A further two episodes of the ITV crime drama adapted from Ian Rankin's best selling thrillers. Features 'Let It Bleed' and 'Strip Jack'. Read more
| Starring | Ken Stott, Claire Price, Anna Chancellor, Jennifer Black |
|---|---|
| Director | Matthew Evans, Roger Gartland |
| Genres | Thriller |
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A further two episodes of the ITV crime drama adapted from Ian Rankin's best selling thrillers. Features 'Let It Bleed' and 'Strip Jack'.
| Starring | Ken Stott, Claire Price, Anna Chancellor, Jennifer Black |
|---|---|
| Director | Matthew Evans, Roger Gartland |
| Studio | JOHN WILLIAMS PRODUCTIONS |
| Run time | DVD: 3 hrs |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Thriller |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Released | DVD: 19 Mar 2007 Production year: 2006 |
| Format | DVD |
Or you can rent each disc individually:
'Let it Bleed' is the rebus episode when finally Ken Stott makes Rebus his own. Stott at last makes DI rebus diffrent from his previous characters especially DI Red Metcalfe in 'Messiah' and DI Pat Chappel in 'The Vice.' Whats makes this unique is the side story of Rebus giving up alchol and smoking, this quite irreverant sub story gives Stott an oppertunity to get close into the rebus character, it also makes it more poignant when he falls off the wagon. The story is pretty standard meandering off the orginal Rankin story at various points unlike the, in my opinion supperear John Hannah versions. This while not as good as hannahs underrated gems of television is certainly the best of the new series, but only because of Stott and his complete submerssion into the grumpy scottish tallisiman of DI John Rebus.
'Let it Bleed' is the rebus episode when finally Ken Stott makes Rebus his own. Stott at last makes DI rebus diffrent from his previous characters especially DI Red Metcalfe in 'Messiah' and DI Pat Chappel in 'The Vice.' Whats makes this unique is the side story of Rebus giving up alchol and smoking, this quite irreverant sub story gives Stott an oppertunity to get close into the rebus character, it also makes it more poignant when he falls off the wagon. The story is pretty standard meandering off the orginal Rankin story at various points unlike the, in my opinion supperear John Hannah versions. This while not as good as hannahs underrated gems of television is certainly the best of the new series, but only because of Stott and his complete submerssion into the grumpy scottish tallisiman of DI John Rebus.