The Doctor Blake Mysteries
When I first watched season four
of The Doctor Blake Mysteries, I really didn’t think I would be writing
about it. The storylines felt rushed and
scattered. One of the main characters
was missing for half the season. Other
characters left and ones I’m not so sure about came in. The overdone ploy of a spouse long-thought to
be dead turning up alive was used. Plus,
once again, two people who should be together ended up separated. All in all, I was not happy with season
four.
With
all that said, you are probably wondering why I am writing about season four of The Doctor Blake Mysteries. That credit needs to go to my local PBS
stations. For awhile PBS had two
different seasons of The Doctor Blake Mysteries airing on two different
stations on two different nights. One
night I would watch the repeats of season three, and on the next night I would
watch season four. Once the season three
episodes finished, PBS immediately started re-airing those from season
four. Even though I had been
disappointed the first time around, I decided to watch these episodes again. What I found was that now that I knew what I
didn’t like about the episodes, I could concentrate on the parts I did
like. This helped me enjoy each episode
far more than I ever thought I would, which is how I find myself writing about
them today.
Dr.
Lucien Blake (Craig McLachlan) has just returned from visiting his housekeeper,
Jean Beazley (Nadine Garner), at her son’s when he is called in to look into
the murder of a racecar mechanic. At
first this investigation seems like it will run a similar course (no pun intended)
as all the others he has worked on, but things do not end up that way. While looking to question a suspect, Chief
Superintendent Matthew Lawson (Joel Tobeck) and Sergeant Charlie Davis (Charlie
Cousins) are run down. Lawson manages to
push Charlie out of the way lessening his injuries, but Lawson himself is
hit. His leg gets broken so badly that
he is at risk of losing it. If it
weren’t for Dr. Blake’s stepping in, Lawson’s leg would have been
amputated. That does not mean all is
good news, though. Despite Dr. Blake’s
interference, the break was so severe that Lawson’s leg will never be what it
once was and he is forced to retire. In
his place comes Chief Superintendent Frank Carlyle (Rodger Corser).
Frank
is very different from Lawson, and especially from Chief Superintendent William Munro (Craig Hall). Unlike the other
two, Frank pretty much lets Dr. Blake do whatever he wants. He even lets Dr. Blake take the lead at
times. It’s a very odd arrangement, if I
must say so, because when he does this, it feels as though Frank does not want
to be doing his job. That may not be the
case at all, but his behavior does make me question his motives.
After
Lawson leaves, so does Mattie (Cate Wolfe), Dr. Blake’s boarder and frequent
investigative partner. She is taking a
job in England, which gives room for Lawson’s niece, Rose (Anna McGahan), to
come into the storylines. A journalist,
Rose likes to drive Dr. Blake and the police crazy by withholding information as
well as inform everyone that that is what she is doing. Neither of these things she actually needs to
do. Rarely, if ever, is Rose protecting
an anonymous or confidential source which would make her restraint
necessary. Instead, I get the feeling,
that Rose simply likes to hold over people’s heads that she knows something they
do not.
Back
at home, things are definitely rocky for Dr. Blake. He is about to propose to Jean when his wife,
Mei Lin (Ling-Hsueh Tang), a woman thought to be dead, shows up at the
door. Not sure what to do, Dr. Blake
tries to split his time between the two women, but Jean puts a stop to it. She does not see his behavior as being fair
to either her or Mei Lin, and that it is only right for him to be with his
wife. While Dr. Blake understands what
Jean is saying, he does not stop trying to figure out how he can be honorable
to both.
On
top of all this, an old military friend of Dr. Blake’s is in town. Major Derek Alderton (Neil Pigot) is
determined to get Dr. Blake back into the military, no matter how hard he
resists. And Dr. Blake certainly does
resist. He does not want to go back into
the military, and no matter what retaliations or needling Major Alderton comes
up with, he is not going to be convinced otherwise.
That does not keep Major Alderton from trying though, to the point where
you eventually wonder how far will Major Alderton go to get what he wants?
This
is a lot to have going on in eight episodes.
Plus, there are the actual murder cases to deal with. No wonder everything felt so scattered. It did not help, either, that Charlie was
practically missing for half of the episodes.
In the first four he would have a scene here or there, usually in the
police station, but otherwise he was only mentioned. This left an odd hole at times as other
characters had to be found to do something that Charlie normally would. Once Charlie was back regularly, everything
started operating as it used to, and the episodes started getting back on track
as well.
Unfortunately,
the return of Charlie meant he and Rose were pushed together more. I’m hoping this does not mean that some
romantic relationship is being formed between them. The writers wisely didn’t do this with
Charlie and Mattie, and I really hope they don’t in this case either. As I said when talking about The Brokenwood Mysteries, not every male and female character need to get
romantically together. Dr. Blake and
Jean work perfectly as a couple, which is why it makes sense that something
formed between them. The same certainly
cannot be said for all pairings.
Speaking
of Jean, she is the one I felt most badly for in this season. Dr. Blake is most certainly caught between a
rock and a hard place with Jean and Mei Lin, and Mei Lin had zero idea what she
was walking into, but it is Jean who must put on a good face all the time. It’s what she feels she needs to do since she
is not the one married to Dr. Blake while Mei Lin is. Jean is also the one who gives up Dr. Blake,
despite her love for him. Instead of
being bitter, Jean continues to make sure Mei Lin is cared for, all while
acting as though everything is fine.
That could not be an easy thing to do.
Not only does Jean have her own feelings to deal with, which she does on
her own, but she also has Mei Lin shooting daggers at her all the time. This season is clearly not a good time for
Jean at all.
With
only one season left to go unless another network picks up the show, I am very
curious to see how everything is going to wrap up in season five. A lot of things were resolved at the end of
the fourth season, but some things were either left hanging or not addressed at
all. I won’t say what those things are,
as I have probably given far too many details already, but I am curious as to
whether or not these situations will get brought up again.
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