TV

Patrick Melrose, episode 3 review ★★★★★

Extravagant excess and personal repression collide as a sober Patrick Melrose navigates the snobbery and scandal of a society party

Benedict Cumberbatch: Patrick Melrose episode 3 review
Preparation is in full swing as a rousing camera sequence alternates between a grand society party and a Narcotics Anonymous meeting. The shot switches between crystal champagne flutes and polished silver to polystyrene cups and instant coffee; a gleaming mahogany table gives way to paper plates and plastic chairs.

Episode Three of Patrick Melrose is collision of extravagant excess and personal repression. The Sky Atlantic TV adaptation of Edward St Aubyn’s third novel, Some Hope, explores the tentative steps towards recovery and redemption.

Having followed Patrick (Benedict Cumberbatch) through the throes of addiction then back to his abusive childhood, we meet him in the early stages of sobriety. Tiny, quotidian actions are freighted with uncertainty. Sugar stirred into coffee is white powder ready to be cut into lines. Voices from the TV trigger bouts of paranoia.

While still coming to terms with the simplest daily tasks, Patrick braves a glittering society party where champagne and snide snobbery flow in equal measure.



Countess Bridget (Holliday Grainger) has pulled out all the stops to make her husband’s party fit for royalty. She’s barely recognisable as the pouty plucky young Bridget Watson-Scott we saw in episode two, wheedling her way into high society on the arm of Patrick’s fusty old godfather.

Twenty years later and she has married up – gaining a title and losing her spirit. She’s rendered rigid with the pressure to behave ‘correctly’, repressing her own emotions and channeling everything into impressing guest of honour Princess Margaret.

It’s an incisive depiction of class – the cruel currencies by which we’re measured, the elegant accouterments and the utter disregard for feelings.

Beneath the glittering gossipy glamour, the whole evening is shot through with a strand of viciousness, which recalls Patrick’s childhood. Class looms large, an oppressive uncompromising authority. Just as David Melrose delighted in bullying guests, the Princess takes a thrill in using her power to demean and discomfort. Children are still supposed to be ignored. And marriages continue to crumble.

In his sharpened state of sobriety, the adult Patrick can’t ignore the parallels. Nor can he escape his the memories. The moment when he finally confronts the trauma is electrifying, with another devastating yet meticulously measured performance from Benedict Cumberbatch.

Read our review of Patrick Melrose episode 1 here, and episode 2 here.

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What Patrick Melrose, episode 3 review
Where Sky Atlantic | MAP
When 27 May 18 – 30 Sep 18, 9:00 PM – 10:00 PM
Price £n/a
Website




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