Any theories from our British friends on Ashes to Ashes? Last year, I was speculating like crazy on Sam Tyler’s predicament, telling people that if you freeze-framed a scene in series two, episode five where Sam touches Ray and sees different characters that DCI Frank Morgan was among them, and how there must be some spiritual reason beyond ‘He’s in a coma.’
I have watched Ashes but not with the fervour and speculation of the earlier Life on Mars. I do believe Alex Drake’s situation is different, for starters, and that the opening speech that she is living one second in her life in 2008 is not far off the mark.
But the idea that she has assimilated Sam’s fantasies doesn’t totally ring true to me.
Last year, some people believed that Gene Hunt et al were spiritual figures or that the Geneverse is Purgatory, while a more complex theory put forward by one netizen, Soozanne, still “fits” (about two lives, one called Sam Tyler and another called Sam Williams and how their accidents forced the time travel).
I would not be surprised if there is more than creators Matthew Graham and Ashley Pharoah are letting on—especially when they said the new series explores a bit more of the Gene Hunt ‘mythology’.
Mythology? Reading too much into one word, or is this a clue?
And if Pharoah has written the series finalé for Thursday with a potential second series in mind, will we actually get closure?
I don’t think we will, though Alex confronts her parents’ death just as Sam confronted the disappearance of his father at the same point in Life on Mars. Sorry, everyone: I don’t think Alex Drake is going home. The calendar she has in her room, which we have been counting down, won’t mark the total number of days she has to stay in 1981.
She’s likely to stay stuck in 1981 but finds that no matter what she does, she can’t create a time paradox—either because she is back in 1981 or her logical mind won’t allow it.
That’s my prediction rather than a theory—largely on the premise that there probably will be a second series as the viewer numbers are healthy and not far off what Life on Mars was doing.