Cracker [: The Complete 1st Season]

DVD/APPROX. 364 MINS./1993/US NR
You have an anti-hero that the audience cares very much about, someone that many of us can empathize with.
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DVD REVIEW
By Hock Guan Teh
FIRST PUBLISHED Oct 30, 2003

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Before becoming internationally famous for his role as Hogwarts´ gamekeeper Hagrid in the Harry Potter movies, Scottish gentle giant Robbie Coltrane first gained fame (plus a few BAFTA Best TV Actor awards--BAFTA is the British equivalent of the Oscars) for his terrific portrayal of criminal psychologist, Dr. Edward Fitzgerald in the early 1990´s popular British crime series, "Cracker". First appearing on the BBC in 1993, "Cracker" ran for three seasons or three years plus a special episode in 1996. Written and created by popular TV/film writer Jimmy McGovern (one of his film credits includes 1994´s "Priest"), "Cracker" is an eclectic combination of crime solving coupled with a protagonist that is sometimes more flawed than the very criminals he stalks.

"Cracker: Series 1" is a 3-DVD set that consists of three major storylines, one on each disc. Disc One contains "The Mad Woman in the Attic" (2 episodes), Disc Two is " To Say I Love You" (3 episodes) and Disc Three offers "One Day a Lemming Will Fly" (2 episodes). "Series 1" contains the entire first year that the series went on the air, which in American broadcasting terms, is the first season.

Better known as Fitz, Dr. Fitzgerald is far from the perfect husband and father. He drinks too much, smokes too much and he has a serious gambling addiction. So much for being a good role model. In fact, early in the first episode of the series, we see Fitz´s wife, Judith (Barbara Flynn) packing her bags and taking their young daughter to stay at her father´s after Fitz gambles their savings away. This sets the stage for an oft-visited theme of Fitz trying to put his life back together while trying to solve crimes. When he is sober, which is a rare occurrence, Fitz is highly capable of picking away at the details of a crime scene or at the mind of a suspect. However, as Judith puts it, Fitz is always looking for a crisis so that he can have an excuse to start drinking. Juggling his own issues and the demands of solving crimes becomes Fitz´s calling card in "Cracker".

So how did Fitz, a failing psychologist with more personal and family problems than the Queen, become a consultant for the Greater Manchester Police? To answer that question, let me describe a brief synopsis of each of the three stories on this DVD set.

The Mad Woman in the Attic
A serial killer is on the loose and he has killed two young women already. The latest victim, Jacqui Appleton, is a former student of Fitz´s at a university in Manchester. Upon learning of her murder, Fitz offers his services to DCI David Bilborough (Christopher Eccleston)(DCI stands for Detective Chief Inspector), the officer in charge of the investigation. Bilborough is young and very eager to crack his first major case. Jacqui was killed on a moving train and an injured man (Adrian Dunbar) is later found lying beside the tracks. This man, struck by amnesia, becomes the main focus of the investigation and is subsequently fingered as the prime suspect in the murders. Bilborough reluctantly takes up Fitz´s offer to help find the murderer when he needs a professional opinion to debunk the suspect´s amnesia claim. Instead, Fitz comes to the conclusion that the man that they have in custody is not the murderer. Shut out from further participating in the investigation, Fitz desperately seeks out the help of DS Jane Penhaligon (Geraldine Somerville) (DS stands for Detective Sergeant) to catch the real killer.

To Say I Love You
Fitz, arrested for disturbing the peace while trying to get his estranged wife, Judith to talk to him while she is staying at her father´s house, is pulled in by DS Jimmy Beck (Lorcan Cranitch) to calm down a volatile young man, Sean (Andrew Tiernan), who was arrested for stealing a bus and taking it for a joyride. Sean suffers from severe stuttering and can only speak properly when he is angry or when he is singing. Despite Fitz´s recommendation that Sean seeks professional help for his raging temper, he is instead released on probation. Together with a troubled young girl, Tina (Susan Lynch), the pair plans and murders a loan shark that has been hounding Tina. Later, our psychotic lovers become irrational and even more dangerous as the law enforcement net slowly close in.

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