Top of the Lake


Top of the Lake is a mystery drama television series created and written by Jane Campion and Gerard Lee, and directed by Campion and Garth Davis. It was broadcast in 2013, and the sequel, entitled Top of the Lake: China Girl, in 2017. It is Campion's first work for television since An Angel at My Table in 1990.
Series 1 follows Detective Robin Griffin and deals with her investigation of the disappearance of a pregnant 12-year-old girl in New Zealand. Series 2, China Girl, is set in Sydney five years later, as Detective Griffin investigates the death of an unidentified Asian girl found at Bondi Beach.
Top of the Lake was co-produced for BBC Two in the UK, BBC UKTV in Australia and New Zealand, and Sundance Channel in the United States. It has been generally very well received.

Cast

plays the central role of Robin Griffin, a Sydney detective specializing in sexual assault, in both series. Additional cast members are as follows:

''Top of the Lake''

Main

  • David Wenham as Al Parker, an old-school and well-liked detective sergeant, based in Queenstown, who also manages a café where young offenders are given a second chance.
  • Peter Mullan as Matt Mitcham, a Scotsman and head of the Mitcham family. He is the informal leader of the town, feared by the townspeople, but with a complex inner life.
  • Tom Wright as Johnno Mitcham, Matt's estranged youngest son, and Robin's teenage sweetheart. He recently returned to Laketop after serving eight years in Bangkwang, a Thai prison, for drug possession.
  • Holly Hunter as GJ, an androgynous Swiss spiritual leader, arriving at Paradise with a group of troubled women, who hope GJ and Laketop will help them rediscover themselves.

    Supporting

  • Kip Chapman and Jay Ryan as Luke and Mark Mitcham, Matt's brute sons.
  • Jacqueline Joe as Tui Angel Mitcham, Matt's 12-year-old daughter who disappears after it is discovered that she is five months pregnant.
  • Robyn Nevin as Jude Griffin, Robin's mother, who is suffering from cancer.
  • Calvin Tuteao as Turangi, Jude's Māori boyfriend, who has a violent temper.
; GJ's community:
; Matt's men:
; Tui's friends:
; The Southern Lakes Police Department:
; Residents of Laketop:

''Top of the Lake: China Girl''

Main

  • Gwendoline Christie as Miranda Hilmarson, a 35-year-old constable in the New [South Wales Police Force|Sydney Police Force], who becomes Robin's partner.
  • David Dencik as Alexander "Puss" Braun, a 42-year-old charismatic German, who owns a building in Sydney he rents to a brothel. He is also Mary's boyfriend. Puss's grooming of Mary is a major concern for her adoptive parents and Robin.
  • Ewen Leslie as Pyke Edwards, Mary's adoptive father. A thoughtful and caring father, he at times appears a pushover in his relationship with Julia.
  • Alice Englert as Mary Edwards, Robin's 17-year-old daughter, whom Robin gave up for adoption right after giving birth to her. Mary is in thrall of her manipulative boyfriend and resentful of her parents' separation.
  • Nicole Kidman as Julia Edwards, Mary's overbearing adoptive mother. She has recently become estranged from her husband and daughter after having an affair with a female teacher from Mary's school, with whom she now lives.

    Supporting

  • Clayton Jacobson as Detective Sergeant Adrian Butler, Robin's boss.
  • Kym Gyngell as Bootie, who owns the Silk 41 brothel in Sydney, in space rented from Puss.
  • Ling Cooper Tang as Dang, Bootie's Thai-born wife and madam of the brothel.
  • Geoff Morrell as Ray, the police pathologist.
  • Liv Hewson as Michaela, Mary's best friend at school.
  • Christiaan Van Vuuren as Stally, a police constable interested in Robin.
  • Lincoln Vickery, as Brett Iles, a young computer science student in love with a missing brothel worker, Cinnamon.
David Wenham returns as Al in one episode. Kip Chapman, Jacqueline Joe, Byron Coll and Cohen Holloway also reprise their Top of the Lake roles in a flashback sequence, with Mark Leonard Winter appearing as Johnno.

Production

''Top of the Lake''

originally offered the role of Robin to Anna Paquin, who had worked with her on The Piano, but she declined due to her pregnancy. The role then went to American Elisabeth Moss.
The series was originally intended as a co-production with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. But after Moss was cast as Robin, the network pulled their funding before production began, citing a prior agreement to put an Australian actress in the lead. Australian-based channel UKTV, owned by BBC Worldwide, filled the funding gap left by the ABC. Philippa Campbell was the New Zealand-based producer.
Filming took 18 weeks and was shot entirely on location in Queenstown and Glenorchy, in Otago, on the South Island of New Zealand. While Queenstown is referred to during the series, Glenorchy doubles as the fictitious town of Laketop. The scenes in the women's commune were filmed at Moke Lake.

''Top of the Lake: China Girl''

In early 2013, co-creator Jane Campion said that Top of the Lake comes to a distinct ending, and there would be no additional series. Despite this, it was announced in October 2014 that the series had been renewed for a second season. China Girl began shooting on location in Sydney in December 2015.
Campion returned as co-writer and co-director. Gerard Lee returned as co-writer. The original co-director, Garth Davis, was replaced by Ariel Kleiman due to scheduling conflicts. Philippa Campbell returned as producer. Actress Nicole Kidman joined the cast for China Girl, which is the second time she has worked with Campion. Kidman "plays an Australian mother, Julia, whose story dovetails with that of Detective Robin Griffin", played by Elisabeth Moss. Gwendoline Christie, a fan of Campion's The Piano, joined the cast in a role written especially for her after sending a letter through a mutual friend.

Release

Top of the Lake was screened in its entirety at the January 2013 Sundance Film Festival, in a single seven-hour session with one intermission and a break for lunch. This was the first such screening in the history of the festival. Top of the Lake was additionally shown at the 63rd Berlin International Film Festival.
The US premiere was on the Sundance Channel on 18 March 2013, in Australia on BBC UKTV on 24 March 2013, and in New Zealand on 25 March, also on BBC UKTV.
China Girl was screened in its entirety at the May 2017 Cannes Film Festival. In the UK, it premiered on BBC Two on 27 July 2017. In the US, it premiered in September 2017, on Sundance TV, and each episode will be available on Hulu the day after its screening on SundanceTV. In Canada, China Girl premiered on 25 October 2017, on CBC Television.

Episodes

Series 1

Series 2: ''China Girl''

Reception

Reviews of the first series of Top of the Lake have been positive, referring to it as "masterfully made", "beautiful", "mysterious", "riveting", and "a masterpiece".
Rotten Tomatoes reported a 95% approval rating with an average rating of 8.9/10, based on 42 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "Absorbing and deeply atmospheric, Top of the Lake takes edgy, disturbing content and delivers powerful performances with lasting impressions." Metacritic assigned a score of 87 out of 100 based on 27 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".
There were also some less positive reviews. Mike Hale of The New York Times criticized the "elaborately introduced plotlines" and described Tui's disappearance as "less a story element than a metaphor for the kind of armed resistance to male hegemony that constitutes the central idea of Ms Campion’s body of work."
Top of the Lake was praised for exploring rape culture, gender dynamics and the experiences of single women.
China Girl received positive reviews, although it was considered inferior to the first series. Rotten Tomatoes reported a 72% approval rating with an average rating of 6.9/10, based on 61 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "Top of the Lake remains impressively idiosyncratic and ambitious in its second season, even if the plot of this six-episode arc isn't quite as tightly wound as its predecessor's." Metacritic assigned a score of 73 out of 100 based on 21 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".

Awards and nominations

[AACTA Awards]

British Academy Television Craft Awards

Critics' Choice Television Awards

Emmy Awards

Golden Globe Awards

Golden Nymph Awards

Screen Actors Guild Awards

New Zealand Film Awards

Screen Producers Australia Awards

Equity Ensemble Awards