Fool Me Once, 2024 (Miniseries)
Maya (Michelle Keegan) is a disgraced military veteran who has just lost her husband to a violent attack. Struggling to find some normalcy, Maya’s world is turned upside down again when she sees her dead husband, Joe (Richard Armitage) on her nanny cam. As Maya searches for answers to this impossible event, the detective investigating Joe’s murder, Sam Kierce (Adeel Akhtar), learns that the case is far more complex than he could ever imagine.
Stretching its story to absurd lengths, this is an overcomplicated muddle.
I got about ten minutes into this miniseries before the a-ha moment that a few years ago I read the thriller novel on which it is based. I settled myself in for what I assumed would be 3-4 episodes.
THIS MINISERIES HAS EIGHT EPISODES!
I was incredibly shocked when I realized how long this series was going to be. I literally did not understand how the story---which was kind of overcomplicated in its plot but also pretty linear---would fill that time. And the answer is that the writers added about six increasingly absurd and yet cliched subplots to the central story. You know what every story needs? A long lost sibling. And once you have one of those, why not throw in someone with a mysterious illness? Oh, and if that’s not enough how about not one, not two, but three sprawling conspiracies?
What’s outrageous about this overstuffed frankenstein of a story is how haphazardly it’s thrown together. There are three characters who we spend time in---one of whom just seems like a really nice person---and once they are done filling in some minutes, they are simply dropped from the story never to be heard from again. And in a hilarious concession to how much they’ve thrown at us, the series repeatedly shows little mini-flashbacks every time it mentions a character that it worries we will have forgotten.
There are some positives to the series. The hook is great: is Joe somehow actually still alive? If yes, how? If no, then what explains the footage on the nanny cam? How does this all connect to something that Maya did in her military service that was so bad that she was fired in disgrace?
I also thought that some of the characters were really enjoyable. Emmett Scanlan plays Shane, one of Maya’s former co-workers from the Air Force. The two flew missions together, and they trust in each other completely. As the story goes on and you start to wonder if a betrayal might be at hand between them, it hits hard. I also really liked Marcus Garvey who played Eddie, Maya’s brother-in-law. Another subplot involves the fact that Maya’s sister was murdered a short while before Joe’s killing, and Eddie is a man teetering on the edge of debilitating alcoholism despite having two children to raise. The relationship between Maya and Eddie is more antagonistic in the beginning, but it evolves and develops nicely as the series goes on.
I also have to hand it to the cast, many of whom have to contend with some dull or strange writing. Armitage is nicely ambiguous as the deceased (or is he?!) Joe. Joanna Lumley plays Joe’s wealthy, cold mother. Akhtar is given, in my opinion, the worst writing and most absurd subplot. He tries his best, but the weight of the ridiculousness of what he’s asked to say and do is almost too much. Scanlan and Garvey get the benefit of plots that actually have room to breathe and are built on relationships, not twist after twist. Keegan is hard to get a read on in this series, because she’s functionally just a script device to scurry around and stare open-mouthed at whatever the latest plot twist is.
I did enjoy the first episode or two of this series, but the majority of it was a bloated mess. I’m not exaggerating when I say that the writers here added about twice as much plot as was in the original novel. And I can tell you that the events of that original novel were already straining some of the bounds of credulity. At one point in the miniseries, a character lectures Maya about the mathematical probability of two events being a coincidence, and it honestly feels like a middle finger to the audience. I will give the series credit for keeping the novel’s original ending, which is a bit daring and also does manage to close the book on a key subplot.
This was okay for a snow day binge, but it was a real slog to finish the last three episodes.