By Morgan Jeffery

Published: Monday, 26 September 2022 at 12:00 am


Having penned screen adaptations of Sherlock Holmes, Jekyll and Hyde, Dracula and The Time Traveler’s Wife, Steven Moffat’s latest project is his first purely original creation in over 20 years: BBC One thriller Inside Man.

The four-part drama follows a small-town vicar (played by David Tennant), a death row inmate (Stanley Tucci), a teacher (Dolly Wells) and a journalist (Lydia West) as their lives are surprisingly and inexorably drawn together.

“I wrote the first episode just on spec,” Moffat told RadioTimes.com. “I didn’t even pitch it to Sue [Vertue, TV producer and Moffat’s wife], I just wrote it while we were doing Dracula to pass the time on set, bored at the monitors, frankly.”

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Harry Watling (David Tennant), Janice Fife (Dolly Wells), Jefferson Grieff (Stanley Tucci) and Beth Davenport (Lydia West) in Inside Man
BBC/Hartswood Films/Sam Barker

Though it’s his first project not based on any existing source material since 2000’s Coupling, it was never Moffat’s plan to become a serial adapter. “It was certainly not an intention of mine to do that, at all. I never really think of myself as someone who adapts things – but yeah, I think it is my first absolute original [since then].

“I mean, I never know if that means anything at all. It would be ridiculous to suggest that it somehow limits your creativity if you’ve got to write a Doctor Who. Jesus Christ, it doesn’t! I mean, f**king hell… that’s a monster. So the fact that you exist sometimes within existing frameworks is not taking a day off – it really, really isn’t. No one who thinks that has ever tried to write the bloody Doctor!”