paul2001sw-1
For a mainstream drama on ITV, 'He Kills Coppers' is remarkably harsh, complex and realistic; a long way from conventional serial-killer cliché. An enigmatic villain, and the under-Britain he inhabits, is set against a story of corrupt policeman: there's certainly promise in the premise. Unfortunately, the acting isn't brilliant (Steven Robinson as the journalist is particularly poor) and the direction relies too much on the soundtrack to insert some otherwise missing emotion. The real problem is that the story seems abbreviated; a succession of events enticingly set out but never fully elaborated; what's left is perfunctory, a barely illustrated outline. It's a shame, as I can believe there was potential here.
Dov763
I was looking forward to this drama, which was serialised to three parts on TV, but have to say I was a little disappointed with the overall result. It is a dramatisation of a real life event which shocked the nation in 1966, the cold blooded murder of three policemen in Shepherds Bush, London, who happened across three armed villains in a car. What started as a run of the mill enquiry as to what they were up to ended up in what the British press at the time dubbed "The Massacre of Braybrook Street" Jake Arnott's novel takes a look at this crime and dramatises the events leading up to it and the aftermath. First we are introduced to two policemen from Central London, Jonathan Young and Frank Taylor, the latter an ambitious high flyer with his sights on promotion and the elite Flying Squad, and their involvement with a call girl, Jeannie, with whom Young falls for. Taylor's jealousy of his best friend leads him to orchestrating his transfer out of the West End and back to a low profile crime squad post in Shepherds Bush.Billy Porter, former soldier turned petty criminal, is shown as a violent offender with a quick temper who's spent time inside and does not relish the prospect of going back. He has formed a small gang with two accomplices who are into armed robberies with increasing violence, perpetrated in the main by Porter.We are also introduced to the shallow character of Tony Meehan, a small time newspaper reporter for a seedy rag, with some latent homosexual tendencies, who seems to be surrounded by other homosexual men wherever he goes, from gentleman's clubs to the offices of Fleet Street.The murder itself is done almost in real time, as quick no doubt as it would have been in Braybrook Street in 1966, as we are shown the dark calculating side of Porter as he decides without a single word to gun down the three policemen who stop them in the street. The last chilling minutes of the killing, in slow motion, is overplayed by one of the saddest tunes from the 60's, Dusty Springfield's "If You Go Away", with Meehan the first reported on the scene and with his desire for the big scoop gets his wish, Taylor's professionalism as he arrives quickly turns to grief as he finds his best friend dead, whilst Jeannie sits in her room in tears at the news on TV.It seems this 5 minute segment of the show is the gripping impetus to propel this drama along at a pace, but alas no. The real life killings saw the nations outrage at what had happened, and this is only touched on by one character, Billy Porter's mum, who asks the question "If policeman aren't safe on the street what hope is there for the rest of us". The graveside scene shows no one other than Taylor and Jeannie, who seem to be there once everyone has left. The streets were lined by 600 policemen in 1966 and the service held at Westminster Abbey was attended by the highest of those in public office. We don't see this here.Porter is now on the run. In real life he, his character based on Harry Roberts, was captured after 3 months. I know we are not looking at a docudrama here, but Porter is then portrayed as some form of unfeeling killing machine now as he leads his life in semi isolation on the run.The final episode, set nearly 20 years on, and shows Porter as a loner falling in with a group of peace protesters, who is later horrified by the image portrayed of him by the new breed of anarchists, and the false belief they hold as the killer of coppers for its own purpose.A dramatisation of the real events showing what really happened would be better. Had it been a docudrama that focused more closely on the real events we could have been treated to the capture of Porter, his trial with his two accomplices, his numerous escape attempts from prison and the fact that he is still inside 42 years after the event, 72 years old. Maybe I'm wrong, who knows, but with knowledge of the real events I feel this could have been done better. As dramas go its fair, it shows peoples dark sides, the uncomfortably corrupt Taylor, the uncomfortably homosexual Meehan and the comfortable killer Porter.