Vigil

TV-MA
2021    58mDrama, Crime
7.471%72%7.2
The mysterious disappearance of a Scottish fishing trawler and a death on-board a Trident nuclear submarine bring the police into conflict with the Navy and British security services. DCI Amy Silva leads an investigation on land and at sea into a conspiracy that threatens the very heart of Britain's nuclear deterrent.

2 Seasons

  • Series 1
    Series 16 Episodes
  • Series 2
    Series 26 Episodes
  • Suranne JonesDCI Amy Silva
  • Rose LeslieDS Kirsten Longacre
  • Gary LewisDSU Colin Robertson
  • Shaun EvansElliot Glover
  • Romola GaraiEliza Russell
  • Anjli MohindraTiffany Docherty
  • Martin CompstonCraig Burke
  • Paterson JosephCommander Newsome
  • Chris JenksCallum Barker
  • Connor SwindellsSimon Hadlow
  • Jonathan AjayiWes Harper
  • Adam JamesLt Commander Mark Prentice
  • Amir El-MasryDaniel Ramsay
  • Lolita ChakrabartiBranning
  • Oscar SalemCaptain Sattam Abdul Kader
  • Stephen DillaneShaw
  • Dougray ScottMarcus Grainger
  • Lauren LyleJade Antoniak
  • Nebras JamaliAli Bilali
  • Shannon HayesNicole Lawson

Vigil Ratings & Reviews

  • CallumNovember 5, 2025
    ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ – Vigil – Depth, Duty, and the Dread Beneath Some shows aim high; Vigil dives deep. What begins as a seemingly straightforward procedural quickly becomes one of the most gripping British thrillers in recent years — part murder mystery, part political drama, and part pressure cooker confined beneath the waves. Suranne Jones commands every frame as DCI Amy Silva, a woman forced to investigate a suspicious death aboard a nuclear submarine that refuses to surface. Claustrophobia drips from every bulkhead; the walls feel too close, the air too stale, the truth just out of reach. Her performance is raw and intelligent — equal parts control and collapse — and she manages to make the smallest twitch of doubt feel like an implosion. Rose Leslie, fresh from Game of Thrones, provides a steady counterbalance on land, chasing political threads while Silva wrestles with ghosts of trauma and the quiet menace of the deep. Season one is a masterclass in tension — a murder mystery that replaces ticking clocks with sonar pings and steel doors that may as well be prison bars. Then, season two breaks the seal and takes us to open skies and dusty battlefields, trading suffocating corridors for drone warfare and moral fog. The contrast works brilliantly: from the crushing pressure of the ocean to the blinding exposure of the desert, Vigil proves that danger doesn’t need darkness — it just needs power unchecked. In tone, it sits somewhere between Line of Duty’s procedural grit and Bodyguard’s restrained intensity. It never plunges into the hopelessness of Blue Lights’ Warhammer-esque grit, but nor does it shy from the moral murk. This is British drama at its best — tightly coiled, emotionally charged, and laced with that quiet institutional tension where rules and conscience are never quite aligned. You can see the truth, you can almost touch it, but the system keeps the lid screwed on tight. Two seasons in, Vigil remains taut, smart, and full of moral bite. And if the Navy and Army have had their turns, the Air Force must surely be next — though heaven knows how Silva will conduct an interrogation from the cockpit of an F-35. ☕️ Pairing: A strong black tea with a drop of whisky — comforting yet bracing, much like Silva herself: unflinching, complex, and just the right kind of bitter.

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