Playing Nice Review: Is James Norton's New ITV Thriller a Masterpiece or a Miss? | World Briefings
Subscribe to World Briefings's newsletter

News Updates

Let's join our newsletter!

Do not worry we don't spam!

Entertainment

Playing Nice Review: Is James Norton's New ITV Thriller a Masterpiece or a Miss?

6 January, 2025 - 4:03AM
Playing Nice Review: Is James Norton's New ITV Thriller a Masterpiece or a Miss?
Credit: futurecdn.net

Playing Nice: A Baby Swap Thriller That's Anything But Nice

Coiling a ridiculous plot around a nauseating premise – babies swapped at birth, one of the parents is a hellish sociopath – makes for a hollow and unpleasant watch. This is the very worst of modern television. The brazenly ludicrous TV thriller has its place. Sometimes it’s fun to throw all logic and sense to the wind and surrender to a bananas plot whose twists and turns – which play out amid huge, aspirationally spotless homes and gorgeous vistas – are so entertaining and hilariously camp that you end up glued to the screen. Unfortunately, Playing Nice does not fit this mould. Yes, it’s a frantically tense drama, set in a beautiful location, that teems with preposterous coincidences and plot developments. But it is also a story about forcibly removing preschoolers from their parents and exposing them to potentially mortal danger at the hands of a disturbed sociopath. Which, you know, isn’t really my idea of a laugh.

The Premise: A Moral Conundrum Gone Wrong

Playing Nice – adapted by Grace Ofori-Attah (Malpractice) from the book by JP Delaney, whose novel The Girl Before was also turned into a disappointing BBC drama – does have a compelling moral conundrum at its core. The Rileys – restaurateur-chef Maddie (Niamh Algar), stay-at-home dad Pete (James Norton), and their son Theo – are a picture of down-to-earth familial joy. Until, that is, the hospital phones to inform them that Theo isn’t their biological child: recent genetic testing on another boy suggests two premature babies got mixed up in a neonatal intensive care unit three years ago. Although this is incredibly unlikely in reality (and the show’s eventual explanation for the swap is nowhere near convincing enough), it taps into a primal fear: which new mother semi-delirious with exhaustion on the postnatal ward hasn’t fleetingly feared such a scenario? And the upshot – that two couples each feel a deep-seated connection towards both children – is a complex and fascinating ethical puzzle that a better drama might have dug into. But Playing Nice – if this wasn’t already abundantly clear – is a very bad drama.

The Arrival of Miles

Rather than focusing on the actual swap, we almost immediately shift into a schlockier gear as Miles (James McArdle) – Theo’s birth father – comes a-knocking at Maddie and Pete’s door. It takes approximately three seconds for ear-piercing alarm bells to start ringing (how on earth did he get their address, for starters?). Not that the Rileys can hear them – instead, they pootle off to Miles’s enormous cliffside home, which he shares with David, the Rileys’ biological son, and his practically silent wife Lucy (Downton Abbey’s Jessica Brown Findlay), who gave up a successful artistic career for motherhood. Everything about the visit – during which the couples agree they will keep their current children while spending time with their birth sons – is deeply sinister, from Miles’ insistence that Lucy not drink to the way a nanny whisks the boys away at the earliest opportunity. Miles is obviously a dangerous, controlling bully who wants Theo all to himself, and soon he is employing all manner of dirty tricks – many of them mind-bendingly ridiculous – to get him, as astoundingly gullible professionals follow his leads.

The Characters: A Study in Contrasts

While the ensuing action is nightmarish for Pete and Maddie – as, of course, having the minutiae of your parenting weaponised against you would be – they don’t exactly do themselves any favours, especially when they leave a pot of cannabis gummies next to Theo on the kitchen table while he draws. One of the weirdest things about the series is how readily the Rileys accept the demands of Miles, despite the fact he is laying on the baddy stuff incredibly thickly; his red flags are practically Bond villain-esque. Pete – with his beanie and scraggy windswept aesthetic – is meant to be the beta nice guy in contrast to Miles’s alpha sociopathy, but he just comes across as spineless and stupid. For all his heinous flaws, I couldn’t help missing Norton’s Happy Valley monster Tommy Lee Royce, who would at least have had the wherewithal to play Miles at his own game. The fact that Playing Nice is a farcical melodrama coiled around an inherently upsetting premise makes it an unpleasant yet hollow watch. Dread is baked into the subject matter; the prospect of children being removed from loving parents and at best manipulated, at worst abused, is nauseating. At the same time, it’s impossible to emotionally invest when everything else about the show is so infuriatingly ridiculous.

The Resolution: A Guffaw-Inducing Finale

As the series builds to a guffaw-inducing finale, some questions are answered, others are left hanging, and the primary narrative is resolved in the most asinine way imaginable. Playing Nice is clearly unconcerned with interrogating real human emotions or examining what it actually means to be a parent. Instead, it’s the worst of modern television: a witless mystery overly reliant on insidious ambience and really nice houses. The show's glossy aesthetic and implausible plot twists detract from the emotional core of the story. James Norton's performance, while adequate, lacks the intensity of his previous villainous roles. The series ultimately fails to deliver a satisfying or thought-provoking narrative. Despite the intriguing premise, Playing Nice ultimately disappoints.

Playing Nice aired on ITV1 and is available on ITVX in the UK and on SBS and SBS On Demand in Australia. The series is based on JP Delaney's novel, and its adaptation has been met with mixed reviews. The show explores themes of parenthood, identity, and the complexities of family relationships, but its execution falls short of its potential.

The show's unrealistic plot points and underdeveloped characters hinder its ability to engage viewers emotionally. Viewers may find themselves frustrated by the lack of depth and the implausibility of events. While James Norton's performance is well-received, it is not enough to save the show from its overall shortcomings. The final episode leaves many questions unanswered, adding to the feeling of dissatisfaction. Overall, Playing Nice is a missed opportunity, a show with a potentially gripping premise that ultimately fails to deliver a compelling narrative.

Tags:
James Norton Playing Nice playing nice itv
Rafael Fernández
Rafael Fernández

Film Critic

Reviewing and critiquing the latest movies and cinema.