Code of a Killer
{{short description|Three-part British television series}}
{{Use British English|date=November 2019}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2019}}
{{Infobox television
| image = Code of a Killer Intertitle April2015.png
| caption = Opening title
| genre = Docudrama
| creator = Michael Crompton
| based_on = Sir Alec Jeffreys' discovery of DNA fingerprinting
| writer = Michael Crompton
| director = James Strong
| starring = {{Plainlist|
}}
| composer = Glenn Gregory (credited as Glen Gregory)
| country = United Kingdom
| language = English
| num_series = 1
| num_episodes = 2 (as aired);
3 (streaming)
| executive_producer = Simon Heath
| producer = Priscilla Parish
| runtime = 2 x 65 minutes (as aired);
3 x 45 minutes (streaming)
| company = World Productions
| channel = ITV
| first_aired = {{Start date|2015|04|06|df=yes}}
| last_aired = {{End date|2015|04|13|df=yes}}
| cinematography = Matt Gray BSC
}}
Code of a Killer is a three-part[https://acorn.tv/codeofakiller Code of a Killer] Acorn Media. Retrieved 14 October 2020. British police drama television series which tells the true story of Alec Jeffreys' discovery of DNA fingerprinting and its introductory use by Detective David Baker in catching the double murderer Colin Pitchfork. Filming commenced in late September 2014, and the program aired on the ITV network, on 6 and 13 April 2015.{{cite web|url=https://www.itvmedia.co.uk/highlights/New-commissions/code-of-a-killer|title=ITV Media commissions new drama "Code of a Killer"|publisher=ITV Media|date=16 May 2014|accessdate=18 May 2014|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140519003238/http://www.itvmedia.co.uk/highlights/New-commissions/code-of-a-killer|archivedate=19 May 2014|df=dmy-all}} Endemol Shine handled international distribution of the series.{{cite web|url=https://www.world-productions.com/productions/code-of-a-killer|title=Code of a Killer - World Productions|website=World Productions|accessdate=14 October 2020}}
Plot
Set over a nearly four-year period from 1983 to 1987, DCS David Baker leads an investigation into the vicious murders of the two Leicestershire teenage schoolgirls, Lynda Mann and Dawn Ashworth. Meanwhile, Alec Jeffreys is an ambitious scientist who has recently discovered a remarkable method to read a person's DNA and, from it, generate a unique DNA fingerprint. Convinced one local person committed both crimes, Baker approaches Jeffreys to utilise his scientific technique to solve the murders. The first-ever DNA manhunt follows, involving the blood testing of many men — all in the aid of catching the killer.
Cast
{{Cast listing|
- John Simm as Alec Jeffreys
- Anna Madeley as Sue Jeffreys
- David Threlfall as DCS David Baker
- Lorcan Cranitch as DI Alan Madden
- Jaz Deol as DC Taran Kholi
- Andrew Tiernan as DS Geoff Taylor
- Robert Glenister as DCC Chapman
- Lydia Rose Bewley as Vicky Wilson
- Farzana Dua Elahe as Tania Patel
- Paul Copley as Sidney Jeffreys
- Ged Simmons as Eddie Eastwood
- Shirley Dixon as Joan Jeffreys
- Hannah Walters as Kath Eastwood
- Dorothy Atkinson as Barbara Ashworth
- Nathan Wright as Colin Pitchfork
- Adam Nagaitis as Ian Whenby
- Jessica Woods as Carole Pitchfork
- Neil Edmond as Robin Ashworth
- Darren Bancroft as Mr. Hopkirk
}}
Production
=Development=
Code of a Killer was commissioned by ITV's Director of Drama Steve November and Controller of Drama Victoria Fea on 16 May 2014.{{cite web|url=https://twitter.com/itvmedia/status/467258172718477312|title=ITV Media on Twitter announces new Code of a Killer commission.|publisher=ITV Media|date=16 May 2014|accessdate=18 May 2014}} The series was developed with the participation of retired Professor Sir Alec Jeffreys and former Detective Chief Superintendent David Baker. It was written by Michael Crompton, directed by James Strong, produced by Priscilla Parish, and executive produced by Simon Heath for World Productions. Filming began in late September 2014, and the episodes were shown on 6 and 13 April 2015 at 9:00 p.m. on the ITV network.
Broadcast
The series premiered in Australia on BBC First on 19 September 2015.{{cite web|publisher=The Green Room|author=Purcell, Charles|url=http://community.foxtel.com.au/t5/Foxtel-Blog/NEW-THIS-WEEK-Sep-14-Ballers-Nikita-Code-Of-A-Killer-Rugby-World/ba-p/90850|title=NEW THIS WEEK (Sep 14): Ballers, Nikita, Code Of A Killer, Rugby World Cup and live sport|date=10 September 2015|accessdate=11 September 2015|archivedate=11 September 2015|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150911033929/http://community.foxtel.com.au/t5/Foxtel-Blog/NEW-THIS-WEEK-Sep-14-Ballers-Nikita-Code-Of-A-Killer-Rugby-World/ba-p/90850}}
Episodes
Originally aired in 2015 in the UK and Australia as two 65-minute episodes;{{cite web |last1=Amazon UK |first1=Prime Video |title=Watch Code of a Killer |url=https://www.amazon.co.uk/Code-of-a-Killer/dp/B00X4SR37I |website=Amazon UK}} currently streams online as three 45-minute episodes{{cite web |last1=Amazon Prime |first1=Prime Video |title=Watch Code of a Killer |url=https://www.amazon.com/Code-of-a-Killer/dp/B06VSWH3TF |website=Amazon US}}{{cite web |last1=hoopla |title=Code of a Killer - Season 1 (2015) |url=https://www.hoopladigital.com/television/Code-of-a-Killer-Season-1-David-Threlfall/12180830 |website=Hoopla Digital}} plus one 28-minute ‘Behind the Scenes’ special. The episode descriptions below are for the (current) thee-episode format, while air dates and viewership data apply to the (original) two-episode format.
class="wikitable plainrowheaders" width="100%" style="background:#FFFFFF;"
!style="background: #bfe0bf;"|# !style="background: #bfe0bf;"|Title !style="background: #bfe0bf;"|Directed by !style="background: #bfe0bf;"|Written by !style="background: #bfe0bf;"|Original air date !style="background: #bfe0bf;"|UK viewers (millions) |
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=1 |Title=Episode One |DirectedBy=James Strong |WrittenBy=Michael Crompton |OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|2015|04|06|df=yes}} |Aux4=7.44 |ShortSummary=In late 1983, in a small village outside Leicester, 15-year-old Lynda Mann is raped and strangled. A year on, after an exhaustive but fruitless search for her killer, Detective Chief Superintendent David Baker is forced to scale down the investigation. Meanwhile, at the University of Leicester, scientist Dr Alec Jeffreys invents a remarkable technique to read DNA (found in every living thing) — and create from it a genetic "fingerprint" unique to the being it came from — something never before achieved. His discovery is first put to use in an immigration case, successfully proving the parentage of a young Ghanaian boy and preventing his deportation. The acceptance of Jeffreys’s findings in a court of law opens the door to DNA testing, and he and his university laboratory are swamped by paternity and immigration cases. Summer 1986, and 15-year-old Dawn Ashworth goes missing — last seen a hundred yards from where Lynda’s body was discovered. The police initiate an intensive search for her. Where is she, and what happened to her? |LineColor=bfe0bf }} {{Episode list |EpisodeNumber=2 |Title=Episode Two |DirectedBy=James Strong |WrittenBy=Michael Crompton |OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|2015|04|13|df=yes}} |Aux4=6.99 |ShortSummary=Two days after her disappearance, Dawn Ashworth’s body is found hidden in undergrowth — only a few hundred yards from where Lynda’s body was discovered less than three years earlier. Like Lynda, she has been raped and strangled. DCS Baker is back on the case — convinced one man is responsible for both assaults. This time, the investigation bears fruit. A teenager from the area, seen acting suspiciously during the search, confesses to her killing under lengthy police questioning. However, he refuses to admit he had anything to do with Lynda Mann’s death. Reading about Jeffreys’s DNA work in a local paper, Baker approaches him at the university — perhaps this new DNA test can prove the teenager’s involvement in Lynda’s death as well? Jeffreys is hesitant — the DNA sample from that murder scene is nearly three years old, and his technique was not designed for criminal investigation. Furthermore, with the use of such DNA testing in legal cases currently limited to paternity and immigration lawsuits, would such evidence be accepted in a criminal court? Jeffreys proceeds, but his testing shows not only that the teenager did not kill Lynda Mann, but that he wasn’t involved in Dawn’s murder, either — his confession to the police was false. Although this is a huge setback for the investigation, Jeffreys does succeed in generating DNA fingerprints of the (unknown) assailant from both attacks, and the two match each other — confirming Baker’s theory that the same person murdered both girls. |LineColor=bfe0bf }} {{Episode list |EpisodeNumber=3 |Title=Episode Three |DirectedBy=James Strong |WrittenBy=Michael Crompton |OriginalAirDate=n/a |Aux4=n/a |ShortSummary=In early January 1987, the testing program begins in earnest. Young men from the three-village area nearest the two assaults voluntarily line up to provide blood samples for DNA fingerprinting. Initial turnout is good, but it soon becomes evident that generating the profiles will be a slow process. On the plus side, only a fraction of the estimated 5,000 samples to be taken will need full genetic fingerprinting, as many may be excluded based on attributes such as blood type. Even so, for those 1,000 or so remaining samples, the Forensic Science Service estimates that completing the DNA profiling will take five months — likely longer. Meanwhile, Jeffreys is temporarily forced off the project when he falls ill with a viral infection, and is briefly hospitalised. Though his health issues have little impact on the pace of blood-sample testing (where his role is largely supervisory), the program’s slow progress, high cost and ongoing failure to find a new suspect cause frustration and second-guessing on multiple fronts. There is pressure on the police to either show results, or cut their losses and end the program. |LineColor=bfe0bf }} |
Reception
=Critical reception=
The drama received a mixed reception. The first part was criticised for dramatic sluggishness and a reliance on crime-show clichés in the portrayal of the two main characters. The depiction of Alec Jeffreys as the stereotypical absent-minded "boffin" was cited by several reviewers. Gerard O'Donovan in The Daily Telegraph called the show's version of him a "stock obsessive boffin so wedded to his lab instruments that his marriage was permanently on the brink of collapse".{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/tv-and-radio-reviews/11518154/Code-of-a-Killer-review-not-a-trace-of-tension.html|title=Code of a Killer, review: 'not a trace of tension'|author=O'Donovan, Gerard|work=Telegraph.co.uk|date=6 April 2015|accessdate=14 October 2020}} Julia Raeside in The Guardian wrote, "There are obligatory scenes in which Jeffreys misses a school play and receives a phone call from his wife pronouncing, 'Your dinner’s in the dog.' There are only so many times co-workers can remark, 'Don’t work too late' or 'Aren’t you going home?' before the hammering repetition starts to cause a dent in your enjoyment."{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2015/apr/07/code-of-a-killer-review-john-simm|author=Simm, John|title=Code of a Killer review – this white-coated automaton is no Turing or Hawking|work=The Guardian|date=7 April 2015|accessdate=14 October 2020}} Chris Bennion in The Independent concluded that "Sadly this drama had the fingerprints of countless other by-numbers crime thrillers all over it."{{cite web|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/tv/reviews/code-of-a-killer-itv-review-a-stodgy-seenitbefore-crime-drama-10173620.html|author=Raeside, Julia|title=Code of a Killer, ITV, review: A stodgy, seen-it-before crime drama|work=The Independent|date=14 April 2015|accessdate=14 October 2020}}
Alex Hardy in The Times was less critical, giving the show four stars out of five and saying that "this fact-based drama managed to balance tragedy with optimism", but added that it "inevitably contained elements of soap".{{cite web|url=https://www.thetimes.com/sunday-times-100-tech/hardware-profile/article/tv-review-code-of-a-killer-how-to-be-a-young-billionaire-hm67d5m0ztx|title=TV review: Code of a Killer; How to Be a Young Billionaire|work=The Times|date=7 April 2015 |access-date=6 June 2015}}{{cite web|url=http://www.leicestermercury.co.uk/Code-Killer-reviews-TV-pundits-thoughts-ITV-drama/story-26294012-detail/story.html|title=Code of a Killer reviews: What TV pundits thought of ITV drama|work=Leicester Mercury|accessdate=6 June 2015|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150810172020/http://www.leicestermercury.co.uk/Code-Killer-reviews-TV-pundits-thoughts-ITV-drama/story-26294012-detail/story.html|archivedate=10 August 2015|url-status=dead}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{IMDb title|id=3847626|title=Code of a Killer}}
- [http://britishtvdetectives.blogspot.com/2017/02/code-killer-tv-review.html Code of a Killer] at British TV Detectives
Category:2015 British television series debuts
Category:2015 British television series endings
Category:2010s British drama television series
Category:2010s British crime television series
Category:2010s British television miniseries
Category:1980s in Leicestershire
Category:British English-language television shows
Category:British television docudramas
Category:Genetics in the United Kingdom
Category:ITV television dramas
Category:Science and technology in Leicestershire
Category:Serial drama television series
Category:Television series by World Productions
Category:Television series set in 1984
Category:Television shows set in England