
controversial and the role it played in transforming the TV crime
drama. Jermyn places the series in the context of earlier TV crime
series, particularly those such as Juliet Bravo, The Gentle Touch and
Cagney& Lacey that featured female detectives, and traces its
influence on those such as Silent Witness and CSI that came after.
Jermyn also relates the institutionalised sexism and misogyny that
Tennison confronts to real-life discrimination and prejudice in
British policing and its attitudes to women, whether as investigators
or victims, in cases such as that of Assistant Chief Constable Alison
Halford and the distinction made between prostitutes and the
'innocent' victims of the Yorkshire Ripper. Through a close analysis
of key scenes, Jermyn highlights the formal and aesthetic innovations
of Prime Suspect, in its attention to the detail of forensic work; its
unflinching portrayal of the bodies of murder victims and its
cinematic shooting style. Recognising Prime Suspect as one of the most
striking, acclaimed and influential texts in British television
history, Jermyn acknowledges the key roles played by the original
screenwriter La Plante and by Helen Mirren as Jane Tennison.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781844575565
Publisert
2013
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
British Film Institute
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Antall sider
144
Forfatter