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BLUE LIGHTS. BBC 1. MONDAY 9pm. TV PACE NO SPOILERS

272 replies

Blondeshavemorefun · 20/03/2023 20:48

New police drama. 6 episodes. Shown weekly. Sure all will be on iPlayer (blondes yawns and sighs) but this will be tv paced and weekly and no bingeing !!!

Blue Lights on BBC1 follows three rookie cops trying to fight crime and navigate the tricky politics of Belfast.

Blue Lights follows Grace, played by Siân Brooke, who is mum to a teenage boy. In her 40s, she’s decided to leave her stable job as a social worker to join the police force.

It’s the biggest gamble of her life, especially as she finds herself making countless mistakes in her first few weeks on the job. Joining her are fellow rookies Annie (Katherine Devlin), who must leave behind everything she’s ever known to follow her dream, and Tommy (Nathan Braniff) who is desperate to prove himself despite being seriously inept when it comes to frontline policing.

The odds are at least one of them will fail the probation period and, to make matters worse, just being a cop in Belfast is a dangerous business.

Siân Brooke, Katherine Devlin, and Nathan Braniff as new recruits to the police force. All three are in the probation period with the PSNI, the Police Service of Northern Ireland, and must deal with immense pressure in order to make it. Added to that, they must navigate the complexities of being police officers in Belfast, which means they sometimes have to hide their true selves from those closest to them.

The trio must work out whom they can trust and who wants them dead simply because of the uniform they are wearing. "I am so thrilled to be playing Grace in Blue Lights," says Siân Brooke. "There is something incredibly special about the scripts and I was hooked from the very first page. Belfast is the beating heart of this piece and it’s a city I’ve been wanting to work in for a long time."

OP posts:
Blondeshavemorefun · 14/04/2023 21:07

Blossomtoes · 14/04/2023 20:23

😂

Now that’s just mean

if it wasn’t for me you wouldn't even be watching !! 😛😛😛

OP posts:
LadyEloise1 · 16/04/2023 08:53

God it's so depressing isn't it.
I'd just want to up sticks and get out if I lived in a community controlled by gangsters and I know it wouldn't be easy. Sad

Not sure I can watch another episode. 🥲

Blondeshavemorefun · 17/04/2023 21:04

E4 on now

OP posts:
LadyEloise1 · 18/04/2023 09:07

Anyone watch last night's episode ?

Blossomtoes · 18/04/2023 09:17

Edge of the seat, wasn’t it? So, so clever the way all the questions are slowly being answered. I think it’s the best police drama ever. It beats Line of Duty hands down.

toomuchlaundry · 18/04/2023 09:20

I couldn’t be in the police

LadyEloise1 · 18/04/2023 09:37

I think it's really good too.
But oh my, it's a tough watch.
Thank goodness for the occasional comic moments.
It's so well written.

Can someone explain please the meeting in the caravan ?
Is the baddie, James Mc Intyre working with the authorities ( MI5 ???? ) or is the senior British authority figure corrupt ?

MeinKraft · 18/04/2023 12:57

LadyEloise1 · 18/04/2023 09:37

I think it's really good too.
But oh my, it's a tough watch.
Thank goodness for the occasional comic moments.
It's so well written.

Can someone explain please the meeting in the caravan ?
Is the baddie, James Mc Intyre working with the authorities ( MI5 ???? ) or is the senior British authority figure corrupt ?

Yeah James is a tout. Working with MI5

KrasiTime · 18/04/2023 14:00

I’ve always loved John Lynch. Think it’s his voice.

ageingdisgracefully · 18/04/2023 14:32

KrasiTime · 18/04/2023 14:00

I’ve always loved John Lynch. Think it’s his voice.

Isn't he Susan Lynch's brother (of Happy Valley)?

KrasiTime · 18/04/2023 15:08

Think he is!

Ilovetea33 · 18/04/2023 15:17

Yes, IMDb (Internet Movie Database) says he is.

LadyEloise1 · 18/04/2023 17:14

I always think John Lynch looks worried.
I've heard of resting bitchy face.
He's got always worried looking face.

So Mc Intyre is in cahoots with the Intelligence service and he can cause awful crimes to happen with no compunction. 🥲

martinisforeveryone · 18/04/2023 20:21

Mea culpa.

It grabbed me so much I couldn't resist binge watching.

It's odd as I really wasn't convinced by episode one.

The McIntyre twist was so unexpected.

I was a massive fan of No Offence and while I wouldn't draw direct parallels, it did slightly put me in mind of that. I think it's the balance between the crimes, the personnel and all the cross-overs and the much needed humorous moments.

daffodilandtulip · 18/04/2023 20:34

I felt so stressed and tired watching this, I could feel every moment! It's so well written and so scarily accurate.

LadyEloise1 · 18/04/2023 23:44

daffodilandtulip · 18/04/2023 20:34

I felt so stressed and tired watching this, I could feel every moment! It's so well written and so scarily accurate.

I agree.

Blondeshavemorefun · 19/04/2023 21:59

I think it's great !!

Tho I missed the m15 man. Just thought he was a bad man

Very clever this episode and the questioning

Well done who called that the useless one was shagging boss and why she got away with doing bugger all

I still don't get the OBB restrictions

I really hope there will be a s2

Gerry is also rather cute

OP posts:
Arcadia · 20/04/2023 08:41

I think the OBB restrictions are because the higher level police are following the transactions between the criminal gangs and have someone informing them and working with them, as was revealed at the end of episode 4 (what a corker that episode was!). There used to be similar in Line of Duty.

kingsleysbootlicker · 20/04/2023 10:57

OBB restrictions are so that the police don't mistakenly interfere in undercover/clandestine operations. They can't be given details of places or people involved etc so they are told areas are OBB instead. If they're not there, they can't interfere!

martinisforeveryone · 20/04/2023 10:59

Oh. I always harboured the belief that OOB referred to areas where it was acknowledged the organised crime gangs had supremacy and the risk versus gain for police was not sufficient to interfere in events. Even if it’s declared OOB for covert reasons unknown to regular police, I mean.

The whole hopelessness of kneecapping by appointment and the relative futility of trying to leave the clutches of the gangs is so depressing, although Grace’s fresh eyes and optimism is supposed to show hope, I suppose.

Blondeshavemorefun · 20/04/2023 11:46

So how did we know the man in the caravan was m15

OP posts:
Blossomtoes · 20/04/2023 12:15

Blondeshavemorefun · 20/04/2023 11:46

So how did we know the man in the caravan was m15

We saw him briefing the cop who’s been shagging scared girl in Ep 1.

MeinKraft · 20/04/2023 14:50

martinisforeveryone · 20/04/2023 10:59

Oh. I always harboured the belief that OOB referred to areas where it was acknowledged the organised crime gangs had supremacy and the risk versus gain for police was not sufficient to interfere in events. Even if it’s declared OOB for covert reasons unknown to regular police, I mean.

The whole hopelessness of kneecapping by appointment and the relative futility of trying to leave the clutches of the gangs is so depressing, although Grace’s fresh eyes and optimism is supposed to show hope, I suppose.

You're all right. Multiple reasons for an area being OB.

Blondeshavemorefun · 20/04/2023 17:29

Thanks @Blossomtoes You have a better memory then me

So the sexy grey haired Irish accent man isn't actually a baddie ?

OP posts:
LadyEloise1 · 20/04/2023 20:04

@Blondeshavemorefun "......So the sexy grey haired Irish accent man isn't actually a baddie ?"

It's "funny" to me that you say he has an Irish accent. As someone from Dublin I would say he has a Northern Irish accent. But I wouldn't know what part of Northern Ireland he was from.

I also wouldn't say that he isn't actually a baddie. Smile

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