Follows rookie police officers working in Belfast, a city in which being a frontline response cop comes with unique pressures and dangers.Follows rookie police officers working in Belfast, a city in which being a frontline response cop comes with unique pressures and dangers.Follows rookie police officers working in Belfast, a city in which being a frontline response cop comes with unique pressures and dangers.
- Won 1 BAFTA Award
- 4 wins & 8 nominations total
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Having stinted in NI 1973-1981 this thought provoking drama brough back some happy, and a lot more unhappy memories of NI (during 'the troubles').
Realistic, excellent action and tension, my only very minor point of technical correctness would be that when 'out on a shout' you always parked up with your vehicle 'pointing' outward to enable a speedy 'escape' should matters turn nasty (as they often did).
The early scenes in the Creggan like area were so very typical of what was happening in those days, and I guess from recent news coverage what is still happening right now.
Every police character had been well thought out, so believable, and inner tensions were excellently captured.
Like other reviewers I sincerely hope there will be more series to follow. Once again, well done to the BBC drama dept, sometimes you just 'hit the nail on the head' e.g. Line of Duty, Happy Valley, Last Tango in Halifax etc.
Realistic, excellent action and tension, my only very minor point of technical correctness would be that when 'out on a shout' you always parked up with your vehicle 'pointing' outward to enable a speedy 'escape' should matters turn nasty (as they often did).
The early scenes in the Creggan like area were so very typical of what was happening in those days, and I guess from recent news coverage what is still happening right now.
Every police character had been well thought out, so believable, and inner tensions were excellently captured.
Like other reviewers I sincerely hope there will be more series to follow. Once again, well done to the BBC drama dept, sometimes you just 'hit the nail on the head' e.g. Line of Duty, Happy Valley, Last Tango in Halifax etc.
Being from, lived, experienced and witnessed the worst of NI through the troubles., I have just finished watching the complete six episodes of Blue Lights. And contrary to some other reviewers on this page I enjoyed the drama and laughed at the ni humour throughout this series. Naturally, it is a tv series and I suppose you have to allow for a certain amount of 'artistic licence' in these type of programmes. But I have to say the sequence of events on the drugs/gun running and or 'sneaky beakers' is very much a realistic story that occurred quite often in the quest for law and order in our we country N. I. I have to single out the character PC Gerry Cliff played by the excellent actor Richard Dormer. I do hope there is a second series to follow.
With the seemingly endless choice of things to watch it's seems to have become the norm to have a list of unfinished series. This won't be one of them. Excellently written drama and very well acted. The story threads, characters and their relationships will soon have you on invested in this series.
I can't say that i was familiar will most of the actors in this series. But for me this only helped to make it seem fresh. It deals with gritty and unpleasant subject matters. But the acting and chemistry between the cast draws you in. There are of course lighter moments to keep the series moving along nicely. I would highly recommend watching.
I can't say that i was familiar will most of the actors in this series. But for me this only helped to make it seem fresh. It deals with gritty and unpleasant subject matters. But the acting and chemistry between the cast draws you in. There are of course lighter moments to keep the series moving along nicely. I would highly recommend watching.
Much of the first episode had me shaking my head at the seemingly over-the-top stupidity and incompetence of the show's newbie cops. Just another show with tons of frustrating idiot-factor lathered on, I figured.
But then a nice thing happened. The plot lines thickened. The characters assumed nuance and complexity. Every actor came through in spades. And each episode from then on just got better. Until, at the end, I was rooting for every single player on the show. That can only happen when there's outstanding character development; so thank you, writers, actors, directors, for providing me with several hours of very high quality entertainment. Bravo.
But then a nice thing happened. The plot lines thickened. The characters assumed nuance and complexity. Every actor came through in spades. And each episode from then on just got better. Until, at the end, I was rooting for every single player on the show. That can only happen when there's outstanding character development; so thank you, writers, actors, directors, for providing me with several hours of very high quality entertainment. Bravo.
Ignore any critics. This is really good.
It's a good insight into the type of incidents all police have to deal with. The added interest is that this is in Northern Ireland.
OK, the Troubles have been and gone, but trouble is still present.
Some of it is political.
As we all know, there are still additional problems present in NI, even though one person has criticised the BBC as depicting all Irish people are criminals.
Not so - but like everywhere else, Northern Ireland does have its fair share of criminals up to no good, and this programme is all about that element through the eyes of the NI Police Force.
There is absolutely no bias toward Irish people here. The critic that said that surely must agree that ALL of Great Britain has an abundance of criminals who are well portrayed in countless drama series.
Does he think Northern Ireland should be portrayed differently?
The programme is about criminality. Its gritty, well written and well acted with a lot of good characters.
An added bonus is that there is no irritating background music obliterating the dialogue.
Very refreshing.
It's definitely not biased toward the Irish as one critic has said. That's just rubbish.
If you enjoy the likes of Happy Valley you'll enjoy this too. I hope there's more to come.
Watch it.
It's a good insight into the type of incidents all police have to deal with. The added interest is that this is in Northern Ireland.
OK, the Troubles have been and gone, but trouble is still present.
Some of it is political.
As we all know, there are still additional problems present in NI, even though one person has criticised the BBC as depicting all Irish people are criminals.
Not so - but like everywhere else, Northern Ireland does have its fair share of criminals up to no good, and this programme is all about that element through the eyes of the NI Police Force.
There is absolutely no bias toward Irish people here. The critic that said that surely must agree that ALL of Great Britain has an abundance of criminals who are well portrayed in countless drama series.
Does he think Northern Ireland should be portrayed differently?
The programme is about criminality. Its gritty, well written and well acted with a lot of good characters.
An added bonus is that there is no irritating background music obliterating the dialogue.
Very refreshing.
It's definitely not biased toward the Irish as one critic has said. That's just rubbish.
If you enjoy the likes of Happy Valley you'll enjoy this too. I hope there's more to come.
Watch it.
Did you know
- TriviaSian Brooke's, who plays the lead role, father was a police officer.
- GoofsScenes filmed inside and outside of patrol cars don't match car makes. Skoda and vauxhall exteriors/interiors are often mixed.
- How many seasons does Blue Lights have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Голубые огни
- Filming locations
- Bangor, County Down, Northern Ireland, UK(on location)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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