Coldwater | Series | Telescope Film
Coldwater

Coldwater

A man in the midst of a mid-life crisis moves his family to a remote Scottish village, only to find himself entangled in a dangerous friendship with a sinister neighbour.

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What are critics saying?

80

Radio Times by Tilly Pearce

There’s certainly some gripes to have with Coldwater, every now and again doing something so wild it throws you out of the realistic world that’s been created, and sometimes edging over the thrilling-ridiculous line in the wrong direction. But it does pull itself back when it needs to, creating a show that is all too easy to want more of.

80

The Times by Ben Dowell

Later episodes the sheer craziness occasionally threatens to overwhelm the dramatic structure. But the taut way in which Ireland mixes believable domesticity with moments of almost grand guignol horror, alongside the excellent ensemble performances, mean the reins are held tightly enough to make this bold and ballsy show just about work.

80

The Telegraph by Anita Singh

It follows the beats of a straightforward drama but there are overtones of horror and moments of off-kilter comedy that give Coldwater an unsettling tone.

70

Collider by Jasneet Singh

Coldwater may not be breaking any new ground, but its six episodes are still time well spent. Between the characters and the atmosphere, it's hard not to get sucked into the creepy whirlwind of murder and mayhem that resides in this seemingly quaint town.

60

Decider by Joel Keller

There’s a lot of entertaining weirdness going on in Coldwater, so much so that the problems we have with the characters and plotting might end up being overridden by it. So, even if the show isn’t all that good, it might still be fun to watch.

60

The Guardian by Lucy Mangan

It’s quality hokum.

40

The Independent by Nick Hilton

Despite some interest in examining the issue of violence against women through the prism of the psychological thriller, Coldwater ends up rushed and schlocky, like so much that is carelessly put out on British TV.

20

i by Ed Power

It takes the serious subjects of PTSD and anger management and twists them into grim parody.