This article was originally published in The Courier on 6th October 2018.
THE CRY: Sunday, BBC One
THE BIG AUDITION: Friday, STV
Cast
under a pall of deep, foreboding gloom, THE
CRY is an anguished four-part drama about a mother on public trial.
Former
Doctor Who companion and Victoria star Jenna Coleman plays
Joanna, a first-time parent struggling to cope with her new-born baby, Noah.
Joanna loves Noah, but can’t seem to form the nurturing bond that, so she’s
been told, should be automatic. No matter what she does, she can’t stop him crying.
Joanna’s
Australian fiancée, Alistair, is a busy government spin doctor who more or less
leaves her to look after Noah alone. He’s also fighting for custody of his
teenage daughter from a previous marriage. That’s why Joanna, Alistair and Noah
end up on a flight to Australia, during which most of the passengers take an
unsympathetic view of Joanna’s inability to control her son’s wails.
When
they arrive in Oz, they stop at a minimart en route to their hired cottage.
Alistair goes in alone, but for some reason Joanna follows him while Noah
sleeps on the back seat of their car. When they return, he’s nowhere to be
found. In that moment, Joanna is transformed from an ordinary mum into an
international hate figure.
Clearly
inspired by the Madeleine McCann case, The
Cry thrives on ambiguity. We’re invited to sympathise with Joanna while
questioning her behaviour. It basically places us in the shoes of those
disapproving plane passengers; a deliberately uncomfortable experience. The Cry demands that we question our knee-jerk judgments, our trivial, selfish irritations.
It’s
told in non-linear fashion, with scenes set before and after Noah’s
disappearance. A potentially gimmicky and alienating narrative device, but it
works in the drama’s favour by building intrigue and tension while reflecting
Joanna’s fractured mental state.
We
knew from the start that Joanna had done something wrong, something capable of attracting
a frenzied press scrum on her doorstep and landing her in court while an angry
mob protests outside. We knew it must have something to do with Noah, but we were
kept in the dark until the last five minutes. Unravelling the story in this way
proved terribly effective. The Cry, so far at least, succeeds as a mystery, a thriller, and a nuanced character piece.
I’ve
never been particularly impressed by Coleman before - she's often too serene, too poised - but here she’s quite
convincing as a traumatised woman in the eye of a hurricane. Ironically,
Joanna’s inability to cry in public may prove her undoing. Parents are expected
to act in a certain way when terrible incidents such as this occur, and woe
betide them if they don’t.
Episode
one implied that Alistair’s ex-wife may have stolen Noah, but I suspect the
truth will be more complex than that. The
Cry appears to be a thought-provoking drama etched in shades of grey.
That
cross between Britain’s Got Talent
and Dragons’ Den you’ve all been
waiting for, THE BIG AUDITION is a light-hearted
reality show in which various showbiz hopefuls vie for actual paying work.
Formats
such as this are a magnet for ‘big personalities’, but thankfully most of the
folk auditioning in episode one were harmlessly eccentric as opposed to
thunderously irksome.
The
undoubted star was Linda, a woman whose cup practically exploded with guffawing
joi de vivre. You wouldn’t want to be stuck in a lift with her, but she
deserved her new job as a bubbly shopping channel host.
Scoff
all you want, but maintaining an incessant barrage of enthusiasm on live
television is a tough gig. It requires an improvisatory skill-set beyond the
capabilities of most mere mortals. Linda is a natural.
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