But this isn't US TV. The writer, Chris Chibnall, claims he got advice from experts regarding British court cases and that they can do things like that there. When challenged on the leading question, Bishop cited the CCTV recordings from the hotel timestamping a late-night visit Ellie made to Hardy's room.
The bottom line is that Chibnall was showing how a seemingly slam-dunk case for the prosecution can be destroyed by a few mistakes on the part of Hardy, Ellie, the rest of the police and the townsfolk. He was also showing the audience that we shouldn't assume Hardy had done due diligence with the investigation in series 1 and that we should have paid closer attention. The story is as much about Hardy's fall from competence as a detective as it is about Joe Miller getting caught and convicted.
I wouldn't be surprised too if Chris Chibnall was also showing the flip side of how TV and movie court cases are typically portrayed. Usually there's someone fighting for justice who's cutting corners to get the suspect behind bars. The audience is rooting for that person to win and they ignore or choose to ignore any mistakes, figuring it all gets worked out in the end and justice is done. Instead, Broadchurch 2 showed us how cutting corners can come back to bite someone in the ass -- as it did Hardy -- and all the fall-out from mistakes like that.
P.S., Hardy is a Detective Inspector, that is, he's a D.I.
reply
share