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  • Let's start with what's flawed with the show. It takes some liberties with the truth and with the rules we're used to in real life situations similar to those depicted in the drama itself. But doesn't all fiction? I look at it more as being so strongly told from the points of views of the lead characters that they are unreliable narrators, remembering things differently from how they may have played out. The fourth episode is a little slow/uneven with the pacing and has a few superfluous scenes, although it does build the characterisation up. The overall plot relies a little too much on convenience, i.e. everyone knows everyone else either as neighbours or old friends/colleagues, but it's so tightly written I can't see another way that would have worked without weakening the story.

    This is a serious drama with the odd hint of black comedy. I found all the breaks from reality served the plot rather than detracting from it, which is important. The script is very strong - barely a wasted word, not overflowing with exposition as often seems to be the case these days, which allows plenty of breathing room through which the characters and audience can reflect on what has happened. Even the minor characters get enough screen time and backstory to be believable rather than being underwritten footnotes, a hard trick to pull off.

    The subject matter is handled with maturity, even when the characters may act with poor judgement or display immaturity themselves. In the way it portrays the differences in genders it spares neither, showing the strengths and weaknesses of both, what we're all capable of, what we're afraid of if we lose the foundations on which our lives are built. The maturity of age, the carelessness of youth, those caught in the middle of an uncomfortable situation who know they should speak out but just can't because they'd hate to be the bearer of life-changing bad news - it's all here.

    Throughout it all the performances are almost uniformly excellent, with particular praise directed towards Suranne Jones. For a character like Gemma Foster you need an actress that can say a lot with only expressions when there isn't dialogue (show, don't tell) and she can do this with an expert level of skill. What she holds back is almost as impressive as what she says and how she says it. Finding herself on the receiving end of infidelity turns her into something she hadn't expected - a detective, a possible reference to her role in Scott & Bailey. She cleverly puts all the clues together, bides her time, does more than a few ethically questionable/devious things in the process and puts her husband where she was emotionally with her actions, a little more each episode. There's the sense that deep down beneath her somewhat smug and condescending exterior and seemingly impulsive actions she cares about those in her life, making decisions for them that they might not have been strong enough to make on their own. She becomes cold and calculating only because she has to, so I'd say she is sympathetic even when she's being morally ambiguous. Her first priority is the motherly instinct to support her son, and in this she succeeds even though first she must step back and consider the dangers of a work/life balance that focuses too heavily on work.

    In conclusion, a few critiques aside, I would say this is one of the best drama series the BBC has commissioned in years. It takes a long, hard look at the consequences of couples trapped in flawed relationships, and which actions they take to keep it all together or end it entirely. There's guilt, passion, denial, painful retribution, webs of deceit and lies. Everything you'd expect when dealing with a multi-faceted matter such as infidelity. It's a grown-up study of what happens when marriages become stale and people cheat which happens to make compelling viewing.

    Thoroughly recommended. 8/10
  • This show gives me bad anxiety so beware. Intense feelings, suspenseful, keeps you on the edge of your seat. That's just season 1, now on to season 2.....
  • TheLittleSongbird21 October 2017
    Have found myself watching the BBC less over the years, mainly because of being too busy and also not a lot that airs regularly interests me. Programmes that were watched religiously when younger are now only watched sporadically or not watched anymore, having lost interest. There are though a fair share of treasures, like their literary period dramas and the David Attenborough nature documentaries, and unexpected gems.

    While not without its drawbacks, 'Doctor Foster' is one of those flawed but better than expected winners. It won't appeal to all tastes, the criticisms are understandable, and it's not quite one of the best BBC dramas/series in years. To me on the other hand, 'Doctor Foster' when it first aired in 2015 was something that personally didn't expect to be as good as it was. And its second season this year was one of the better BBC programmes airing in the latter part of this year.

    'Doctor Foster' to me isn't perfect. Do agree about the truth and credibility being stretched, Gemma especially making some rash and unrealistic decisions. Some events also happen and are resolved all too conveniently. The final episode of Season 1 also felt somewhat unbalanced and absurdly melodramatic and sees Gemma's unrealistic actions at her worst and most extreme, almost erratic.

    On the other hand, 'Doctor Foster' is very well made visually, stylish and audaciously with a fluid way of how it's shot. The music has presence but has moments where it isn't too intrusive, though it can be prone to being melodramatically overbearing.

    The script is thought-provoking and continually smart and gripping, with some genuine pathos, tension and a little dark subtle humour. The storytelling is not always perfect in balance but has plenty of twists and turns and its depiction of flawed relationships and such can be quite chilling. The same goes for Season 2 in both the script and story, except that it takes a darker and more emotionally turbulent tone, as well as even more twisted. There are still the same faults that the first season did, except the ending of Season 2 is more of a nail-biter and more emotional.

    Direction keeps things controlled, the storytelling never gets dull and the characters are interesting even if their behaviour is uneven and are largely unsympathetic with the exception of Tom. A huge part of 'Doctor Foster's' appeal is Suranne Jones, who is in nearly every scene and dominates them all in an outstandingly nuanced turn that says so much whether saying anything or being reliant on expressions without saying anything.

    Bertie Carvel is also excellent and Tom Taylor is wholly credible as the most sympathetically, realistically and consistently written character (one does relate to him). All the supporting cast do very well, with Robert Pugh in Season 1 being one of the most memorable ones.

    In conclusion, flawed but still a winner. 7.5/10 Bethany Cox
  • Really enjoyed the series, a very slick show that was well written, well produced and brilliantly acted. Suranne Jones and Bertie Carvel were excellent as the lead couple. Her initial paranoia and subsequent problems were brilliantly realised, but it all came down to the Dinner party in the concluding episode, what an outstanding piece of television that was, I was on tender hooks watching it. They managed to keep it entertaining and gripping all the way through, it was filled with twists and turns, you had no idea what was going to happen next. Roll on Series 2!

    9/10 exceptional drama.
  • One of a kind relationship-horror with strong Shakespearean elements of personas and duplicity, betrayal, obsession, jealously, revenge, conniving and plotting, and distrust.

    As the viewer we are constantly made extremely paranoid and horrified by the protagonist's life. Constant threats from every side and not a single person to trust. Suranne Jones is absolutely terrific as the two faced doctor who is highly composed and calculating, while a seething wreck inside.

    It also portrays the curse of the professional woman -- of how she's "unlikeable," a damnation that often means her doom.

    There is no sympathetic character, no hero and villain. And just as how some people hate Hamlet, while others are fascinated by him, so will many viewers hate Gemma, while others will be glued to the screen to watch her every move and expression.

    It's also in sorts almost a semi-Lynchian small-town mystery, where everyone has a secret, everyone is very close, yet no one can be trusted.

    An amazing and gripping show that makes a intense and horrific portrayal of something as domestic as marriage and it's complications (an understatement). Carrying strong tones of paranoia, calculated revenge, depiction of "natural" misogyny, and with undertones of misanthropy, this show will give you knots and chills and keep you hooked.
  • I previously reviewed this show (deleted) after the first series. Had they left it after the first series it would have remained in my opinion a slightly flawed, but compelling example of TV drama.

    Having just watched the final episode of the second series, I wish that Suranne Jones had been given her way and the whole thing had been left at the end of Series One, which had a satisfying ending without leaning too much towards melodrama.

    Without disclosing anything of the latter series, I can only say how disappointed I am at how the story line became more complicated and unrealistic as the show progressed. Acting in this was, as in the first series, excellent, if a bit OTT at times, but I regret to say that this was spoiled by the plot, which was increasingly all over the place. A huge disappointment in almost every way.
  • The creator of this brilliant five-part series has gone on the record stating that they would not rule out there being a second series. It's really hoped that would happen. And if they would be able to pull it off with anywhere near as much intense drama as the first, it would be a truly remarkable achievement. For without a doubt, this is some of the finest programming you're likely to see this year (or for that matter the past several years). The entire cast is outstanding, and Suranne Jones is just simply phenomenal... all acclaim she receives is so well deserved. This is one for the library.. and that final episode, in my mind, will go down as one of the best series finale's in programming history.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I don't understand why people praise this series so highly. Yeah, sure, it's nice sugar to eat for a while, but then it makes you ill. It reminds me very much of 'At Home With the Braithwaites', a hit series years ago about a family that copes badly after they win an obscene amount of money in the lottery. You take a respectable middle class family, then drop them in an extreme situation that they can't handle. Soon the characters turn into cartoon figures and the plot becomes ridiculous. And similar to 'Braithwaites', 'Doctor Foster' started out as a classy and realistic series, but it soon reverted to schlock and cheap tricks to keep us interested. Suranne Jones is certainly chic and expressive in the title role, as Dr Gemma Foster, but the ridiculous melodrama she goes through is worthy of a bad pantomime. And after discovering that her husband Simon (Bertie Carvel) has cheated on her many times with many women, she doesn't do what most normal people would -- confront him, call him a piece of trash, leave him, then get herself a good lawyer. Instead, she waits what seems like an eternity, i.e. about five episodes, to silently grieve, break the law, enlist dodgy friends to spy for her, go mad, try to drown herself, devise revenge schemes and do everything except the logical things. She even cheats on her husband with one of his friends, solely to elicit information about Simon's finances. And she is supposed to be an intelligent physician and pillar of the community? Sorry, I just don't buy it. While it was initially refreshing to see a doctor as a flawed human being, and Jones is great at conveying the myriad emotions of a cheated-on wife, the ensuing schlock was ultimately just annoying. The production values are great, the pacing is fine and the setting in a picturesque village is appealing. Maybe if the writers had shown a little less sensationalism, this would have been a great series.
  • hezmack15 October 2015
    I don't normally write reviews but after reading the others I got bored.

    This is good. If you like nail biting drama watch this.

    The other women around me loved it and I discussed at length all the possible outcomes with them. It keeps you guessing throughout.

    If you haven't already watched this and don't want spoilers do not Google this as there are many forums that have people talking about this.

    Block out 5 hours of your life and get comfy. You won't want to leave the telly! (please don't search for it in between episodes because you will find out what happens)

    I was screaming at the TV which is something I haven't done in a long time. If your a woman you will love it and if you're a guy you probably won't be bothered unless you like that sort of thing.

    Gemma, the main character, does and doesn't do some of the normal things that you would expect her to do and you do route for her throughout. I definitely recommend it.
  • I get it when people gush about a show, "Oh it's sooooo good, I really loved it so much, you have to watch it!" The statement is rubbish to me, as useless as an empty ink cartridge. The only think I learn out of that is that the person doesn't know how to articulate why they thought the film (or whatever) was "good."

    Well, I'm not going to do that to you. I will try to be pithy but also support my declaration that this is a show worthy of your undivided ten hour attention. Yeah, only two seasons each with five episodes... and just think I had to wait three years for the second season, you can just power on through on a Sunday binge... just do yourself a favor - before you start: clear the next ten hours because you will not want to miss out by sleeping or bothered with work... no this will be difficult to turn off.

    Why?

    Because the characters are so wonderfully rich and intricately woven into each other's storylines. This is about a relationship, the main one being a smaller town doctor, her husband, her son, her practice and how she deals with handling betrayal on all sides of her life. The strong acting lends to the believability of the characters actions and the lengths they go to be heard, understood and ultimately loved. Just when you think you know the characters and think you have it all figured out another delicious tidbit is doled out to the viewer leading you to think the character just might...

    It is highly relatable... anyone who has ever been in a relationship of any kind might be able to recognize the blatant manipulations, but honestly this is a simple story with very clever twists. Extremely satisfying for those going through a breakup, however, I think the biggest flaw -if there was one to point out- a smart, resourceful woman would have never looked back. Despite getting her hand burned several times, Doctor Foster can't help but put her hand back on the stove over and over again.

    There are rumors of a third season, completely up in the air as of April 2018... but I'm hooked and waiting. Just hope it's not another three years in the making.
  • gweesha27 November 2021
    The first season was really good, and I really believe they should've stopped right there. They really did not need a second season. Gemma just gets more pathetic in every episode, and I found myself losing interest. I just feel like the story was told in season one and should've ended.
  • kesakb12 July 2018
    This program is engrossing, well written and well acted. It walks a fine line between being utterly disgusting and completely relatable, making me hate it and love it all at once. You definitely have to be patient to watch all the incendiary acrimony!
  • The 7 stars are for Season One. For Season Two; 3.

    If you go into this BBC Series with low expectations you will find it very entertaining. Somewhat above the 'soap opera' level of drama but still it does have that genre to thank for its plot, its themes. Again, this ain't Albee or Tennessee Williams. It ain't great theater. But Season One does entertain. Season Two turns out to be another thing completely. Here we do have the soap-opera melodramatics, in plot, in dialogue, in character. Worse still, there's no one to like.

    Doctor Foster, played by Suranne Jones, believes her husband has been unfaithful. In Season One she believes she knows with whom. And it's driving her crazy. Making matters worse, it seems that everyone knew or knows about the affair. Everyone but her. So. Who can she trust? To whom can she talk? And, if her husband has kept the affair a secret, what else about him - or others - does she not know?

    Let me tell you this. Over the course of the First Season's five episodes, you, the viewer, will find out. Though there is a Season Two, at the end of Season One I did not feel as though the writers had baited me into needing to watch Season Two. And that, of course, is a good thing. Though watch it I did. All the way to its conclusion. A long way to go for a conclusion not worth the trip.

    Suranne Jones' portrayal of Doctor Foster, is superb. She is a beautiful woman. You cannot take your eyes from her. But what wins me over is that I actually believe her pain; her face shows that pain, the sadness, the anger, even fury. Though she is far from perfect - either as a wife, mother, or physician - I rooted for her throughout Season One.

    And then came Season Two.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Wow. Season 2 - it's like a train wreck you can't turn away from, but wonder why you're still watching. Not one single character is likable in even the slightest degree. The poor teenage son will end up a serial killer thanks to his parents. I found myself asking, "Seriously?" at least every five minutes.
  • I don't understand why there are negative reviews of this drama. I found it riveting and very polished. Great storyline and performances. Hope there's a 3rd series
  • I binged this - which is pretty easy since it's 2 seasons of 5 episodes each. But each episode is filled with so much, every scene matters, and intense emotions. Each episode is 60 minutes but feels like more - wonderfully more. Watching this was an absolute treat. I can't remember the last time I unabashedly empathized for a character so much.

    I do want to say that with its plot as well as the "A Woman Scorned" subtitle, it seems like there would be more revenge, but there isn't. I empathized for the character so much that I wanted some just revenge but that's not as prevalent as it would seem. There are some moments of revenge type behavior, but only small doses. The show is extremely methodical.

    The main character Gemma is so well-written and real feeling. She's multidimensional. We see her past, present, herself, her marriage, her motherhood, and her trying to find herself among the pieces all over again.

    This show packs so many punches to the gut and doesn't hold back.

    It's. So. Good.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Suranne Jones stars with Bertie Carvel,Thusitha Jayasundera, and Jodie Comer in Dr. Foster: A Woman Scorned. This was shown in three two-hour segments on American television.

    Suranne Jones plays Gemma Foster, a successful doctor. When she finds a long blonde hair on her husband's coat, she suspects that he's having an affair. Eventually she finds out that he is. She also finds out that he's bleeding their money on a new project. Unfortunately she still loves him, and he claims to love her. She wants to make it work; finally she realizes that she can't.

    She decides to get revenge, and when she does, watch out.

    This series moved slowly at first and heated up in the fifth and sixth episodes. During the first four episodes, you want to slap her - why is she even considering staying with this guy? Granted, they have a son, but the tension in that house isn't helping him any.

    The most striking scene, which I am sure others have mentioned, is in episode five when Gemma and her husband show up at another couple's house for dinner a week early. Gemma's complete outrageousness starts there and just keeps on going.

    Supposedly there will be a season 2. It will be interesting to see what happens.
  • I couldn't stop watching.AT first it looked like something that wouldn't interest me but the first ten minutes i was hooked. I couldn't stop binging on it. Actors were all dynamic and yes, over the top sometimes but it was a fabulous ride while it lasted. I hope we get a season 3.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    ** minor spoilers ** We caught this on Netflix, and found it to be a passable, if grim, drama about the serious fallout of marital infidelity. Suranne Jones (whom we know from 'Scott & Bailey' where she plays a rather troubled detective) plays Doctor Foster, a clinic physician, with a handsome husband and son, and a tidy upper-middle class home. She finds a blond hair on a scarf she borrows from her husband, and the mystery begins to unfold: why would this guy, with a decent standard-of-living and a reasonably attractive wife, engage in an extra-marital affair? The answer, as it comes from several characters (including the erring husband), is that it is an acceptable weakness - men just don't want to stay monogamous. That's a poor excuse, of course, for betraying someone who has done nothing except being a loyal, supportive spouse for several years, and a de facto breadwinner. I might say, a pretty wife, also. She comes in for all kinds of bitter criticism from different quarters (i.e. cold, arrogant), but I didn't see it, although she does have flaws. (lol - if I started out trying to say that this film didn't reach me, I'm not doing a very good job, eh?) Another wife in this story accepts her husband's philandering as inevitable, but our Doctor refuses. Good for her.
  • 1. we never got married. 2. we never had children.

    I would have given up on both of them a long time ago. You can't control people; and fighting with or for a cheat is a complete waste of time. Girl you should have walked away the moment you realized this man had cheated. I'd take a financial loss over so much heartache. Period!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The story started off well, but it kind of ran out of steam with what to write for the last few episodes. The story was not realistic. This is a seemingly intelligent woman whose husband has an affair, a two year affair with their friend's daughter who ends up pregnant. She enlists the help of a patient to follow her husband and spy on him. This patient is being abused by her boyfriend. The doctor confronts and threatens the boyfriend, very strange thing to do. She promises she will prescribe sleeping pills to the patient is she does this for her. What sane person gets a patient to spy for her. Hire a private detective, he would of done a better job. She throughout the first few episodes finds out that her husband is a liar and is unable to tell her the truth about anything. Most women would of left after the first chance of trying to save their marriage, but she seems to expect that this deceitful man will change. He doesn't, and when she pressures him for the truth he still keeps denying everything and yet she knows he is lying again. Her son seems to be neglected and her obsession is with her husband. Then she wants to bring him down and destroy him. Why? She knows what he is like. Leave. Leave your so called friends who have the weirdest concept of love, especially her co-worker. Move to another city or town. You're a doctor, and from this show not a very good one at that. She did some really bizarre and weird things to get back at him. The guy forged her signature, was a lousy business man, spent all her money, had an affair for two years with your friend's daughter, got her pregnant and was told her was a terrible and useless businessman and yet she put all her energy into this guy. What a waste.
  • We were hooked from the first episode. The pace of storylines is fast with the characters clearly drawn. Talented direction and acting. Loved Season 1. Cannot wait to binge on Series 2. More, more, more please.
  • grnhair20019 June 2017
    Warning: Spoilers
    Though it is inexplicable what this woman character finds in this loser of a husband, if you are willing to suspend your disbelief on that matter then this plot works okay. A successful, educated woman with a nice house, a son, and a husband she thinks is okay is surprised to find not only is he cheating on her with someone inappropriately young but that many of her "friends" have been hiding this from her. She tries to keep it together, doing whatever she can to figure out what is happening and to save her marriage, but she finally realizes he is the idiot that the viewer has understood he was from early on and lets go.

    Perhaps it is a British thing that she never thinks I'm going to kill the SOB, but I rather hoped she would. Adult viewers get that the 20-year-old he goes away with will be cheated on in her turn, if she doesn't quickly find poverty unpleasant, and he'll hit her on the way out, and so it will go. And it would be a happy ending with Dr. F, dumping the loser but for her staying in the small town that also betrayed her, which makes no sense either. For a smart woman, that's pretty dumb behavior.

    Anyway...acting, lighting, all that perfectly good. Bertie Carvel nailed the sniveling boy-man who justifies and excuses his cheating. A character you do love to despise.
  • sbsieber3 February 2018
    Warning: Spoilers
    I got sucked into this melodrama and binge watched all of season one and half of season two in one night. It has been a bumpy ride and my feelings about this series are all over the map, just like the acting and characterization.

    Gemma as "The Woman Scorned" veers wildly between being the sane dutiful wife, mother and sensible GP to being a bad-ass chick who's got her revenge game on in a big way, only to devolve into a sniveling, drunken, insecure woman with questionable ethics and crazy eyes. I don't know who this woman is, but I am quite sure I would never trust her to be my physician.

    Her estranged husband, Simon, also goes through a myriad of personality changes, first as a seemingly devoted family man, then a lyin', cheatin', sniveling bastard, only to become in Season two, a smooth, mustache twirling, evil genius mastermind. Who are these people?

    The one thing I am sure of is that they are both terrible parents, and should have had their poor son taken from them early on, since the first time Gemma took him for one of her hair-raising, white knuckle car rides through the winding streets of a small(ish) English village. They talk about their son constantly; the name "Tom" is spoken ad-nauseum, they steal him away from each other, stalk him and his friends, invade his privacy, and expose him to adult situations well beyond his years, and then neglect him for hours on end. He seems to spend most of his time sulkily eating his breakfast cereal in the kitchen, or lying alone in his bedroom. What a sad and depressing life this kid lives, and most of it is his parents' fault.

    Add to this sad bunch is a motley group of friends and coworkers who appear to have no loyalties or affiliations and are about as fake as fake can be.A Guilty Pleasure and a Primer on How Not to Raise a Child
  • I watched season 1 years ago on Lifetime. I din't know they made a 2 so I started it last night. I have 2 episodes left. I have forgotten a lot about the first( except I loved it) and am liking this one so far. I've seen most the top UK series out there so I'm not going to hurry thru since I only have a few episodes left. But I really liked it. I contemplating staying up until 4am to watch another episode but I'll wait until tonight to finish. I highly recommend this series. I don't remember Simon being such a bag. Lol.
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