Mint, BBC One review - when crime families collide

Charlotte Regan's genre-jumping drama defies categorisation

share this article

True love ways: Arran (Benjamin Coyle-Larner) meets Shannon (Emma Laird)
BBC

Filmmaker Charlotte Regan has been moving steadily up the creative ladder with music videos, short films and her 2023 feature debut Scrapper, which made a splash at the Sundance Film Festival. Now she takes a crack at a major drama for the BBC with Mint, whose eight 30-minute episodes describe a tale of young love, family dysfunction and gang violence.

At its core is the Glasgow crime dynasty headed by Dylan (Sam Riley), who has been maintaining the thuggish legacy of his appalling father Andy (Clive Russell), but now seems to be wearying of the struggle to keep the operation afloat. Andy, now languishing in jail, is an old-time gangster with a death-before-surrender mentality, but Dylan turns out to have a credibility-stretching secret identity which he’s yearning to express.

The fact that there’s a new rival crime crew in town is pushing Dylan towards chucking the whole thing in, and he has lined up his brutish second-in-command Sam (Neil Leiper) as his successor. Sam likes nothing better than a dash of ultra-violence, involving knives and guns if necessary, and relishes the challenge of wiping out the opposition.

Image
Laura Fraser, Sam Riley

Set against this seething cauldron of blood and testosterone is the unlikely and rather whimsical romance which blossoms between Dylan’s daughter Shannon (a superb Emma Laird) and Arran (Benjamin Coyle-Larner), the offspring of the enemy faction. While the two tribes go to war, this pair meet by chance at a railway station and find themselves wrapped in a fantasy affair which writer/director Regan depicts as quite literally lighter than air, with her protagonists floating in space in an expression of romantic bliss.

However, this updated, urbanised McRomeo and Juliet are doomed to discover that the course of true love can be… well, you can guess the rest. Meanwhile, despite the looming presence of too many ghastly macho thugs, Regan’s story focuses most strongly on the women in the family. Laura Fraser (pictured above with Riley) is excellent as Shannon’s mother Cat, a woman who has been caught up in gruesome gang politics and sexual bullying since she was just a girl, and who is trying to adjust to the realisation that the family she thought she was building is in the process of tumbling around her ears. On the flip side there’s Lindsay Duncan as Ollie (pictured below), Andy’s wife and a fire-breathing matriarch who relishes brutal confrontations and loves pushing her opponents to the limit and watching them crumble.

Image
Lindsay Duncan

It’s a fascinating group of characters, but Regan’s mix of raw reality with fantasy and dashes of surrealism doesn’t always pay off. After a powerful start, the focus starts to drift round about the halfway mark, and the drama feels as if it’s wandering around in a daze before girding its loins and galloping towards a thunderous climax.

Along the way, Regan refracts her story through chunks of fuzzy, memory-evoking home video, assorted flashbacks to fill in aspects of her characters, and dreamlike sequences which function like audio-visual facsimiles of sessions with a therapist. Widescreen scenes of landscape or the now-defunct Grangemouth oil refinery (because obviously we don’t need oil any more) are allowed to rotate slowly before our eyes, as if we’ve been gorging on magic mushrooms. It’s a daring and unusual concept which manages to defy categorisation, but it also means that the narrative thread disappears for periods of time. But at only 31, Regan obviously has much more to come.

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Regan’s mix of raw reality with fantasy and dashes of surrealism doesn’t always pay off

rating

3

explore topics

share this article

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?

more tv

Charlotte Regan's genre-jumping drama defies categorisation
Well paced and excellently cast, this revival still needs more of a sense of danger
Is anything real in Ben Chanan's digital dystopia?
The sadness of multiple miscarriages gets a tender treatment and great performances
Tobias Santelmann is perfectly cast as Jo Nesbø's hard-bitten detective
Mark Burt's script takes a measured approach to its potentially incendiary material
David Morrissey dominates a dark tale of secrets and lies
Bringing Janice Hadlow's alternative-Austen novel to the small screen
Spies, lies and surprises in gripping German thriller