Blackshore Series 1 Finale Recap

Blackshore Series 1 Episode 6 Recap

Fia Lucey (Lisa Dwan) doesn’t waste any time at the start of the finale making her intentions to bring Bill McGuire (Stanley Townsend) to justice clear when she interrupts his morning. He doesn’t appear too threatened when she claims to have evidence proving that Charlie Reid (Aidan McArdle) wasn’t the driver of the vehicle containing Chloe Whelan’s (Grace Collender) corpse. His tune appears to change when she claims to also have witness, Jack Lucey (Sean T. O Meallaigh). Despite his near laughter, she tells him that the dead can be extremely informative. After a bit more back-and-forth, he rushes her off with the claims of running late for a meeting.

Fia Blackshore RTE

Fia continues her search for the truth as she returns home to discuss the case with Donal Riley (Andrew Bennett). He is quick to remind her that all she has is the memory of Niamh Furlong (Amy De Bhrun) and that only circumstantial at best. She claims to have gotten all the proof she needed when she looked him in the eye this morning. The conversation leaves Fia with the nagging question of why Charlie would kill for Bill.

Cian Furlong (Rory Keenan) attempts to comfort Niamh when Fia shows up unannounced with the discovery of Charlie’s check cashing scheme in the nineties. Cian doesn’t appear to see the importance until she mentions what Carrie (Rebecca Hanssen) said about Charlie and Roisin Hurley (Clara Fitzgerald) making a deal back in the day. It is Niamh who asks if the deal could have been tied to the murder of her family. Fia claims she would need a peek at certain financial accounts to determine that.

Later that night, Fia breaks into McGuire’s office while Cian and Niamh distract Bill and Deirdre McGuire (Orla Charlton) at a Blackshore Whiskey event. It’s later revealed that she discovered records proving that Bill paid off both Charlie and Roisin.

Hurley Blackshore RTE

The day after Fia’s discovery, she is called into Superintendent Shanahan’s (Lloyd Hutchinson) office for a reprimanding about visiting Bill with only circumstantial evidence. He tells her that she may never find evidence because there is none to find and the Roisin case is officially closed. He loses his cool when he learns that she asked for the case to be held. He claims to have been with Bill the night Roisin was murdered before ordering her out of the office.

Cian joins Fia at her house where they discuss Shanahan’s reaction. Cian claims he’s never seen the man act so harshly before while Fia says it’s a sure sign of fear or guilt. She suspects she has gotten too close to Bill and now getting her hands on the coroner report is the next step. This is when Donal interrupts to reveal that it won’t be necessary because Shanahan took over the case after he recused himself. Cian returns to the office while Fia and Donal continue to debate the case over dinner.

That night both Niamh and Cian have trouble sleeping which leads to a discussion about her fears that Bill is going to find out she helped Fia access his financial records. She confronts those fears the following morning when she shows up at work and overhears Deirdre questioning the maid about locking up the night before. Bill startles her when he appears out of nowhere and tells her to get her coat they are going for a ride. It is later revealed that he is taking her to lunch to offer her a much higher-paying job. When she later shares the news with Cian, he encourages her to resign.

Fia pays a visit to the coroner’s office in an attempt to get Dr. Myreen Burgess (Gwynne McElveen) to access her family’s report without going through official channels. Myreen is unable to help with the official report but offers to let her look through her father’s old notes. Myreen makes the offer after admitting that her father wasn’t a huge fan of Shanahan. Apparently, Shanahan shut down her father’s attempts to help one of his former students learn more about his daughter’s death. That student was Dr. James Whelan (Barry McGovern).

Cian Blackshore RTE

Neither James nor Marjorie Whelan (Ingrid Craigie) can shine any light on why Shanahan would prevent Myreen’s looking into Chloe’s death. Before the meeting ends, James not only warns Fia about Bill having many friends in the church but confesses to feeling guilty for Chloe’s murder. He claims he used her in an attempt to convince Fia’s mother and Emma Riley (Lisa Dwyer Hogg) to join the church. Instead, Chloe used the freedom to sneak with Charlie or the likes of him.

Before Fia takes Dr. Myreen up on her offer to scour through her father’s old files, a very short scene shows Bill receiving what appears to be a letter of resignation from Niamh. After spending several hours with the files Fia appears to uncover something shocking.

She returns home with her discovery where Donal unveils what truths he knows about the case. It turns out that Donal only recused himself from the case after signing off on the coroner’s report, allowing the next investigator to essentially bury the case without scrutiny. He did this at the behest of Bill in exchange for Emma’s cancer treatments. As their conversation goes on, he also admits that it was Charlie and Roisin who murdered her family. Apparently, they were concerned that Jack would blab about pulling Charlie from the lake, where Chloe’s body was found. Things went bad when Elizabeth (Siobhan O’Kelly) and Aidna Lucey (Senan Jennings). He tells her he doesn’t expect her to keep the truth hidden but he needs her to know why he staged the crime scene to point the blame at Jack.

Fia’s arrival at the station the following morning is interrupted by Sandra Riley (Ally Ni Chiarain) who basically asks Fia to attend Emma’s party later that night. Their conversation also reveals that Sandra still genuinely believes that Donal’s grief has to do with him not solving the case. The discovery appears too much for Fia to handle as she rushes off without sharing the truth. She later takes her frustration out on Cian when he tries to question her about the original coroner’s files. She lies about what she discovered.

Fia Blackshore RTE

Despite her mood, Fia shows up for Emma’s party where she learns from Fergus Slattery (Brendan Conroy) that someone has recently taken out Jack’s boat. The discovery sends her to the boat where she discovers Roisin’s locket. The following morning, she confronts Donal again, but not in such a subdued way as before. Once she tells him that the forensics unit is going through the boat and on their way to process his car, he admits to killing Roisin. She apparently came to him the night Charlie drugged and raped Carrie. She wanted to reveal the truth but he could not let that happen. Their rather vocal attracts the attention of Sandra and Emma, leaving Donal no option but to reveal the truth. Despite the discovery, both Emma and Sandra attempt to get Fia to bury the truth. She chooses not to.

At the station later, a conversation between Fia and Cian suggests that they are still not only going after Bill, but Fia is staying in town. Cian assures her that all things come to the surface with time.

 

Blackshore Review

Despite having more twists than a pretzel, this wasn’t a horrible finale. I’ll give the writers kudos for the twists because they weren’t done in a way that made you think more were coming. Just when it appeared things were wrapped up, something would come out of left field and change everything. The episode was still incredibly drawn out and bland for a finale, but once again, it worked for me. I can at least say watching this didn’t feel like an entire waste. I also found it intriguing and more realistic that Sandra and Emma were willing to bury the horrible truth just to keep Donal around.

There is also a potential for a second series, although I probably would not recommend it. I’d have to give the finale a 5.8 because I felt the twists were cleverly done and the lack of a complete resolution should keep viewers guessing.

 

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  1. James Luther says:

    This show had many structural flaws in its attempt to explain everything that happened years before as well as the present day homicide under investigation. In the end, very little of it made logical sense. If one thinks about it, the motives and methods eventually disclosed for each crime committed borderlined in the absurd. Much of what Fia expoused out loud as her current working crime theories were based on zero evidence, and were just hunches. However as ludicrous as many of them were they all proved to be true just because the writers said so. It was very frustrating to watch.

    Frankly i just never felt any sense of satisfaction I normally have at the end of a good crime thriller because I don’t even understand it.

  2. James Luther says:

    Specific examples

    – Why did Bill kill Chloe in the first place? Because he was such great pals with Charlie? Doesn’t make sense. You’d murder someone to help out a pal?

    – Why drive a car into the lake then escape? Seems very risky you’d also drown plus there’s no guarantee Chloe wouldn’t escape as well or that someone wouldn’t find the car soon after. Maybe better to just shoot her and bury the body deep in the woods.

    – Don’t understand why Roisin and Charlie would agree to kidnap and torture Fia’s dad. It really just doest make much sense theyd even be capable of it. Seems a better job for a couple of chavs or henchmen.

    – Roisin and Charlie are wearing balaclavas and yet instantly shoot the other family members when surprised instead of just fleeing. That seems implausible. You issue one last warning then just leave.

    – Donal accepts money to cover up the crime 20 years ago, that makes sense but then kills Roisin to keep it all from coming out 20 years later after his daughter is an adult and presumably cancer free. Doesn’t make sense. He’d be on the hook for closing the case too early. Hardly a motive for murder.

    – Essentially Charlie was a deviant that drugged and raped women. That makes sense. Not at all clear what type of criminals Bill and Roisin were. They just never say but rather imply it has something to do with the hotel or maybe the distillery .

    – As mentioned, every time Fia speaks a cockamamie theory out loud ot turns out to be true.

    Just poor storytelling in my opinion.

    • ReelMockery says:

      All very good examples of what was wrong with the series. Not necessarily the worst European detective series, but it’s not near the top of the list either. They really need to move past these types of shows and find something else. It’s getting to the point that they’re like the superhero movies. Just oversaturated. Keep pumping out the same old stuff and the quality will inevitable drop.

      • Yevgeniya says:

        ”They really need to move past these types of shows and find something else” – isn’t this a bit presumptuous of you to single-handedly decide what they should or should not make? Those films and series are made because there is demand for it, as simple as that. You got bored of it, fair enough, just stop watching, switch your attention elsewhere. And sure, there are tropes in these types of shows but at least in Blackshore acting is great, there are interesting layered characters, personal/inter-relationship drama and suspensful plot development (even if they throw too many twists in the run). Everything can’t be at the ”top of the list” but it can be and is decent.

    • Yevgeniya says:

      ”Why did Bill kill Chloe in the first place? Because he was such great pals with Charlie? Doesn’t make sense. You’d murder someone to help out a pal?” – what? Did you confuse the names or misunderstood the plot. BILL was having an affair with Chloe, not Charlie. Charlie helped cover it up, not Bill. ”after his daughter is an adult and presumably cancer free. Doesn’t make sense” – his daughter didn’t have cancer, his wife did… We even saw a photo of Sandra with a handkerchief on, implying loss of hair from chemo. Donall killed Roisin simply because he didn’t want truth to come out, what’s so hard to understand? No, he wasn’t on the hook for closing the case too early because it was already known and covered up. What type of criminals Bill and Roisin were? Well, Bill killed Chloe and then ordered Roisin and Charlie to deal with Lucey family and then covered that too. He made people do his bidding because everyone owed him. Roisin murdered three people, including a chid, just to have shares in the hotel, and then closed her eyes to Charlie’s crimes (raping girls) and fired the victims to cover it up. All are horrible people and deviants, what’s not clear there?
      Maybe pay attention next time?

      • Yevgeniya says:

        I retract my sentence about Sandra being treated for cancer, it was Emma. Apologies for that mix-up but my other points stand.

        • ReelMockery says:

          See how easy it is to mess stuff up? I didn’t personally recap this one but doing it this way means you have to focus on every little detail and that makes a slow show even slower. I do think these shows are overdone though.

          Way too many of them with varying degrees of success. They’ve become so formulaic that it’s the same old stories with a few minor twists. A little original would make a huge difference instead of rehashing crime stories.

          Not to mention these small European towns would not and don’t have 15 murders in 15 days. There’s a demand for some but not all. Most aren’t worth recapping to possibly get 20 visitors a week meaning no one is watching lol.

          Glad you enjoyed it though. Cheers.

  3. James Luther says:

    RTE put out two really great shows before Blackshore… Kin and Clean Sweep. Though not as prolofic as UK producers, Irish TV and movies as well can be really thoughtful and always have a real independent spirit. Too bad this one followed in the mold of a sloppily designed ITV seties. Don’t get me wrong , it wasn’t horrible and was a decent time killer. It just didn’t make that much sense. 😕

    Ow well… moving on.

    • ReelMockery says:

      Yep agree. RTE does a good job more often than not but it has its fair share of stinkers as well. Obituary an The Dry are two of those. I’ve watched some good ones though, especially those about Irish independence and such. Been a long time so I don’t really remember the names lol.

    • Yevgeniya says:

      Except it did make much sense (except few moments) if you paid enough attention, and even if there were some faults with mystery storyline, drama and acting and character development conmpensated for it. It WAS thoughtful in those aspects at least.

  4. Barry says:

    I’m wondering if, in the final scene at Fia’s family grave, the six people in the background were of significance? Fia looked at them, smiled, then left.

  5. James Luther says:

    Yevgeniya thank you for all your clarifications. I’m just not sure why you chose to take such a hostile and bitter tone. 😕

    • ReelMockery says:

      lol. It’s the Internet. Everyone can be mean about insignificant things just because they have a sense of anonymity and no risk of repercussions. I do question why someone would get so upset over a television show and someone’s comment about it. Either they’re connected to it, they know someone connected to it, or they’re way too emotionally invested.

      So many other things to legitimately be upset about instead of some television show they’ll forget in a few weeks lol.

  6. James Luther says:

    Unless they are Irish and felt a criticism of an RTE show is like slapping Ireland in the face. 😦

    • ReelMockery says:

      Well in all fairness, you were being a little Irishphobic. lol! I think some people take criticism personally even when it’s not. Me and you’ve disagreed before and it’s never anything personal. Just some stuff people like and some stuff people don’t.

      I did have an actress I won’t name leave a nasty comment but it was so much gibberish and nasty that I didn’t understand it until the last minute. Ended up deleting it until I put 2 and 2 together lol. Wish I’d kept it now for laughs.

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