| Lynley | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Crime drama |
| Based on | The Inspector Lynley series by Elizabeth George |
| Written by | Steve Thompson |
| Directed by | Ed Bazalgette |
| Starring | |
Countries of origin |
|
Original language | English |
| No. of series | 1 |
| No. of episodes | 4 |
| Production | |
Executive producers |
|
| Producer | Suzanne McAuley |
| Running time | 90 minutes |
| Production companies |
|
| Original release | |
| Network | BritBox (United States) |
| Release | 4 September 2025 (2025-09-04) – present |
| Network | BBC One (United Kingdom) |
| Release | 5 January 2026 (2026-01-05) – present |
Lynley is a British crime drama television series that is an adaptation of the Inspector Lynley novel series by Elizabeth George. Leo Suter plays the title role, Detective Inspector (DI) Tommy Lynley, alongside Sofia Barclay as Detective Sergeant (DS) Barbara Havers. The series premiered on 4 September 2025 on BritBox in the United States and on 5 January 2026 on BBC One in the United Kingdom. On 30 March 2026, BritBox announced the second season, with production now underway in Dublin.[1]
Premise
A mismatched crime-solving detective duo working for the fictitious Three Counties police force (covering East Anglia) and based in Norfolk are teamed up: an aristocratic male police inspector and a maverick female sergeant from a working class background. Together, the two become a formidable team, bonded by their integrity and their desire to see justice done, while the series tackles issues around personality, gender, and class.[2]
Cast and characters
- Leo Suter as DI Thomas "Tommy" Lynley, 8th Earl of Asherton
- Sofia Barclay as DS Barbara Havers
- Daniel Mays as Detective Chief Inspector (DCI) Brian Nies
- Niamh Walsh as Helen Clyde
- Michael Workéyè as Tony Bakare
- Rosalyn Wright as Maia Saunders
- Joshua Sher as Simon St. James
- Nadia Parkes as Sofia
- Jack Archer as Frazer
- Eloise Thomas as Cynthia
- Tom Forbes as Gareth
- Oliver Wellington as Leo Hodgson
- Sophie Harkness as Gemma Swift
- Helene Maksoud as Susan Myerson
- Nathaniel Curtis as Prof Hamish Milne
- Kris Hitchen as DI Derek Horwood
Production
The Elizabeth George Inspector Lynley novels are adapted by Steve Thompson, who is also an executive producer. The four-part series is directed by Ed Bazalgette. It is produced by BritBox International, Playground and Salt Films.[3]
The cast is led by Leo Suter and Sofia Barclay and also includes Daniel Mays, Niamh Walsh and Michael Workéyè.[4]
Despite being set in the fictional "Three Counties" constabulary in East Anglia, the series began filming in August 2024 around Dublin, along the Wicklow Mountains, and at Mallow Castle in County Cork. Additional establishing shots were filmed in London, the Norfolk Broads, and the Thames Estuary.[5][6]
The series calls back to the previous adaption of the books, The Inspector Lynley Mysteries series, filmed between 2001 and 2008, putting Inspector Lynley back in a vintage 1970 Jensen Interceptor Mk II, the same model car featured in the original series.[7]
The series was purchased by the BBC in October 2024. Suzanne McAuley is series producer. David Stern and Colin Callender are executive producers for Playground with Robert Schildhouse, Stephen Nye, Jon Farrar and Jess O'Riordan executive producers for BritBox, Kate Woods executive producer for BBC Studios and Sue Deeks as executive producer for the BBC.[8]
Broadcast
Lynley premiered on 4 September 2025 on BritBox in the United States.[9][10] In the United Kingdom, the series premiered on 5 January 2026 on BBC One, with all episodes made available on BBC iPlayer the same day.[11]
Episodes
| No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date | UK air date | UK viewers (millions) [12] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | "A Place of Hiding" | Ed Bazalgette | Steve Thompson | 4 September 2025 (2025-09-04) | 5 January 2026 | 4.45 |
| 2 | 2 | "This Body of Death" | Ed Bazalgette | Steve Thompson | 11 September 2025 (2025-09-11) | 12 January 2026 | 4.13 |
| 3 | 3 | "Careless in Red" | Stewart Svaasand | Steve Thompson | 18 September 2025 (2025-09-18) | 19 January 2026 | 4.19 |
| 4 | 4 | "With No One as a Witness" | Ed Bazalgette | Steve Thompson | 25 September 2025 (2025-09-25) | 26 January 2026 | 4.18 |
Reception
A review in The Guardian described it as "undemanding telly".[13]
In The Independent, Nick Hilton wrote: "It feels cruel, having lamented the inexorable rise of detective dramas that plumb the depths of human despair, to be so underwhelmed by a determinedly old-school offering like Lynley. ... There would be something reassuring about this throwback, if it were better executed. Instead, the eye is drawn constantly to the limitations: the performances, the writing, the convoluted mysteries."[14]
On a positive note, Laura Jane Turner of Digital Spy wrote: "[T]o the show's credit, despite the focus on their developing (and strictly platonic) relationship, Lynley and Havers are afforded equal care and attention as individual characters. We are offered insights into each of their personal lives and further layers of characterisation, elevated by Suter and Barclay's performances and chemistry. While Lynley isn't going to go down as a groundbreaking or game-changing show, it's a solid case-of-the-week that will surely be as enjoyable for fans of the original story as it is for a broader cosy crime audience."[15]
References
- Room, BritBox Media. "BritBox Announces Second Season of Lynley, Now in Production". press.britbox.com. Retrieved 17 April 2026.
- Berman, Marc (16 October 2024). "'Lynley,' Based on the Crime Novels, Begins Filming for Britbox". Programminginsider.com. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
- Goldbart, Max (26 July 2024). "Inspector Lynley Series In The Works At BritBox International & 'Wolf Hall' Producer Playground". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
- Cremona, Patrick (16 October 2024). "BBC announces Lynley adaptation with Ted Lasso, Line of Duty and Vera stars". Radio Times. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
- "Filming underway in Ireland on Lynley reboot from Salt Films and Playground for BBC Studios and BritBox International". IFTN. The Irish Film & Television Network. 20 August 2024.
- Hibbs, James (5 January 2026). "Where was Lynley filmed?". Radio Times. Immediate Media Company Ltd.
- Fear, Helen (5 January 2026). "DI Thomas Lynley's vintage car is 'star of the show'". TV Guide. Digitalbox Publishing Ltd.
- Goldbart, Max (16 October 2024). "BBC Buys BritBox International's 'Lynley' Series As Elizabeth George Adaptation Rounds Out Cast & Rolls Cameras". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
- "Britbox/US Lynley". Britbox US. Archived from the original on 10 September 2025. Retrieved 10 September 2025.
- McPherson, Chris (16 October 2024). "Inspector Lynley Returns as BritBox Reboots the Beloved British Mystery Series". Collider. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
- Cormack, Morgan (12 December 2025). "New Inspector Lynley adaptation with Sanditon favourite gets release date confirmed by the BBC". Radio Times. Retrieved 16 December 2025.
- "Weekly Top 50 Shows (select date from dropdown)". Broadcasters' Audience Research Board. Retrieved 9 February 2026.
- Mangan, Lucy (5 January 2026). "Lynley review – consider it the ultimate undemanding telly". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 25 January 2026.
- Hilton, Nick (5 January 2026). "Lynley review – Wooden acting and clunky scripts stop this from being a great comeback for the detective show". The Independent. London: Independent Digital News & Media Ltd. Retrieved 11 June 2026.
- Turner, Laura Jane (5 January 2026). "BBC's exciting new crime drama has a mismatched detective duo that you won't want to stop watching". Digital Spy. London: Hearst UK. Retrieved 11 June 2026.