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Cracker

by Mark Duguid

Type
Studies
Subject
One FilmCracker (TV Series)
Keywords
TV Series
Publishing date
2009
Publisher
BFI Publishing
Collection
BFI TV Classics
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Paperback • 144 pages
5 ¼ x 7 ½ inches (13.5 x 19 cm)
ISBN
978-1-84457-263-2
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Book Presentation:
Cracker (1993-1996; 2007) was one of the stand-out television series of the 1990s, reinvigorating the television crime drama and winning both critical plaudits and ratings success. In Fitz, its flawed, self-destructive, arrogant but brilliant criminal psychologist hero, the series created one of the decade's most iconic characters, in the process turning Robbie Coltrane from a respected comic performer into an award-winning actor and a genuine star.

Cracker played freely with the conventions of the detective thriller, focusing less on the who of crime than the why . As such it followed a Catholic preoccupation with deep motive and moral responsibility shared by Fitz and his creator Jimmy McGovern, the first and most dominant of the series three writers. Through three series and two specials, Cracker explored the causes and consequences of crime, while never losing sight of the moral choices made by its perpetrators. At the same time the series exposed the inherent dangers of a police force in pursuit not of justice but of results .

Mark Duguid's illuminating study of Cracker traces the series origins and development in the context of early 1990s television and places it in the contemporary social and political landscape. Duguid explores the series distinctive moral focus, paying particular attention to Cracker s concerns with justice and the impact of bereavement and grief, most notably in McGovern's impassioned engagement with the devastation caused by the Hillsborough disaster and its aftermath. Combining detailed textual analysis with insights drawn from interviews with McGovern and producer Gub Neal, Duguid reveals how one of the angriest, toughest series of its time is also, paradoxically, one of the most compassionate.

About the Author:
MARK DUGUID is a Senior Curator of the BFI National Archive, and is the editor of, and a major contributor to BFI Screenonline, an online research and educational resource devoted to the history of film and television in Britain. He has contributed to Sight& Sound magazine and to the Encyclopedia of Television (2004).

See the publisher website: BFI Publishing

See Cracker (TV Series) (1993–1996) on IMDB ...

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