Netflix's new series 'Criminal' attempts a bold experiment with a beloved format — and it sort of works. TV critic Alan Sepinwall's review
Interrogations, when dramatized well, can be among the most potent devices available to a cop show. But they’re very hard to sustain. Even the best interrogation show of them all, NBC’s Nineties classic, only attempted an episode-length interrogation once, with the Emmy-winning “Three Men and Adena.
That the episodes are largely standalone, with familiar types of crimes, helps. The U.K. edition, for instance, opens with David Tennant playing a doctor accused of sexually abusing, then murdering, his 14-year-old stepdaughter. Nothinghasn’t done dozens of times before.
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