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New drama a gritty portrait of a city and its flawed police force

You don't need a TV drama to tell you these are dark days for Detroit.

But a once-great city's headline status facing bankruptcy serves as poignant timing for the debut of “Low Winter Sun,” a gritty cop show whose Motor City setting gives this unforgiving saga even greater urgency.

“Low Winter Sun” premieres on AMC Sunday at 9 p.m. right after the midseason premiere of “Breaking Bad,” adding up to quite a drama-series twofer. Like its companion show, but in its own way, “Low Winter Sun” is not a series for the faint of heart.

Of course, piling on Detroit is not the point of the series, nor is this locale even essential to its story (the series is adapted from a British miniseries that was set in Edinburgh, Scotland). But Detroit at this moment proves an all-too-apt backdrop.

For starters, the police and all they survey in their bleak precinct are in desperate straits, even down to the paint flecking off the station house's walls.

And then: The show's presumed hero, homicide Detective Frank Agnew, participates in a terrible act — he executes a fellow cop — that promises to keep him in a desperate state for the season to come.

The “victim” — Detective Brendan McCann — is corrupt, depraved and a menace to his fellow officers and the citizens alike. So McCann's fed-up partner, Joe Geddes, conspires with Agnew (who nurses a particularly personal urge for payback) to drown him in a kitchen sink, then fake his suicide at the wheel of his car plunged into the Detroit River.

Despite their best efforts, suspicions of foul play are immediately raised. An investigation is launched.

Haunted by his deed and his possible exposure, Agnew is powerfully played by Mark Strong, the British actor who originated this role for the British series. Bald and wiry and taciturn, he is first glimpsed with tears rolling down his cheeks.

“I'm not a bad person,” he tells Geddes as the moment nears for them to carry out their plan.

“No,” says Geddes, “but (McCann) is. The man's a disease.”

There seems little doubt of that. But Geddes (played by Lennie James) just may be as compromised as the cop he helps kill, and may have set up Agnew as his partner in crime.

On their tail is Detective Simon Boyd, a chillingly composed and dogged member of Internal Affairs. He is played by the excellent David Costabile.

The unsolved murder of a cop — even a bad cop — sends the department into spasms. But the internal trauma (and Agnew's subterfuge to hide his involvement) aren't the only aftershocks of the killing.

McCann's disappearance also hastens a scheme by crime lord Damon Callis (James Ransone) to overthrow the city's reigning mob boss. Thus does crime beget crime.

Executive-produced by Chris Mundy, “Low Winter Sun” offers up few answers to the problems it showcases. It is not a series that preaches right and wrong.

So “Low Winter Sun” leaves the viewer to identify with Agnew, a flawed man who does a dastardly thing for all-too-understandable reasons.

“Low Winter Sun”

Premieres 9 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 11, on AMC

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