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Episode Guide
- 1. Photochemistry May 15, 2020
- When murders threatens Blennerhasset's reputation, a detective drags him into an investigation.
- 2. Development May 18, 2020
- A heavy storm forces the pair to stay at a house that may be haunted.
- 3. Daguerreotype May 25, 2020
- Blennerhasset and Nancy travel to an unsavory part of Dublin to track down Molloy.
Dead Still is a six-part Irish-Canadian television drama series, which premiered on May 18, 2020 on Acorn TV and May 15, 2020 Citytv. The series is a co-production between Ireland's Deadpan Pictures and Canada's Shaftesbury Films and is written by John Morton, from a story by John Morton and Imogen Murphy , and directed by Imogen Murphy and ...
With Michael Smiley, Kerr Logan, Eileen O'Higgins, Aidan O'Hare. Set in 1880s Ireland in the Victorian-era heyday of 'postmortem photography,' the six-episode period drama follows a renowned memorial photographer who is drawn into a series of apparent murders that appear to be linked to his work.
May 22, 2020 · Here's everything to know about the new Acorn TV series 'Dead Still', including the show's cast, trailer, release date, and how to watch.
Season 1 – Dead Still. Buy Dead Still — Season 1 on Fandango at Home, Prime Video. The strange adventures of Blennerhasset and Molloy, Dublin's most famed memorial photographers.
Dead Still. Season 1. Brock Blennerhasset makes a living out of photographing the dead in Victorian Ireland. When a series of murders threatens to sully Blennerhasset's reputation, a tenacious detective drags him into an investigation of Dublin's criminal underbelly.
Dead Still. Brock Blennerhasset makes a living out of photographing the dead in Victorian Ireland. When a series of murders threatens to sully Blennerhasset's reputation, a tenacious detective drags him into an investigation of Dublin's criminal underbelly.
May 18, 2020 · Dead Still review – a Victorian dark comedy with wit to spare. Strong characters, an unusual premise and a fine sense of wit make Dead Still enticing, transporting television of a kind we can always use more of. This review of Dead Still (Acorn TV) is spoiler-free.