sat 14/12/2024

Chloe, BBC One review - good start, weak finish | reviews, news & interviews

Chloe, BBC One review - good start, weak finish

Chloe, BBC One review - good start, weak finish

Identity-swapping drama runs out of steam in the final furlong

Erin Doherty as Becky (alias Sasha) with portrait of Chloe

Suddenly bogus-identity stories are all the rage. Netflix has been scoring big with Inventing Anna, the story of fake heiress Anna Delvey, as well as the The Tinder Swindler, a cautionary tale about a high-rolling conman who scams money from women he meets online.

Meanwhile the BBC has brought us Chloe, screenwriter Alice Seabright’s drama about a woman who cloaks herself in a new identity to investigate the death of her childhood friend. Once again, Chloe is about the obsessional allure of the web. It all begins with Becky Green (Erin Doherty) poring over the seemingly gilded life of Chloe Fairbourne (Poppy Gilbert) and her glittering circle of friends, as portrayed in her internet postings. In contrast, Becky is a temp agency worker whose horizons are narrowed by having to care for her dementia-affected mother.

However, Chloe’s sudden death switches Becky into action mode, as she sets out on a mission to find out what really happened, and whether Chloe really killed herself. We already know that she has a knack for “borrowing” other people’s clothes and brazenly busking her way into openings and parties. Now, the sullen-looking Becky becomes the more ingratiating Sasha – the name of her dead baby sister, it turns out – and sets to work. She neatly engineers a “chance” meeting with Chloe’s close friend Livia, which nets her a job with Livia’s events organising company. She insinuates herself into Livia’s social group, which naturally contains Chloe’s husband Elliot (Billy Howle), and boldly climbs into Elliot’s bed after he invites the inebriated Sasha to stay at his house rather than risk a drink-driving rap.BBC One ChloeChloe isn’t an especially plausible story to begin with, but the rapidity with which Sasha is able to establish herself as a Chloe replacement is probably its most credulity-stretching aspect. Especially fantastic is the moment when Sasha emerges from Elliot’s bedroom, wearing a post-coital kimono, to meet his mother (Phoebe Nicholls), on the day when the family are going to the cemetery to lay Chloe’s headstone. It’s as if Seabright is saying “I dare you to believe this bit.”

Still, the show seemed to be building up to a taut and explosive climax in its final couple of episodes. Sasha’s gift for conning people into taking her at her word has unearthed a variety of teasing clues about Chloe’s fate, not least the amazingly fortuitous discovery of a priceless box of evidence inadvertently left in a hotel cloakroom. Was Chloe having an affair with doleful drug addict Richard Greenbank (Jack Farthing, pictured above with Billy Howle)? Was Chloe’s death somehow connected to her husband’s political aspirations as he geared up to get elected as the local MP? Did Elliot, who was proving not to be so quiet and mild-mannered after all, murder her?

Sadly, the narrative mysteriously slowed to a crawl amid lengthy scenes of Sasha investigating a seaside caravan or creeping around Elliot’s house in the middle of the night, rifling through drawers and piles of documents by the light from her iPhone, trying to find answers about Chloe’s death. A visit to Chloe’s parents produced only an exasperatingly ambiguous account of what happened on the night of her death. Perhaps the idea was to evoke the haunting effects of memory and loss which can never be completely resolved, but it felt like a deflating end to a drama which promised much more.

Comments

a shame you renamed the actor who played Becky/Sasha. I thought her name is Erin, Is Eeric another one of her personas?

One hates to nitpick, but what I actually typed was "Eric". Anyway, Erin it is!

Good review. I found the plotline very confusing in the last couple of episodes. The constant flashbacks to Chloe also got in the way of a fluent narrative. Elliot must have been taking some knockout sleeping pills as Becky rifled through drawers and got his dabs to access a phone. He would probably still be kipping if a herd of elephants ran amok in the bedroom. PS. The character's name is Greenback while the actor is Farthing.

Thanks for that, Ray. I've now put the names the right way round.

Thanks for calling out the implausibility. By the 3rd or 4th episode, something or other in EVERY EFFING SCENE beggared belief. Nevertheless, some 90%+ of your "peers" on Rotten Tomatoes swallowed the relentless malarkey.. . I myself would have needed to stay as high as pre-rehab Greenbank to have gotten through thisLAZILY written and edited series without gagging on it. Thank the gods for fast-forward.

I enjoyed the first episode but jumped ship half way through the second. Just not believable.

Add comment

The future of Arts Journalism

 

You can stop theartsdesk.com closing!

We urgently need financing to survive. Our fundraising drive has thus far raised £33,000 but we need to reach £100,000 or we will be forced to close. Please contribute here: https://gofund.me/c3f6033d

And if you can forward this information to anyone who might assist, we’d be grateful.

Subscribe to theartsdesk.com

Thank you for continuing to read our work on theartsdesk.com. For unlimited access to every article in its entirety, including our archive of more than 15,000 pieces, we're asking for £5 per month or £40 per year. We feel it's a very good deal, and hope you do too.

To take a subscription now simply click here.

And if you're looking for that extra gift for a friend or family member, why not treat them to a theartsdesk.com gift subscription?

newsletter

Get a weekly digest of our critical highlights in your inbox each Thursday!

Simply enter your email address in the box below

View previous newsletters