Martin Shaw and Lee Ingleby are currently filming four new, feature-length episodes of Inspector George Gently.
The series, adapted by Peter Flannery from Alan Hunters novels, stars Shaw as former Met Detective Gently who has moved to Northumberland, where he and sidekick Bacchus (Ingleby) keep order in a society which is rapidly changing.
Due for transmission on BBC One later this year, the series is currently filming on location in Durham and the North East.
Flannery says: “Gently and Bacchus return to my home turf of Durham and Northumberland with plenty more murders and cases to solve. It’s 1968 and there are huge changes taking place in society, and hopefully our series continues to give a real portrait of the age.”
Written by Flannery, the first film, Gently With Class, sees a darker side of 1968 as the social landscape of the Western World is being shaken to its core. In Paris, riots rage as the workers and students take to the streets. In the United States, thousands rally against the Vietnam War. And in England, antipathy for the upper class’ outmoded social graces and their abuse of privilege is growing by the day.
The indefatigable Chief Inspector George Gently and Detective Sergeant John Bacchus experience the inflated authority of their ‘social betters’ first hand, when a beautiful young girl called Ellen Mallam is found dead in the passenger seat of a an upturned car, registered to local aristocrats.
Guest stars include Roger Lloyd Pak and Geraldine Somerville as Lord and Lady Blackstone; with James Norton, Nick Hendrix, Christopher Fairbank and Fred Pearson.
The second film, Gently Northern Soul, written by David Kane (The Field of Blood, Sea Of Souls), sees the racial unrest that is sweeping the United States reach British shores as Enoch Powell launches his tirade against immigration. But racial harmony can be found at the ‘all-nighters’ that take place in 1968, where disillusioned young people, black and white, escape the boredom of factory life to dance the night away to imported soul music.
In Newcastle, the haven of equality found at the Carlton Ballroom all-nighter is destroyed when a young black girl, Dolores Kenny, is murdered, leading Gently to uncover a disturbing and racialist undercurrent growing within the local community. Guest stars include Leonora Crichlow, Eamonn Walker, Philip Correia, Pippa Bennett-Warner, Gary Carr, John Bowler and Maggie O’Neill.
In the third 90-minute film, written by Simon Block, Gently and Bacchus are thrown into an emotionally-wrought case when a middle class couple’s adopted child is kidnapped. It takes them to a mother and baby home where young single mothers are forced to give up their infants, where the shame of illegitimacy still burns the cheeks of single mothers.
The final film this series, written by Peter Flannery, sees Gently’s enemies from his London Met days coming after him. Gently finds himself suspended from duty – powerless, unprotected and persecuted. Gently must confront his deepest fears and fight to the death…