<img src="https://sb.scorecardresearch.com/p?c1=2&amp;c2=36750692&amp;cv=3.6.0&amp;cj=1"> 'A cleanly executed gutpunch': One episode of 'Adolescence' is hitting home hard – We Got This Covered
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Image via Netflix

‘A cleanly executed gutpunch’: One episode of ‘Adolescence’ is hitting home hard

We won't forget this episode anytime soon.

Netflix is onto a monster hit with Adolescence. The British limited series centers on 13-year-old Jamie Miller, who’s arrested on suspicion of murder in the first episode. The show then goes on to show the impact of this on his family, explore his school life, dig into the grimy manosphere, and attempt an understanding of the impacts of misogyny.

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It’s a compellingly paced and beautifully performed drama, with the tension heightened by jaw-dropping technical proficiency. Each episode was shot in a single take, encoming multiple changes of scenery, large crowd scenes, moving between vehicles and interiors, and one “how in the heck did they even do that!?” drone shot.

Since its premiere last week Adolescence has rocketed to the top of the global Netflix TV charts, leaving its competitors in the dust and instantly cementing it as the TV awards season frontrunner. But even amongst the near-universal praise, there’s one episode viewers believe is one of the most important hours of television in years.

‘The best episode of TV anyone will see all year’

We’re talking episode three, which sees Erin Doherty’s psychologist Briony Ariston visiting Owen Cooper’s Jamie Miller in the psychiatric facility he’s being held in before trial. Ariston’s job is to assess Jamie, asking him questions to evaluate his personality, his understanding of the case, and gauge his emotional responses.

In comparison to the other episodes, this one is somewhat static. The vast majority of the action takes place within a single plain room, with the camera revolving around Ariston and Cooper as she attempts to complete her evaluation. But though this episode is light on bravura camera moves, it’s dripping with dramatic tension.

Many have zeroed in on Jamie’s behavior, as the episode subtly shows without telling how deeply internalized his misogyny has become:

And, as Netflix itself points out, the third episode was the first episode to be filmed. This means this was – incredibly – Owen Cooper’s first time ever performing before cameras on set. Without understating things:

And, finally, there’s a reason this show is terrifying parents of young teenage boys. Social media algorithms are designed to pour misogynist content down their necks and Jamie – who you feel in other circumstances would be a perfectly intelligent and polite boy – is the result:

I can only echo the chorus of people demanding this show gets some serious awards recognition. Each major cast member is delivering career-defining performances, all buoyed up by some seriously ambitious film-making. Hey Netflix, fund more things like this and don’t waste your money on dreadful CGI-stuffed blockbuster flops!


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David James
I'm a writer/editor who's been at the site since 2015. Love writing about video games and will crawl over broken glass to write about anything related to Hideo Kojima. But am happy to write about anything and everything, so long as it's interesting!