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Silent Witness Season 28 Review

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Silent Witness Season 28 Review: New Blood, Same Unbelievable Charm

Ben Carter by Ben Carter
8 months ago
in Entertainment, Reviews, TV Shows
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Some television shows are mere programs; Silent Witness is a geological feature. It has been on the air for so long that it feels less like a product of broadcast schedules and more like an unmovable part of the landscape. Its 28th season begins not with a bang, but with the eerie quiet of change. The Lyell Centre, London’s busiest and most dramatic morgue, has been hit by a staff clear-out, leaving only the central duo of Dr. Nikki Alexander and Jack Hodgson to hold the fort.

Their long-simmering professional respect has finally boiled over into a full-blown engagement, and they fill the lab’s emptiness with the slightly awkward energy of two people trying to plan a wedding around corpses. This cozy status quo is promptly shattered by the arrival of a baby grand piano, heralding the entrance of Professor Harriet Maven, the Lyell’s formidable new head.

She is joined by the sharp and cheerful analyst Kit Brooks, completing a new quartet. The season immediately poses its central question: how does a television landmark reinvent itself without losing its foundations?

The Piano, The Prodigy, and The Pathologists

A show’s longevity often depends on successful transfusions of new blood, and this season’s casting choices are a masterstroke of revitalization. Maggie Steed arrives as Harriet Maven not merely as a new boss, but as a welcome agent of chaos. An eccentric pulled from retirement, Harriet’s decision to install a piano in her office is a declaration of intent: the old ways are over.

Steed plays her with a magnificent, dry authority, her sharp intellect cutting through any procedural fluff. Her instant friction with Jack, whom she correctly identifies as the resident wit, creates a compelling dynamic. It is a clash of the old guard’s freewheeling style against a new, if quirky, sense of order. In perfect contrast, Francesca Mills’s Kit Brooks is a breath of fresh air.

She is written with a playful intelligence and performed with an infectious energy that makes her fit in instantly. Mills ensures Kit is never just a sidekick; she is a vital intellectual connector, a capable analyst who builds bridges between Jack’s intuition and Harriet’s demanding standards. The result is a team that feels more alive and collaborative.

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Their interactions make the lab scenes crackle with a fresh energy, turning what could be simple exposition into engaging character moments that drive the narrative forward.

From Cowboy Builders to Cabin Pressure

The season’s cases demonstrate a remarkable narrative range, shifting from intimately disturbing domestic horror to high-concept thriller mechanics. The opening two-parter, “Exodus: 20:17,” is a chillingly effective piece of television grounded in the all-too-real threat of elder abuse. The story centers on a ring of conmen using property scams to exploit and murder vulnerable pensioners.

The direction builds a palpable sense of dread, focusing on the quiet menace of a charming fraudster and the heartbreaking confusion of his victims. David Hargreaves gives a particularly moving performance as a targeted widower, while Sean Pertwee’s return as the world-weary DI John Flynn adds a layer of grizzled authenticity to the investigation. Later in the season, “Vanishing Point” throws the show into a completely different gear.

Confining its action to a long-haul flight, the episode is a masterclass in claustrophobic tension. The direction uses tight shots and a disorienting sound design to amplify the passengers’ panic as a mysterious illness spreads.

The script brilliantly juggles the immediate threat inside the cabin with the frantic investigation on the ground, creating a gripping, multi-layered narrative that explores grief, paranoia, and the mechanics of a potential terror plot. It is an ambitious, cinematic achievement that proves the series is still capable of producing genuinely unforgettable television.

Comfort Food with a Side of Formaldehyde

Silent Witness has outlasted its contemporaries by perfecting a bizarre but irresistible formula. At its core, it is a piece of forensic science fiction, a universe where pathologists are also world-class detectives, fearless action heroes, and amateur psychologists. The show’s most enduring trope is the sight of Nikki and Jack arriving at a crime scene and immediately spotting the pivotal clue that dozens of police officers somehow missed.

Silent Witness Season 28 Review

It is a delightful absurdity that viewers have willingly accepted for decades. This is not a series for procedural purists; it is a dark, character-driven melodrama that uses science as its stylish backdrop. The Nikki and Jack romance is the ultimate extension of this identity. For some, it is a soapy distraction, but it also represents the show’s full commitment to its melodramatic heart, raising the personal stakes to their highest level. This blend of the fantastical with the graphically real is what makes it such compelling comfort viewing.

The unflinching realism of the autopsy scenes, with their scalpels and skull saws, provides a jarring jolt of morbidity that keeps the familiar rhythms from becoming stale. The show’s true genius lies in this delicate balancing act. It is a reliable machine that delivers a very specific, unbelievable, and thoroughly entertaining product, suggesting this television titan may just be immortal after all.

Silent Witness Season 28 is the latest installment of the long-running British crime drama. It premiered on Monday, January 6, 2025, at 9 pm on BBC One in the UK, with the full series available to stream on BBC iPlayer starting from that date. In North America, the season premiered on BritBox on September 25, 2025. The 28th season is structured into ten episodes, comprising five two-part stories, and carries an overarching theme of love, particularly following Jack Hodgson’s proposal to Dr. Nikki Alexander.

Full Credits

Director: Thaddeus O’Sullivan, Richard Signy, Andy Hay, Dudi Appleton, David Richards, Tracey Rooney

Writers: Nigel McCrery, Ed Whitmore, Michael Crompton, Jim Keeble, Timothy Prager, Dudi Appleton, Tony McHale, Tracey Malone

Producers and Executive Producers: Phillippa Giles, Delia Fine, Emilia Fox, Lawrence Till, Priscilla Parish, Richard Stokes, Nick Lambon, Nawfal Faizullah, Caroline Levy

Cast: Emilia Fox, David Caves, Amanda Burton, William Gaminara, Tom Ward, Liz Carr, Richard Lintern, Alastair Michael, Aki Omoshaybi, Genesis Lynea

Composer: Geoffrey Burgon, John Harle, Paul Leonard-Morgan, Sheridan Tongue, Jon Opstad, Nick Holywell-Walker

The Review

Silent Witness Season 28

8.5 Score

With a superb cast shake-up that injects fresh energy, Silent Witness Season 28 proves its remarkable longevity is no accident. The new team dynamic is a delight, anchored by Maggie Steed’s formidable presence and Francesca Mills's charm. While the plots remain as gloriously implausible as ever, the season delivers standout cases, including a genuinely tense high-altitude thriller. This is a confident, revitalized chapter for the forensic-procedural titan, proving the old formula still has plenty of life left in it.

PROS

  • The new characters, Harriet and Kit, are fantastic additions that revitalize the team's chemistry.
  • The season features a compelling mix of grounded, emotional stories and high-concept thrillers.
  • The new four-person team has an immediate and believable camaraderie.
  • The show successfully leans into its signature blend of graphic forensics and melodramatic plotting.

CONS

  • The long-running trope of pathologists acting as detectives requires a major suspension of disbelief.
  • The new characters are well-integrated but are not given much personal history.
  • The absence of former colleagues is mentioned only in passing.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: Aki OmoshaybiAlastair MichaelAmanda BurtonBBC OneCrime dramaDavid CavesDramaEmilia FoxFeaturedLiz CarrNigel McCrerySilent WitnessSuspenseTom WardTop PickWilliam Gaminara
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