The Ireland murder case that inspired two docuseries and a podcast - Los Angeles Times

2022-08-13 00:01:00 By : Ms. Astrid Yang

Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone trying to make summer’s rising temperatures a little more bearable by curling up with another true crime saga.

In this week’s edition, we look at staff writer Meredith Blake’s latest trip down a true crime rabbit hole — this time, the brutal murder of Sophie Toscan du Plantier at her vacation home on Ireland’s southern coast in 1996 — which has Blake urging us to get caught up on “Murder at the Cottage: The Search for Justice for Sophie” on specialty streamer Topic.

Plus, we spoke with “For All Mankind” showrunners Matt Wolpert and Ben Nedivi, send you into the weekend with recommendations on what to stream, and more. And, as always, we want to know what you’re watching, so send your TV or streaming movie recommendations to screengab@latimes.com with your name and location. Submissions should be no longer than 200 words and are subject to editing for length and clarity.

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Two days before Christmas 1996, the mutilated body of French TV producer Sophie Toscan du Plantier was found in the driveway of her remote vacation home in West Cork — a rural corner of Ireland known for attracting artistic types from abroad. Suspicion immediately fell on a brash, imposing freelance journalist from England named Ian Bailey, who had a history of domestic violence and happened to be the first reporter on the scene. Thanks to a bungled police investigation, a lack of physical evidence and a wildly unreliable key witness, the brutal murder remains officially unsolved after a quarter of a century, but a flurry of recent true crime accounts has reignited public interest in the case. The latest is “Murder at the Cottage: The Search for Justice for Sophie,” a five-part documentary from acclaimed director Jim Sheridan, now airing on the specialty streaming service Topic. (It was broadcast on British TV last year.)

The Oscar-nominated filmmaker (“In the Name of the Father,” “My Left Foot”) has spent much of the last decade working on the project, which features extensive interviews with Bailey and his former partner, Jules Thomas, as well as Maria Farrell, a local woman who said she saw Bailey near Toscan du Plantier’s home on the night of the murder, only to recant later. “Murder at the Cottage” takes a sharply critical look at the Garda — the Irish police force — who were so keen to suspect Bailey, they may have ignored other potential leads, and is sympathetic to the notion that Bailey, who was tried and convicted of the murder in absentia in France, has no connection to the case. Bailey has denied involvement in Toscan du Plantier’s death. (Her family initially gave interviews for the series but asked Sheridan to remove their interviews from the final cut, which now includes archival interviews with Toscan du Plantier’s parents and son.)

Though it offers few easy answers to the mystery of who killed Toscan du Plantier, “Murder at the Cottage” is informed by a deep familiarity with the cultural idiosyncrasies and dysfunctional institutions of rural Ireland, circa 1996. Ironically, the series, which features lyrical narration from Sheridan (whose thick Dublin accent makes murder sound like “more-door”) , beautiful shots of the brooding Irish landscape and a bevy of colorful locals, may compel you to start browsing real estate listings in County Cork. “Murder at the Cottage” follows the engrossing, 14-part podcast “West Cork,” originally released in 2018, so thorough it even explored the (highly unlikely) theory Toscan du Plantier was killed by a drunken horse and “Sophie: A Murder in West Cork,” a three-episode docuseries that arrived on Netflix last year (as “Murder at the Cottage” was airing on Sky TV) and presented a compelling but possibly oversimplified version of events. The combined spotlight seems to have spurred action: Earlier this summer, the Garda announced plans to conduct a thorough review of the case.

A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what they’re working on — and what they’re watching

In its third season, which concludes Friday with a dramatic cliffhanger, space-race epic “For All Mankind” (Apple TV+) has achieved what I can only describe as greatness. Since “Nixon’s Women,” a Season 1 entry that used the series’ alternate history to create a brilliant all-female spin on “The Right Stuff,” the series has steadily honed both its human drama — divorces, affairs, rebel children and workplace rivals — and its gravity-defying action — space walks, crash landings, recuse missions. Season 3, which fast-forwards to the mid-1990s and mankind’s first mission to Mars, marshals these qualities to create one of the most consistently gripping stories of the year, as the U.S., the Soviet Union and Silicon Valley vie for control of, and strive for survival on, the next frontier. Showrunners Matt Wolpert and Ben Nedivi stopped by Screen Gab to discuss the series’ action set pieces, what inspired Season 3, and what they’re watching. — Matt Brennan

What have you watched recently (not counting your own show) that you are recommending to everyone you know?

Matt Wolpert: “Tokyo Vice” [HBO Max] is really fascinating. I’m a Michael Mann junkie, so it’s firing on all cylinders for me.

Ben Nedivi: I love “Better Call Saul” [AMC]. It is a masterclass in writing, directing, acting, you name it — and the one show I watch as soon as it airs every week. Sad to see it go but excited to see what they do next. A more recent obsession has been “The Rehearsal” on HBO, which is the perfect mix of weird, dark and hilarious.

Obviously, space travel — whether to the moon, Mars or more distant planets — has inspired countless films and TV shows. What would you say was your No. 1 touchstone or inspiration for Season 3 of “For All Mankind”? How has it shaped the show?

Wolpert: Weirdly, the two types of films that inspired Season 3 were adventure epics like “Master and Commander” [HBO Max], and westerns like “The Searchers” [VOD, multiple platforms] and “Rio Bravo” [VOD, multiple platforms]. They all touch on that sense of being on your own, of having to rely on each other and surviving the elements of an inhospitable place.

Nedivi: The Polaris hotel disaster in Episode 1 was definitely inspired by our love of the disaster films of the ’70s, especially “Towering Inferno” [VOD, multiple platforms] and “Poseidon Adventure” [YouTube]. But once we got to Mars, we actually talked a lot about westerns, like “Treasure of the Sierra Madre” [VOD, multiple platforms]. Stories of survival, greed and competition in an unforgiving environment. There’s also something about the look of Mars that has such a western feel to it — in fact, we used a few spots in Utah as a visual reference for our Mars landscapes, and our composers Jeff Russo and Paul Doucette even paid homage to Sergio Leone with the opening track in Episode 306, titled appropriately enough “Spaghetti Martian.”

For me and many other fans, “For All Mankind’s” gripping action set pieces have become one of the series’ defining features. What sequence have you found most memorable to make (whether for good or bad reasons), and why?

Wolpert: One of the most memorable for me was the Soviet invasion of Jamestown in Season 2. A lot of the effects were practical when we depressurized Ops Comm — we got to create our own mini-hurricane, which was pretty fun. But we also shot the whole sequence during the very beginning of the pandemic, and the feeling of claustrophobia in those scenes was also being felt by the whole crew.

Nedivi: If I had to pick one, it would probably be the Mars landing at the end of Episode 5, not only because it captured the intensity of those seven minutes of terror but also the absurdity of being first. That last moment of Poole and Kuznetsov wrestling each other to the ground was especially tricky to execute. We shot it several times and worked for days with our amazing stunt coordinator Todd Schneider and his team to find the right choreography to make it feel like both a desperate dash to be first and an an inspirational moment of cooperation. I think we stuck the landing (pun intended).

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The complete guide to home viewing

Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyone’s talking about.

You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.