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Stuart Orme who directed Cold Bloods I and II returns here after the previous two segments were handed over to Suri Krishnamma. Cold Blood: The Last Hurrah redresses the balance somewhat and brings the games with Matthew Kellys Wicklow back to centre stage. That said, Wicklows return lacks the degree of brilliance that Cold Bloods I and II had. Certainly, the plot that Tom Needham starts in with has ones head spinning at the number of things he has all abruptly happening at once the police investigating a child abduction at a mall, the sudden discovery that the missing child is named Jake Osbourne, wondering about the connection to Wicklow, the discovery of his sister gone missing and the meaning of the dead foetus left in her bed, the media scrum, Jakes attempts to contact his son. However, there is still not enough of Wicklow and his games Cold Blood: The Last Hurrah substitutes Wicklow and his sister playing a cryptic game with one another but this never hits in with the same ingenuity. Most of the time, you sit wondering where all of these script elements are going. Stuart Orme creates a fine scene in the middle of the film with an elaborate police pursuit set up to follow Alison Fiske, only for her to cleverly outwit everybody. Despite a long build-up where one is frustrated at not being sure where the show is going, Cold Blood: The Last Hurrah eventually comes together at the end with Matthew Kelly escaping from his bed by cutting his thumb off, his meeting up with his sister and a final bloody showdown between he, Jemma Redgrave and John Hannah. For all that, the series wrap-up is disappointing. You feel that Wicklows end should have been infinitely more devious than a confrontation in a hospital surgery. Even though we see him in his true demoniac light and killing for the first time in the entire series, there is little of the genius sadist that we saw in the earlier entries. Moreover, while the relationship between Eve and Jake is resolved, the dual nature of Jakes character and the secrets that Parts III and IV kept hinting she was afraid of finding remain unexplored. What the show feels like is that the people who created it did not know where it was going to end up themselves and were left with having to come up with a wrap-up that lacked the strength of what they had originally conceived. Cold Blood: The Last Hurrah does throw in one amusingly snide joke with Matthew Kellys Wicklow sitting in his hospital bed reading Thomas Harris Hannibal Rising (2006) and commenting As if, something that is pertinent in that The Silence of the Lambs (1991) is the clear inspiration for the Cold Blood films. It something that sits just between being a cute margin aside and far too obvious a tipping of the series source of inspiration.
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