Cracker (British TV series)

{{short description|British television crime drama series (1993–2006)}}

{{Use British English|date=November 2018}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2020}}

{{Infobox television

| image = Robcolcractit.png

| runtime = 50 mins. (Series 1–3)
120 mins. (Specials)

| creator = Jimmy McGovern

| starring = Robbie Coltrane
Geraldine Somerville
Christopher Eccleston
Ricky Tomlinson
Lorcan Cranitch
Barbara Flynn
Kieran O'Brien

| executive_producer = Sally Head

| producer = Gub Neal
Paul Abbott
Hilary Bevan Jones
John Chapman

| company = Granada Television

| location = Manchester, England

| language = English

| country = United Kingdom

| network = ITV

| first_aired = {{start date|1993|9|27|df=y}}

| last_aired = {{end date|2006|10|1|df=y}}

| num_series = 3 (+ 2 specials)

| num_episodes = 25

| list_episodes = List of Cracker episodes

}}

Cracker is a British crime drama series produced by Granada Television for ITV, created and principally written by Jimmy McGovern. Set in Manchester, the series follows a criminal psychologist (or "cracker"), Dr Edward "Fitz" Fitzgerald, played by Robbie Coltrane, who works with the Greater Manchester Police (GMP) to help them solve crimes.

The show consists of three series, originally broadcast from 1993 to 1995. A 100-minute special set in Hong Kong followed in 1996 and another two-hour story in 2006. The show won the British Academy Television Award for Best Drama Series in 1995 and 1996, and Coltrane received the British Academy Television Award for Best Actor in three consecutive years (1994 to 1996).

Overview

Fitz is Scottish of Irish origin, alcoholic, a chain smoker, obese, sedentary, addicted to gambling, manic, foul-mouthed and sarcastic, yet cerebral and brilliant. He is a genius in his speciality: criminal psychology. As Fitz confesses in "Brotherly Love": "I drink too much, I smoke too much, I gamble too much. I am too much."

Each case spanned several episodes and cliffhangers were quite often used, but it was not until the end of the second series that a cliffhanger was employed to tie off the series. Some of the plotlines in the cases took as their starting point real events such as the Hillsborough disaster, whilst others were purely fictional with only tangential ties to actual events.

Several different psychotic types were explored during the run of the show with increasingly complex psychological motivations that, as the series entered the middle of the second series, began to expand beyond the criminals being investigated to the regular cast members. As the series moved forward, the storylines became as much about the interactions of the regulars as they were about the crimes. In many later episodes, in fact, the crimes often became background to intense, provocative explorations of the police officers' reactions to the crimes they investigated.

To emphasise how fine a line the police (and Fitz) walk in their close association with criminals, all three series featured several stories in which the police become victims of crime or themselves commit criminal acts such as murder, rape, obstruction of justice and assault and battery.

Characters

=Main cast=

=Notable guest stars=

Episodes

{{main|List of Cracker episodes}}

{{:List of Cracker episodes}}

Production

The first two series were written by Jimmy McGovern, excepting the fifth serial, "The Big Crunch", which was contributed by Ted Whitehead. Claiming that he had "nothing more to write about”,[http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/09/29/1096401643089.html 'Head case'] SMH.com.au; 30 September 2004 McGovern originally planned to leave after the second series but was allowed to write the controversial rape storyline, "Men Should Weep", when he agreed to contribute a three-part story to the third series. Two of McGovern's stories, "To Say I Love You" and "Brotherly Love" (from the first and third series respectively), received Edgar Awards from the Mystery Writers of America. Each serial had a different director, with the exceptions of "To Be a Somebody" and "True Romance", both directed by Tim Fywell.

Paul Abbott, who had produced the second series, wrote the remainder of the episodes (including the feature-length special "White Ghost"). Abbott later went on to create several high-profile dramas, including Touching Evil (1997), State of Play (2003) and Shameless (2004). Another crew member, Nicola Shindler, who worked as script editor on the programme, later went on to found Red Production Company.

Of the regular cast, only Coltrane and Tomlinson featured in "White Ghost" (retitled "Lucky White Ghost" for some overseas markets), which was set in Hong Kong. Although the series was still drawing large audiences after White Ghost, Coltrane declined to return as Fitz unless McGovern returned to write the series.

Cracker returned a decade after "White Ghost" in the 2006 special episode, "Nine Eleven", written by McGovern and directed by Antonia Bird. Coltrane, Flynn and O'Brien were the only actors to return in their previous roles. The new roles of DCI Walters, DS Saleh and DS McAllister were played by Richard Coyle, Nisha Nayar and Rafe Spall respectively. The story involved Fitz returning to Manchester after several years of living in Australia with Judith and his son James (who had been born during the third series) to attend his daughter Katy's wedding. The murder of an American nightclub comedian sends the police to ask Fitz for his help.

Influences

Cracker storylines often begin by showing the crime being committed, a format popularised by Columbo.{{cite web|url=https://buffalonews.com/2006/10/26/cracker-comes-off-as-a-little-stale/|title='Cracker' comes off as a little stale|date=26 October 2006 |publisher=The Buffalo News|access-date=16 May 2020}} Both series feature a lead character who solves crimes while masking an intelligent, perceptive nature behind a slobbish exterior, a debt acknowledged by Cracker creator Jimmy McGovern;{{cite web|url=http://therapsheet.blogspot.com/2006/04/oh-im-just-another-cop-my-name-is.html|title=I'm Just Another Cop. My Name Is Columbo|last=Billingham|first=Mark|author-link=Mark Billingham|date=10 September 2007|website=The Rap Sheet|access-date=16 May 2020}} Fitz delivers his summing-up in "To Say I Love You" while doing a Peter Falk impression.{{cite web|url=https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cracker-Say-Love-You-DVD/dp/B00008WQ8Q/ref=sr_1_5?keywords=cracker+to+say+i+love+you&qid=1583114260&s=dvd&sr=1-5|title=Cracker: To Say I Love You [DVD] [1993]|publisher=Amazon.co.uk|access-date=2 March 2020}}

The series' conception was also partly a reaction against the police procedural approach of fellow Granada crime serial Prime Suspect, placing more emphasis on emotional and psychological truth than on correct police procedure. In an interview with the NME, McGovern dismissed Prime Suspect, noting that "Good TV writing has narrative simplicity and emotional complexity," and characterising the series as "A narratively complex story going up its own arse."{{Cite journal|first=Steven|last=Wells|author-link=Steven Wells|date=28 October 1995|title=Ratings-guzzling uber-TV show Cracker is back to peel away the scabs of post Hillsborough Britain|journal=NME|publisher=IPC Media}} Gub Neal, who produced the first series of Cracker, is quoted as saying, "That we had adopted the right approach was confirmed for me when Jacky Malton, the senior woman police officer who advised on Prime Suspect, said that although the way things happened in Cracker was sometimes highly improbable, the relationships between the police were in many ways much more credible than they had been in Prime Suspect."{{harvnb|Crace|1994|pp=22–24}}

Locations

The series was principally filmed in south Manchester, at locations including Didsbury (where Fitz lived at the fictitious address of "15 Charlotte Road"From the business card that Fitz presents to his stalker in the episode "True Romance".) and the police station at Longsight. The internals for the police station were filmed in the old Daily Mirror offices in central Manchester, now The Printworks retail complex. Other Manchester locations included Victoria Railway Station, St Peter's Square, Old Trafford, the Arndale Centre, UMIST, University of Salford, the Ramada Hotel, The Star and Garter (interior and exterior for the "Best Boys" episode) and the Safeway supermarket (now Morrisons) in Chorlton-cum-Hardy. The Hulme Crescents were also used for filming in the first two episodes of series one and the first episode of series two; during which time they were being demolished. The first episode involved several railway scenes which were filmed on the East Lancashire Railway in Bury (north Manchester) both on the trackside and inside the Carriage & Wagon Works, where working volunteers from the railway used crowbars to push the carriage springs up and down to suggest a moving train, while water was poured on the windows to suggest rain between black polythene sheets and the window to indicate darkness.

Other versions

In 1997, a short spoof episode, Prime Cracker, was produced for the BBC's biennial Red Nose Day charity telethon in aid of Comic Relief. A crossover with ITV stablemate crime drama Prime Suspect, the spoof starred Coltrane and Prime Suspect lead Helen Mirren as their characters from the respective series, sending up both shows.

In 1997, a 16-part US version of Cracker — directed by Stephen Cragg and Michael Fields — was made, starring Robert Pastorelli in Coltrane's role. The original UK story lines were transferred to Los Angeles. The series finished after the first season. It was broadcast in the UK, retitled Fitz.

Home media

class="wikitable"
SeriesTitleRegion 1Region 2
rowspan="3" style="text-align:center;" |1

| The Mad Woman in the Attic

| rowspan="3"|14 October 2003{{cite web| url=https://www.blu-ray.com/dvd/Cracker-Series-One-DVD/115055/| title=Cracker: Series 1 DVD| publisher=Blu-ray.com| access-date=2 March 2020}}

| 12 May 2003{{cite web| url=https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cracker-Mad-Woman-Attic-DVD/dp/B00008WQ8P/ref=sr_1_fkmr0_1?keywords=cracker+the+madwoman+in+the+attic&qid=1583113909&s=dvd&sr=1-1-fkmr0| title=Cracker: The Mad Woman In The Attic [DVD] [1993]| publisher=Amazon.co.uk| access-date=2 March 2020}}

To Say I Love You

| 12 May 2003

One Day A Lemming Will Fly

| 12 May 2003{{cite web| url=https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cracker-One-Day-Lemming-Will/dp/B00008WQ8S/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=cracker+one+day+a+lemming+will+fly&qid=1583114463&s=dvd&sr=1-1| title=Cracker: One Day a Lemming Will Fly [DVD] [1993]| publisher=Amazon.co.uk| access-date=2 March 2020}}

rowspan="3" style="text-align:center;" |2

| To Be a Somebody

| rowspan="3"|24 February 2004{{cite web| url=https://www.blu-ray.com/dvd/Cracker-Series-Two-DVD/115056/

| title=Cracker: Series 2 DVD| publisher=Blu-ray.com| access-date=2 March 2020}}

| 12 May 2003{{cite web| url=https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cracker-Somebody-DVD-Robbie-Coltrane/dp/B00008WQ8T/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=cracker+to+be+somebody&qid=1583114709&s=dvd&sr=1-3| title=Cracker: To Be a Somebody [DVD]| publisher=Amazon.co.uk| access-date=2 March 2020}}

The Big Crunch

| 12 May 2003{{cite web| url=https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cracker-Big-Crunch-Robbie-Coltrane/dp/B00008WQ8U/ref=sr_1_7?keywords=the+big+crunch&qid=1583115089&s=dvd&sr=1-7| title=Cracker: The Big Crunch [DVD]| publisher=Amazon.co.uk| access-date=2 March 2020}}

Men Should Weep

| 12 May 2003{{cite web| url=https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cracker-Men-Should-Weep-DVD/dp/B00008WQ8W/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=cracker+men+should+weep&qid=1583115248&s=dvd&sr=1-3| title=Cracker: Men Should Weep [DVD]| publisher=Amazon.co.uk| access-date=2 March 2020}}

rowspan="3" style="text-align:center;" |3

| Brotherly Love

| rowspan="3"|20 April 2004{{cite web| url=https://www.blu-ray.com/dvd/Cracker-Series-Three-DVD/115057/

| title=Cracker: Series 3 DVD| publisher=Blu-ray.com| access-date=2 March 2020}}

| 12 May 2003{{cite web| url=https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cracker-Brotherly-Love-Robbie-Coltrane/dp/B00008WQ8Z/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=cracker+brotherly+love&qid=1583115377&s=dvd&sr=1-3| title=Cracker: Brotherly Love [DVD]| publisher=Amazon.co.uk| access-date=2 March 2020}}

Best Boys

| 12 May 2003{{cite web| url=https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cracker-Best-Boys-Robbie-Coltrane/dp/B00008WQ92/ref=sr_1_12?keywords=cracker+best+boys&qid=1583115594&s=dvd&sr=1-12| title=Cracker: Best Boys [DVD]| publisher=Amazon.co.uk| access-date=2 March 2020}}

True Romance

| 12 May 2003{{cite web| url=https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cracker-True-Romance-Robbie-Coltrane/dp/B00008YNE2/ref=sr_1_5?keywords=cracker+true+romance&qid=1583115723&s=dvd&sr=1-5| title=Cracker: True Romance [DVD]| publisher=Amazon.co.uk| access-date=2 March 2020}}

{{center|Special}}

| White Ghost

| {{center|TBA}}

| 12 May 2003{{cite web| url=https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cracker-White-Ghost-Robbie-Coltrane/dp/B00008YNE4/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=cracker+white+ghost&qid=1583115854&s=dvd&sr=1-1| title=Cracker: White Ghost [DVD]| publisher=Amazon.co.uk| access-date=2 March 2020}}

{{center|Special}}

| Nine Eleven aka A New Terror

| 28 August 2007{{cite web| url=https://www.blu-ray.com/dvd/Cracker-A-New-Terror-DVD/16560/

| title=Cracker: A New Terror DVD| publisher=Blu-ray.com| access-date=2 March 2020}}

| {{center|TBA}}

{{center|1–3}}

| The Complete Collection

| 10 March 2009{{cite web| url=https://www.blu-ray.com/dvd/Cracker-The-Complete-Collection-DVD/21998/| title=Cracker: The Complete Collection DVD| publisher=Blu-ray.com| access-date=2 March 2020}}

| 16 October 2006{{cite web| url=https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cracker-Complete-Collection-Box-Set/dp/B000H7JBKQ/ref=sr_1_5?crid=1OW1QMU7ZT4EI&keywords=cracker+complete+box+set&qid=1583117514&s=dvd&sprefix=cracker+complete+box+%2Cdvd%2C401&sr=1-5| title=Cracker Complete Collection Box Set [DVD]| date=16 October 2006| publisher=Amazon.co.uk| access-date=2 March 2020}}

References

{{reflist}}

  • {{cite book|last=Crace|first=John|year=1994|title=Cracker: The Truth Behind The Fiction|publisher=Granada/Boxtree|isbn=0-7522-0974-4|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/crackertruthbehi0000crac}}
  • {{cite book|last=Duguid|first=Mark|title=Cracker|series=BFI TV Classics|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan/BFI Publishing|location=Basingstoke|isbn=978-1-84457-263-2|year=2009}}