The Gold (TV series)
The Gold is a British drama television series written by Neil Forsyth and co-produced by his Tannadice Pictures production label. It stars Hugh Bonneville, Dominic Cooper, Charlotte Spencer, Sean Harris, Jack Lowden and Tom Cullen and is a dramatisation of events around the Brink's-Mat robbery in 1983. It is directed by Aneil Karia and Lawrence Gough. The first episode was previewed at the BFI Southbank on 17 January,[citation needed] and aired on BBC One from 12 February 2023, with all episodes simultaneously available on BBC iPlayer. It began streaming on Paramount+ in September 2023.[1] The BBC commissioned a second series in November 2023.[2] SynopsisThe series covers the 1983 Brink's-Mat robbery in which £26 million (equivalent to £111 million in 2023[3]) worth of gold bullion, diamonds, and cash was stolen from a warehouse near Heathrow Airport, and the widespread events that followed over the following decade. At the time it was the biggest robbery in history, and led to a number of international criminal investigations.[4] CastMain
Recurring
Episodes
ProductionThe series was commissioned by the BBC in August 2021.[6] The project was announced to have started principal photography in April 2022 with Bonneville, Lowden, Spencer, Cooper and Harris all revealed to be cast and Karia announced as director and Forsyth's Tannadice Pictures producing.[7] Filming took place in the UK and Spain and locations included Dorchester Prison in July 2022.[8] The show was renewed for a second series in November 2023 with filming scheduled to start in January 2024. Returning cast members include Hugh Bonneville, Charlotte Spencer, Emun Elliott, Tom Cullen, Stefanie Martini and Sam Spruell.[9] BroadcastThe BBC released the first trailer for the show in on 20 January 2023.[10] The first episode aired in the UK on BBC One on 12 February 2023 with all episodes immediately available on BBC iPlayer in UHD picture quality.[11] ReceptionHugo Rifkind of The Times remarked of the series, "it's tremendous. I'm not sure there's been a drama like it in years".[12] In the Sunday Times, Camilla Long said The Gold was “astonishingly, lavishly, well realised”,[13] while Esquire said that The Gold was “British TV at its best” and had “all the hallmarks of a crime classic”.[14] Radio Times said it was "an intricately crafted crime drama".[15] Euan Franklin of Culture Whisper said The Gold "proves that shows dealing in largely British matters are just as ambitious as prestige American television".[16] The New Statesman called it "outstandingly enjoyable TV",[17] with the Evening Standard calling it "a truly smart British crime drama with a classic feel and a knockout cast".[18] Ellen E. Jones of The Guardian dubbed it an "ever-enjoyable ride".[19] Nick Hilton of The Independent remarked the show was "a lively, creative piece of work from writer-creator Neil Forsyth, which bubbles away with the vigour of a red-hot crucible".[20] There was some criticism of the perceived sympathetic portrayal of Kenneth Noye from the family of the man he murdered and one of the police officers involved in his conviction.[21][22] AccoladesThe series was nominated for Best Drama Series at the Royal Television Society Programme Awards.[23] In March 2024, the series was nominated in the Best Drama category at the 2024 British Academy Television Awards.[24] Neil Forsyth was nominated for Best Writer Film and TV at the 2023 Scottish BAFTAS.[25] BookScreenwriter Neil Forsyth co-wrote a book with Thomas Turner entitled The Gold: The real story behind Brink's-Mat: Britain's biggest heist and published by Penguin Random House, which had involved extensive interviews with some of the major characters involved.[26] Forsyth commented on the morality of the story, saying they were not seeking "a black-and-white reading of it. No-one in the show is an out-and-out criminal living in a world dictated by criminality. They've got families and lives". Forsyth gives historical context and says, "Social mobility is an interesting aspect, because it was obviously a theme of the time in the 1980s. I think we examine that...Criminality is a tool which they're trying to use to achieve something".[27] See also
References
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