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British television drama miniseries in which wealthy upper-class Englishman Patrick Melrose (Benedict Cumberbatch) struggles to manage his drug addiction and memories of an abusive childhood. Growing up, Patrick suffered abuse at the hands of his father David (Hugo Weaving) and, with his mother Eleanor (Jennifer Jason Leigh) turning a blind eye, Patrick's life as an adult spirals out of control as his past experiences return to haunt him and he attempts to manage the torment by turning to drugs and alcohol. As the years pass by, Patrick continually attempts to overcome his dependencies by seeking help, only to return to them when sobriety forces him to face reality. (Acorn Media UK)

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Patrick Melrose (2018) 

Engels Each episode is different, interesting and inspiring in its own way. The first mainly stylistically, the second for its disturbing concentration of hopelessness and disjointed innocence, the rest as a blackly humorous and ironic portrait of a narcissistic social elite where the important values of life are blurred in a whirlwind of stiff parties and self-centred family attitudes. All this accompanied by a psychologically refined portrait of the title character, who’s an asshole and knows it, but how else to survive in this world, how else to maintain one’s own hated identity? I almost regret that it was so short and time-skipping, because the material for knowingly immoral smirks and the deepening of Patrick's relationship with his repulsive world was more than solidly set up. On the other hand, it’s better to stop when you’re on top, and I wish Edward Berger some proper feature-length flicks, because his great direction clearly pushes Patrick Melrose into the company of the most interesting TV series of the last few years – alongside, of course, the performances of Benedict Cumberbatch, who downright entertains with every line, and Hugo Weaving, who confirms his innate mastery of the bad guy even in a small space. Great. ()

Never Mind (2018) (E02) 

Engels Unlike the stylistically distinctive and entertaining first episode, this one is "just" a focused and brilliantly acted build-up to a sense of helplessness and inevitability (of what Patrick will become in the future), but it's still hard to take your eyes off of it, and every scene is absolutely correct given the complex psychological portrait of a personality that will surely continue to play a key role in the series. And is it just me, or is Hugo Weaving delivering his fourth iconic villain? He's never been this scary before... 85% ()