Stop your moaning, Top Boy is deserving of all the accolades.

By Morgan Cormack

Published: Monday, 13 May 2024 at 11:53 AM


It’s not often that the BAFTA TV Awards drum up quite as much reaction as this year’s. But if there’s one way to set social media alight, it’s to mess with the expected outcome of the coveted Best Drama Series.

Now, let’s caveat all of this by pointing out that this writer is very much a big fan of Happy Valley (hell, I even got a little red in the face arguing its case for the Best Ever), but I’m also firmly in the camp of loyal Top Boy fans who are overjoyed at the show finally getting its dues.

In the anticipated awards ceremony, it’s the gong for best drama that is, arguably, one of the biggest of the night. Up against the likes of The Gold, Happy Valley and Slow Horses, I personally love the fact that those who have yet to watch Top Boy never counted the Ronan Bennett series as a serious contender for the award. Oh, how wrong they were.

X (formerly known as Twitter) users have not spared a minute in their incessant tirade against Top Boy since last night’s win, deeming it to be the most unexpected of the night and bandying around phrases like “unbelievable” and “what a joke” at Top Boy’s success.

For a lot of people, the front-running series was Sally Wainwright’s expertly penned third season of Happy Valley. The final instalment to what will likely go down in crime drama history, many clearly feel as though it should’ve been celebrated one last time as the official BAFTA announcement was swarmed by X users proclaiming that Happy Valley was “robbed” of its award.

“Happy Valley should have won” becomes such a regular sentence in reply to the official news in question that it almost seems like it’s being churned out by those pesky online bots.

Felicia Mukasa as Tash and Kane Robinson as Sully in Top Boy season 5.
Felicia Mukasa as Tash and Kane Robinson as Sully in Top Boy season 5.
Netflix

But what a lot of those people fail to realise is that if you haven’t actually watched Top Boy, you can’t understand the way that the series is more than deserving of the Best Drama Series award.

Bowing out after an impressive run of five seasons in total (including its previous Summerhouse iteration, which initially premiered on Channel 4 back in 2011), the final series – like Happy Valley – brought the world of Top Boy to a spectacular close.

Jasmine Jobson, who was rightfully recognised for Supporting Actress on the night, too, pretty much carried the final season as the fearless and captivating Jaq, the only woman in the male-dominated London drug industry. She risked it all, turning against her mentors and friends Dushane (Ashley Walters) and Sully (Kane Robinson) and in her, we also explored the ethics and morality of being a drug dealer.

Where Dushane and Sully’s over-arching rivalry could’ve so easily waned, it took on a new form in the final season, as well as centring on the often heart-breaking story of young Stefan (Araloyin Oshunremi). It even saw Saltburn star Barry Keoghan part of the drug-dealing action.

Sure, the final season of Top Boy left its viewers divided, with many deeming the series as feeling rushed, needing more time for some of the big character twists to breathe and the character arc of people like Dushane as feeling quite unrealistic.

I agree with all of those sentiments in part but, ultimately, did Top Boy season 5 leave me on the edge of my seat? Did it have my heart racing? Was it also home to some spectacular performances? Most definitely.