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Luther: Fallen Sun is flawed but likeable as infamous detective makes big screen debut

Charismatic Idris Elba holds together Luther: Fallen Sun as the detective with a murky moral compass makes his first outing on the big screen, with Andy Serkis struggling to convey the menace required as the villain

Luther: The Fallen Sun trailer stars Idris Elba and Andy Serkis

Renegade cop John Luther’s transition from TV to film is, like the man himself, flawed but likeable.

Fallen Sun, (in cinemas now, on Netflix from March 10) is the first in a planned series of feature-length cases for the Cockney Detective Chief Inspector played by Idris Elba.

As is often the case with TV-to-movie spin-offs, this extended episode is bigger, louder and a whole lot dafter than anything we saw on the small screen.

It begins with a brazen re-jigging of the final episode. In 2019, we saw Luther finally led to jail by his wonky moral compass. Here, his downfall was the work of a murderous computer hacker called David Robey ( Andy Serkis ).

Idris Elba at the premiere of Luther: The Fallen Sun(Image: Dave J. Hogan/Getty Images)
Co-star Cynthia Erivo plays Det Supt Odette Raine in the movie(Image: Lia Toby/Getty Images)

As part of a confusing scheme to build an evil online network, Robey had kidnapped a young London cleaner.

To stop the maverick cop from feeling his collar, Robey leaked information about Luther’s crimes, from tampering with evidence to witness intimidation.

In a scene that didn’t feature in the BBC series, Luther vowed to the missing cleaner’s mum he would find her son.

To keep his promise, he busts out of prison to hunt down Robey and forge an uneasy alliance with his replacement, Det Supt Odette Raine (Cynthia Erivo).