A gruesome serial killer is terrorizing London while brilliant but disgraced detective John Luther sits behind bars. Haunted by his failure to capture the cyber psychopath who now taunts him, Luther decides to break out of prison to finish the job by any means necessary.
Idris Elba
John Luther
Cynthia Erivo
DCI Odette Raine
Andy Serkis
David Robey
Dermot Crowley
DSU Martin Schenk
Thomas Coombes
DS Archie Woodward
Hattie Morahan
Corinne Aldrich
Lauryn Ajufo
Anya Raine
Vincent Regan
Dennis McCabe
Ross Waiton
Newman
Dan Li
Wong
Edward Hogg
Derek Standish
Einar Kuusk
Kachimov
Tom McCall
Freddie - Assault Squad
Carl Spencer
Jamal - Assault Squad
Amy Trigg
Bullpen Tech
Natasha Patel
Lydia
Jess Liaudin
Nilsson
Alexander Anderson
Ian Moore
Ian Streetz
Deacon
Teodor Tzolov
Skinner
Andy Apollo
Barman
Samantha Pearl
Uniformed Officer
Bianca Bardoe
Italian Girlfriend
Patrick Marciano
Italian Boyfriend
Hugo Nicolau
Brigida's Father
Gwen Subuh-Symons
Brigida
Borislava Stratieva
Camille
George Jovanovic
Jacov
Ash Patel
Middle Aged Asian Man
Yasmine Maya
Middle Aged Asian Woman
Paul Coster
Patrician White Man
Susan Lawson-Reynolds
British African Woman
Grace Cookey-Gam
Nicole Lewis
Henry Hereford
Brian Lee
Wayne Cater
Trevor Underhill
Martin Sarreal
Young Tourist
Orlando Brooke
Victim Farmer
James Bamford
Callum Aldrich
Nicola Achilleas
News Reporter 1
Charlotte Workman
News Reporter 2
Lawrence Russell
News Reporter 3
Guy Williams
Tim Cranfield (Civil Servant)
Tara Fitzgerald
Georgette Robey (uncredited)
Director
Jamie Payne
Original Series Creator, Writer
Neil Cross
February 28, 2023
5
I loved the first television series of this gritty and challenging police drama. Sadly, now we have reached a nadir for this charismatic and unorthodox character. The story is so ridiculously far-fetched that it reminded me of something Mark Gatiss might have written for "Sherlock" before he watched "No Time To Die" (2021) and thought - nah! It all starts when youngster "Callum" is dragged away from his night-time cleaning job by a mysterious phone call. Next thing we know, "Luther" (Idris Elba) is at a crime scene with no sign of the boy but with a victim in her car that has been missing for ages. Enter the completely un-menacing "Robey" (Andy Serkis) and pretty soon our favourite policeman is incarcerated for a career of systematic rule-bending/breaking and this rather evil monster now proceeds to prove that evil can prevail - and on a fairly spectacular scale. This story is, frankly, preposterous and as the film lumbers along for over two ours I really struggled to remain engaged as it moved from suicide scenarios to far more brutal killings - but what, exactly, is motivating this man is anyone's guess. He appears to have acquired control over a vast network of technology and people to effect his dastardly plan but none of that even vaguely rings plausible. The last twenty minutes are just plain silly and overall, the writing is all rather poor: "They'll kill you John" - "I can live with that!" - not an hint of irony there, neither. This is a pretty shameless attempt to capitalise on a strong character made memorable by a charismatic actor and a series of solid stories. This film has thrown all of those under the snowplough.