Shardlake | Series | Telescope Film
Shardlake

Shardlake

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  • Austria,
  • Hungary,
  • United States,
  • Romania,
  • United Kingdom
  • 2024
  • · 1 season
  • · 50m

Creators Stephen Butchard, C. J. Sansom
Cast Arthur Hughes, Anthony Boyle, Sean Bean, Babou Ceesay, Paul Kaye, Ruby Ashbourne Serkis
Genre Drama, Mystery

In the 16th century, young lawyer Matthew Shardlake is sent by Thomas Cromwell to the Scarnsea monastery to investigate a suspicious death. When the resident monks prove uncooperative, Shardlake's investigation uncovers major corruption that threatens him and the government he serves.

Stream Shardlake

What are critics saying?

83

The A.V. Club by Kayleigh Dray

Perhaps one of the best things about Shardlake is also its worst: The series is a microscopically mini one at just four episodes long. On the one hand, this makes for tight storytelling, very little bloat, and an insatiable desire to binge binge binge like mad until you get to the very end. On the other hand, however, it all feels as if it’s over far too quickly.

80

Radio Times by James Hibbs

More than just acting as an effective story in its own right, this season also acts as the perfect set-up of a world for additional stories, with engaging characters and an enticing historical backdrop.

80

The Times by Carol Midgley

The unravelling is well done, even delivering a little love story along the way.

80

The Guardian by Lucy Mangan

Shardlake is prone to delivering dramatic monologues, when alone in his bedroom, usually as he divests himself of the painful brace he wears to help him manage life with scoliosis. But this is to quibble with an otherwise hugely well-executed and enjoyable (I forgot to mention Peter Firth having a whale of a time as the villainous Duke of Norfolk!) addition to the Tudor drama canon.

80

Los Angeles Times by Robert Lloyd

The actor [Arthur Hughes], who anchors every scene he plays, has charisma to spare, and, assuming an audience arrives, this will one day be characterized as a star-making performance. .... Adapted by Stephen Butchard (“The Good Mothers”) in four relatively lean, well-packed episodes, the series includes a complement of classic procedural scenes. .... It’s no surprise to learn that the series was partially filmed in Transylvania. We are on unfamiliar familiar ground, and it feels good.

80

The Observer (UK) by Barbara Ellen

This new series goes a long way to doing the books justice.

75

The Mercury News by Randy Myers

Director Justin Chadwick keeps it all running at a fast clip while the Hughes/Boyle odd-couple pairing clicks. And the historical elements punch up a convoluted mystery that has surprising ties to actual events.

70

Collider by Maggie Boccella

For all its masterwork in laying out a Tudor setting, and its excellent performances, the real framework of the series still manages to poke through. At its heart, Shardlake is still very much a murder mystery, a procedural wrapped in codpieces and capes.

70

Wall Street Journal by John Anderson

"Shardlake" is nuanced enough in its political profile of early 16th-century England, less so in the delivery of some overheated dialogue and the impression it seems to have that everyone spoke to each other during that period as if delivering royal decrees.

63

Slant Magazine by Niv M. Sultan

Its surfeit of broad, melodramatic commentary grants only the illusion of depth to its characters. Shardlake gestures at their inner lives and competing political visions but barely dips past the surface of their psyches.