Posts Tagged ‘Ashes to Ashes’

This Week On Ashes To Ashes – 06 – 15 – 10

June 15, 2010

DCI Gene Hunt (Philip Glenister) and DI Alex Drake (Keeley Hawes). Photo copyright of the BBC

SPOILER ALERT!! - A dead body found floating in a canal is identified as Colin Mitchell (Jason Haigh), a man recently reported missing by his glamorous wife, Donna (Daisy Haggard). DCI Gene Hunt (Philip Glenister) discovers that Colin worked for Trevor Riley (Sam Spruell), a nasty loan shark with a habit of hurting those who mess with him. A ruthless capitalist, Riley invokes terror in the community he controls and Gene sets his sights on bringing down this cocky, unscrupulous villain. DI Alex Drake (Keeley Hawes) cannot shake the feeling that Donna is hiding something, and wants to use her profiling skills to explore the case further. However, her skills start to fail her as she undergoes surgery in the present to have the bullet removed from her brain. Alex can only wait to see whether she will pull through – and meanwhile Gene’s determination leads him onto equally dangerous ground. Episode six airs Tuesday, June 15th @ 10:00 p.m. EST/PST on BBC America.

Gene puts the cuffs on Riley (Sam Spruell). Photo copyright of the BBC

As noted above, all photos copyright of the BBC, so please no unauthorized copying or duplicating of any kind. Thanks!

This Week On Ashes To Ashes – 06 – 08 -10

June 8, 2010

Keeley Hawes as DI Alex Drake. Photo copyright of the BBC

SPOILER ALERT!! - When a violent burglary occurs at Alex’s (Keeley Hawes) in-laws’ house, she comes face-to-face with their son Peter (Perry Millward) - the 14-year-old future-father of Molly (Grace Vance).  Alex is desperate to help Molly’s grandparents but Gene (Philip Glenister) – wanting a big collar to bury the press stories of police corruption – dismisses the case as trivial. When the fingerprints from the crime scene reveal the burglar was George Staines (a notorious gangster, now supposedly dead), Gene realizes this could be the catch he’s after. Alex remembers hearing stories about the burglary in her old life, and is convinced she’d remember if the culprit was as infamous as Staines. Gene’s determined to uncover the truth and get the headline he deserves, but will Alex’s loyalty to her in-laws and pent-up resentment of her ex-husband lead her down the wrong path? Alex finally gets to meet the mysterious man who has been circling her and he arrives with a proposition – is her desire to get back to Molly strong enough to become a corrupt cop? Episode Five airs Tuesday, June 8th @ 10:00 p.m. EST/PST on BBC America

Martin Summers (Adrian Dunbar) is the mysterious man from Alex's future. Photo copyright of the BBC

As noted above, all photos copyright of the BBC, so please no unauthorized copying or duplicating of any kind. Thanks!

This Week On Ashes To Ashes – 06 – 01 – 10

May 31, 2010

Someone from DCI Hunt's (Philip Glenister) past pays him a surprise visit to ask for his help. Photo copyright of the BBC

Gene Hunt (Philip Glenister) is visited by a former adversary from his old stomping ground of Manchester. Journalist Jackie Queen (Ruth Millar) had several run-ins with Gene in the past and this time she has a surprise in store – she’s pregnant with his baby.  Not one to miss out on a story, she’s also investigating the disappearance of northern teenagers that have arrived in London. She wants help to find one in particular – her niece Rachel (Kirsty-Leigh Porter) has run away and Jackie fears she’s been lured into the seedy underbelly of the capital. Alex (Keeley Hawes) is suspicious of Jackie. Also, with the threat of a transfer haunting Gene, Alex is desperate they get to the bottom of the corruption she believes is in the police force. But as the investigation progresses, evidence leads them to a man named Jarvis (John Bowe). On the surface he’s a legitimate business man, but they’re convinced he’s responsible for the murders of young girls. With an expensive lawyer and his smug demeanour, Jarvis appears untouchable and, worse, seems to have protection from within the Met itself. As the pressure mounts to find Rachel, the team is forced to acknowledge the force is being poisoned from the inside. Gene’s loyalty is tested as he and Alex are forced to put a stop to it, however messy the consequences.  Episode Four airs Tuesday, June 1st @ 10:00 p.m. EST/PST on BBC America

As noted above, photo copyright of the BBC, so please no unauthorized copying or duplicating of any kind. Thanks!

This Week On Ashes To Ashes – 05 – 25 – 10

May 25, 2010

DI Alex Drake (Keeley Hawes) and DCI Gene Hunt (Philip Glenister) head off to the crime scene. Photo copyright of the BBC

SPOILER ALERT!! - Animal rights activists have threatened a series of attacks in London and the first victim – the daughter of a commercial laboratory owner – is in hospital. Gene Hunt (Philip Glenister) orders his team not to sleep until those responsible are behind bars. Their first stop is a prison where Robin Elliot (David Bradley), a known animal rights activist, is serving time for killing a scientist in the 70′s. Alex (Keeley Hawes) is convinced Robin knows about the planned attacks, but with no contact with the outside world, there doesn’t appear to be any way for him to be involved. Robin’s eerily prescient knowledge of the future makes Alex think he could be involved not only with the case, but also with her own fate. Having heard the voices of ambulance men, Alex worries that hope is fading for her survival in the present day. Gene skirts closely towards a dangerous conflict with Supermac (Roger Allam), who warns him to toe the line or face the consequences. As Alex fights for her life and Gene fights for his career, can they prevent more casualties before time runs out? Episode three airs Tuesday, May 25th @ 10:00 p.m. EST/PST on BBC America

Robin Elliot (David Bradley) - prophet or phoney? Photo copyright of the BBC

On the move! DS Ray Carling (Dean Andrews), DC Chris Skelton (Marshall Lancaster) and DCI Hunt (Philip Glenister). Photo copyright of the BBC

Philip Glenister prepares for the next take. Photo copyright of the BBC

Keeley Hawes and Philip Glenister wait for the cameras to start rolling. Photo copyright of the BBC

As noted above, all photos copyright of the BBC, so please no unauthorized copying or duplicating of any kind. Thanks!

This Week On Ashes To Ashes – 05 – 18 – 10

May 18, 2010

DCI Gene Hunt (Philip Glenister) and his beloved Quattro. Photo copyright of the BBC

SPOILER ALERT!! - The team is on the hunt for major vehicle thief Jed Wicklow, but when a car chase leads to his death, Gene (Philip Glenister) stands accused of causing it through reckless driving. Alex (Keeley Hawes) is adamant that there was something wrong with Jed at the wheel and wants to prove that the crash wasn’t Gene’s fault. The deceased Jed was a Romany gypsy, and hostilities run high on the camp as the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) heavy-handedly try to uncover the circumstances of his death. But in an investigation that’s already met with resistence, someone in the police force also appears to be standing in their way. Gene needs to get the result he wants without treading on the toes of his revered superior. Detective Inspector Mackintosh (Roger Allam), known to all is “Supermac.” But will Alex be able to trust that he’ll not take the easy option of a cover-up? As the divide grows between Gene and Alex, she gets another visit from the mysterious strangers whose presence could be the key to her finding her way home. Episode two airs Tuesday, May 18th @ 10:00 p.m. EST/PST.

The team is on the move! Photo copyright of the BBC

As noted above, all photos copyright of the BBC, so please no unauthorized copying or duplicating of any kind. Thanks!

Ashes To Ashes’ Keeley Hawes Talks About DI Alex Drake

May 15, 2010

Ashes to Ashes' DI Alex Drake (Keeley Hawes) and DCI Gene Hunt (Philip Glenister). Photo copyright of the BBC

As MI5 agent Zoe Reynolds on the hit British TV spy drama series Spooks, Keeley Hawes risked her life in the defense of the realm from international terrorism. For the past three years, the actress has focused more on home-grown threats, specifically involving the sprawling metropolis of London, as DI Alex Drake in Ashes to Ashes, which is currently airing its third season in the UK.  

When a gunshot wound to the head “transports” Alex Drake back to the early 1980′s, she struggles to separate fact from fiction as she tries to find her way back home to the present day and to her daughter Molly. In the show’s second season, which premiered Tuesday, May 8th @ 10:00 p.m. EST/PST on BBC America, audiences continue along with Alex as she fights to get her real life back. The following is the second of two BBC America Ashes to Ashes Q &A’s with actress Keeley Hawes about her work on the series.  

As Ashes to Ashes continues, DI Alex Drake and the rest of the CID team are searching for suspects in an underground sewage system,. Luckily for Keeley Hawes, this scene didn’t set the tone for what her character could expect to get up to throughout the rest of the season.  

KEELEY HAWES - This season we get to see that Alex has calmed down a lot and has begun to settle into the 80′s environment. She now considers the people around her to be friends, and because we’ve moved on a year, things aren’t quite so heightened for her.  

I’ve found Alex really interesting to play this season, because the lines are blurring between what she thinks is real and what isn’t. She is now beginning to wonder whether the 2008 part of of her life, including her daughter Molly, only ever existed in her head. It’s definitely been an interesting angle to explore rather than the story simply concentrating on her trying to get back to the present.  

Viewers are also introduced to an enigmatic stranger who is watching the DI and trying to make contact with her in a mysterious manner.  

KH - A strange man keeps leaving Alex roses which she initially thinks is another puzzle. She starts to investigate further believing that if she solves the puzzle she may be able to go home. There are certainly lots of twists but I can’t give the game away!  

Since Alex first met ber boss, the brass DCI Gene Hunt (Philip Glenister), the pair have often clashed and enjoy a tempestuous relationship. Viewers are used to their onscreen bust-ups and fiery exchanges, however, Keeley believes they shar a mutual admiration for each other.  

KH - They do still have their ups and downs, but Gene is beginning to take onboard different ways of policing and is starting to understand forensics and the importance of collecting evidence. Occasionally he and Alex are quite in tune and they definitely admire each other to a certain extent.  

Keeley also reveals that there is a darker edge to this season.  

KH - When DS Mackintosh (Roger Allam) joins CID as Gene’s boss Alex instantly likes him but then she starts to see a darker side to his life. Roger Allam who plays “Supermac” is absolutely fantastic. He’s brought a mysterious side to the character and a darker side to the whole season, which we’re all really pleased with. The script writers have also explored Dean Andrews’ (DS Ray Carling), Marshall Lancaster’s (DC Chris Skelton) and Montserrat Lombard’s (WPC “Shaz” Granger) characters more this season, and we get to see a lot more of Chris’ and Shaz’s relationship.  

The 80′s was a time of flamboyant fashion, bright make-up and glitzy accessories, and Keeley admits that she had far more costume changes this season.  

KH - We haven’t gone down the silly 80′s fashion route because I don’t think Alex would wear those clothes. However, Alex definitely wears a lot more outfits this season and in one episode I think I have eight costume changes. I had one quite brilliant outfit which was a shirt with a giant pussy bow, covered in little anchors, tight jeans with red stripes down the side and anchor earrings which were on chains. It really was quite something. I also had a great Japanese look at one point. The costume department have gone to town with the details this season.  

Alex’s hair has also changed from a poodle perm to a more grown out look with a fringe. Keeley explains the reason behind the change.  

KH - My hair is now much shorter in real life because it had to undergo so much styling for the first season of Ashes followed by Mutual Friends that I had to chop it all off before it fell out. So for this season of Ashes I’ve now got a growing out perm – a bit like Cagney from Cagney and Lacey. Most of it is my own hair but I needed a bit of extra length at the back so I have a hairpiece that clips on easily.  

Although the drama itself is getting darker, Keeley admits that the set was full of laughs and there was good banter between cast and crew.  

KH - We all get on really well, thank goodness, and there was constant laughter on-set. Dean and I would regularly laugh together and, in fact, last season was the first time I’ve ever been asked to leave a set because I couldn’t stop laughing at Dean. I can honestly say we were all a bit better filming this season, but it was still very difficult not to crack up. However, laughing releases a lot of energy, so I think it is a healthy thing on-set.  

A rare treat for Keeley was driving the Quattro; an experience usually reserved for the one and only Gene Hunt.  

KH - I love driving the Quattro; the hand-break turns are particularly fun! However, there was one time when we were all in the car with a very expensive camera attached and Phil was driving. We were heading towards the end of the road, in the rain, and suddenly the brakes didn’t work! It was a hairy moment, but Phil is a very good driver and managed to stop the car; we are all still here, thank God!  

As noted above, photo copyright of the BBC, so please no unauthorized copying or duplicating of any kind. Thanks!

This Week On Ashes To Ashes – 05 – 11 – 10

May 11, 2010

Behind-the-scenes with Philip Glenister (DCI Gene Hunt) and Keeley Hawes (DI Alex Drake). Photo copyright of the BBC

SPOILER ALERT!! - When a dead man is found in a Soho strip club, it looks like a sex game has gone wrong. So when the deceased is discovered to be a police officer. Gene (Philip Glenister and Alex (Keeley Hawes) are ordered to keep the case under wraps. PC Sean Irvine was supposed to be clearing the streets of vice, but did he instead become seduced by it? When the pathologist uncovers signs that Sean was murdered, the team need to discover whether he was killed because he was a corrupt cop – or an honest one. As the case leads them into dangerous territory, Alex finds herself kidnapped by a man whose words threaten her whole perspective on this world. Only Gene can save her, but even if he gets there in time, Alex fears that someone else in 1982 knows her dark secret – that she’s from the future. Meanwhile, sounds and messages from the future suggest to Alex that her circumstances have changed. Lying with a bullet in her head on the wet ground of an abandoned boat, is it possible that someone has discovered her. Episode one airs Tuesday, May 11th @ 10:00 p.m. EST/PST

DC Chris Skelton (Marshall Lancaster) and DI Drake (Hawes) in Soho. Photo copyright of the BBC

As noted above, all photos copyright of the BBC, so please no unauthorized copying or duplicating of any kind. Thanks!

Ashes To Ashes’ Philip Glenister Talks About DCI Gene Hunt

May 10, 2010

Philip Glenister as DCI Gene Hunt in Ashes to Ashes. Photo copyright of the BBC

If you happened to be a member of the criminal element during the 1980′s in London, then Ashes to Ashes‘ DCI Gene Hunt was the last person you would want to meet in a proverbial dark alley. Not one to suffer fools gladly, he has even less tolerence for those caught breaking the law. A fair and honest cop, and very often a politically incorrect one, Gene does not fool around when it comes to cleaning up the streets of London and fighting crime.

Having broken in the character’s cowboy boots playing him for two seasons on Life on Mars, Philip Glenister brings DCI Hunt’s own brand of policing forward from the 70′s to the 80′s in Ashes to Ashes (season two of which begins airing on Tuesday, May 11th @ 10:00 p.m. EST/PST on BBC America). The following is the first of two BBC America Ashes to Ashes Q &A’s with the actor about his work on the series.

It’s true that over the last four years the public have taken the character of Gene Hunt to their hearts and Philip attributes this to Hunt’s ideals.

PHILIP GLENISTER - In this season of Ashes to Ashes, Gene is still out there being a maverick, but what I always say about him is that while he bends the rules, he never breaks them. He merely manipulates and stretches them a bit. If anything he is a decent and honest copper and he’ll usually only collar unsavory characters. I love the western connotation with Hunt – he is exactly like a sheriff and sees himself very much in that guise. However, the problem is that he is out of his depth in the 80′s metropolis of London and the bottom line is he is a 70′s copper at heart.

In this second season of Ashes to Ashes the action moves on a year from 1981 to 1982 and the CID team face tough times.

PG - Alex Drake (Keeley Hawes) becomes much more part of the team. But there is a police corruption theme running throughout the season, so it does feel darker than season one; the corruption breeds a lack of trust and coherence, which is unsettling for everybody. However, viewers can still expect moments of high campiness and there are some great one-liners.

Central to the police corruption theme is Gene’s new boss, Detective Superintendent “Supermac” Mackintosh (Roger Allam), who arrives in the first episode determined to restore the reputation of the police in the eyes of the media and the public.

PG - Supermac is a highly respected superintendent who has been in the police force for a long time. He trained at Hendon and has come up through the police ranks which gained him a lot of respect from his colleagues on the force. Supermac enters CID and basically says that the police need to regroup and be accountable. I think Gene agrees with him up to a point, but then certain events lead him to question Supermac’s motives.

Gene and Alex’s relationship also continues to be fiery with a hint of simmering sexual tension beneath the surface. Does Philip think they would work as a couple?

PG - If you just had a show based on “will they, won’t they,” it wouldn’t be that interesting; hopefully their relationship is a bit more complex than that. It’s the moment things spill over from a professional capacity to a personal one when complications set in and you start to question whether they would work as a couple. I think Gene is an enigma and I play him with ambiguity rather than having a preconceived idea of whether Gene fancies Alex or not. There are moments when he teases her and she teases him, but Gene will never give anything away.

Philip admits that the long hours on set did take their toll, but he clearly enjoyed working with the cast and production team who he shared plenty of laughs with.

PG - Filming eight episodes took six months so it was a long shoot, but a great bunch of people work on the show, which is one of the joys of the job. There were so many funny incidents; we laughed a lot – particularly Keeley and Dean Andrews (DS Ray Carling), who are real gigglers. In fact, they are the troublemakers! Dean’s laugh is like an animal’s and Keeley will just crack up out of nowhere. She’s pretty amazing because she can also cry on cue for scenes; her range of emotion is incredibly impressive.

Of course an interview about Gene Hunt wouldn’t be complete without asking about the love of his life – the Quattro. Philip chuckles as he recounts his experiences of driving what many people consider an antique.

PG - The stunt guys could just whizz past the cameras and do hand brake turns. I then had to get in the car for the interior shots and there would be two cameras stuck to the front and one on the side. I’d have to make sure I didn’t drive too close to the curb otherwise I would have taken one out on a lamppost. The camera stuck to the windshield also meant I couldn’t see anything out the front and the heavy equipment combined with actors, who had spent five-and-a-half months eating location food and syrup sponge, left the poor old Quattro scratching along the floor!

I always enjoy the driving stuff, though, especially throwing around a car which isn’t my own. We had two Quattros this time round, so we weren’t stuck if one broke down. In fact, we did have a couple of instances with the Quattro while filming this season, both involving the stunt men and not the cast I hasten to add. First a stunt guy smashed one of the car’s front lights when we were filming a chase scene and the two cars clipped each other. The second incident involved a scare when the Quattro had to hit one of the stuntmen. Unfortunately, when the car actually struck him, he accidently smashed the windscreen. Luckily he was alright.

As noted above, photo copyright of the BBC, so please no unauthorized copying or duplicating of any kind. Thanks!

Ashes To Ashes Returns To BBC America

April 29, 2010

Ashes to Ashes cast - Dean Andrews (DS Ray Carling), Keeley Hawes (DI Alex Drake), Philip Glenister (DCI Gene Hunt), Montserrat Lombard (WPC Sharon "Shaz" Granger) and Marshall Lancaster (DC Chris Skelton). Photo copyright of the BBC

BBC America’s Ashes to Ashes, the critically acclaimed sequel to the UK hit Life on Mars, continues by fast forwarding a year to 1982, where leg warmers are cool and fluorescent is the color of choice. While Thatcher is in her element at No. 10 Downing Street, bullish Detective Chief Inspector Gene Hunt (Philip Glenister, Cranford,Life on Mars) is back, policing the streets in his politically incorrect and foul-mouthed style. 

Season two of Ashes to Ashes premieres Tuesday, May 11th @ 10:00 p.m. EST/PST on BBC America. Sassy Detective Inspector Alex Drake (Keeley Hawes) continues her fiery relationship with Hunt, and though no nearer to getting back to her daughter, Alex believes she’s suspended in time and finally understands how the world around her works. But when she starts hearing news from the future, she realizes nothing is as it seems. Clinging on to fast fading hope, she discovers she may mot be alone in her predicament. A mysterious stranger who also seems to be stuck in 1982 is making Alex doubt her current world is merely a figment of her imagination. Is he a friend who can help her get home, or a foe who will destroy all she knows? 

And while Gene Hunt saved her younger self from the car bomb that killed her parents, can she ever trust him enough to share in her extraordinary scenario? As she struggles to stay alive long enough to find a way home, it appears she needs him more than ever before. “Alex becomes much more part of the team,” explains Philip Glenister. “But there is a police corruption theme running throughout the season, so it does feel darker than season one; the corruption breeds a lack of trust and coherence which is unbalancing for everybody. However, viewers can still expect moments of high campiness and there are some great one-liners.” 

DC Chris Skelton (Marshall Lancaster, Life on Mars) and WPC Sharon “Shaz” Granger (Montserrat Lomboard) couldn’t be happier. He’s still trying his best to be the perfect ‘Feminist” boyfriend and wants to take their relationship to the next level, but predictably DS Ray Carling (Dean Andrews, Life on Mars) continues to tease him about his romantic gestures. Ray is also struggling to contain his emotions about the Falklands War,blaming the “Argies” and throwing his weight fully behind Maggie Thatcher. However, more testing times lie ahead for the trio. 

Producer Beth Willis says, “The new season of Ashes to Ashes movies in a slightly different direction and we’ve really enjoyed developing the characters and Alex’s journey further. Her and Gene’s relationship is so complex; it is very sparky and they obviously care for each other in a begrudging manner, so it’s interesting to see how this evolves. Ray and Chris are still by Gene’s side, but when police force legend Detective Superintendent “Supermac” Mackintosh (Roger Allam, The Queen, V for Vendetta) starts working with the team it looks as if Gene’s equilibrium could be broken.” 

The arrival of “Supermac” seems like a blessing to the team because he’s been hailed as a star within the force and someone not to be messed with. However, it’s not long before Gene’s gut instinct tells him something isn’t quite right. Could this cop legend be up to no good?” 

As noted above, photo copyright of the BBC, so please no unauthorized copying or duplicating of any kind. Thanks!

Demons Comes To BBC America

December 2, 2009

Rupert Galvin (Philip Glenister, front) leads the fight against the forces of darkness in Demons. His team includes (L-R) Ruby (Holiday Grainger), Luke Rutherford (Christian Cooke) and Mina Harker (Zoe Trapper). Photo copyright of ITV

THE battle against the dark underworld of half-lives, monsters and inhumans lies deep beneath the streets of modern-day London in the U.S. premiere of Demons. This contemporary spin on the character of Van Helsing features Luke Rutherford (Christian Cooke) as an average teenager, but with the arrival of his dead father’s best friend Rupert Galvin (Philip Glenister, Life on Mars, Ashes to Ashes), Luke’s life is about to be flipped upside down. Galvin is a straight-talking, headstrong American who has come to tell Luke his secret destiny – he’s the real-life great-great grandson of Abraham Van Helsing, the vampire hunter in Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Luke’s destined to inherit the family mantle as a warrior in the coldest of wars against the supernatural entities behind every myth and legend from vampires to werewolves and all things that go bump in the night. Demons premieres Saturday, January 2nd, 2010 @ 10:00 p.m. EST/PST on BBC America

Christian Cooke as our young hero, Luke Rutherford. Photo copyright of ITV

Just another day (or night) on the job for Luke and company. Photo copyright of ITV

Richard Wilson as Father Simeon. Photo copyright of ITV

As noted above, all photos copyright of ITV, so please no unauthorized copying or duplicating of any kind. Thanks!


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