Booker Prize-winning author Marlon James’ first foray into television with Get Millie Black, from Motive Pictures for HBO and Channel 4 in the U.K., is set in his home of Jamaica. In her first series ...
In Get Millie Black, Ex-Scotland Yard detective Millie-Jean Black gets pushed out of the London police force due to racism (unsurprisingly) and returns to Kingston to work missing person cases, soon ...
Tamara Lawrance (Mr Loverman, Time) is a former detective working missing persons cases in Kingston in this gritty crime drama, a co-production between Channel 4 and HBO. Think Mare of Easttown, but ...
Christina Radish is the Senior Entertainment Reporter at Collider. Having worked at Collider for over a decade (since 2009), her primary focus is on film and television interviews with talent both in ...
"My memory of the British police is corrupt coppers." HBO and Channel 4 have unveiled an official trailer for a crime thriller series called Get Millie Black, created & written by the acclaimed ...
“Get Millie Black” is exactly what it sounds like: Someone is on the run, but who can stop them? Well, perhaps the ex-Scotland Yard detective of the title. Tamara Lawrance stars as Millie-Jean Black, ...
*HBO’s new detective series “Get Millie Black” debuted on November 25, featuring Tamara Lawrance in the lead role. Airing Mondays at 9 p.m. on HBO and streaming on Max, the five-episode limited series ...
Isabella Soares is a Senior Writer for Collider, as well as a CherryPicks-approved critic. Born in Brazil, previously based in Canada, and now residing in the UK, she is passionate about stories that ...
Booker Prize-winning author Marlon James wanted to showcase the “richness” of queer Caribbean communities when compiling his debut TV project Get Millie Black, which launches on HBO in a few days’ ...
Created by the Booker Prize-winning author Marlon James, the HBO series puts a new spin on a lot of old crime show conventions. By Margaret Lyons “Get Millie Black,” beginning on Monday at 9 p.m., is ...
It seems like only the week before last that I was reviewing two thrillers — “Cross” and “Day of the Jackal” — in a single review. (Because it was.) And now I’m going to review three more, similarly ...