Current:Home > InvestIn its ninth and final season, 'Endeavour' fulfills its mission to 'Inspector Morse' -MoneyTrend
In its ninth and final season, 'Endeavour' fulfills its mission to 'Inspector Morse'
View
Date:2025-04-17 01:25:54
We're living in hard times for originality. These days, both studio execs and audiences appear to mistrust anything they don't already know. They favor movies and TV shows that keep recycling popular characters and situations. And this isn't only true of mega-franchises like Star Wars or the so-called Marvel Cinematic Universe.
Consider the British crime series Inspector Morse which ran from 1987 to 2000. Based on novels by Colin Dexter and starring the charismatically grumpy John Thaw, that series was so beloved it engendered nine seasons of Lewis, a spinoff about Morse's boring sidekick that ended in 2015. It also spawned a far better prequel, Endeavour, whose ninth and final season is airing on PBS's MASTERPIECE Mystery!
Starring an excellent Shaun Evans, Endeavour is an origin story. It charts the pilgrim's progress of brilliant, headstrong Endeavour Morse as he goes from an idealistic young Oxford cop to the boozing, vaguely misanthropic detective made famous by Thaw. Just as Better Call Saul is, in some ways, more interesting than Breaking Bad, so Endeavour offers more emotional richness than the series that inspired it.
The new season begins with Morse returning to the force after months away dealing with his drinking problem. Even as he investigates a murder at the Oxford Concert Orchestra, the world is shifting around him. His boss and mentor, Detective Inspector Fred Thursday — played by Roger Allam — is soon moving to a station in another town. Thursday's daughter Joan, whom Morse has secretly loved for years, has gotten engaged to his hearty, mediocre colleague Jim Strange. And ratcheting up the tension, there's a sudden break in a case that Morse and Thursday had investigated years earlier, nearly getting themselves murdered in the process. Morse is warned off reopening the investigation — which threatens some very powerful people — but you think that'll stop him?
Now, it's one of the comical quirks of the series that, even though Morse is a genius who solves a brain-teasing murder in every single episode, his slower witted colleagues still scoff at his ideas in every single episode. They don't quite grasp that, in addition to his eye for arcane clues, he's got a keen sense of the human frailties that can lead to murder.
Thaw's original Inspector Morse was your classic offbeat cop — he drove a vintage Jaguar, loved classical music, didn't suffer fools, and wallowed in whiskey-drenched melancholy. Watching some old episodes again, I was startled at how Morse also seemed to chase everything in skirts. The show couldn't get away with that now. Still Thaw tooled around picturesque Oxford with such ravaged, romantic panache that he was an alluring fantasy of the world weary detective.
At the same time, Morse and his story were static. And it's here that Endeavour is the superior series. What carries the show aren't the mystery plots — their solutions are too clever by half — but the way it portrays Endeavour's spiritual education. Over the years, we see this honest, fresh-faced young man repeatedly stung by life: He's treated as a weirdo by colleagues, proves unlucky at love, gets betrayed by higher-ups, betrays his own highly rigid moral code, and sinks into alcoholism. He is condemned to a life of loneliness.
While the show keeps returning to Morse's unrequited love for Joan, its heart lies in the quasi-paternal relationship between the troubled Endeavour and the blokish Thursday, a family-loving World War II veteran who's given real emotional heft by Allam's layered performance. Their last scenes together are deeply moving, not least because both are so incapable of expressing their feelings.
Charged with an inescapable sense of loss, Endeavour's finale delivers the narrative closure and emotional weight that its many fans would hope for. Not that it's perfect. Perhaps hoping to please everyone, there are a few too many endings.
Even so, the series has more than adequately fulfilled its mission in the Morse Television Universe. By the time Endeavor hops into his Jag and identifies himself as, "Morse, just Morse," he's recognizable as the character we first loved in Inspector Morse. Over the course of a decade and 50 hours of TV, Endeavour has shown us the child fathering the man.
veryGood! (7785)
Related
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Shooting suspect dies following police standoff that closed I-80 in Bay Area Friday
- Usher's Lovers & Friends canceled, music festival cites Las Vegas weather
- Who will run in Preakness 2024? Mystik Dan and others who could be in field at Pimlico
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- If Anthony Edwards, Timberwolves didn't have your attention before, they do now
- All the past Met Gala themes over the years up to 2024
- A boy gave his only dollar to someone he mistook as homeless. In exchange, the businessman rewarded him for his generosity.
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- I-95 overpass in Connecticut scorched during a fuel truck inferno has been demolished
Ranking
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Jackson scores twice as Chelsea routs West Ham 5-0
- Sandra Doorley timeline: Police chief defends officer who stopped DA in viral video case
- Hush money, catch and kill and more: A guide to unique terms used at Trump’s New York criminal trial
- 'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
- Sandra Doorley timeline: Police chief defends officer who stopped DA in viral video case
- Colorado dentist accused of killing wife with poison tried to plant letters to make it look like she was suicidal, police say
- Pro-Palestinian protests stretch on after arrests, police crackdowns: Latest updates
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Padres manager Mike Shildt tees off on teams throwing high and inside on Fernando Tatis Jr.
1 person killed and 23 injured in a bus crash in northern Maryland, police say
Where pro-Palestinian university protests are happening around the world
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Reese Witherspoon's Daughter Ava Phillippe Slams Toxic Body Shaming Comments
Biden has rebuilt the refugee system after Trump-era cuts. What comes next in an election year?
Reese Witherspoon's Daughter Ava Phillippe Slams Toxic Body Shaming Comments