The new HBO crime drama Mare of Easttown opens with shots of a small town tableau. Soon after, we see a beleaguered Kate Winslet hitting a vape. Wait a minute now, I thought, are we in a tight-knit community where nobody is quite what they seem … and is this detective trying to solve a crime while she’s wrestling with her personal demons???
The sad TV detective trope is well-worn by now. Sometime in the last 15 years, it was decided that if we’re going to see a character solve a crime on television, they better come with some serious baggage. (I like to imagine that the directive came from a fat cat studio exec chomping on a cigar and shouting “Sadder! Make ‘em sadder!”) Vulture pointed out this trend in 2018, writing, “If the premise of a TV show is that a detective searches for justice, it follows that the detective will be almost unbearably sad. Her ability to do her job will occasionally be hindered by her alcoholism, or her post-traumatic stress, or her grief.” You want a well-adjusted television detective with healthy work-life balance, thriving relationships, and a keen sense of boundaries? Sorry bud, the halcyon days of Columbo are behind us.
But who is the saddest TV detective of them all? Using a secret scientific process, we assessed our top 10 picks on an x-y axis of sadness and skills; the highest ranked are both the most morose and the best at their jobs. Chug a drink, stare silently out at a foggy vista while ruminating on your many regrets, then read on.
10. John River (Stellan Skarsgård) in River
Let’s kick things off with a British pick, because streaming detective dramas are the UK’s number one international export (number two is Mr. Bean). Here, Stellan Skarsgård plays DI John River, a literally haunted detective: he imagines his murdered ex-partner—played by the great Nicola Walker, who you will recognize from … all the other British detective shows—is following him wherever he goes.
9. Ralph Anderson (Ben Mendelsohn) in The Outsider