Crime thrillers offer subtle drama

By Michael Idato
Updated February 28 2015 - 12:09am, first published February 27 2015 - 11:45pm
<i>Fortitude</i>: from left - Stanley Tucci, Sofie Grabol and Christopher Eccleston.
<i>Fortitude</i>: from left - Stanley Tucci, Sofie Grabol and Christopher Eccleston.
<i>Fortitude</i>: from left - Stanley Tucci, Sofie Grabol and Christopher Eccleston.
<i>Fortitude</i>: from left - Stanley Tucci, Sofie Grabol and Christopher Eccleston.
<i>Fortitude</i>: from left - Stanley Tucci, Sofie Grabol and Christopher Eccleston.
<i>Fortitude</i>: from left - Stanley Tucci, Sofie Grabol and Christopher Eccleston.
<i>Fortitude</i>: from left - Stanley Tucci, Sofie Grabol and Christopher Eccleston.
<i>Fortitude</i>: from left - Stanley Tucci, Sofie Grabol and Christopher Eccleston.

Once upon a time there were three kinds of television in the world: American television, where everybody had guns and spoke like Lorne Greene, British television, where everyone had curlers in their hair, smoked fags and had cups of tea, and Australian TV, which was more or less like British TV only the walls wobbled with a little more conviction.

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