WRITER: Ed Himme[SPOILERS] Skins returns from last week's tedious angst-driven episode with... well, another angst driven episode, only this time they nail it. It's partly a testament to Kathryn Prescott's lead acting as Emily, who carries the episode, and partly down to a script that allows itself to work with the relationships between characters as opposed to merely focusing on one, whilst neatly sidestepping common Skins pitfalls and predictabilities.
DIRECTOR: Phillippa Langdale
GUEST CAST: Ian Watkins, Ronni Ancona, John Bishop & Pauline Quirke

Emily ventures to the girl's home to find the extent of Naomi's relationship with the girl, which leads past awkward family scenes and to an army camp which the girl attended. Along the way is the obligatory "Skinsian" sex scene and the obligatory Skinsian party scene, the latter proving a particular highlight as it's the first time in the series where the cast come into play as a group -- Cook (Jack O'Connell), having discussed relationships with Emily, and spurred by jealousy over losing Effy (Kaya Scodelario) to Freddie (Luke Pasqualino), takes his anger out by assaulting on a random passer by, much to his friends despair, as the couple in question walk out amidst the chaos.
Later, the climax of the episode see's Emily and the dead girl's brother opening a box found in her room, containing a sketchbook detailing her loneliness and the revelation of her affair with Naomi. The sequence, with emotional backing music and shots of Emily teetering on the edge of a 10 story car park flirts with melodrama, but it's just about kept in check.

In essence episode two took all the mistakes made in the first episode and learnt from them. There's a decent amount of screentime for Cook and the rest of the cast (even Thomas makes a typically glum appearance), whilst the central relationship between Emily and Naomi develops interestingly and stylishly, via a storyline that refrains from being consumed by angst. More of this please.
4 FEBRUARY 2010: E4 (HD), 10PM