All four episodes of Adolescence are shot in a singular, shocking take. The camera takes us along as Jamie Miller (an outstanding Owen Cooper) is arrested for suspected murder. In one episode we follow Jamie and his confused father (co-creator and writer Stephen Graham), in another we follow DI Luke Bascombe (Ashley Walters). And in one particularly head-spinning episode, we follow Jamie and his psychiatrist Briony (Erin Doherty) as they both try to get in each other’s heads. The series may seem like a straightforward murder mystery at first. Like Apple TV+’s Defending Jacob, it asks, did young Jamie do it? Will his parents believe him? Will we? But those questions are almost secondary to what the show really gets at. It takes on violent misogyny, a growing trend among the Andrew Tate-influenced youth. It takes on parental guilt, grief, and moral responsibility. It’s a hefty piece of work, but the naturalism of the script and the intimacy of the single-takes makes it feel terrifyingly close to home.
Synopsis
When a 13-year-old is accused of the murder of a classmate, his family, therapist and the detective in charge are all left asking: what really happened?
Storyline
When a 13-year-old boy is accused of murdering his schoolmate, detectives rush to find the truth behind the crime as his parents struggle to understand their child.
TLDR
If you’re a parent raising a young kid, this just might be the most horrifying thing you could put on right now.
What stands out
Episode 3, easily. To see a 13-year-old go head-to-head with a psychologist, and then to realize that’s a 13-year-old actor going head-to-head with a seasoned actress, is mind-blowing.
really well done and amazing as each episode is done in one take too