"Broadchurch" Episode #3.3 (TV Episode 2017) Poster

(TV Series)

(2017)

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8/10
The list of suspects increases ever more.
Sleepin_Dragon20 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Trish receives a worrying message, possibly from her attacker, but still refuses to provide the identity of the man she slept with on the morning of her attack. Trish's husband admits he has no alibi for her attack, and claims he blacked out after too much tequila. Add focuses on questioning and sampling the remaining party guests, tasking the unpopular DC Hartford with coordinating, the list of suspects seems endless.

Third part done and the standard is very good, it's managing a balance of slowly providing information, but leaving the viewer with plenty of questions. The biggest of all being 'does Trish know who her attacker was.' The dynamic between Tennant and Coleman continues to develop, we learn where he's been in his absence.

The scene where Trish reveals to Beth that she knew of her history was particularly well done. Still a few too many suspicious locals, I'll be glad when the list of suspects is thinned down. 8/10
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8/10
Alec Hardy is a treasure
richiehodev29 August 2022
In this third season and by now, we've come to understand and embrace DI Alec Hardy's world weary outlook on life and strong ethical code of conduct. But David Tennant's delivery of "This case makes me ashamed to be a man" in this episode takes the cake. There are a lot of similar TV detectives like Hardy with same make and mold, but David Tennant's portrayal of this character is part of what makes Broadchurch such a compelling and enthralling watch.

This series so far allows Alec Hardy to be at his best again, as he pours everything he has into not only figuring out the "how", but also the "why". The quote above stops you in your track with how profoundly invested he is in this case.
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8/10
Love them
hazangel-8991020 July 2022
I really enjoy Alec and Ellie's relationship. It's obvious he really cares for her and respects her. I think they are turning out to be very good friends. It's kind of cute!
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8/10
More Character Development
Hitchcoc17 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
That cabbie is quite the piece of work. What is he up to and why? His wife is interviewed and reveals that they have a really strained relationship. People are starting to lie more and more, often by omission. Mark uses a family evening to get back to his obsession concerning his son. Further alienating from those he left behind. There is massive list of suspects developing.
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10/10
Suspects?
Littleman9524 December 2020
Wow, things are more and more complicated that you thought. Everyone looks suspicious and a lot of people has something to hide. Oh, and there is the number of men at the party.

I also like the way that they keeps alive the stuff of the previous seasons. But the thing I like even more I love the fact that everyone is human with human problems. There is no super clever detective that knows the solution of the case even before it happens.
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7/10
A solid Broadchurch focuses on one suspect and finds glimmers of potential
ryanjmorris13 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Broadchurch is in a tricky place right now. On paper, things appear to be moving forward. New suspects are emerging, suspicious faces are growing more guilty and peripheral characters are beginning to find their stories for the series ahead. Yet, even with this in mind, it still feels as if Broadchurch is holding back on us this year - at least so far. After a solid and confident series premiere, the ITV drama has been content to just interview suspects and hop around between characters, only offering one or two notable scenes over the last two weeks.

Luckily, even when Broadchurch stalls its narrative, it remains a show so packed with stunning visuals and great performances that a dull hour still seems a long way away. This week, the guilty eye shifted over to Clive Lucas (Sebastian Armesto), the cabbie who took Trish (Julie Hesmondhalgh) to the party on the night of her assault. Of course, some other stories emerge too, and episode three does a better job than last week's instalment at integrating these subplots into the focal story without causing unnecessary distraction.

That isn't to say they feel necessary though, because as of now, they certainly don't. Mark Latimer's attempt to continue Danny's trial feels well intentioned but misjudged. I'm not fully sure what a better way to continue Danny's story would be, but hammering in on last series' horrendously mishandled trial plot is never a good idea. Tom Miller's new found porn addiction also isn't really clicking yet, but it seems as if it has a direction, so I'm willing to roll the dice with this one and see where it heads.

The majority of episode three is focused on the investigation, and it helps maintain a sense of focus. For the first real time this series, we feel just how daunting in scale Hardy and Miller's job is here. By taking us through a number of new faces the episode adds depth to the investigation while also forming a pathway, even if it still doesn't seem prepared to fully run down it yet. By this point in the show's first year I felt as if I'd lived in this community with these people for years, I felt the impact Danny's death had. This time around I know the faces, but there's little behind them beyond the structured enigma of every whodunnit series.

Luckily, Broadchurch corrects that issue with one suspect tonight - Clive Lucas. By focusing this week's episode on him, we finally get an understanding of who he is and what he could have been doing on the night Trish was raped. It deepens his character and advances the plot simultaneously, a balance that Broadchurch hasn't been striking particularly well so far this series. Armesto's performance is terrific here, he succeeds in finding something down to Earth about Clive during his interview, but when we gain more information later on courtesy of his rather unhappy wife, his final appearance in the episode feels like watching a whole new man.

Speaking of his interview, what a scene. Broadchurch has always been the kind of show that works best when there are fewer people in a room, when the conversations can be direct and focused and important. By withholding information from us and then only revealing it in the interview room, a simple piece of dialogue is transformed into an endless roller coaster of mini reveals and subtle character definitions.

It's the kind of scene that Broadchurch offered between every ad break back in 2013. We may only get one or two per episode now, but it just about makes each entry worthwhile. There still isn't quite enough here to chew on for me - this new supporting cast just aren't sticking and the actual crime is still too shrouded in mystery for that to be easily forgiven - but Broadchurch seems to be its way to correcting this. If it stays moving in this direction, we could find that same greatness that the show forced on us back in year one.

Grade: B

www.morrismovies.co.uk
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