The Beast Must Die: AMC’s Initially Taut UK Thriller Quickly Unravels
Photo Courtesy of AMC
The UK’s greatest export is crime drama. This tiny island pumps them out at an extraordinary rate, and while not all of them are good, they provide a familiar narrative framework that usually works to their advantage. These series either take place in a small village or London-at-large, any time period. There’s always a hard-nosed DC or DCI with a lot of personal issues who is doggedly pursuing the case under moody coastal skies. An aerial shot of the White Cliffs of Dover are a must, or the Shard if we’re London-bound. The seasons are short, the episodes are emotionally taut, and in the end… well, the ending is what usually makes or breaks it.
Crime show fans know that a good mystery series doesn’t need to break the mold. It doesn’t need to rely on outrageous twists or subvert viewer expectations, not only because very few can pull that off, but because when you tune in for a British crime series you know what you’re getting into and you want specifically that thing. The acting and the character stories are what can make these shows special, but none of it matters if they don’t stick the landing. Above all, a good crime show has to be satisfying. The crime needs to be solved and we need some sense of closure, but the intangibles of greatness require something more.
Enter The Beast Must Die, an emotionally compelling story that follows a London woman, Frances Cairnes (Cush Jumbo), desperate for justice after her son was killed in a hit-and-run on the rural Isle of Wight. Her story is split with that of a young inspector, the Dickensian-named Nigel Strangeways (Billy Howle), who has suffered a recent trauma of his own. As Nigel takes up his new post in the Isle of Wight, he begins quietly looking into the case, uncovering just how badly it was mishandled thanks to the cozy relationship among the island’s elite. Meanwhile, a disillusioned Frances begins her own investigation—clumsily at first, but soon with a pinpoint-precision that allows her to manipulate her way into the lives of the Rattery family, one of whom is responsible for her son’s death.
All of this, coupled with an excellent cast, should have led to a familiarly excellent series. But The Beast Must Die chooses to eliminate the mystery very early on. The murderer is obvious; what’s less obvious is how Frances, and to a much lesser extent Nigel, will be able to prove it. While there are intriguing traces of a psychological thriller, maybe even a horror, that are suggested at this point, none of it is capitalized on. The characters, including Frances and Nigel, exist only to move the plot and—other than one terrible incident in each of their lives—don’t have much interiority or past beyond that. The shallow conception of our leads as well as the wealthy Rattery family makes the show’s ending after just a brisk six episodes all the more disappointing. (Regarding the posh and troubled Ratterys: to waste Jared Harris and Geraldine James is a crime, but Mia Tomlinson also makes a magnetic impression before her character is essentially tossed aside). What’s frustrating is not the implied esoteric nature of what justice really means or if peace after trauma can ever be achieved so much as the fact that none of these character’s stories really seem to get closure. The teases for a good, deep story are all there, but we never go below the surface.