This City Is Ours
- Serie TV
- 2025–
Michael, un membro di lunga data della criminalità organizzata, si innamora di Diana, spingendolo a rivalutare la sua vita al di là delle sue attività criminali. Il suo amore diventa sia una... Leggi tuttoMichael, un membro di lunga data della criminalità organizzata, si innamora di Diana, spingendolo a rivalutare la sua vita al di là delle sue attività criminali. Il suo amore diventa sia una motivazione che una potenziale responsabilità.Michael, un membro di lunga data della criminalità organizzata, si innamora di Diana, spingendolo a rivalutare la sua vita al di là delle sue attività criminali. Il suo amore diventa sia una motivazione che una potenziale responsabilità.
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I was really looking forward to watching this, especially being written by the same guy who wrote The Last Kingdom (if you've not seen it watch it, absolutely brilliant from start to finish).
I digress. If you're wanting flowers and hearts this isn't for you, however if you like a good northern drama you will love it.
I don't believe in giving any kind of spoilers so all I can say is it has a kickass soundtrack. The cast choices are perfect Julie Graham is a really good choice for the Matriarch and Sean Bean even with his Yorkshire accent (thee knows nowt Jon Snow) as a scouser well he can be forgiven. Jack McMullen (Waterloo Road) is a real header, somewhat unpredictable character. An actor I don't recall seeing before is James Nelson-Joyce who again puts in a solid performance.
I have watched the whole season in 2 nights and will be watching it again.
I digress. If you're wanting flowers and hearts this isn't for you, however if you like a good northern drama you will love it.
I don't believe in giving any kind of spoilers so all I can say is it has a kickass soundtrack. The cast choices are perfect Julie Graham is a really good choice for the Matriarch and Sean Bean even with his Yorkshire accent (thee knows nowt Jon Snow) as a scouser well he can be forgiven. Jack McMullen (Waterloo Road) is a real header, somewhat unpredictable character. An actor I don't recall seeing before is James Nelson-Joyce who again puts in a solid performance.
I have watched the whole season in 2 nights and will be watching it again.
It is with a fervor bordering on the evangelical that I proclaim This City Is Ours a towering colossus among British gangster television, a masterpiece destined to be etched into the annals of dramatic lore with the indelible ink of genius. In an era where mediocrity so often masquerades as entertainment, this series emerges as a defiant rebuke to the tepid and the trite, a clarion call to those who still believe that the small screen can ascend to the sublime.
The acting-oh, the acting!-is nothing short of a revelation, a constellation of talent blazing fiercely against the drab firmament of contemporary telly. Each performer, from the grizzled kingpins to the flint-eyed foot soldiers, inhabits their role with a verisimilitude that transcends mere craft; it is as though they have not so much learned their lines as lived them, breathed them, bled them. The ensemble is a gallery of rogues and redeemers, rendered with such visceral authenticity that one might suspect the casting director scoured the back alleys of London rather than the green rooms of RADA.
And then there is the writing-brilliant is too meek a word, too pedestrian to capture the alchemy at work here. The script is a rapier, sharp and swift, cutting through the banalities of the genre with a precision that borders on the surgical. It weaves a tapestry of betrayal, ambition, and brute survival, threaded with dialogue that crackles like gunfire in a concrete canyon. The writers have not merely constructed a narrative; they have forged a world, one so richly textured and morally shadowed that it rivals the labyrinthine intrigues of a Dickens novel or the bleak grandeur of a Shakespearean tragedy.
This City Is Ours stands as a monument to what television can achieve when it dares to marry intellect with instinct, when it refuses to pander and instead demands that its audience rise to meet it. It is a gangster saga, yes, but one that transcends its tropes to grapple with the eternal questions of power, loyalty, and the human soul's capacity for both savagery and grace. To call it one of the finest British offerings of its kind is not hyperbole but simple justice; to predict its immortality among the greats is not prophecy but recognition of a truth already manifest. Watch it, revere it, and let it remind you that art, even amidst the muck and mire of our modern age, can still burn bright enough to blind.
The acting-oh, the acting!-is nothing short of a revelation, a constellation of talent blazing fiercely against the drab firmament of contemporary telly. Each performer, from the grizzled kingpins to the flint-eyed foot soldiers, inhabits their role with a verisimilitude that transcends mere craft; it is as though they have not so much learned their lines as lived them, breathed them, bled them. The ensemble is a gallery of rogues and redeemers, rendered with such visceral authenticity that one might suspect the casting director scoured the back alleys of London rather than the green rooms of RADA.
And then there is the writing-brilliant is too meek a word, too pedestrian to capture the alchemy at work here. The script is a rapier, sharp and swift, cutting through the banalities of the genre with a precision that borders on the surgical. It weaves a tapestry of betrayal, ambition, and brute survival, threaded with dialogue that crackles like gunfire in a concrete canyon. The writers have not merely constructed a narrative; they have forged a world, one so richly textured and morally shadowed that it rivals the labyrinthine intrigues of a Dickens novel or the bleak grandeur of a Shakespearean tragedy.
This City Is Ours stands as a monument to what television can achieve when it dares to marry intellect with instinct, when it refuses to pander and instead demands that its audience rise to meet it. It is a gangster saga, yes, but one that transcends its tropes to grapple with the eternal questions of power, loyalty, and the human soul's capacity for both savagery and grace. To call it one of the finest British offerings of its kind is not hyperbole but simple justice; to predict its immortality among the greats is not prophecy but recognition of a truth already manifest. Watch it, revere it, and let it remind you that art, even amidst the muck and mire of our modern age, can still burn bright enough to blind.
This was an amazingly acted and perfectly written series with great pacing. Sean Bean is a reliable familiar face and the rest of the cast were excellent. James Nelson-Joyce is someone I only recognised from Time (also with Sean Bean) but he really carries the show with his gritty and believable performance. The series feels quite similar to Top Boy in some ways, but with a Liverpool setting.
It is a very suspenseful watch and I absolutely binged through it, hooked from episode 1 right through to the end of the series. I really really really hope they make a second season! This show deserves more hype!
It is a very suspenseful watch and I absolutely binged through it, hooked from episode 1 right through to the end of the series. I really really really hope they make a second season! This show deserves more hype!
This is the only series I've watched 1 episode of and couldn't stop watching it...I watched 5 episodes in one night, and the remaining 3 the next morning on iplayer.. I've never done that before! Every scene in it leaves you wanting more! The acting is brilliant and the characters totally believable. I didn't know anything about it apart from Sean Bean was in it and being from Sheffield myself watch anything he's in, but I was blown away by the gritty performances of EVERYONE in it! This is a show that could go on and on... I was gutted that there wasn't more episodes ( there's 8) it's the best thing I've watched in years! I dare you to watch this and not be hooked! 10 out of 10.
There was not much hype surrounding this shows release as far as I could tell, so, my surprise binge made it all the more pleasurable. Here is the Gist...Liverpool drug kingpins Ronnie and Michael are always looking to broaden their margins, money wise. Enter the Columbians, located in Spain. This is just an aside to all the other drama. Michael ( a fantastic James Nelson-Joyce) and his girlfriend Diana are trying to conceive. Jamie, the son of Ronnie ( Sean Bean), is like AJ Soprano ( Tony's son), but more useless and way more volatile. After an incident, Jamie wants more power. He also has his own little Band of Thieves, who are as useless and more dangerous than him. While Jamie's fiance wants to live in Dubai (?!) with their baby. Shout out to A very scary Bobby Shofield, as Bonehead, crazy excellent.
Drama really stretches across these 8 episodes...Including a great side plot with, Saoirse-Monica Jackson from " Derry Girls". It's not just drugs and Mobsters here. It's a really great series written/ created by Stephen Butchard. Foreshadow, Episode 8 at the 43 minute mark, is insanely brilliant.
Drama really stretches across these 8 episodes...Including a great side plot with, Saoirse-Monica Jackson from " Derry Girls". It's not just drugs and Mobsters here. It's a really great series written/ created by Stephen Butchard. Foreshadow, Episode 8 at the 43 minute mark, is insanely brilliant.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThere are frequent references to 'Lemo' in the dialogue, this is Scouse slang for cocaine.
- ConnessioniReferenced in The One Show: Episodio datato 19 marzo 2025 (2025)
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