
Sherwood
2022
Synopsis
Two shocking and unexpected murders shatter an already fractured community leading to one of the largest manhunts in British history.
Trailer

Cast

Lorraine Ashbourne
Daphne Sparrow

Adam Hugill
Scott Rowley

Perry Fitzpatrick
Rory Sparrow

David Morrissey
DCS Ian St Clair

Philip Jackson
Mickey Sparrow

Bill Jones
Ronan Sparrow

Lesley Manville
Julie Jackson

Claire Rushbrook
Cathy Rowley

Michael Balogun
Harry Summers

Christine Bottomley
Rachel Crossley

Stephen Dillane
Roy Branson

Monica Dolan
Ann Branson

Robert Emms
Samuel Warner

Robert Glenister
DI Kevin Salisbury

Andrea Lowe
DI Taylor

Terence Maynard
DS Cleaver

Oliver Huntingdon
Ryan Bottomley

Clare Holman
Helen St Clair
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Comments
10 Comments

Episode 2 had me hooked thought it was going to be really good but personally rubbish I would not recommend it the story could have been done in 4 episodes or less disappointed very disappointed.

Episode One was interesting from the perspective of one who lived through the Strike and was very familiar with pit villages and mines. Without a doubt the legacy of bad feeling still lurks beneath the surface . Thatcher, policing, Unions and ordinary people were involved . All the unrest of 1984 could resurface in 2022, with this current government. All the signs are there I look forward to see how this series progresses. A very good start.

The background to this show is fascinating and, mostly, handled well,. The notorious miners' strikes of 1984 in Britain, and the way they polarised and divided the mining communities themselves, and all of Britain, has left a black stain on British society, and particularly on the Metropolitan police force who used a very heavy hand against the striking miners. In present-day Sherwood, a lone archer fires at people in a now depressed mining town full of bitter memories of rival unions and collaborators, and we are invited to wonder if the killer of at least one old miner agitator might somehow be connected to the rumour of undercover metropolitan police officers, sent to spy on the miners. While stretching the obvious Robin Hood comparison a bit thinly, nevertheless the ingredients are here for a half-decent if somewhat improbable thriller. But (as so often in what passes for cutting edge TV drama these days) where things fall apart is with the sometimes ridiculous coincidences on which the plot hinges. A Met officer returning to the town for a single day meets an old flame in the supermarket. Well imagine that. Then it turns out the same old flame is now best friends with the cops nemesis from back in their raw recruit days - the same cop who is now his local, superior liasion. The outlaw Archer, and still another man, also on the run for murder (he's killed his daughter-in-law for reasons that seem completely unconnected), are being hunted by 'hundreds' of Met officers through Sherwood Forest, yet both of them, coincidentally, turn up at a remote campsite at precisely the same time, just as the two camping strangers conveniently decide to take an unexplained walk, leaving cooked food on the pan (no animals in this forest?), their tent wide open and - why not? - both of their cellphones charging on their sleeping bags. With the hundreds of cops, sniffer dogs and even helicopters searching the woods, the two campers are somehow entirely oblivious to the ongoing search, as if the woods were not just a few hundreds acres of woodland but the Amazonian jungle. And what about their phones? No one thought to ring them to let them know 'the biggest manhunt' in recent British history was going on around them? Oh, and though the hundreds of cops can't find their elusive archer, they do almost immediately come across the note he leaves for them, stuck with an arrow to a random tree. What's that line about not being able to see the woods for the trees? Maybe the needle in the haystack is the better analogy. And on and on it goes. So that what looks quite promising in the first couple of episodes is just a mess by three and four and five. It's a lucky thing that this is just six episodes long: the dumb desire to find out 'whodunnit' can only take so many scowling miners in flashback and horribly choreographed search scenes in the woods where extras dressed as coppers plod through the ferns and wonder, as I kept wondering myself, if they weren't just wasting their time.


















