'Red Riding': The Dark Side of That Sceptred Isle

If you thought “The Wireâ€� and “The Sopranosâ€� the best of American TV, then you must see British television’s Channel 4 trilogy, “Red Riding.â€�  

   Although released recently in theaters in a five-hour version, this huge, gritty, violent and very beautiful work is easier to absorb in its three installments:

“1974,â€� “1980â€� and “1983.â€�  They are already on Netflix, and — hopefully — will soon be in our local library systems.

   Based on novels by noir writer David Peace, the films are set in Yorkshire, England’s largest, most northern and least populated county.  Almost a country unto itself, Yorkshire speaks its own, frequently incomprehensible English and breeds its own bizarre criminals and often corrupt officials and businessmen.

    Peace’s conceit and brilliance was to take three notorious crimes or miscarriages of justice (including the notorious Yorkshire Ripper murders) and fictionalize them, filling his books with venal men, lost women and children, corrupt police and news reporters, and always the unique mores of a part of England unlike any other. There is epic sweep here.

   Each segment was made by a different director, each shot differently — first 16 mm, then 35, then digital.  So Yorkshire’s fabled moors and dales become more beautiful as the series progresses toward a sort of final redemption.  But make no mistake, evil thrives in beautiful surroundings.

   The acting is superb, flashbacks and connections between the three parts, fascinating, the interlocking stories mesmerizing.  Yes, there is blood and shooting.  There is suicide (one scene will remind you of the ending of “Thelma and Louiseâ€�).  And there is gore.  But “Red Ridingâ€� is addictive and  entertaining.  It is, of course, very R-rated.

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