Ripper Street 2.4 Review, ‘Dynamite And A Woman’
rating: 3.5
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Without the appearance of the established villain Shine, the episode was seemingly a 'crime of the week' format. Damien Molony is given a chance to show-off his acting credentials in the forth episodes of Ripper Street's second series as young DC Flight is sent undercover to infiltrate proposed Irish terrorists and yet, the first scene of the episode see's Flight in a confessional, seeking repentance for lying, what could he have done? With an Irish prisoner carted through the Irish sector of London, we knew that the poor lawman driving the cart would have an unfortunate end, but it was one so mysterious which caught the eye as he seemingly, died of natural causes and plunged off of the cart, allowing Aiden Galvin (Stanley Townsend) to go free and start causing havoc on Detective Inspector Reid's streets. Flight finally got his chance to Shine, he has been portrayed as naive over the last two episodes, now his loyalties are tested, torn between his Irish roots and his career in Whitechapel - an internal conflict which never quite reached a pinnacle, I'm sure most viewing at home weren't too moved by his story for we are yet to know his character truly. Galvin proceeds in his actions as a xenophobic politician is blown up in his bed. Galvin is a character to behold in Ripper Street, the 2004 Irish times Best Actor Award winner (for Shining City) Stanley Townsend moulds this fantastic character through gestures and gleeful grins, an eerie yet intriguing villain who rules the episode. Some police brutality conveys the idea of the xenophobic hierarchy in Britain at the time, a period of tense culture mixing and racism towards the Irish, colonisation at its height. But this episode is not solely focused upon the Irish Home Front, for it is revealed that electricity has played its part with both men's deaths. Curiously juxtaposing the Irish revolution and electricity contracts, a far fetched plot yet one which worked in Ripper Street's world. The construction of power stations was simply the goal for two sides, the cause for the violence.