From Derry Girls to Donegal Whodunit
Lisa McGee built her reputation crafting one of the most beloved comedies of the past decade with Derry Girls, a show that managed to find hilarity in the backdrop of Northern Ireland's Troubles. Now, with How to Get to Heaven From Belfast, the writer and creator has returned to Netflix with something altogether different in tone yet unmistakably McGee in its DNA. This new series is a dark comedy mystery set across Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland, and beyond, following three childhood friends reunited under deeply unsettling circumstances.
The premise begins with a familiar mystery genre setup -- the suspicious death of an enigmatic woman named Greta -- but McGee and director Michael Lennox rapidly subvert expectations. Rather than a grim procedural, the show uses its central crime as a springboard for a layered exploration of female friendship, guilt, memory, and the way small-town secrets have a half-life that far outlasts adolescence. Set in the fictional village of Knockdara in County Donegal (actually filmed in Carnlough, Northern Ireland), the series populates its world with theme-night hotels, single-taxi villages, and cow-related traffic jams that feel authentically lived-in rather than quaint.
A Trio of Performances Worth the Subscription
At the heart of the series are three performances that elevate the material from clever genre exercise to something genuinely special. Roisin Gallagher plays Saoirse, a jaded crime-show writer who channels her real-life anxieties into her fictional series Murder Code and finds herself drawn to investigate Greta's death with an intensity her friends find alarming. Sinead Keenan delivers a scene-stealing turn as Robyn, a no-nonsense mother of three whose glamorous exterior barely contains a simmering fury at the hand life has dealt her. And Caoilfhionn Dunne rounds out the trio as Dara, a devout woman caring for her ungrateful mother, whose physical comedy -- the way she peers around a doorframe, the precise timing of her moral outrage -- provides some of the show's biggest laughs.
Together, the three women form an unlikely investigative unit, drawn back to the site of a terrible secret from their youth by mysterious red letters that arrive after Greta's death. McGee writes their dynamic with the specificity that made the Derry Girls ensemble so beloved: the brutal honesty, the fierce loyalty underneath the bickering, and the particular quality of friendships forged in childhood that can survive decades of growing apart.

