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» » State of Mind (2003)

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  • comment
    • Author: Orll
    Typical made-for-TV Thriller in the mode of "Cracker" but doesn't really deliver. The plot could have been told in a good episode of "The Bill". Niamh Cusack kept trying to be Amanda Burton in "Silent Witness" which was fairly irritating. Ending too predictable.
  • comment
    • Author: EROROHALO
    Utterly predictable silly show about a man who has killed his wife by mowing her down when driving and claimed he had blacked out. Why was he still driving a car? Why did he still feel able to drive a car having killed his wife with one? This question has not occurred to the writers. The story then witters on about a psychologist and her failing marriage which is tied into the failing marriage of wife-killing blackout driver. An omniscient mother and one dimensional child are thrown in for good measure, and the whole builds up to a predictable denouement and crashing finale. Are police psychologists so easily taken in? Deadful writing that the actors do their best with, but they are doomed to failure. This is on a par with a Harlequin Romance. Don't waste your time watching this one unless that's what you are aiming for.
  • comment
    • Author: Inabel
    "I thought I'd be locked away in a padded cell and they'd throw away the key" (Thus is a paraphrased snatch of dialogue from "State of Mind".

    One wonders in what tangled forest Paula Milne and her co-writer found the magic mushrooms they must have eaten, to create this feeble "whodunnit" and bring such rubbish to our screens. A padded cell should indeed be left available.

    Niamh Cusack did her best, (as did the other actors) but surely her talent deserves a better vehicle than this. The height of absurdity has been reached, and this particular "State of Mind" is best buried and forgotten, and certainly not just "placed in a box and locked away in a drawer".
  • comment
    • Author: Phenade
    Whatever happened to British TV drama? From John Major through Tony Blair, the focus of the genre appears to have shifted from social realism to smugly normative women-focused tales about the piddling domestic problems of nice middle class professionals.

    (Or perhaps TVNZ doesn't buy the good stuff? Please let that be what it is...)

    The writer's long career in soaps probably explains why the dialogue is made up mostly of stale clichés. Niamh Cusack's performance is strong on meaningful looks, each held by the director for at least half a dozen beats longer than they deserve. Baleful looks, however, are a poor substitute for depth of character, if the writer has failed to provide such material for actors to work with.

    Of course this is theoretically a thriller, about a murder investigation; but that's not as important as the central character's failing marriage and its attendant problems. Is Cusack's character's husband a complete bastard? Will her son be utterly traumatized by the marriage break up? Making these the central issues isn't a sign of insight -- it indicates a profoundly narcissistic identification by the writer and director with a character who should be getting on with her job.

    Lynda La Plante knows how to write this stuff so that it feels as if it matters and involves viewers other than housebound neurotics ; evidently Paula Milne isn't up to the task.
  • comment
    • Author: Gogal
    I watched this with my family and the quality strikes you from the first. It avoids the clichés of other TV dramas on the whole. The acting of Niamh Cusack and Dominic Mafham was truly believable. Hugh Mitchell as the son was just right. The overt plot was rather predictable. A question of whether to believe the story of a killer. Is he ill or is he a murderer? Of course, like all serious drama, this was just a vehicle for the real story of loss, betrayal and redemption. The harrowing scenes of betrayal are bound to strike a chord with any sensitive person. They are almost too unbearable to watch. Buy it. You won't be disappointed.
  • Cast overview, first billed only:
    Niamh Cusack Niamh Cusack - Dr. Grace Hazlett
    Rowena Cooper Rowena Cooper - Dr. Isabel Hazlett
    Andrew Lincoln Andrew Lincoln - Julian Latimer
    Deborah Findlay Deborah Findlay - D.C.I. Stella Munroe
    Dorian Healy Dorian Healy - Det. Supt. Martin Callum
    Dominic Mafham Dominic Mafham - Carl Watson
    Hugh Mitchell Hugh Mitchell - Adam Watson
    Saira Todd Saira Todd - Carly Lucas
    Stuart Goodwin Stuart Goodwin - D.S. Devlin
    Jason Watkins Jason Watkins - Nathan Saunders
    Juliet Seal Juliet Seal - Sally
    Dani Biernat Dani Biernat - Nina Latimer
    Simon Fielder Simon Fielder - Stephen Lucas
    Niall Costigan Niall Costigan - Boatyard Lad
    Dearbhla Molloy Dearbhla Molloy - Wanda Latimer
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