Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Crime and Punishment (2002 TV series)
2002 British TV series or programme From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Crime and Punishment is a two-part British television crime drama series based upon the 1866 novel of the same name by Fyodor Dostoevsky, which first broadcast on BBC2 on 12 February 2002.[1] The novel was adapted for television by playwright Tony Marchant, and was directed by Julian Jarrold.[2]
John Simm stars as Rodya Raskolnikov, a former student who plans the murder of a pawnbroker to alleviate his financial problems, but also as an existential exercise, feeling himself able to commit such acts without guilt, remorse or justification.[3] The series was broadcast over two consecutive nights, airing in the 9:00-10:30pm slot. The series was released on DVD on 25 August 2008, via 2|Entertain.[4]
Remove ads
Production
The series was filmed in St. Petersburg. Simm said of his role as Raskolnikov; "The hard job for me is to make the viewer understand why Raskolnikov kills. But that is helped by seeing the place that he has to live in, it was absolutely disgusting. He is a very intelligent guy, who is slowly driven to madness by the things he sees around him."[5]
Reception
The series gathered mixed reviews in the press, with The Guardian claiming that "As Raskolnikov, the murderer, John Simm is the spindle the whole thing whirls around. He gives a vivid performance and looks like a vicious angel. In the current Augean state of the stables, I am not able to find fault with this well-bred winner"; while The Telegraph were more scathing, writing "It's as if scriptwriter Tony Marchant and director Julian Jarrold had decided to take the setting and crime-drama structure of Crime and Punishment and ditch the philosophical core, the engine that gives everything meaning."[6]
Remove ads
Cast
- John Simm as Rodya Raskolnikov
- Ian McDiarmid as Detective Porfiry
- Shaun Dingwall as Razumikhin
- Geraldine James as Pulcheria
- Kate Ashfield as Dounia
- Lara Belmont as Sonya
- Mark Benton as Zosimov
- Katrin Cartlidge as Katerina
- Alice Connor as Polya
- David Haig as Luzhin
- Martin Hancock as Koch
- Anna Hope as Nastasya
- Philip Jackson as Marmeladov
- Sean McKenzie as Semyonobvich
- Roger Morlidge as Lt. Gunpowder
- Jake Nightingale as Artisan
- Tim Potter as Nikolai
- Nigel Terry as Svidrigailov
- Darren Tighe as Zamyotov
- Heather Tobias as Lizaveta
Episodes
Remove ads
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads