The first episode suffered from being a little muddled, attempting to introduce and develop too many characters in a short space of time, we had DI Will Wagstaffe, his family, his colleagues, the victims etc, as they were all established, this second episode focused on story, and it was excellent.
It felt very cohesive, it was gripping, deep, and thoroughly engaging, and although the identity of the perpetrator wasn't too taxing to work out, the delivery was fantastic. I thought the concluding scenes were terrific, so well acted. Tom RIley shines once again, but arguably Tom Brooke steals the show as he so often does.
Again, I see this appealing to Luther fans, this was a great episode. 9/10
It felt very cohesive, it was gripping, deep, and thoroughly engaging, and although the identity of the perpetrator wasn't too taxing to work out, the delivery was fantastic. I thought the concluding scenes were terrific, so well acted. Tom RIley shines once again, but arguably Tom Brooke steals the show as he so often does.
Again, I see this appealing to Luther fans, this was a great episode. 9/10