Parents' Guide to

White Heat

By Kari Croop, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 15+

Sex-strewn drama views the '60s through British eyes.

TV BBC America Drama 2012
White Heat Poster Image

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The critical and commercial success of Mad Men proved that audiences hungered for a good period drama -- and that the 1960s made for some succulent eye candy. But the problem with White Heat's approach is that it attempts to paint a portrait of the era (and the decades that follow) with broad strokes that are dripping with clichés, from impossibly iconic news clips that just happen to pop up on television to characters who are a little too diverse to believe.

The show's saving grace, however, lies in its acting, both in the flashback segments featuring fresh, young faces and the modern-day scenes that spotlight seasoned thespians like Lindsay Duncan, Juliet Stevenson, and Michael Kitchen. The subtly suspenseful structure succeeds, too, at hooking in viewers and keeping them guessing, with a surprising twist toward the end that you wouldn't expect.

TV Details

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