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‘Gritty and dark’: The best British crime thrillers on Netflix right now

Gillian Anderson wears a black coat in The Fall
Here are our top picks of the good cops from the bad ones (Picture: BBC)

When our descendants look back upon the genre that has most governed the British TV-watching public’s tastes, they could very likely land upon the crime thriller.

It’s gritty, it’s darkly humoured, it’s occasionally bleak – what could be better suited to our national sensibilities?

Thanks to some robust commercial partnerships (wait, don’t fall asleep), there is an embarrassment of riches when you stumble upon Netflix‘s binge-worthy British crime shows. They literally have an entire genre category for it.

Whether it’s hard-boiled coppers, cunning criminals or even citizen detectives, these criminally-minded thrillers have something for everyone. 

So here are our top picks of the good cops from the bad ones, over on Netflix this very moment.

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Peaky Blinders

The Shelby dynasty rumbles on (Picture: BBC/Mandabach/Tiger Aspect/Robert Viglasky)

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Obviously! The breadth and scale of Peaky Blinders warranted a franchise of TV and film content that is still going.

The Shelby dynasty is among Birmingham’s biggest cultural exports. Just look at the impact it’s had on David Beckham’s wardrobe.

Cillian Murphy shot to fame as swaggering Tommy Shelby, who heads up his family’s criminal syndicate in the wake of World War I.

The Gentlemen

Guy Ritchie’s first return to form in some time came with this TV remake/spin-off of his 2019 film of the same name.

It’s bold, brash and distinctly British. 

Kaya Scodelario starred as aloof Susie Glass (Picture: Christopher Rafael/Netflix)

It was also his first decent female protagonist (despite the show’s title). Kaya Scodelario’s aloof Susie Glass heads up a series of underground marijuana plants, hidden on the enormous estates of our landed gentry.

This one’s heavy on crime and light on the coppers. It’s also incredibly good fun. Season two, coming soon.

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Top Boy

We have another criminal enterprise in Top Boy.

Netflix was instrumental in the survival of the show, after it ended its run on Channel 4

As gritty as it is heartbreaking (Picture: Ali Painter/Netflix)

Ronan Bennett’s saga has been touted as a hugely realistic portrayal of life on a crime-ridden Hackney council estate with ‘shotting’ (selling), ‘food’ (drugs) and ‘Ps’ (cash) in the mix.

As gritty as it is heartbreaking, of everything on the list, this probably best tackles what desperate people can be driven to in order to survive.

The Serpent

The Serpent takes on the true crime story of the icy serial killer and fraudster Charles Sobhraj, played by Tahar Rahim. It even manages to do so with some sensitivity.

This BBC export is a true crime drama (Picture: BBC/Mammoth Screen)

Doctor Who’s Jenna Coleman plays his inscrutable girlfriend Marie-Andrée Leclerc.

The show, originally on the BBC, is mostly set in Asia in the mid-’70s as Sobhraj drugs and kills Western travellers, hiding behind the absence of any joined-up international communication at the time.

Dept Q

Setting a dusty cold case file in front of a crack team of coppers isn’t reinventing the TV wheel. Making the detective in charge of said team the most disliked man in the police precinct is also nothing new.

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But Dept Q is further proof that when it comes to bad-tempered, trauma-laden crime shows, the limit does not exist.

This one benefits from a violently unhinged baddie, who it’s impossible to look away from.

A Good Girl’s Guide To Murder

A bit of a different kettle of fish with this mystery thriller for young adults. AGGGTM follows teen citizen detective Pip (Emma Myers) and is set in a sleepy English town you’ll want to move to.

Summer vibes, but with a thrilling mystery (Picture: BBC/Netflix)

Alongside some boundless summer activities, Pip decides to take on the disappearance of schoolmate Andie Bell and crack the case.

It can be a bit ludicrous in parts (such as the fact that this is touted as part of her sixth form studies) but you’ll want to stick around to see whodunnit.

The Fall

This psychological thriller was the talk of British TV when it first hit screens, with avid discussion over whether it was glorifying its criminal.

A creepy Jamie Dornan as you’ve never seen him before (Picture: BBC/The Fall 3 Ltd/Helen Sloan)

Jamie Dornan stars as the perfectly detached Belfast killer of women in their thirties, who, to observers, is a regular-degular happily married dad of two.

Gillian Anderson is parachuted in from the Met to hunt the killer out, in what is a brilliant, creepy two-hander. 

Line of Duty

To many, this will be the apex of the crime thriller. Jed Mercurio’s masterwork captivated the nation for years.

Now, with more on the way, this ultimate cop show needs to prove it can do it all over again. 

The gold standard! (Picture: Aiden Monaghan/World Productions/BBC)

Starring the trio of Vicky McClure, Martin Compston and Adrian Dunbar, the show revolves around the anti-corruption police unit AC-12 as they try to root out sinister forces within the police and politics. 

Expect tense interrogation scenes, jaw-dropping twists and high-octane action – maybe all you can ask from a thriller.

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