Monday, 22 February 2016

TV Review: ONE CHILD + THE NOT SO SECRET LIFE OF THE MANIC DEPRESSIVE: 10 YEARS ON

This article was originally published in The Dundee Courier on 20th February 2016.


One Child: Wednesday, BBC Two

The Not So Secret Life of the Manic Depressive: 10 Years On: Monday, BBC One

You've got to hand it to BBC Two. To celebrate Chinese New Year last week it launched a new drama criticising China's controversial one-child policy and its attendant issues of social inequality and state corruption. As far as party-pooping goes, that's pretty explosive.

A solemnly compassionate piece, One Child follows Mei, an adopted Chinese-British student meeting her blood relatives for the first time under strained circumstances.

Raised in relative affluence by a loving British couple, Mei's life was complicated suddenly when a Chinese journalist got in touch with an urgent message: a brother she never knew existed is languishing on death row after being framed for murder. For reasons unclear, her desperate birth mother needs Mei to visit China in a bid to rescue him.

But what can she do? When she met her mother in a cramped apartment, the poor woman was so ashamed she couldn't meet Mei's gaze. It was an awkward, overwhelming encounter. Mei became even more upset when she discovered that her mother assumed that, as a rich westerner, she'd have powerful government connections. Is that all she was wanted for? Only after meeting her incarcerated brother – a fresh-faced beacon of indisputable innocence – did she feel compelled to stay and fight.

His government-funded lawyer was useless, as were the British consulate. Their only hope arrived in the form of a campaigning social justice group, whose very existence is anathema to Chinese state control. Mei is entering a minefield.

If One Child occasionally delivers its message with a sweeping heavy hand, its inherent compassion is undeniable. The plight of Mei's brother still functions quite effectively as a blunt metaphor for the way the poorest members of society, whether in China or elsewhere, are treated as expendable by their ruthless ruling classes.

Its portrayal of an anguished mother forced to abandon her child was elevated by a quietly affecting scene in which she and Mei overcame their language barrier to pore through a box of modest family mementoes.

Katie Leung delivers a dignified performance as the dazed and confused Mei, while Elizabeth Perkins and TV stalwart Donald Sumpter are wholly believable as concerned parents trying their best to support their child.

Though it sometimes falters under the weight of its well-meaning intentions, One Child is at least more ambitious and politically sensitive than most mainstream dramas. That must count for something.

It's fair to say that when Stephen Fry's series about bipolar disorder was broadcast in 2006, it played an important role in developing awareness of the condition. Certain stigmas still exist with regards to mental illness – such attitudes can't be eradicated overnight – but Fry's insightful study did encourage a sympathetic discourse that continues to this day.

In The Not So Secret Life of the Manic Depressive: 10 Years On, he caught up with some of the participants from the previous programme. For the likes of Cordelia, her situation had worsened; she now has breast cancer. There were no condescendingly sentimental nods to her “brave” battle, just a lingering sense of sorrowful injustice.

Cautious glimmers of hope were provided by two young people who'd used their experiences to raise awareness and help others. The overriding message – that bipolar is incurable, but there are ways of coping with it – was helpful in its honesty.

Although he discussed his second suicide attempt from a few years ago, and was filmed in frank conversation with his psychiatrist, Fry wisely took a back seat to allow these people to tell their stories. Once again, a valuable piece of public service television.

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