Ripper Street

Ripper Street
Series title against printers typefaces
Genre Drama
Mystery
Created by Richard Warlow
Written by Richard Warlow
Starring Matthew Macfadyen
Jerome Flynn
Adam Rothenberg
MyAnna Buring
Theme music composer Dominik Scherrer
Composer(s) Dominik Scherrer
Country of origin United Kingdom
United States
Original language(s) English
No. of series 5
No. of episodes 37 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Greg Brenman
Will Gould
Simon Vaughan
Andrew Lowe
Ed Guiney
Polly Hill
Producer(s) Stephen Smallwood
Katie McAleese
Location(s) Dublin, Ireland
Cinematography Julian Court
PJ Dillon
Peter Robertson
Camera setup Single-camera setup
Running time 58–76 minutes
Production company(s) Tiger Aspect Productions
Lookout Point
Distributor Endemol UK
Release
Original network BBC One (Series 1–3)
BBC Two (Series 4–5)
Amazon Video (Series 3–5)
Picture format HDTV 1080i
Audio format Stereo
Original release 30 December 2012 (2012-12-30) – 12 October 2016 (2016-10-12)
External links
Website

Ripper Street is a British-American TV series set in Whitechapel in the East End of London. It begins in 1889, six months after the infamous Jack the Ripper murders. Starring Matthew Macfadyen, Jerome Flynn, and Adam Rothenberg, the first episode was broadcast on 30 December 2012 during BBC One's Christmas schedule. It was first broadcast in the United States on BBC America on 19 January 2013.[1] Ripper Street returned for a second eight-part series on 28 October 2013.[2][3]

On 4 December 2013, it was reported that a third series would not be made due to low viewing figures for series two.[4] Then on 11 December 2013, Variety reported negotiations between Tiger Aspect, the show's producer, and LoveFilm to fund future episodes, similar to Netflix's funding of episodes of Arrested Development.[5] On 26 February 2014, it was confirmed that Amazon Video would resurrect the show. Filming began in May 2014.[6] Series three began streaming on Amazon UK Prime Instant Video on 14 November 2014 but has not been made available on Amazon's US site.[7][8] The third series began airing on BBC America on 29 April 2015,[9] and on BBC One on 31 July 2015.[10]

In June 2015 the series was renewed for a fourth and fifth series.[11][12][13] In 2016 it was announced that the show would end with the fifth series.[14] Series 4 premiered on Amazon UK on 15 January 2016,[15][16] BBC America on 28 July 2016 and in the United Kingdom on BBC Two from 22 August 2016. [9] The concluding fifth series premiered in full (six episodes) on Amazon UK on 12 October 2016.

Plot

Series 1

The series begins in April 1889, six months since the last Jack the Ripper killing, and in Whitechapel H Division is responsible for policing one and a quarter square miles of East London: a district with a population of 67,000 poor and dispossessed. The men of H Division had hunted the Ripper and failed to find him. When more women are murdered on the streets of Whitechapel, the police begin to wonder if the killer has returned.

Among the factories, rookeries, chop shops (food establishments), brothels and pubs, Detective Inspector Edmund Reid (Matthew Macfadyen) and Detective Sergeant Bennet Drake (Jerome Flynn) team up with former US Army surgeon and Pinkerton agent Captain Homer Jackson (Adam Rothenberg) to investigate the killings.[17] They frequently cross paths with Tenter Street brothel madam Long Susan (MyAnna Buring), who came to London with Jackson from America and lets him reside at the brothel. Their relationship becomes strained due to Jackson's attraction to one of her most profitable girls, Rose Erskine (Charlene McKenna), and because of his close involvement with Reid and H Division.

Reid and his wife Emily (Amanda Hale) only have one daughter, Mathilda, who was lost and presumed deceased, some months before the series begins, in a river accident during the hunt for the Ripper. The newspaper reporter, Fred Best (David Dawson), knows a dark secret about her death. Although still troubled, and despite her husband's reservations, Emily is determined to make a new life for herself by helping the fallen women of Whitechapel.

Series 2

Set in 1890. Emily has left Reid after he gave her false hope that Mathilda might not have drowned. Rose Erskine has left Long Susan's brothel to work as a waitress at the music hall, Blewett's Theatre of Varieties. Sergeant Drake has married another of Susan's girls, Bella. A new detective constable, Albert Flight (Damien Molony), is introduced.

Reid crosses swords with the ruthless Inspector Jedediah Shine (Joseph Mawle). Ten years an Inspector on the Hong Kong police force, Shine has used that experience to exert a firm grip over Limehouse’s neighbouring "K" Division and the emergent Chinatown that grows within it. Long Susan, happy as brothel keeper, is in debt to Silas Duggan (Frank Harper), who lent her funds to start the business, unbeknownst to Jackson who wants to leave London.

Backdrops to episodes in series 2 include Chinese immigration, the London matchgirls strike of 1888, electrical War of Currents, the Cleveland Street scandal, the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, Joseph Merrick, known as the Elephant Man and the Baring crisis.

Series 3

In 1894, a train accident in Whitechapel kills fifty-five civilians. At the scene of the accident, Reid, Drake, Jackson, Rose Erskine and Long Susan are reunited after a long period of separation. Reid investigates the derailment and discovers that it was caused by a heist. The organiser is Susan's solicitor, Ronald Capshaw. His intention is to steal US bearer bonds in order to bail out their financially stricken Obsidian Estates and to continue in their attempt to gentrify Whitechapel.

Mathilda is discovered by Capshaw to be still alive, although Reid is told by Susan that she has died since being rescued. Mathilda escapes and is picked up by Harry Ward, a teenage pimp. Receiving a tip-off where she was last seen, Reid and Bennett find her, but she runs away. Reid returns to his home and father and daughter reunite.

Series 4

Series 4 opens in 1897, the year of Queen Victoria's diamond jubilee. Reid has now given up his detective work and is living in Hampton-on-Sea with Matilda. He is drawn back to Whitechapel after a visit from Deborah Goren, who urges him to return to investigate the murder of a rabbi at the hand of Isaac Bloom, whom she believes innocent.

Meanwhile, Drake is now head inspector of Whitechapel and still employs Jackson, who has given up his drinking and gambling in order to save money to free Susan, who is now sentenced to hang for her crimes. When his attempts to legally free her fail, he helps to fake her death, forcing her to give up their son to be raised by Drake and his wife Rose, while Susan hides out of sight and Jackson pretends to be a grieving widower to his friends.

Series 5

Series 5 continues the events of the tragic ending of series 4.

Production

A joint BBC and BBC America production written by Richard Warlow, Julie Rutterford, Declan Croghan and Toby Finlay and directed by Andy Wilson (4 episodes), Colm McCarthy (2 episodes) and Tom Shankland (2 episodes). The series includes scenes of the seedier side of life during the late Victorian era, including bare-knuckle boxing, early pornography and prostitution.[18]

Tom Shankland said of the series, "Whitechapel's not an area that was short of vicious murders and any woman found murdered with a knife in the consequent months was held up as a Ripper murder... So we’ll touch on Ripper in that way but not dig anybody up or change the canonical five... All the period depictions I’d seen of that particular crime story had almost been a bit too well behaved in a slightly slower way and shots have to be a bit wider to show off the nice furniture, but if you can think of something awful, it was happening [in Victorian London]."[18]

Casting

The three leads of the show, Macfadyen, Flynn and Rothenberg, have discussed how they got the roles in interviews. Macfadyen claims his involvement was all down to his interest in the 'fresh' script: "I had a few months of nothing, then a load of scripts all came at once, and this was by far the best. It's such terrific writing; it just barrelled along. I saw the title and thought, 'This has been done before', but it was so fresh, and it had all the qualities, interest and depth of a period drama."[19]

Rothenberg's involvement in the show was more straightforward, as he auditioned during pilot series. In an interview with both Flynn and Rothenberg, the latter states: "I auditioned for it, got it, and then showed up. That’s as simple as it was for me." to which Flynn chimes in, claiming: "it was very funny, though, ‘cause when he [Rothenberg] did show up, he was like, “I don’t know how the f*** I got here!". Flynn's casting experience was similar: "It was pretty basic for me. The writer, Richard Warlow, had seen me in Game of Thrones, playing Bronn, and asked about casting me."[20]

Filming

The first series was filmed entirely in Dublin, Ireland, in locations that included the former Clancy Barracks beside Clancy Quay and Trinity College, Dublin.[21] Macfadyen discussed the sets in Dublin in an interview with The Daily Mail, saying, "The barracks were like a big playground, big enough to recreate a huge area of Whitechapel, and we filmed in Dublin Castle and Kilmainham Gaol, all as if it was the East End of London."[22] The same article claims that "a second series [was] commissioned even before the first episode has been publicly screened".[22]

The Leman Street police station and "The Brown Bear" pub are still on Leman Street,[23] and the Jews Orphan Asylum still exists, renamed and relocated first to Norwood and then to Stanmore.[24]

Cast

Main cast

L-R: MyAnna Buring, Adam Rothenberg, Matthew Macfadyen, Jerome Flynn, and Charlene McKenna

Additional cast

Series 1

Series 2

Series 3

Series 4 and 5

Episodes

SeriesEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast aired
1830 December 2012 (2012-12-30)24 February 2013 (2013-02-24)
2828 October 2013 (2013-10-28)16 December 2013 (2013-12-16)
3814 November 2014 (2014-11-14)26 December 2014 (2014-12-26)
4715 January 2016 (2016-01-15)19 February 2016 (2016-02-19)
5612 October 2016 (2016-10-12)12 October 2016 (2016-10-12)

Reception

Ripper Street was well received by critics upon release. On the review aggregator website Metacritic, the first season of the series holds a score of 72 out of 100, indicating "generally favorable reviews". On another review aggregator website, Rotten Tomatoes, the first season features a score of 100 percent, based on 17 reviews.

Critical reception of the initial two episodes was divided with some praising the show's gritty script and good acting performances, and others feeling the show was a mix of ITV's Whitechapel and Guy Ritchie's Sherlock Holmes.[32]

In his weekly review of the show, Jamie-Lee Nardone wrote of its continued improvements, "more of this please, just perhaps not before dinner", referencing the show's gory nature.[33]

Sam Wollaston of The Guardian discussed the pros and cons of the show, claiming "It would be easy to be negative about Ripper Street. Do we really need more on a story that's been not just done to death, but then carved up, and had its insides torn out?" but he concludes his review stating "[ the] script is real, alive and human. It's beautifully performed, and beautiful to look at – stylish, and stylised. The bare-knuckle fight scenes are brutal and memorable. It's proper, character-based crime drama, gripping, and yes – I'm afraid – ripping as well".[34]

Benji Wilson of The Daily Telegraph reviewed the first episode positively, praising the performances of the three leads, which he said compensated for the "dull grind of all the exposition" and "tedious" historical references.[35]

J.C. Maçek III of PopMatters reviewed the debut episode, remarking

writer/creator Richard Warlow and episode director Tom Shankland’s attention to the period details: streets are sooty, gaslight creates flickering shadows, and stone floors make footsteps seem chilling. These details help make Ripper Street a compelling procedural, its long form narrative and deliberate pace different from the CSI and Law & Order clones. But the show also bears traces of contemporary influences: an underground boxing club sequence in the first episode resembles similar scenes in Sherlock Holmes (2009) so much that a coincidence is hard to imagine. Equally derivative, some overt efforts to shock viewers deliver graphic violence and some nudity, courtesy of the evolving technology of photography, as it’s inspiring an evolving “smut” industry.[32]

Ahead of its debut in the US, IGN's Roth Cornet reviewed the first episode, discussing how "the setting is handled with absolute care and a razor-sharp attention to detail, from costume and production design to the varied vocal cadences of the players, the texture and flavor of London's East End are brought to vivid life." The review continues to discuss the show's depiction of London's streets in the Victorian era:

Ripper Street provides a gritty look at the evolving streets of London and the advent of technology at the time; be it the "moving-picture-machine" that is featured in "I Need Light" or the introduction of early forensics that follows through the series. More interesting still is that it is the dirt and bones look at the uses of said technology that is in play here. This is no wink-wink "look at how charming early cameras were" depiction, but rather a portrayal of the underbelly of what those cameras would have been used for. Additionally, there is engaging interplay between those who would usher in necessary change and those who are, as Jackson says, "the barriers to progress."[36]

Hollywood Reporter gave it significant praise "Ripper Street is a well-acted, well-written and compelling mystery series. And even better, there’s no waiting around, wishing it would improve. It’s alluring from the start."[37] Los Angeles Times called it "Well-written and acted."[38]

Some female critics have not been so positive about the show, disappointed by its two-dimensional portrayal of women as either repressed wives and mothers or prostitutes.

Jan Moir of the Daily Mail wrote that "the torture and murder of women" is "enthusiastically depicted", claiming "there is terrible violence meted out to men and children, too, but the focus of the viciousness is always on the knicker-dropping molls and the ‘tarts’".[39]

Grace Dent of The Independent was more satirical about the show, but was still unamused by the portrayal of women, stating "centuries may shift and fashions may change, yet raping and murdering women has really never been as popular."[40]

The show was later voted best show of 2013 in a UK public poll for the Radio Times TV guide and magazine shortly after the series had ended, ahead of Doctor Who.[41][42]

Home media

Series 1 was released on a region 2 (Europe) 3-disc DVD set and 3-disc BD on 18 March 2013, with the same DVDs being released in region 1 (Canada/US) on 12 March 2013.

The series 2 DVD-set, plus a 6-disc box set containing both series 1 & 2, was scheduled to be released on 27 January 2014, with region 1 DVDs of series 2 to be released on 15 April 2014.[43]

See also

References

  1. "Ripper Street". BBC America. Retrieved 18 October 2013.
  2. Brown, Maggie (29 January 2013). "Ripper Street to return for second series". The Guardian. London: Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 3 July 2013.
  3. "Ripper Street". two premiere date confirmed by BBC One – Ripper Street News – Cult. Digital Spy. 2 October 2013. Retrieved 18 October 2013.
  4. "Ripper Street not returning for third series, BBC One confirms". Digital Spy. Retrieved 4 December 2013.
  5. "'Ripper Street' May Return with Funding from Amazon's LoveFilm". Variety. Retrieved 17 December 2013.
  6. "Ripper Street: Axed show to return". 26 February 2014.
  7. Ahmed, Tufayel (3 October 2014). "Ripper Street to return for brand new series next month". Daily Mirror. London: Trinity Mirror.
  8. Georg, Szalai. "'Ripper Street' Season 3 to Premiere on Amazon U.K. in November". TheHollywoodReporter.com. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  9. 1 2 "Ripper Street - BBC America".
  10. Walker-Arnott, Ellie. "Ripper Street". Radio Times. Retrieved 18 July 2015.
  11. Mellor, Louisa (13 May 2015). "Ripper Street: renewed by Amazon for series 4 and 5". Den of Geek. Retrieved 28 May 2015.
  12. "'Ripper Street' Season 3 finale isn't the end: Season 4 and 5 are already in the works". 18 June 2015.
  13. Vine, Richard (13 May 2015). "Ripper Street to return for two more series of 'blood, guts and pocket watches'". The Guardian. London: Guardian Media Group.
  14. "Say goodbye to Ripper Street - it's ending after season 5". The Independent. 7 March 2016.
  15. "Ripper Street series 4: Amazon Prime releases lengthy synopsis".
  16. User, Super. "Ripper Street series 5 release date – renewed (to be scheduled)".
  17. "Ripper Street – New drama for BBC One starring Matthew Macfadyen, Jerome Flynn and Adam Rothenberg". BBC. 2012-11-28. Retrieved 2013-01-10.
  18. 1 2 Gee, Catherine (25 September 2012). "Ripper Street: gruesome new crime drama set in the east end of London". The Daily Telegraph.
  19. "MacFadyen couldn't resist Ripper St". BelfastTelegraph.co.uk. 2013-01-19. Retrieved 2013-07-03.
  20. "Jerome Flynn and Adam Rothenberg Talk BBC America's New Crime Drama Ripper Street". Collider. 2013-01-24. Retrieved 2013-07-03.
  21. "'Ripper Street' gets Dublin preview". The Irish Times. 10 October 2012.
  22. 1 2 Wigg, David (2012-12-28). "EXCLUSIVE: Matthew Macfadyen shares all the GORY details from his new TV series Ripper Street". London: Daily Mail. Retrieved 2013-07-03.
  23. n/a. "Goodmans Fields 2".
  24. "Jews' Hospital and Orphan Asylum banner". The Jewish Museum. Retrieved 2013-10-26.
  25. In reality, a division was commanded by a uniformed superintendent, not its detective inspector.
  26. "Inspector Edmund Reid". BBC Online. Retrieved 2015-09-20.
  27. "Detective Inspector Edmund Reid". Drama. Retrieved 2015-09-20.
  28. "Sergeant Bennet Drake". BBC Online. Retrieved 2015-09-20.
  29. "Detective Sergeant Bennet Drake". Drama. Retrieved 2015-09-20.
  30. "Captain Homer Jackson". BBC Online. Retrieved 2015-09-20.
  31. "Captain Homer Jackson". Drama. Retrieved 2015-09-20.
  32. 1 2 Macek III, J.C. (2013-01-19). "'Ripper Street': The Famous Killer Inspires Anew". PopMatters. Retrieved 2013-10-18.
  33. "Ripper Street episode 3 review: The King Came Calling". Den of Geek. 2013-01-14. Retrieved 2013-10-18.
  34. Sam Wollaston (30 December 2012). "TV review: Ripper Street; Neil Armstrong – First Man on the Moon; The Hotel | Television & radio". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2013-10-18.
  35. Wilson, Benji (30 December 2012). "Ripper Street, BBC One, review". London: Telegraph. Retrieved 2013-10-18.
  36. "Ripper Street: "I Need Light" Review – IGN". Uk.ign.com. 2013-01-19. Retrieved 2013-10-18.
  37. Goodman, Tim (2013-01-17). "BBC America's Ripper Street: TV Review". Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2013-07-03.
  38. McNamara, Mary (2013-01-19). "Review: BBC America's 'Ripper Street' a fine dose of mystery". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2013-07-03.
  39. Moir, Jan (2013-01-07). "Who decided to make the BBC's Sunday night period drama an anti-women orgy of gore?". London: Daily Mail. Retrieved 2013-07-03.
  40. Grace Dent (2013-01-05). "Grace Dent on TV: Ripper Street, BBC1 – Reviews – TV & Radio". London: The Independent. Retrieved 2013-10-18.
  41. Georg Szalai (2013-12-30). "BBC's 'Ripper Street' Tops U.K. Poll of Best TV Shows of 2013". Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
  42. Ellie Walker-Arnott (2013-12-30). "Ripper Street fans protest against BBC axing by voting crime drama the best TV show of 2013". Radio Times. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
  43. Lacey, Gord (14 March 2014). "Ripper Street – Season 2 Press Release". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Retrieved 18 March 2014.

External links

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