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Feel like a British detective show for the holidays? Here are 4 to watch on Acorn

By Nina Metz

Feel like a British detective show for the holidays? Here are 4 to watch on Acorn

With the holidays upon us, you might be looking to curl up with a British detective show. The kind of quietly straightforward procedural that is occasionally wry, occasionally laden with gloom -- even if it's just the gray skies overhead. No guns. No gimmicks. Just slow and steady shoe leather investigations: Asking questions, squinting at the evidence and solving a crime.

Here's a roundup of shows with new episodes on Acorn, the niche streamer that specializes in offerings from the UK.

Based on Julie Wassmer's novels, Kerry Godliman stars as Pearl Nolan, who was briefly a cop before a pregnancy derailed her career. In the 18 years since, she's been running a beachside seafood restaurant with her spikey mother (Frances Barber) and son (Rohan Nedd) in the small, chilly, coastal town of Whitstable.

When she's not shucking oysters, Pearl moonlights as a private detective. Inevitably, she finds herself teaming up with the new cop in town (Howard Charles), a tall, handsome widower who is a man of few words. He's repressed and withdrawn, but their chemistry gives the show a quiet will they/won't they energy.

Running a restaurant is time-consuming and hard enough, how does Pearl have time to moonlight as an investigator? Who knows, but it's her very averageness that makes the character tick. Once she's got her teeth into a thing, she's not likely to let go.

Two things set "Dalgliesh" apart: Its 1970s setting and the wonderfully restrained performance by Bertie Carvel as veteran detective and published poet Adam Dalgliesh. What an odd combination, someone says: A policeman and a poet. "It has its uses," he replies enigmatically. The man gives nothing away. Based on the novels by P.D. James, Dalgliesh is a widower (his wife and baby died in childbirth a year before the series begins), but he seems like someone who would have a quiet, intensely private demeanor regardless. He's also graceful and contemplative, keeping everything close to the vest.

Sometimes he considers leaving the job, but that's really just "a trick I play on myself sometimes; I tell myself I can stop so that I can keep going." Though soft-spoken, his words are deliberate and have import, and he approaches the job with a thoughtful intelligence while all others are spinning out around him.

The show premiered last month and it's good right out of the gate. Sharon D Clarke stars as Detective Chief Inspector Ellis, who is called in when the local constabulary is failing. Their investigations have stalled either because of incompetence or corruption, so she parachutes in "like the Wicked Witch of the West, starting from scratch, no team, no support."

Often she's greeted with suspicion. Sometimes even derision -- not only because she's taking over, but because she's a Black woman taking over. The passive-aggressive racism and sexism among these mostly white, male detectives is ever-present. When a DCI on a new case introduces himself to her, he says, "I'm in charge." She calmly stares at him. "But you're not. Not anymore." She's very adept at quietly asserting her authority.

Clarke's performance suggests there's so much going on inside Ellis' head; she's only voicing a fraction of it. She has a sharp understanding of human nature and which approach is needed at any given moment, whether it's compassion or something more steely. Her phone is forever running out of juice and her charger has seen better days. But her mind is always at 100%.

Adrian Scarborough stars as Detective Inspector Max Arnold in "The Chelsea Detective." His patch, as the title makes obvious, is the Chelsea neighborhood of London. He's estranged from his wife, rides a bike to get around the city and lives on a houseboat. Occasionally his busybody aunt (played by "Whitstable Pearl's" Frances Barber) tells him how sad his life has become and that he needs to buck up.

This is perhaps the most straightforward of all the series, but it's solid and entertaining. In the Christmas special, a pop star from an earlier generation is found dead, drowned in her bathtub.

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