Genre: | Crime drama |
Director: | Sallie Aprahamian |
Starring: | Ben Daniels Charles Dale Ewan Stewart Zoe Telford Christine Tremarco Caroline Catz Harry Eden Steve John Shepherd Stephen Lord Emil Marwa |
Composer: | Daniel Pemberton |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Num Series: | 1 |
Num Episodes: | 2 |
List Episodes: |
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Producer: | David Snodin |
Executive Producer: | Frank Deasy Victoria Evans Barbara McKissack |
Cinematography: | Tim Palmer |
Editor: | Luke Dunley |
Runtime: | 90 minutes |
Company: | BBC Scotland |
Network: | BBC Two |
Real Men is a two-part[1] [2] British television crime drama series, written by playwright Frank Deasy and directed by Sallie Aphramain, that first broadcast on BBC Two on 12 and 13 March 2003. The series stars Ben Daniels as Detective Inspector Matthew Fenton, who after re-opening the cold case of a missing child, finds himself drawn to a local orphanage where he suspects the caretaker of sexual improprieties with the minors. The script for the series took writer Frank Deasy more than four years to write.[3]
The series was considered so-hard hitting that the Radio Times published an article on the week of the programme's broadcast, entitled A fit subject for drama?. The series has never been repeated, nor released on DVD.
Daniels commented on the role of Fenton; "Fenton is a deeply moral man, he's likable and kind. But, best of all for an actor, he really changes during the course of this piece. I love the fact that as the drama progresses, his veneer of perfection cracks. We gradually see that he's quite arrogant and emotionally stunted."
Producer David Snodin praised Deasy, writing "The moment I started reading it, I couldn't put it down. By exploring the links between the perpetrators of abuse and their victims, I believe that Real Men provides the deepest examination of this subject in a drama to date. This piece is drenched in truth, so it can't be exploitative. Frank's writing may be dangerous and close to the bone, but it's always truthful. You get drawn into the world of these characters - you don't approve of it, but Real Men just shows you how it is."[4]