David Tennant's 2020 crime thriller which drew Broadchurch comparisons is now available to stream on Prime Video.
Deadwater Fell, which originally aired on Channel 4, has just been added to the streaming service with all four episodes available to watch now.
Set in a remote Scottish town, Deadwater Fell, stars Tennant as local GP Tom Kendrick, whose wife and three children were killed when a fire broke out in their home.
Tom is left as the sole surviver of the fire but all five members of the family were drugged, with the horrific crime sending shockwaves through the community and starting an investigation which uncovers deeply buried family secrets.
Writing at the time, The Guardian's Lucy Mangan described the series as, "an irresistible treat," adding that it was: "Broadchurch with freckles".
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The Evening Standard added that the series "uses the abstract architecture of Broadchurch to create psychological confusion".
Series writer and creator Daisy Coulam told Digital Spy back in 2019: "The story you think you're being told at the end of episode one is not the story that you realise you're being told in episode two, which again is not the story you thought you were in the midst of when you get to episode three.
"Whatever you think the story is, it will confound you, compel you and surprise you," she added.
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"It's about what happens behind closed doors, how we look at people's lives and think they're perfect when they're anything but and the fact we never really know our friends or the dangers behind closed doors."
Deadwater Fell also stars The Good Fight's Cush Jumbo, Cleaning Up's Matthew McNulty and EastEnders' Laurie Brett.
All four episodes of Deadwater Fell are available to stream now on Prime Video.
Reporter, Digital Spy
Stephanie is a freelance news writer, who previously covered WWE and AEW for Digital Spy.
After graduating with a degree in history from Queen Mary University, London, she studied journalism at Birkbeck University.
Outside of her work at Digital Spy, she writes about pop culture, with a special focus towards Irish media and how it intersects with politics.
You can read more of her work on her Substack page.

















