Jake Gyllenhaal as Rusty Sabich in the TV series Presumed Innocent.

Jake Gyllenhaal as Rusty Sabich in the TV series Presumed Innocent.Credit:Apple TV+

Three-and-a-bit decades on,Apple TV+ has rebooted,remade and retooled the story for a modern age as an eight-part series. Now Jake Gyllenhaal plays Rusty Sabich,a smug,arrogant,hugely talented prosecution lawyer in the Chicago district attorney’s office who suddenly finds himself on the receiving end of every bit of intimidating legalistic gameplay he’s ever deployed. It’s nasty. But then,maybe he is too.

Taylor Swift fans will love this. Gyllenhaal isone of the pop star’s former lovers,more vilified than many for his supposedly callous treatment of her. The sight of him squirming in virtually every frame will be sweet revenge indeed for Swifties,even if it’s only a character,not the man himself,who’s being done slowly.

Adapted byAlly McBeal andBoston Legal creator David E. Kelley,who has become a master teller of tales about privilege upended by bad behaviour (Big Little Lies,The Undoing,Nine Perfect Strangers),this version deviates from both the film and the novel in ways that are both significant and welcome.

The character of Carolyn Polhemus (played by Norwegian actor Renate Reinsve) is less problematic here than in the movie or the novel.

The character of Carolyn Polhemus (played by Norwegian actor Renate Reinsve) is less problematic here than in the movie or the novel.Credit:Apple TV+

For a start,while the murdered woman,Carolyn Polhemus (Norwegian actor Renate Reinsve,star of indie filmThe Worst Person in the World),still largely exists only in the minds and memories of others,she is a more sympathetic creature than the ladder-climbing lawyer of the film. She may have jilted Rusty,but there’s not even a hint of the slut-shaming that tarnished the earlier takes.

The increased running time also allows for a much greater exploration of the impacts of both the affair and the investigation and subsequent court case on the marriage. As Rusty’s wife Barbara,Ruth Negga has plenty to play with:stoicism,grief,shock at the incremental revelations of his betrayals,a desire to even the score that sees her contemplating an affair of her own.

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Around the central triangle there’s a host of characters with complex motivations of their own:outgoing DA Raymond Horgan (Bill Camp),who is drafted in as Rusty’s defence lawyer;incoming DA Nico Della Guardia (O-T Fagbenle,who played June’s husband Luke inThe Handmaid’s Tale);his ambitious and egotistical new lead prosecutor Tommy Molto (Peter Sarsgaard),determined to skewer his predecessor as payback for years of petty slights;Lily Rabe as the therapist who has heard perhaps too much about the intricacies of the Sabich marriage.

This is rich territory to explore,and it does a terrific job of expandingPresumed Innocent well beyond the courtroom drama that,at core,it really is.

The sensational plot twists are likely to keep you glued to the end. But it’s the glimpses of ordinary lives made messy by all-too-human failings that really make it worth the journey.

Contact the author atkquinn@theage.com.au,follow him on Facebook at karlquinnjournalist and Twitter at@karlkwin,and read more of his workhere.

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