When ITV’s new thriller Code of Silence debuted on 18 May, the broadcaster replaced a regular commercial slot with a three-minute “silent ad break”, screening adverts only in British Sign Language and subtitles— a stunt that mirrored its deaf heroine’s world and drew instant praise across social media. Brands such as Ikea and Virgin Atlantic took part in the sound-free break, extending the awareness campaign beyond the programme itself.
The six-part drama, now streaming in full on ITVX, follows Alison, a deaf police-canteen worker whose lip-reading skill pulls detectives into a Canterbury robbery probe. It stars Strictly Come Dancing champion Rose Ayling-Ellis and is created by screenwriter Catherine Moulton, who is partially deaf herself. “It just made me think: lip readers are detectives,” Moulton said of her inspiration. Early viewers have hailed the “electric” chemistry between Ayling-Ellis and co-star Kieron Moore and raced through all six episodes on ITVX.
Ayling-Ellis, also an executive producer, demanded authenticity: “There is never a close-up on a character’s lips alone,” she told reporters, wary of exaggerating what lip-reading can do. She reminds hearing audiences that words like “elephant” and “I love you” look identical on the lips. Researchers put visual comprehension at only 30–40 per cent of spoken English, even under ideal conditions. Deaf journalist Liam O’Dell praised the series for “never operating under any illusion that lip-reading is easy”, while forensic expert Tina Lannin warns that the technique is “not infallible” and can produce false positives in investigations.
That caution has legal precedent. In R v Luttrell (2004) the Court of Appeal accepted lip-reading transcripts as evidence but ordered juries to be warned of their potential unreliability—a tension the drama weaves into its storyline of covert surveillance and blurred consent.
Critics have welcomed the balance of suspense and representation. The Guardian hailed Ayling-Ellis as “a triumph” who makes the show “enlightening viewing for hearing people”; The Arts Desk praised its inventive subtitles for capturing “the reality of deaf people’s experience”; and The Times said the script delivers “a cop drama with something new to say” while demystifying lip-reading’s complexity. With inventive broadcast tactics and an unsentimental look at the limits of lip-reading, Code of Silence is pushing deaf experience—and the debate around forensic lip-reading—into prime-time conversation.