This review contains spoilers. Episode one saw Banville take on the case of Kevin Russell, an ex school-caretaker who’s spent the last fourteen years inside for the murder of fifteen-year-old schoolgirl Linda Simms. Banville believes Russell didn’t do it, and is raking up all manner of trouble, and making all manner of enemies, in her attempt to prove it. In the first hour, Banville did enough to have Russell’s conviction declared unsafe and him released from prison pending a retrial. In the second, she moved him into her home (where she also keeps lovable boyfriend Steve, played by John Bishop, the wife and son of a British-Syrian doctor wanted for suspected links to terrorism, and a fresh bottle of Stoli in the crisper drawer) before discovering that there’s much more to Kevin’s case than meets the eye. So far, we’ve seen Banville spend more time coppering than in court. She’s visited crime scenes and interviewed witnesses and spotted tell-tale clues everyone else has missed like your common or garden genius TV detective. As a lawyer building a case, she’s unusually hands-on, which is all the better for us the viewers. Episode two concluded with a tense counter-terrorist extraction involving a patrol of armed officers storming Banville’s leafy London address. As Miriam Attar (Karima McAdams) was taken into custody for contacting a known ISIS telephone number, she passed Banville an illicit SIM card. Not minutes after that, a new lead in the Russell case phoned up out of the blue. Linda’s murder, it seems, was tied with in a photographer taking ‘glamour’ shots of underage girls, and the US air force stationed at the base at the time of her death. Banville will get to the bottom of it, no doubt. That’s the overriding sense McCrory provides here. She feels as safe a pair of hands as Sofie Grabol in The Killing or Elisabeth Moss in Top Of The Lake, all three of them women with wonky personal lives but determined, and ultimately successful, professional ones. Fearless has taken the trouble to create Banville a personal life, though so far it’s less compelling than her job. Her father is dying, and she and her boyfriend are trying to adopt. She went off the rails as a student protestor, and it’s hinted she may have given up a baby as a younger woman. All that’s just tangy dressing on the salad of really good stuff though – the political conspiracy, and her professional hostilities with two other powerful characters; counter-terrorism officer Olivia Greenwood (Wunmi Mosaku) and Heather Myles. Greenwood and Myles also have hostilities of their own, keeping things nicely complicated (three women over the age of thirty driving a primetime thriller? Fearless, where have you been all my life?). A hook of a central case, tantalising layers and complexities, international intrigue and codenames… put that all together with a performer as strong as McCrory and it adds up to thrilling TV. Fearless continues next Monday the 26th of June at 9pm on ITV1.