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A GOOD GIRL'S GUIDE TO MURDER. THUR BBC 1 - 9/915 - TV PACE. NO SPOILERS

102 replies

Blondeshavemorefun · 05/07/2024 14:25

A Good Girl's Guide to Murder is a British television series based on the Holly Jackson (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/HollyJacksonn) novel of the same name (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/AAGoodGirl%27ssGuidetooMurder), adapted by Poppy Cogan, directed by Dolly Wells (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/DollyWellss), and developed by Moonage Pictures for BBC Three (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBCCThree). The first series of the show consists of six 45-minute episodes covering the events of the first book.

If the series is renewed, later series plan to cover the other two books. However, executive producer Frith Tiplady also stressed that the first series has a real end.

Pip, 17, is the sort of teenager who has never given her parents cause to worry.

She doesn’t drink, seems physically incapable of telling even the whitest of lies, and spends her spare time ranking Cambridge colleges based on their acceptance rates and famous alumni.

In fact, it’s only the prospect of gaining some extra Ucas points that drags her into the messy business of investigating a killing in A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder, the BBC’s likeable, absorbing drama based on Holly Jackson’s bestselling young adult novel (https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/holly-jackson-interview-guide-to-murder-b2391446.html). 

This must surely be the only mystery story that uses the Extended Project Qualification – essentially an add-on where A-level students write a mini-dissertation about a chosen subject – as a plot device. Pip, played by Wednesday (https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/tv/reviews/wednesday-review-netflix-jenna-ortega-tim-burton-b2231098.html) star Emma Myers, decides to ditch her initial idea of writing about Gothic novels in favour of diving into the disappearance
and presumed death of Andie Bell (India Lillie Davies).

Andie was a popular older pupil at Pip’s school who went missing five years ago; her boyfriend Sal (Rahul Pattni) seemed to confess to her murder shortly afterwards, then died by suicide.

These two deaths still haunt the sleepy countryside town of Little Kilton – all thatched cottages and rows of pastel-painted shop fronts.

Pip’s thesis is that “good guys don’t kill people”, and Sal, she believes, was very much a good guy. Soon, she turns her bedroom wall into an evidence board covered in Instagram print-outs connected by red string, and recruits Sal’s younger brother Ravi (Zain Iqbal) as her fellow detective.

Her mum and dad aren’t exactly thrilled. Anna Maxwell Martin and Gary Beadle are a delight here as the parents, bringing comic relief and, later, some emotional heft.

Pip’s investigation style – and in fact her character as a whole – grates a little as the series opens. She has a bracingly direct approach when it comes to interrogating her potential suspects about the case, which verges on self-righteousness.

Sometimes she seems to view the case as a puzzle to be solved, an intellectual exercise rather than an awful tragedy.

But as the episodes go on, she grows in self-awareness (and Myers’ performance becomes less mannered, more empathetic), and makes enough mistakes of her own that she stops seeing the case in such black and white terms.

As Pip gets deeper and deeper into the case, the series takes us on a whirlwind tour of teen mystery drama tropes.

There’s the spooky camping trip in a desolate wood, an attempt to speak to spirits using a very rudimentary take on an Ouija board, and even a touch of Skins-style bacchanalia when she and her friends attend a secret party in a cave (the latter feels a little bit like a CBBC version of Euphoria, with Pip improbably quizzing an allegedly dangerous drug dealer about his operations).

But although some of these component parts might feel familiar, the story is pacily told and filled with enough twists to make A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder moreish viewing. Think The Famous Five meets Pretty Little Liars, as told by Agatha Christie: it’s a combination that shouldn’t really work on paper, but will have you hooked all the same.

OP posts:
butterpuffed · 06/07/2024 18:00

This sounds fairly complicated but I always give them a go . Thanks @Blondeshavemorefun .

EachandEveryone · 06/07/2024 18:04

I won’t read what it’s about but the trailer looks good. I will keep on this thread before I decide.

DoneAdulting · 06/07/2024 18:04

The book is very good, twisty and I didn't guess the ending.

deeahgwitch · 06/07/2024 19:09

I have it on to record- thank you @Blondeshavemorefun

Blondeshavemorefun · 06/07/2024 20:24

@butterpuffed think of it as a murder mystery but in Istanbul

OP posts:
Blondeshavemorefun · 06/07/2024 20:24

DoneAdulting · 06/07/2024 18:04

The book is very good, twisty and I didn't guess the ending.

That's good to know. Thanks

OP posts:
Blondeshavemorefun · 06/07/2024 20:25

Blondeshavemorefun · 06/07/2024 20:24

@butterpuffed think of it as a murder mystery but in Istanbul

Ignore that. That was meant to for the other thread 😂😂🙀🙀

OP posts:
butterpuffed · 06/07/2024 21:44

Blondeshavemorefun · 06/07/2024 20:25

Ignore that. That was meant to for the other thread 😂😂🙀🙀

I'll let you off this once 😅😅

autienotnaughty · 06/07/2024 22:08

We have watched 3 episodes so far. It's good, my dd is slightly irritated by the differences to the book (she recently re read it) but that's fairly normal. So far I'm enjoying it I think the actress playing pip is believable

Theimpossiblegirl · 06/07/2024 22:12

Filmed locally to me in Axbridge, Somerset so will be watching. Also enjoyed the book.

Blondeshavemorefun · 06/07/2024 22:12

This is tv pa Ed so we haven't seen 1 yet

Starts bbc 1 on thur

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SoupDragon · 07/07/2024 16:21

I watched the first episode on iPlayer last night. I assumed it had already started! Anyway, I'm definitely intrigued enough to watch them all but I will say no more.

I laughed at the EPQ (DD did hers last year. On child aged serial killers!!)

Blondeshavemorefun · 07/07/2024 17:42

This is what annoys me about iPlayer. Why show them on There before been shown on live tv

OP posts:
SoupDragon · 07/07/2024 18:10

It was on BBC3 originally by the look of it.

Blondeshavemorefun · 07/07/2024 18:10

Oh. Wonder how I missed that

Do like bbc 3. Usually good on sat about 9pm

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coastingcoffee · 07/07/2024 19:09

Hi all, my 12 year old has read all the books but is the TV adaptation suitable for her? I've seen the trailer and thought it looked great but I am not sure what age group it is aimed at? Should we have even let her read the books! We thought it was a tween thing....

SoupDragon · 07/07/2024 19:42

The first episode was fine. The warning on iPlayer says "contains strong language" for all episodes and episodes 5 & 6 have "contains some upsetting scenes" as well. You might want to watch those to check.

Invent · 07/07/2024 20:18

I've watched it all. My poor telly can't get terrestrial BBC anymore so I'm iPlayer only.

Not read the book but I thought it was good. The teenagers are all lovely and the worst scene is the blood on her head. There's drugs but nothing horrendous ( slightly annoying that smoking a joint is sort of glossed over as funny rather than smelly, addictive and bad for your lungs). I think a 12 year old would be fine with it. There is potentially a coercive sex scene but aside from the word sex that's as far as it goes.

I think the slightly urban writing jars with the rural small town setting. Kids that are mates from primary in a small town like that have a different vibe to city kids. But I liked the plot.Six episodes was exactly right.

CharismaticMegafauna · 08/07/2024 15:58

I'm watching it with my daughter who's 11 as she loved Wednesday and it has the girl who played Enid in it. I haven't read the book and it has more adult content than I had imagined (swearing and references to drug use). Seems like a police procedural for teens so far.

It seems quite American in some ways (no school uniform, rows of lockers and Pip having her own car). That said many sixth forms have no uniform, some 17yos do have their own cars and maybe the flashback scene with younger Pip was a non-uniform day!

SoupDragon · 08/07/2024 16:06

It seems quite American in some ways (no school uniform, rows of lockers and Pip having her own car).

The lack of uniform and the lockers jarred with me - I assumed it was set in America with the opening school scene. The car was fine though - all DD's driving friends have a car. I don't think any are 1979 estates though!

ItIsEverywhere · 08/07/2024 16:29

Is this just the first book? I'm keen to see how well they adapted it having read all three books.

Blondeshavemorefun · 08/07/2024 19:41

Yes the first book

Guess did it goes down well there will be more series

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AuntieJoyce · 08/07/2024 19:58

Sorry but not for me. I’ve got halfway through episode three and just given up because it’s way too slow.

I think if I had a teenage daughter watching it would probably be okay but watching as an adult it’s very obviously not aimed at me.

Blondeshavemorefun · 08/07/2024 20:38

I still haven't seen as this is tv paced and starts thur

But trailer looks good so I'm hoping it will be good

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alwaysonadiet1 · 09/07/2024 13:27

My teenage DD is annoyed with the differences to the book too and that they have dressed Pip really badly! The actress is not as we imagined Pip at all.