The first of three episodes directed by Peter Sasdy in this series, "The Thirteenth Reunion" is an acceptable if slightly overlong horror-drama, with a surplus of recognisable faces that service a storyline that doesn't quite add up.
Ruth (Julia Foster) is a journalist tasked by her editor to investigate a controversial diet technique called Think Thin. At her first meeting she meets Ben (Warren Clarke) who has been attending for a while and they hit it off, but on the way back from their first date he's run off the road and dies. At the funeral, Ruth is approached by Andrew (Gerard Kelly) who works at the funeral home and who suggests that all at Think Thin is not above board.
It's funny, watching these anthology style shows that the pool of actors is such that people are reappearing. I'd seen both Warren Clarke and George Innes in recent episodes of "The Frighteners" I'd watched. This episode had a number of other recognisable actors, including James Cosmo, who still is in high profile projects in 2020, and Gerard Kelly who was a regular on TV until his untimely death in 2010. Julia Foster has the most to do in this one, piecing together the various threads of this story into one complete picture.
And that's perhaps my issue with this episode, it feels like three tangentially related stories pushed together in an attempt to form one, but it makes less sense the more you think about it. The storylines involving the undertakers and the stately home do sort of fit together, but why the Think Thin aspect is involved is less clear, as you'd think that their objectives would be against what the others want? (Sorry if that sounds vague, I'm trying to write without spoilers). An OK episode that struck a nice tone, particularly towards the end, but is perhaps a little longer and disjointed than it really ought to be.