

7.046 minSeason 2 • Episode 6
LatestMonroe has informed Bremner after Shepards activites. Witney appears to have decided that its time to leave St Matthew’s. Monroe decides to throw a stag party for his son Nick. Meanwhile at the hospital Springer is introducting Jacob Namobu, a young medical student to neurosurgery. Things don't go to plan when there is a large road traffic accident. This night the truth will be revealed, someone will die, and someone will resign.
Monroe is a brilliant and unusual neurosurgeon. A flawed genius who never lets anyone forget his flaws or his genius. Each episode will feature one compelling story of the week about life or death situations. The drama will focus on the way in which a serious injury or disease cuts across the lives of everyone involved, from hospital staff to patients to relatives. And how that group become, in an intense few days, a reluctant dysfunctional family united by hopes, fears and grief. At the centre of this stands Monroe, his trainees, his anaesthetist and his poker school - and his female colleague, heart surgeon, Jenny Bremner, who has contempt for his cockiness. The series will tell heightened emotional stories and be shot through with dark humour and portray the pressures and pleasures of high-end surgery in a modern urban hospital.
Acting
Nesbitt's charm weaponizes narcissism into watchability
Writing
Peter Bowker balances scalpel-sharp banter with genuine loss
Production
Leeds hospital standing in for Manchester—stealthy northern pride
Creator
Peter Bowker
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
James Nesbitt based Monroe's swagger partly on real surgeons he'd observed, who treated the OR like a stage.
This aired the same year as 'The Night Manager' rebooted British TV medical drama, but ITV never promoted it—buried treasure.