Current:Home > ContactThe final season of the hit BBC crime series 'Happy Valley' has come to the U.S. -Aspire Money Growth
The final season of the hit BBC crime series 'Happy Valley' has come to the U.S.
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-08 08:34:44
It wasn't so long ago that a handful of shows were commonly offered as examples of how good television can be. In America, these touchstones tended to skew extremely male — The Sopranos, The Wire, Mad Men, Breaking Bad. The exact opposite was true in Britain, where the defining titles of the 21st century — Fleabag, Killing Eve, I May Destroy You — are by and about women.
The most popular of this bunch is Happy Valley, the BBC crime series that became an instant sensation when it premiered in 2014. Created by Sally Wainwright, and centering on a woman police sergeant in the Calder Valley of West Yorkshire, it set the gold standard for crime series anchored by complicated women. You find its DNA all over a show like Mare of Easttown.
When Happy Valley's third and final season aired in Britain earlier this year, it was a smash with both critics and viewers. It's now come to our screens on BBC America, Acorn TV and AMC+. The latter two services also offer the first two seasons, and I highly recommend you see them. With a grand arc unfolding over nearly a decade in real time, the 18 episodes of this series take viewers on a twisting, cliff-hanging, deeply satisfying emotional journey.
In the star turn of a lifetime, Sarah Lancashire plays Sgt. Catherine Cawood, a sharp, big-hearted divorcee who often sports a yellow police vest. Catherine is raising her grandson, Ryan, whose mother killed herself from the trauma of being kidnapped and raped by Ryan's father, a sociopath named Tommy Lee Royce. Tommy's played by James Norton, who you may know as the crime-solving vicar in Grantchester. While Season 1 focused on Catherine bringing Tommy to justice, Season 2 dealt with her trying to create a normal life for her family while her nemesis plots vengeance from prison.
As Season 3 begins, it's seven years later, and Catherine is about to retire and take a trip to the Himalayas. Her world is overturned when she discovers that the 16-year-old Ryan has begun communicating with Tommy — he wants to know more about his dad. Even as Catherine wants Ryan to stop, she's still hard at work, looking into a murder that Tommy may have committed a decade ago, and dealing with a drug-addicted woman whom she fears is being abused by her husband.
Now, Wainwright — who also created Last Tango in Halifax and the gender-bending HBO series Gentleman Jack – knows how to reel you in. Season 3 serves up funny police banter, stinging family arguments, elaborate jail breaks, casual murders, elaborate murders, dramatic showdowns and moments of profound personal betrayal. Through it all, her characters burst with humanity — even evil ones, like the often sweet-faced Tommy, who Norton makes an unnervingly mercurial bad guy.
Catherine's police work lets Wainwright capture a Yorkshire she knows inside out. While Mare of Easttown was justly praised for its portrait of small town Pennsylvania, Happy Valley's detailed vision of its community is even richer, and not only because the local dialect is as thick as Yorkshire pudding. We get Catherine's world in all its gritty reality — the poverty, corruption, drug use, domestic violence, gangsterism and despair that stand in stark contrast to the area's tradition of working-class solidarity and its often beautiful landscape.
The show rotates around Lancashire's full-court-press of a performance in a role that asks her to do everything. Catherine is an honest, foul-mouthed cop. She's a nurturing mother who mourns her dead daughter, raises Ryan with boundless love and worries that her reporter ex-husband may get into trouble investigating a gang. She's a linebacker of a woman who, more than once, gets bloodied from knockdown-dragouts with male criminals. And she's a female avenger who, attuned to the weakness and violence of men, is especially protective of women.
Catherine's not a saint, of course. She jumps to conclusions, lashes out at her sister and, in her protectiveness toward Ryan, she doesn't let him know what Tommy is truly like. But her flaws only deepen our sense of her strengths. Indeed, she emerges as one of the genuine feminist heroes in television history. Happy Valley isn't a happy place, but I was always happy being in her company.
veryGood! (41)
Related
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Airbnb guest who rented a room tied up, robbed Georgia homeowner at gunpoint, police say
- Will Russia, Belarus compete in Olympics? It depends. Here's where key sports stand
- Climate solutions are necessary. So we're dedicating a week to highlighting them
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Serbia’s president denies troop buildup near Kosovo, alleges ‘campaign of lies’ in wake of clashes
- U2 brings swagger, iconic songs to Sphere Las Vegas in jaw-dropping opening night concert
- Inmate accused of killing corrections officer at Georgia prison
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Stock market today: Asian shares mixed as Japan business confidence rises and US shutdown is averted
Ranking
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- The UK defense secretary suggests British training of Ukrainian soldiers could move into Ukraine
- Grant program for Black women entrepreneurs blocked by federal appeals court
- Armenia accuses Azerbaijan of ethnic cleansing in Nagorno-Karabakh region as 65,000 forcefully displaced
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- Grant program for Black women entrepreneurs blocked by federal appeals court
- Ukraine aid left out of government funding package, raising questions about future US support
- Seaplane hits power line, crashes into Ohio river; 2 taken to hospital with minor injuries
Recommendation
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
A fight over precious groundwater in a rural California town is rooted in carrots
Tell us your favorite Olivia Rodrigo 'Guts' song and we'll tell you what book to read
Taylor Swift's 'open invitation' from the NFL: A Hail Mary pass to Gen Z and female fans
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
New York City works to dry out after severe flooding: Outside was like a lake
Yes, Pete Davidson's Dating History Was Stacked Well Before He Was Linked to Madelyn Cline
A populist ex-premier who opposes support for Ukraine leads his leftist party to victory in Slovakia