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ITV1 'Madeleine, One Year On' documentary

ITV1 documentary: 'Madeleine, One Year On: Campaign For Change' was screened on Wednesday 30 April between 8:00pm - 10:00pm.
 
(Four short Sky News clips below: Please wait for the picture to appear before clicking the 'play' icon. Each clip is preceded by an advert)

 
Madeleine, One Year On: Campaign For Change
 
Madeleine, One Year On: Campaign For Change
 
Wed 20 April 2008
 
New. A year since their daughter vanished from their holiday apartment in Portugal, Kate and Gerry McCann talk exclusively to ITV about the events of that fateful night.
 

 
The McCanns on ITV1
 
The McCanns on ITV1 ITV1
 
Published: Tuesday, 29 April 2008, 5:47PM
 
The McCanns have given an emotional interview to ITV1 one year on since Madeleine disappeared in which they revealed the extent of their pain and talked about their continued hope she will be found despite fearing the worst in the first few days she was missing.
 
Cameras followed them from January until April as they launched their campaign to introduce an Amber Alert system across Europe and spoke about being made arguidos – with Gerry describing it as feeling like they were "in the middle of a horror movie really, a nightmare."
 
And they talked about their leaked statements to the press and their regrets at not questioning Madeleine further when she told them she had cried the night before she disappeared.
 
The programme features the couple talking about:

• Becoming arguido suspects
• Their decision to leave their children in the apartment while they dined at the tapas bar
• Being criticised by the public
• What happened on the night Madeline went missing
• How they felt about their police statements being leaked and the context of what Madeliene said about crying
• How they nearly didn't go to the tapas bar that night
• The anniversary and what Madeleine may look like now
• Their relationship with Madeleine – 'she was like a little buddy to me,' said Kate.
• How they try to have a normal life for Sean and Amelie

Madeleine, One Year On: Campaign For Change is the only TV programme the McCanns agreed to be filmed for in the run up to the anniversary. Footage includes the couple in their home in Rothley and travelling to Brussels and Washington as they pursue their campaign.

On the change in focus of the police investigation and becoming arguido suspects Kate said: "As soon as I realised the story or theory or whatever you want to call it, was that Madeleine was dead and that we'd been involved somehow.  It just hit home. They haven’t been looking for Madeleine.  And it was just I mean, just, I just felt yet again my daughter's had such disservice and I just, I mean I was obviously upset by that, very upset and I was angry you know. 

"And I just thought she deserves so much better than that, and I thought I'm not going to sit here and allow, allow this you know."

Gerry said: "Pressure that, such as I've never felt before because you’re under attack in one way or another. 

"The speculation takes you to the worst places and at that point you know the worst place would have been being charged, potentially being put in jail, certainly being detained to face charges that could have taken I don’t know years to materialise, being separated from Sean and Amelie. 

"These sort of things were going through your mind and you're, because it's a system that you're unfamiliar with, you don’t know what could happen."

"I started thinking well if they're saying that about us being involved with Madeleine," said Kate, "you know it's not long before they say what about Sean and Amelie, what about their other two children?  And I can remember saying to Gerry's mum and Gerry’s sisters, do not let anyone near them and they were like – 'don't you worry', you know, and it was back again to the sort of lioness and her cubs.  You know I'd just do whatever it took to protect them."

"It felt like you're in the middle of a horror movie really, a nightmare," Gerry said.

"When I was going in to become arguido, because I felt angry, I felt strong. I wasn't scared. I felt like I was going to fight the world to be honest. My daughter was worth more than all that and I would do whatever it took to fight for justice and truth," said Kate.

Their arguido status means that the McCanns are still not allowed to talk about what happened inside the police station but it was widely reported that Kate was being offered a deal: admit accidentally killing Madeleine, and face a reduced sentence. 

Kate said: "No I'd have fought to the death to be honest at that point.  There was no way I was going to be railroaded into something. 

"I felt almost invincible at that point.  I just don’t know what kicked in.  You know I just thought my children deserve that, Madeleine deserves that. Someone has to be fighting for Madeleine."

On their decision to leave the children in the apartment while they dined at the tapas bar Kate and Gerry explained how on the first night they had eaten at a restaurant called the Millennium half a mile away from their apartment.

Kate said: "But that (the Millennium) was, that was a good walk away and we didn't, we didn't have a buggy or anything with us so we did go and we took all the kids.  It didn't open til half six or something and our kids usually go to bed around seven so they were really tired and they were walking but you’ve got to remember they’re only little.  
  
"So we ended up having to carry them and trying to carry three of them  between two, you know and we decided we couldn’t do that really.  It wasn't, wasn’t fair and it wasn’t you know, it wouldn’t have been good for anybody."

Gerry explained: "And it turned out our apartments were right next to the  tapas which was literally from the back of ours, like fifty yards, maybe sixty. And, and then so we said well why don’t we just try and eat there?"

Kate added: "Just seemed like a good idea…"

And on the decision to do regular checks on their children Gerry said: "Two of  the other couples had been on Mark Warner holidays before and they have a baby listening service which essentially is where someone goes round the apartments.  They don't actually go in, they just listen outside."

"And it wasn't till quite late on that we realised there wasn't a baby listening service. But I guess we were just doing our own baby listening service, only we were going inside and checking," said Kate. 

Gerry compared it to having a meal in the back garden while the children were asleep upstairs.

"And… it seemed a fairly natural sort of thing to do, it was so close.  As you say you could actually see the apartment and it didn't feel that different to dining out the back garden.  What you wouldn’t do was go upstairs and check on your kids every half hour like…we were doing.  But – you just, it was the furthest thing from my mind that something like that happen," said Gerry.

"I think if there'd even been one second where someone had said do you think it’s going to be okay, it wouldn’t have happened," said Kate.

"I mean there's absolutely no way, and I've said it before, there’s absolutely no way if I'd have had the slightest inkling that there was a risk involved there, that I'd have done it," she added.

Gerry said he wasn’t surprised by people’s criticisms.

"You know people will say that they've never done that and you know who am I to argue?  You know we have to live with the fact that we weren’t directly there and if we were then you know possibly, probably it wouldn’t have happened," he said.

The couple have received hate mail to their Leicestershire home. In a Christmas card which Gerry read out they were accused of being "thieving bastards".

It read: "Gerry and Kate, how can you use money given by poor people in good faith to pay your mortgage on your mansion? You **** thieving bastards. Your brat is dead because of your drunken arrogance. Shame on you. I curse  you and your family to suffer forever. Cursed Christmas. If you have any shame you would accept full responsibility for your daughter's disappearance and give all the money back. You are scum."

The couple recalled what happened on the night that Madeleine went missing.

Kate said she did her check and discovered her daughter had been taken. She said she rushed to the tapas bar shouting "someone’s taken Madeleine."

"And that's when the nightmare started," she said.

Gerry explained: "Everyone knows the fear, I think fear is probably the right word, fear for your daughter, fear for yourself, fear for your family, fear for everything and, and that horrible kind of adrenalin fight, flight."

Kate said: "And I just remember saying 'not Madeleine, not Madeleine, not Madeleine' and I just remember saying that over and over again."

He added: "Later on there was a period where she hadn't turned up. It was absolute devastation and total, just total emotion really."

Kate recalled how the couple searched through the undergrowth early the following morning.

"We were saying over and over again 'just let her be found let her be found'," said Gerry.

"It was really hard those first few days. I just feared the worst at the beginning. Probably for the first few days we were like that. I mean just, you’re just like praying and praying that that wasn’t the case," said Kate.

Gerry and Kate hit back at criticisms that they had shown little emotion in the early days of the investigation.

Gerry explained: "Numbness sort of kicked in and you can't have that raw emotion 24 hours a day, seven days a week.  You just can't, physically you can't do it. And I’m sure that’s self-protection as well but also I think the psychological element of kicking in and actually saying we do have some influence in this. So what I think we wanted to do is make sure we've done everything absolutely possible to try and help and influence that search."

"We had…behavioural specialist profilers out who were telling us not to show emotion in case the abductor gets a kick out of it, you know and so you've got the pressure of not showing emotion to protect your daughter…" added Kate.

Kate and Gerry also spoke about their anger over parts of the statements they gave to the Portuguese police being leaked.

While they were being filmed for the documentary in Brussels where they were campaigning for a Europe wide Amber Alert system they discovered that parts of their witness statements had been given to the press.

"They've had those statements for eleven and a half months," said Kate. "Why today on all days when we’re in Brussels trying to do something positive have they been given to a journalist? 

"And it also appears that you know the bits of the statement which have been chosen which I have to say we've told police absolutely everything, because we wanted to give everything to find out what's happened, but the bits that have been chosen have been picked out of context intentionally to smear us and I think you know the whole thing is to you know detract from what we’re doing today and I feel absolutely gutted.  I think it's an absolute disgrace," Kate commented.

"I'm really angry. Judicial secrecy should apply to everybody," she added.

"It’s not coincidence. I think it's a sad indictment of a system that we’ve had to put up with," Gerry said.

Kate recalled Madeleine's comment the day before she went missing.

"Well I can’t remember, we'd just had breakfast.  It was, it was sort of fairly early in the morning.  She just very casually really said 'where were you last night when me and Sean cried?'  And we immediately looked and said, you  know, 'when was this Madeleine, was this when you were going to sleep?' And she didn’t answer.  And then she just carried on playing, totally undistressed," said Kate.

She added: "But we obviously told the police because we thought does that indicate that someone's been round the night before and that’s what’s woken her up?  Which is significant, you know…I’ve persecuted myself over and over again about that statement because you think why didn't I kind of just hold her and say what do you mean, what do you mean you know?  What do you mean you woke up?"

Gerry said: "I think the worst thing is we kind of almost thought about not going.  And er, and did.  We weren’t sure we were going to get into the tapas, remember, and…"

Kate said: "In fact we were all, we were all going to go up to the Millennium  again, that was with the kids, which is what we did the first night.  It was just, it was just because the walk was so long and we didn’t have a buggy and the  kids were tired by that time and I thought we were, you know we did talk about going up to the Millennium that night."  
 
Gerry added: "But I mean the worst thing is that you can’t change any of that  and it doesn't help find her.

"I think we’ve actually, despite you know our own guilt, we've tried to focus on what we can change and you know in the first few days you know obviously we focused much, much more on the negatives and it doesn't help.

"It doesn't help Madeleine, it doesn't help us and it doesn’t help find her."

Said Kate: "…As Gerry said, the guilt you feel for not being  there and giving someone that opportunity, you know but then I just have to
kind of reel myself in and think you know I know how much I love Madeleine  and I have no doubt that Madeleine knows how much I love her.

"I think – I mean I know that and I've just got to think regardless of what all those people say out there, you know those bloggers and people on the forums who obviously get some kind of kick out of being nasty, I know that and I know Madeleine knows that and I’ve just got to kind of keep hold of that really."

Kate described Madeleine. She said: "She's, she's very loving.  She's a very bright little girl.  I had days when I'd go to a café with Madeleine and we'd go shopping together and you know she just, you know just say: 'Oh mummy like that top', 'Oh I love your earrings, mummy', you know and she's good company.  She's like my – you know she's like a little buddy to me you know."
 
Gerry added: "She looks like Kate, thank goodness for that, but in terms of personality trait, she’s more like my side of the family I think. 

"She's very outgoing, she was a bit of a ringleader in the nursery and her friends and it's always bizarre because at times I'd go into nursery and 'oh are you Madeleine’s dad, so and so's always talking about Madeleine'.  All the parents - you start to think oh my goodness, what’s she been doing?  But you know she’s just really outgoing, good fun, bundles of energy and very loving."

Gerry: "She was a little person becoming independent and a piece of, you know, endless joy."

Referring to the anniversary marking a year since her daughter went missing Kate said: "It doesn’t feel like a year since I saw Madeleine.  She's just so much, very much still there and she doesn't seem that far away.  It feels like she's still with me in some way and I've never felt that I won't see her again." 

Gerry added: "She's still very much part of our life and the twins.  We can see how much they love their big sister.  I do think that she's still out there, very much so."

"Our little girl wasn't even four, and is now nearly five.  She's the victim and people should not forget that," said Gerry.

Kate revealed that they often wonder what Madeleine would be like now. "She was great with Sean and Amelie and that. You know even when …they were born you know…she just stepped into the role really well considering you know she was only 20 months when they were born and she wanted to be involved and help and then obviously as they got a little bit older because the age difference was so close they just played so well together.

"And it was just lovely seeing them together and that's one thing I struggle with is imagining how they'd be now," she said.

Kate said she also saw Madeleine's best friend and it made her wonder what her daughter would look like.

"I see Madeleine's best friend from time to time," said Kate. "Can’t help but wonder what would Madeleine be like, would she be that much taller, you know is her hair as long as that?  You know and would she be writing her name too?  You know she’s there waiting for us. She deserves us to keep going."

They said the family tried to have as normal a life as possible for the sake of Sean and Amelie but Gerry described it as a "purgatory type existence."

He said: "Your life is carrying on to an extent, in a quasi-real existence, a purgatory type existence.  We are, we are kind of between something real and never finding out.  But although it was hard, we decided to re-introduce Sean and Amelie to a degree of normality and normality is that I go to work."

Kate said: "When we first came back, you know I didn’t cook a meal just couldn't do it. All the every day things that have to be done, you know there were times in the early days where things like that, I found I resented things like that because it was taking me away from Madeleine you know. How can I hang up washing when my daughter's not here?

"Whereas now, you know, we have got Sean and Amelie and they, they need a happy normal life and they deserve a happy normal life…"

Madeleine, One Year On: Campaign For Change is a Mentorn Media production for ITV1. The executive producer is Steve Anderson and the producer/director is Emma Loach.

 
Last night's TV, 01 May 2008
 
Last night's TV Guardian
 
So the McCanns are sad and angry - did we really need a two-hour documentary to tell us?
 
Sam Wollaston
Thursday May 01 2008
 
Tuesday's News at Ten (ITV1) led on the McCanns and how they felt last August when they were named aguidos in the investigation into the disappearance of their daughter. We already knew that the McCanns were aguidos, of course, so the news - the biggest story of the day according to Sir Trevor and the team, bigger than petrol prices, or the housing market, or Austria, or Ken v Boris - was that Kate McCann says she felt "angry" and Jerry found it "surreal" when they became people of interest to the inquiry. Bong: Kate McCann was angry last summer. Bong: petrol's £5 a gallon. Bong: the horrid Austrian man is definitely both father and grandfather to lots of kids.
 
Kate had revealed her anger in a new documentary to be shown the following evening. So Sir Trevor's top story was essentially a trailer for another show: the main news tonight on ITV1 is that there's another programme on ITV1 tomorrow. I think that's shocking. And they wonder why twice as many people watch the BBC News at 10 (which inexplicably missed the McCann scoop and went with the mortgage squeeze).
 
Anyway, what about the documentary itself, last night's Madeleine, One Year On: Campaign for Change (ITV1)? Well, there's a clue in its awkward title. It felt like two films, a compromise between what the film-makers and the McCanns wanted. This is speculation, but I imagine that Madeleine: One Year On is what the film-makers wanted to make, a documentary in which the McCanns spoke openly and candidly about their past year, hopefully with some sensational and newsworthy nuggets. Which they got, but as part of the deal they also got the film the McCanns wanted, about their campaign for a European equivalent of the Amber Alert in America.
 
It made for a bloody great sprawl of a film. Two hours! That's too long for most feature films, and much too long for an interview with two quite ordinary people. Yes, they have been through the most terrible thing anyone can go through. No, that doesn't make them worth two hours, especially as anyone who's opened a newspaper in the past year pretty much knows every detail of the story already. And, in spite of what the people at ITN think, there were no new revelations. I can't imagine many people did the distance.
 
I think the film probably did succeed in showing us the real McCanns, possibly for the first time, and of course I hope it helps them find Madeleine. At times it was moving, but, as television, it would have benefited from being cut in half. Plus, it jumped around in time confusingly, and the music was oppressive - the same four cello notes, again and again. A cello always signifies sorrow. It was annoying at first; after two hours, it was maddening.
 
It's difficult to keep the visuals stimulating, too. We saw the McCanns at home in Leicestershire; Kate and Jerry talking on the sofa. But you can't have two hours of sofa, so we joined them in a lot of taxis - in Portugal, London, Washington. And there were plenty of lingering tree shots - leafless, winter trees (this is a sad story, after all). And a flying heron ... eh, what's that about? Maybe the heron is an aguido, too. Does Sir Trevor know?

 
Madeleine, One Year On: Campaign For Change, 01 May 2008
 
Madeleine, One Year On: Campaign For Change Timesonline
 
Last night's TV
 
Stefanie Marsh
May 1, 2008 
 
Why must television do compassion? Why, when faced with a captive audience, a prime-time slot and a story that could, if they’d let it, tell itself, must television turn to mush and mutate into a series of treacly Hallmark bereavement cards?
 
Usually we television reviewers get sent DVDs but for the preview of Madeleine, One Year On: Campaign for Change, we were bustled off to the ITV headquarters, where we had to sign an embargo form and watch the two-hour documentary with a roomful of reporters who didn’t quite manage to get a story out of it.
 
The film’s director, Emma Loach, the daughter of Ken and one of the professionally compassionate people working in the industry, answered questions at the end wearing the kind of furrowed brow that she might have swiped off the actress Emma Thompson in empathic mode.
 
Loach let it be known that, as a parent herself, she felt the McCanns' pain. But just in case the audience didn't, one presumes, she had decided to overlay the entire two hours with Mentorn's answer to Philip Glass. As we watched poor Kate McCann breaking down again and again in front of the camera, the piano went berzerk. This Is Moving, it told us not altogether implicitly, lest a year's worth of 24-hour Maddie news coverage had partially eroded our capacity to feel. Which it has, of course. But is an orchestra the solution?
 
There’s not that much new to say about the Madeleine case, but the people at ITV could have dealt with that. When, for example, we followed the McCanns to America to meet the father of Elizabeth Smart, a 14-year-old who was abducted for nine months in 2002, it might have been useful to give us some background, rather than cut to the 24th close-up of Kate McCann’s helpless, grief-crumpled face. And on the subject of missing children in general, how about some more information about those who disappear every year (one minute it was 10,000, the next 12,000).
 
For every chat with the couple's cheerleaders, how about a set-to with their enemies; whoever it is in Brussels who opposes the introduction of the US-style Amber Alert system that the couple want to have introduced across Europe; the Portuguese police. There was a good bit when it emerged that leaked police statements had coincided with the day of the McCanns’ Brussels trips, a smear, the McCanns thought, but soon we were back to too many shots of empty swings and deserted playrooms, and an obsession with capturing on camera every single one of Kate McCann’s breakdowns.
 
What, perhaps inadvertently, came out of this film was a worrying portrait of a woman so obviously poleaxed by grief that, a year on, she is no closer either to finding out what happened to her eldest daughter or resolving in her mind the events of last May. "You never can give up hope," she said, and yet "the thought of living like this for another 40 years is not exactly a happy prospect".
 
At one point Gerry McCann admits that his "wife is carrying on in a quasi-real existence". What she is really doing is falling apart, but too much gloop from the director turned the McCanns’ terrible situation into a guilt trip that made me want to watch The Apprentice instead.

 
Come off TV, Kate and Gerry, your time is up, 02 May 2008
 
Come off TV, Kate and Gerry, your time is up The Sun
 
JON GAUNT - Sun Columnist
Published: 02 May 2008 (published online 01 May 2008) 
 
IT must be just me, but the Maddie documentary left me feeling less sympathetic to Gerry and Kate than I was before.

It was a two-hour bore-fest with a centre softer than a marshmallow. And my God, did the background music get on your nerves too?

There was no real probe into why they chose to leave their three children home alone.

I accept that their proposal for an amber alert system is a great idea and should be implemented right across Europe.

However, I couldn’t believe their bleating over the fact that their campaign was bumped off the front pages by the revelation that Maddie had asked why Mummy hadn’t come to their room the night before when she was crying.

This was, at best, naive.

Of course a revelation like this will go straight to the top of the news agenda.

The question remains: Why didn’t Kate and Gerry talk to us about this earlier?

Booze

Again let me state, I don’t know whether they are involved in Maddie’s disappearance — only a court can discover the truth — but I believe they are guilty of neglect.

What was all that guff about not having a buggy as a reason for leaving the kids alone in the room?

What was that nonsense about thinking there was a listening service? After a few days they must have realised that no such service was available?

Even if they didn’t realise this, surely when Maddie talked about crying on the very day she was abducted they should never have chosen to go out on the booze again.

I interviewed Emma Loach, the director of this film, on my radio show on Wednesday and she clearly illustrated where her sympathies lay when she told me she too had left her three-year-old and five-year-old alone in a hotel room while she went off and had dinner.

Her pathetic excuse for this child neglect was that it was better to do this than have the kids be irritable the next day.

Gerry and Kate said on GMTV yesterday that there are different ways to parent.

They are WRONG.

There is only way and that is to always put your kids first.

People like Loach and the McCanns clearly don’t understand that when you have kids your priorities have to change, you are no longer a singleton or a couple and you cannot act as if you are.

Your first responsibility is the safety and comfort of your children.

This programme left me with even more questions than answers and just confirmed to me that the spinning and propaganda on both sides has to stop.

I agree with the man who brought the Bulger killers to justice, Albert Kirby, who said on my show that the McCanns’ time would be better spent going back to Portugal and helping the police with the reconstruction rather than touring TV studios.

The McCanns must return and do the reconstruction. Then the Portuguese police need to charge them or release them from their suspect status.

But please, most of all, can all the main players in this sad saga remember it is not about you and your suffering but the plight of an innocent four-year-old

 
A year none of us will ever forget, 04 May 2008
 
A year none of us will ever forget Guardian
 
Andrew Anthony
Sunday May 4 2008
 
For a variety of reasons, the disappearance of Madeleine McCann seems to hold an enduring, not to say unhealthy, hold on the nation's imagination. The first and most obvious is that it exemplifies every parent's deepest fear. It's also a mystery, and it's only human to wonder at the unknowable truth. But there is more to it than that, something modern and distinctive. For it's also a media story, a testament to the power of the digital image.
 
There can be few people in this country who are unfamiliar with the photograph of Madeleine with her large, dark and seemingly imploring eyes. And many, if not most, will have seen the footage in which she looks up, full of a child's acceptance, at her father's camcorder. Then there are her parents, an attractive couple and, in the case of Kate McCann, strikingly photogenic. And finally the missing image, the one that in our surveillance culture we have come to expect to exist, that of a perpetrator carrying the child off into the night.
 
It's a story that has remained in the public eye because the truth is that, however macabre, it is attractive to the eye. I recall being in the Sky News studios when the McCanns flew back to England from Portugal. All other news that morning was dropped. Every item. Hours were spent on reporting the arrival of an aeroplane. Forget Chamberlain returning from Munich, the coverage could not have been any greater had Martians landed with a declaration of interplanetary war.
 
And yet nothing had happened. Nothing has happened of any consequence, in fact, for a whole year. Inevitably, then, at the end of a long two hours of Madeleine: One Year On the viewer knew precious little more than was known at the beginning. The bare facts were and remain that on 3 May 12 months ago Madeleine McCann went missing from her room in a Portuguese resort and has not been seen since. It is, as her father Gerry McCann said a number of times, the 'nightmare' from which there is no waking.
 
But is it a nightmare from which we can gain meaningful information? Or is it the type that offers some kind of dark, vicarious entertainment, the sort derived from the voyeuristic relief that we are not in the McCanns' dreadful position?
 
The programme-makers, who followed the couple for four months, seemed to have two aims. The first was to allow the McCanns to tell their version of events, and thereby counter some of the rumour and vicious innuendo that has flourished in the media frenzy. And the second was to show the McCanns trying to gather support for a Europe-wide 'amber alert' to deal with missing children.
 
In both cases, the film, despite its length, performed a frustratingly limited job. Though it revisited the scene of Madeleine's disappearance, and the McCanns went over what had happened, key details were left conspicuously untouched. For example, was the apartment locked or unlocked? Without definitive answers to this question and others there is still plenty of room for malicious speculation.
 
Which is what the McCanns file under 'Nasty' in the boxes of correspondence they receive. They also have a box marked 'Nutty' and - an interesting though needless distinction - 'Psychics'. We watched them reading letters from supporters, conspiracy theorists and hate-filled moralists, neither them nor us any the wiser to the details of the real-life event that prompted this epistolary outpouring.
 
In one vital respect, though, the film delivered. Shot in unflinching close-up, it was not quite a study of people under unbearable psychological pressure, but it was a kind of trial by reflex expression. It's impossible to imagine that anyone could withstand that degree of photographic scrutiny while harbouring a massive lie.
 
The McCanns came across as determined and disciplined people, particularly Gerry. 'It's absolutely essential that you survive,' he said, addressing the camera with something between stiff resolution and pride, 'and come ou