The actor plays a doctor accused of murder – but is he being set up?

By David Craig

Published: Friday, 12 April 2024 at 20:00 PM


Richard Armitage has said he wants his accused character in ITV thriller Red Eye to remain an “enigma” for viewers, as they decide whether or not they can really trust him.

The new series kicks off with the relatively unassuming Dr Matthew Nolan (Armitage) being arrested on suspicion of murdering a woman during a recent business trip to China.

He insists that he is innocent, but is nevertheless extradited to face justice, with DC Hana Li (Jing Lusi) as his police escort.

But when catastrophe strikes on their flight back to China, it becomes clear that there’s more to this case than anyone imagined.

Speaking to RadioTimes.com, Armitage explained: “One of the things that I was attracted to about the role was, by default, as a doctor, he’s somebody that we should trust. He’s taken the Hippocratic Oath to do no harm.

“So, therefore, the accusation of killing someone and leaving them for dead strikes me as unfair.”

On his first reading of the scripts by Peter A Dowling (Flightplan), the Fool Me Once star said he was kept guessing regarding his character’s true intentions – with a forgotten period of time being central to the mystery.

“I don’t know if he’s who he says he is,” recalled Armitage. “What happened to him in Beijing? He can remember part of it. There’s another part of it that he has no memory of which, when you’re faced with a legal challenge, is really difficult territory.

“So, he’s already on thin ice… protesting his innocence, but really not being sure himself.”

Richard Armitage as Matthew Nolan and Jing Lusi as Hana Li in Red Eye. Armitage is looking up with disgust as he is handcuffed and has bruised knuckles while Jing is looking up with a mute expression as they are both sat on a plane.
Richard Armitage as Matthew Nolan and Jing Lusi as Hana Li in Red Eye.
ITV

The actor is known for carefully analysing his characters, and even devising thorough backstories for them, but in this case he wanted Dr Nolan’s past to remain a mystery even to him.

“I just thought, actually, it becomes a more enigmatic tool,” he explained. “Normally, I would probably have written a biography of him, but I didn’t. I focused on his job and I focused on the here and now, because I wanted this man to be an enigma.”

Armitage added: “I did like the idea of the viewer fluctuating between completely trusting him and really having serious doubts about who he really is.”