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Father and Son (TV serial)

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Genre
  
Crime thriller

Directed by
  
Brian Kirk

First episode date
  
20 July 2009

Networks
  
ITV, STV, UTV, RTÉ One

7.5/10
IMDb

Written by
  
Frank Deasy

Country of origin
  
Ireland

Director
  
Brian Kirk

Father & Son (TV serial) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbtvbanners8013340p801334

Starring
  
Dougray Scott Sophie Okonedo Stephen Rea Ian Hart Reece Noi Wunmi Mosaku John Kavanagh Flora Montgomery

Composer(s)
  
Harry Escott & Molly Nyman

Cast
  
Dougray Scott, Stephen Rea, Sophie Okonedo, Reece Noi, Ian Hart

Father & Son is a four-part Irish television crime thriller produced by Left Bank Pictures and Octagon Films. The series was broadcast in the Republic of Ireland on RTÉ One and in the United Kingdom on ITV.

Contents

Written by Frank Deasy, the serial depicts the return of Michael O'Connor (played by Dougray Scott) to his native Ireland, after spending several years imprisoned in the United Kingdom. A parallel storyline follows O'Connor's son and sister-in-law in Manchester. The serial was filmed entirely on location in Dublin and Wicklow from October to December 2008, with only minimal second-unit filming in Manchester. Father & Son was first broadcast on RTÉ One in June 2009 and has since received positive reaction from the Irish press. It was broadcast in the UK on the ITV network during June 2010.

Plot

The series focuses on inner city crime life in both the United Kingdom and Ireland. Ex-criminal Michael O'Connor (Dougray Scott) comes back to Ireland to live with his new pregnant partner Anna, free from his past life of crime. Michael was arrested and spent years in prison, leaving his wife Lynne and son Séan (Reece Noi) on their own. Three days later his wife Lynne was murdered, leaving Michael devastated, and he quickly turns his back on crime. He returns to Ireland, leaving his son Séan behind in the care of Lynne's sister Connie. Connie and Séan live in a gang-ridden Manchester suburb. Séan distances himself from the gangs, and their culture of violence. But it's not long until gang leader Jacob King (Dwayne Scantlebury) disturbs the peace. However, with the unfolding of unexpected events, Séan is arrested for a murder which he did not commit, and is imprisoned. These events lead his father Michael back to Manchester to help free his son from prison. Manchester, however brings back painful memories for Michael, as it was here his wife was murdered, and comes to terms that his past involvement in crime resulted in Lynne's death.

Cast

  • Dougray Scott as Michael O'Connor
  • Sophie Okenedo as Connie Turner
  • Ian Hart as D.I. Tony Conroy
  • Stephen Rea as Augustine Flynn
  • Reece Noi as Sean O'Connor
  • Wunmi Mosaku as Stacey Cox
  • Simon Delaney as George Harper
  • John Cavanagh as John O'Connor
  • Terence Maynard as Barrington
  • Imani McLaren as Imani Turner
  • Flora Montgomery as Anna Caplan
  • Darren Morfitt as Blanchflower
  • Philip Arditti as Suliman
  • Michael McElhatton as D.S. Norman McGinty
  • David Wilmot as D.S. Declan Henderson
  • Dwayne Scantlebury as Jacob King
  • Production

    Frank Deasy was inspired to write Father & Son (under the working title The Return) after considering how decisions he made when he was young shaped the lives of his three children. From that, he developed the character of Michael O'Connor. He also acknowledged how money laundering and investment is relevant to Ireland and wanted to explore how Irish people have "disappeared" into Britain. Deasy compared the premise of Father & Son to his previous television serial The Passion, calling Father & Son "a reverse telling"; "it's the story of a father prepared to sacrifice himself for his son, to cleanse his son's sins, as it were."

    British network ITV commissioned Deasy's script but were unable to fund the entire series, so approached Irish broadcaster RTÉ and the Irish Film Board for additional funding. Tax breaks available to television production in Ireland made it cheaper to film outside of Britain. Production, by Left Bank Pictures, was based in Crumlin. Open casting calls for background actors were held on 2 and 3 October at Liberty Hall. Filming ran over 52 days from 13 October to 13 December 2008. Two days were spent filming in Manchester for establishing shots. Location filming took place along the Dublin quays and in Wicklow. The production was the first time director Brian Kirk and producer Michael Casey had used the Red One digital camera. Production of the series in Dublin and Wicklow generated €5 million for the local economy.

    Broadcast and reception

    Following Episode 1, Donald Clarke for The Irish Times compared Father & Son to the American drama series The Wire, complimenting the opening titles and "its ability to tie together a multitude of apparently unconnected stories". However, he was concerned that the level of realism created by the writing and directing was spoilt by filming the Manchester-set scenes in Dublin: "Deasy appears to have something important and specific to say about gang culture in Manchester, but, filmed largely in Dublin, the series cannot hope to breathe genuine Mancunian air [...] the average Dublin viewer, having spotted familiar roofs and corners, will find his credulity stretched to breaking point." In the Evening Herald, Pat Stacey praised the actors, particularly Dougray Scott, and compared the series to "the kind of stuff writers such as Trevor Preston and the Kennedy Martin brothers, Troy and Ian, used to turn out for ITV in the 70s and early-80s, but with an added edge of social realism." Stacey continued his praise, calling Episode 2 "a fantastically well-crafted thriller that shows no sign of letting up".

    The Irish Playwrights and Screenwriters Guild posthumously presented Deasy with the ZeBBie Award for Best Television Script for Episode 1. At the 7th Irish Film and Television Awards, Deasy won the award for Best Television Script, Stephen Rea won Best Actor in a Supporting Role, and the serial was nominated in the Best Single Drama/Drama Serial category.

    ITV broadcast the serial in the UK from 7 to 10 June 2010.

    References

    Father & Son (TV serial) Wikipedia