EPISODE
Informer - Season 1
An ideal series and exciting events look more serious. Gabby joins a new partner named Holly, a young ambitious but virtuous, as well as Raza, a young second generation British. Trio will conduct many investigations into drug control and terrorism. With the increase in the strength of the central investigations to combat terrorism, the danger for these three begins and the risk has not only stopped, but it may even be dangerous for their families.
1981, UK
1982, Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire, England, UK
30 November 1976, Selkirk, Scotland, UK
24 April 1978, Hitchin, Hertfordshire, England, UK
1969, London, England, UK
22 August 1965, UK
25 June 1973, Liverpool, England, UK
9 April 1984, Nottingham, England, UK
October 17, 2018
The idea behind Informer is fine, even if the subject is overdone, and its cast and crew do their best, but you need real characters if you're going to ask them to drive.
October 17, 2018
Informer has two writers and the temptation is to wonder if one of them is very, very bad and the other very, very good.
October 16, 2018
It's all beautifully done. It's good to see Considine in a major role, and Rizwan is a natural.
October 22, 2018
Why was this steaming pile of rubbish commissioned? It was desperately unfunny stuff, the kind of dreck that would struggle to make the grade in on daytime TV, yet here it was on prime time.
October 17, 2018
The way she trapped Raza's mother into confessing she was an illegal immigrant was a masterpiece of cynical manipulation.
October 17, 2018
You may need a high-tolerance threshold for these cynical almost aphorisms.
October 22, 2018
This first episode was paced achingly slowly, was packed with clichéd cop-speak, and also did not serve the main character well.
October 24, 2018
Roger Jean Nsengiyumva makes a good job of Dadir, but makes you wonder why he isn't running PR for Facebook or something, instead of committing random acts of violence in fried chicken shops and poncey degree shows.
October 22, 2018
Informer was dynamic, funny and compassionate, an uncomfortable look at power and its abuses.
October 23, 2018
Rather good, if flawed. There's a revelation in the newcomer - never acted before - Nabhaan Rizwan - but a clunkiness in the script.

