Review of The Gulf

The Gulf (2019–2021)
8/10
Gripping New Zealand Police drama
7 August 2022
The Gulf is a contemporary police drama set ostensibly in Auckland, New Zealand's largest city. But in fact most of the action takes place on Waiheke, an idillic island about 50 minutes ferry ride in the Hauraki Gulf with about 10,000 inhabitants comprising artisans, hippies, wineries and wealthy folk who often commute to Auckland. The three main police officers are brooding middle aged Detective SS Jess Savage (Kate Elliot) and her handsome 30 something assistant DS Justin Harding (Ido Drent). Jess lives on the Island (as it is usually called), Justin in an inner city Auckland apartment and Senior Sergeant Denise Abernathy (Allison Bruce) holds down the fort at the Waiheke police station. Jess reports to her boss at Auckland Central Police Station and the show features many stunning shots from the frequent ferry rides Jess and Justin must take.

The Gulf cleverly weaves an ever more gripping developing plot line across all episodes and series but the bulk of episode time is taken up with excellent two-episode local crime story lines. In the ongoing story, Jess survives a near fatal accident that killed her husband and she now lives alone with her 18 year old daughter Ruby (Timmy Cameron) who gets pregnant to her older boyfriend AJ (Dahnu Graham). The exact circumstances of the accident unfold gradually as do the consequences for Jess and how she deals with them and it is a compelling and tense underlying storyline that augments the attractiveness of the ongoing policing work stories.

Now I'm a biased observer on the location being a kiwi expat but the setting is simply superb and the show beautifully captures many endearing and attractive aspects of kiwi culture and life: the stunning scenery of Auckland's Gulf region, the plethora of beautiful 100+ year old restored wooden villas on the Island, the casual laid back style of interpersonal relations in NZ, the slang, the way Maori culture and words are neatly interwoven into modern white NZ society and down to the little things like iconic fish and chips in the squad room and Marmite on toast for breakfast. All in all a fabulous and quite unique police drama. It is more dark and has a harder edge than the more genteel and slow pace of The Brokenwood Mysteries, another NZ police drama.
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