My Policeman Apr 2026

The photograph on the book’s cover and the film’s poster says it all: three young people on a beach, smiling, beautiful, and full of potential. The tragedy of My Policeman is not that the love failed. It’s that for forty years, they had to pretend it never existed at all.

The central metaphor of the novel is the locked cabinet. Patrick, the openly sophisticated intellectual, tries to live a semi-visible life in the shadows of Brighton’s queer underground. Tom, desperate to be “normal,” marries Marion and builds a life of brittle heterosexuality. But the story argues that the closet is not a singular prison; it is a contagious disease. By marrying Tom, Marion becomes an unwitting warden of the closet. Her love for Tom is real, but it is also an act of self-deception. She convinces herself she can change him, that his distance is merely English reserve. The tragedy is that all three characters end up policing each other. My Policeman

The story’s most devastating sequence—the arrest and imprisonment of Patrick for “gross indecency”—is rendered not as a police raid but as a betrayal by silence. When Patrick is arrested, Tom, the policeman, does nothing. He watches. He goes home to his wife. This is where Roberts’ writing and the film’s imagery diverge productively. The photograph on the book’s cover and the

By setting the story in Brighton, a town known today as a haven for queer life, the narrative underscores how recent that freedom truly is. Patrick’s crime is not loving Tom; it is leaving a paper trail—a diary, a letter. In an age of digital footprints, My Policeman is a chilling reminder that visibility is a luxury bought with the suffering of those who were forced to hide. The central metaphor of the novel is the locked cabinet

In the novel, we get Tom’s hollow interiority: his fear, his self-loathing, his pathetic justification that he has to protect his career. In the film, Styles’ performance relies on a clenched jaw and downcast eyes. Critics who dismissed Styles’ acting as wooden missed the point—Tom is wood. He is a man hollowed out by his own inability to feel authentically. The horror is that Tom’s cruelty is not malicious; it is born of a desperate, misplaced kindness. He believes he is sparing Marion humiliation and Patrick a harder punishment. He is wrong.

This is the story’s ultimate irony: The love that was once a secret, stolen affair of skin and beach caves becomes, in old age, an act of care. Marion, who hated Patrick for being Tom’s true love, now bathes him and feeds him. And Tom, finally free from the uniform of the policeman, can only watch. The novel ends with a fragile, ambiguous hope—a hand held, a tear wiped away. The film ends with a similar silence, but on screen, the weight of Harry Styles and Emma Corrin’s younger faces juxtaposed against the aged prosthetics of Linus Roache and Rupert Everett drives home the point: