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Steven Knight developed Peaky Blinders, which was directed by Otto Bathurst and produced by Katie Swinden.1)
Steven Knight, David Leland, Stephen Russell, and Toby Finlay are credited as the writers.2)
Birmingham, Bradford, Dudley, Leeds, Liverpool, and Port Sunlight were all used as filming locations for the series.3)
Using carriages from the Ingrow Museum of Rail Travel, railway sequences were shot between Keighley and Damems (owned by Vintage Carriages Trust and carriages owned by the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Trust).4)
Northern Irish actors James Nesbitt and Liam Neeson assisted Sam Neill in perfecting his Northern Irish dialect for the character of C.I. Campbell.5)
Peaky Blinders is a gangster family epic set in 1919 Birmingham, England, immediately after World War I.6)
The plot revolves around the Romani Peaky Blinders gang and its ambitious and violent leader Tommy Shelby (played by Cillian Murphy).7)
The gang attracts the attention of Chief Inspector Chester Campbell (Sam Neill), a detective in the Royal Irish Constabulary dispatched from Belfast to rid the city of the Irish Republican Army (IRA), gangs, and common criminals.8)
Winston Churchill (Andy Nyman in series 1 and Richard McCabe in series 2) charged him with putting down a riot in Birmingham and retrieving a stolen stockpile of munitions destined for Libya.9)
The Shelby family expands its criminal organization throughout the “South and North [of London] while retaining a foothold in their Birmingham base” in the second series, which takes place two years after the first.10)
It began in 1921 and culminates on Derby Day in June 1922 at Epsom Racecourse.11)
Peaky Blinders received mostly favorable reviews, with particular appreciation for its script, performances, visual flair, and elegant cinematography.12)
The series was described as a “riveting, fast-paced tale of post-First World War Birmingham criminals” by David Renshaw of The Guardian, who praised Murphy as the “ever-so-cool Tommy Shelby” and the rest of the cast for their “strong performances”.13)
The Telegraph's Sarah Compton gave the series a 4/5 rating, praising it for its uniqueness and “confounding all of our assumptions”.14)
Digital Spy's Alex Fletcher says “Peaky Blinders has started as sharp as a dart”, while Den of Geek calls the season “the most brilliant, sophisticated, and engaging BBC drama in centuries”.15)