True crime dramas seldom provide understanding. This one is different
Genuine understanding is often the last thing a true crime drama provides. The horror of what happened in real life takes over on screen, even as the fictionalised characters seek to apply justice. The how tends to overwhelm the why. But this wrenching, insightful 2024 American limited series, which is making its free-to-air debut, achieves a sad, necessary balance. It struggles to make sense of the inexplicable, and to ask what ultimately divides the perpetrators and the investigators, the victim and those who looked away.
A story that dominated the news cycle in Canada at the time, Under the Bridge explores the 1997 murder of Reena Virk (Vritika Gupta). A teenager in British Columbia town of Saanich, Reena is the daughter of Suman (Archie Panjabi) and Manjit (Ezra Faroque Khan). She rebels against their Indian heritage and Jehovah's Witnesses faith, trying to earn the friendship of a clique of female schoolmates, led by the capricious Jo Bell (Chloe Guidry), who used gangster rap and street gangs as empowering imagery.
Reena goes out one chilly November night to meet the girls who had been alternately encouraging and tormenting her, and her battered body is discovered the next morning. Her family is devastated, the wider community shocked, and the authorities ill-prepared. It's two locals that sit apart who advance the case: police officer Cam Bentland (Lily Gladstone) is the adopted First Nations daughter of the police chief, while her long absent friend, Rebecca Godfrey (Riley Keough), is a writer wrestling with grief.
Under the Bridge was adapted from Godfrey's 2005 literary non-fiction of the same name. Creator Quinn Shephard worked closely with Godfrey, who passed away just before the limited series started production, and they shaped a story where the questions asked are diverse and difficult to answer. The storytelling can be idiosyncratic or unexpected: a scene that suggests a generic dynamic will not unfold as expected, while one episode is an extended flashback to the courtship between Reena's parents in 1979.
The show looks thoughtfully at the many factors that tragically intersected on Reena's final night alive, whether it's the racism and suspicion the Virk family had to navigate, or how teenagers like Jo, who lives in a group home overseen by social services, have already been written off by many locals before they've done anything wrong. The one boy present on the night Reena died, Warren Glowatski (Javon Walton), comes into focus as an unbuoyed figure, and his bond with Rebecca is tender and doomed.
Loading
Both Gladstone (Killers of the Flower Moon) and Keough (Daisy Jones and the Six) give cohesive performances that pull and fray at the conventions of their characters. You can feel the former's Cam bristling at the off-hand dismissals of the town's disadvantaged, realising she could easily have been one of them. The latter's Rebecca silently knows that her empathy for all involved must eventually come up against her desire to write about what happened, to pass a written judgment.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sydney Morning Herald
2 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
The anatomy of a record Wimbledon serve
Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard may have left the Wimbledon field for another year, but his record-breaking 246km/h serve will be remembered – not least by American Taylor Fritz who was on the receiving end. Fritz somehow managed to return the missile – the fastest in tournament history – to win the point in Tuesday's match, and Mpetshi Perricard was ultimately beaten 6-7(6-8), 6-7(8-10), 6-4, 7-6 (8-6), 6-4 to exit in the first round. But the shot will stick in the minds of fans around the globe who have marvelled at the speed, accuracy and agility of tennis greats on display at Wimbledon. In a clear sign of just how the art of the serve has captivated fans around the world, an Instagram post of world No.1 Jannik Sinner appearing to serve a ball on to a match stick, lighting it in the process, has garnered more than 475,000 likes. Much of Tuesday's post-match focus was on Mpetshi Perricard's reputation for hitting huge serves, which the 21-year-old told reporters came naturally. 'I didn't check the speed, to be honest... I lost the point,' the six-foot-eight Frenchman said. 'I'm not doing some special technique to have a big serve or a fast serve. I'm serving like I'm supposed to do.' But what actually goes into a great serve? We spoke to professional tennis coach Marc Sophoulis, from the Melbourne International Tennis School, to find out. 'The big thing with Mpetshi Perricard's serve [is that] he has a step-up serve, gaining a lot of momentum from his back foot moving up to his front foot before he serves,' Sophoulis, who has worked with Anastasia and Arina Rodionova, Victor Hanescu, and the Bryan brothers, observes.

The Age
2 hours ago
- The Age
The anatomy of a record Wimbledon serve
Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard may have left the Wimbledon field for another year, but his record-breaking 246km/h serve will be remembered – not least by American Taylor Fritz who was on the receiving end. Fritz somehow managed to return the missile – the fastest in tournament history – to win the point in Tuesday's match, and Mpetshi Perricard was ultimately beaten 6-7(6-8), 6-7(8-10), 6-4, 7-6 (8-6), 6-4 to exit in the first round. But the shot will stick in the minds of fans around the globe who have marvelled at the speed, accuracy and agility of tennis greats on display at Wimbledon. In a clear sign of just how the art of the serve has captivated fans around the world, an Instagram post of world No.1 Jannik Sinner appearing to serve a ball on to a match stick, lighting it in the process, has garnered more than 475,000 likes. Much of Tuesday's post-match focus was on Mpetshi Perricard's reputation for hitting huge serves, which the 21-year-old told reporters came naturally. 'I didn't check the speed, to be honest... I lost the point,' the six-foot-eight Frenchman said. 'I'm not doing some special technique to have a big serve or a fast serve. I'm serving like I'm supposed to do.' But what actually goes into a great serve? We spoke to professional tennis coach Marc Sophoulis, from the Melbourne International Tennis School, to find out. 'The big thing with Mpetshi Perricard's serve [is that] he has a step-up serve, gaining a lot of momentum from his back foot moving up to his front foot before he serves,' Sophoulis, who has worked with Anastasia and Arina Rodionova, Victor Hanescu, and the Bryan brothers, observes.


7NEWS
7 hours ago
- 7NEWS
7NEWS take a tour of Brittany Saunders' multi-million dollar company, Fayt
An Australian fashion founder with a multi-million dollar business has described how she went from dropping out of school, to starting her empire. And if you've dipped your toe into the world of online shopping, there is a high chance you've bought something from Brittney Saunders' company, Fayt. Watch 7NEWS at 6pm for a behind the scenes look at the Fayt warehouse. Know the news with the 7NEWS app: Download today Saunders started out as a content creator after discovering some American influencers on Youtube when she was 14-years-old and knew she wanted to do it. She grew a loyal group of followers after making Youtube videos and then eventually branched out to Instagram and Tiktok too. Those loyal followers turned into a customer base when she launched Fayt almost eight years ago. 'I guess, yeah, I became an influencer. I think I always knew deep down that wasn't gonna be sustainable for me forever,' she told 7NEWS. Fayt sells womenswear, but with a twist. The clothing shuns the standard model and instead runs its collections in a full suite of sizes. 'As we got bigger and bigger, I'd add another size and another.,' Saunders said. 'And then it got to the point where we had sizes six to 26 in everything. And now it's just it's normal to us and I forget that not every brand does that.' Fayt is now so big, it has outgrown its 1300sqm warehouse and is expanding to a second storage space next door. Saunders' story is a modern day fairytale and now she's sharing all the secrets to her success in her brand new memoir.