Private investigator and war veteran Cormoran Strike and his assistant Robin Ellacott use their unique skills to investigate complex cases that the London police are unable to solve.Private investigator and war veteran Cormoran Strike and his assistant Robin Ellacott use their unique skills to investigate complex cases that the London police are unable to solve.Private investigator and war veteran Cormoran Strike and his assistant Robin Ellacott use their unique skills to investigate complex cases that the London police are unable to solve.
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Based on the books by Galbraith (pen name of JK Rowling of Harry Potter fame).
The books (as books often can) delve more deeply into characters and backstory. That said, the balanced focus between Strike and Ellacott and their cases, provides a fairly complete picture of two star-crossed would be lovers who navigate their own relationship while solving crimes. It's a grim version of the "will they or won't they" trope made popular in the 80's.
Season 6 (or 4 if you're looking at HBO MAX's different numbering approach as opposed to the original BBC schedule) was well worth the wait. I found the plots much easier to follow, and there were fewer confusing side plots.
The two leads, Tom Burke and Holliday Grainger, are well cast and very believable.
The crime stories, like in the books, have one or two too many twists and turns to follow easily. So this isn't your typical paint-by-the-numbers detective show. You have to be engaged while watching or you'll miss a lot.
My wife finds some of the casework occasionally too grisly, but she is drawn back to Robin's and Cormoran's tortured romance.
The acting is top notch, with only a few brief supporting roles hitting sour notes. The slowly developing background on Strike and Robin is compelling and leaves you anxious for the next episode.
Highly recommend.
The books (as books often can) delve more deeply into characters and backstory. That said, the balanced focus between Strike and Ellacott and their cases, provides a fairly complete picture of two star-crossed would be lovers who navigate their own relationship while solving crimes. It's a grim version of the "will they or won't they" trope made popular in the 80's.
Season 6 (or 4 if you're looking at HBO MAX's different numbering approach as opposed to the original BBC schedule) was well worth the wait. I found the plots much easier to follow, and there were fewer confusing side plots.
The two leads, Tom Burke and Holliday Grainger, are well cast and very believable.
The crime stories, like in the books, have one or two too many twists and turns to follow easily. So this isn't your typical paint-by-the-numbers detective show. You have to be engaged while watching or you'll miss a lot.
My wife finds some of the casework occasionally too grisly, but she is drawn back to Robin's and Cormoran's tortured romance.
The acting is top notch, with only a few brief supporting roles hitting sour notes. The slowly developing background on Strike and Robin is compelling and leaves you anxious for the next episode.
Highly recommend.
'Strike: The Cuckoo's Calling' is on the Poirot-Marple-Midsomers branch of the mystery tree with its irresistible stars in the lead roles, its slow but never time-wasting character developments, its high-on- thinking and low-on-physical-violence story, and its beautiful camera work. If you like all of the above features and a good, escape-for-an- hour mystery, please watch this. J.K. Rowling wrote the book and I'm glad that the British television peeps had the great good sense to bring this to us as beautifully as they did. I hope they make more.
Tom Burke and Holiday Grainger are a stand out team in what could easily have been a tawdry run of the mill Detective trawl.
Cormeran Strike is a lovable mess of a reinvented down at heels gumshoe. The pacing manages too drag the fashionable locations and characters into the gutter along with him, humanising them all in his search for the truth over the death of a model.
There is an endearing quality to this show which so readily could have been destroyed by bad casting. Ignore any opinion drawn from knowing the writer. Approach with a fresh face. Definitely a good first outing for Strike.
Cormeran Strike is a lovable mess of a reinvented down at heels gumshoe. The pacing manages too drag the fashionable locations and characters into the gutter along with him, humanising them all in his search for the truth over the death of a model.
There is an endearing quality to this show which so readily could have been destroyed by bad casting. Ignore any opinion drawn from knowing the writer. Approach with a fresh face. Definitely a good first outing for Strike.
Excellent cast, dynamic story line, unique cinematography all combine for an outstanding series. The nonexistence of over the top completely impossible special effects is refreshing. It's intelligent and sophisticated in it's execution. There is no quick fix to each case, yet the writers don't drag the story along simply to fill time and episodes, instead time is utilized efficiently and very effectively creating a great deal of intrigue and suspense which will keep you up at night to watch an episode instead of going to bed. A definite must watch series.
I'd already read the book, but Strike as portrayed was more convincing than my own prior vision.
You get a nice range of people in one limited slice of London, as well as a series of puzzles that get solved.
They improve the ending, giving a better excuse for the murderer doing something I can't detail without giving away the plot.
You get a nice range of people in one limited slice of London, as well as a series of puzzles that get solved.
They improve the ending, giving a better excuse for the murderer doing something I can't detail without giving away the plot.
Did you know
- TriviaThe name Cormoran appears in Cornish folklore. He was a giant who lived in a cave on St. Michael's Mount off Cornwall's southern coast. 18 feet tall, he used the low tide to access the countryside and pillage the local community until he met his match in Jack the Giant-Killer, a trapping pit and a mattock (pickaxe).
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