Georgie Lane is the definitive "Our Girl." She is frustratingly stubborn, emotionally guarded, and prone to catastrophic romantic choices (the will-they-won't-they with Captain James and Elvis is the stuff of fan-forum legend). Yet, she is also fearless, compassionate, and devastatingly competent. The show’s genius was putting a medic at the center. Georgie doesn’t just shoot; she heals. This perspective shifted the moral axis of the show away from killing the enemy and toward saving the innocent.
However, the show truly found its stride and its identity when Michelle Keegan took over the role of Corporal Georgie Lane in Season 2. Where Molly was a runaway, Georgie was a lifer—a seasoned combat medical technician for whom the chaos of Afghanistan and Kenya was a strange sort of home.
At its heart, Our Girl is a profound character study disguised as an action thriller. The title itself is a double-edged sword. The "Our" implies a national, familial ownership—she is every soldier, every daughter, every young woman trying to prove herself. The "Girl" suggests an intimacy and vulnerability that the word "soldier" often erases. Our Girl
What made Our Girl stand apart from shows like Ultimate Force or even Strike Back was its unglamorous portrayal of conflict. There are no slow-motion hero walks. Instead, there are IEDs that rip apart a squad in a blink, children caught in crossfire, and the long, silent nights where soldiers grapple with PTSD.
The series began with a two-part pilot focusing on Molly Dawes (Lacey Turner), a working-class Essex teenager stuck in a dead-end life. Joining the Army was her escape hatch from a toxic family and a string of bad decisions. Molly’s story was raw and relatable; it wasn't about patriotism or glory, but about finding a family when your own fails you. Georgie Lane is the definitive "Our Girl
The show never shied away from the bureaucratic stupidity of war or the emotional cost of service. Georgie loses friends, makes mistakes that cost lives, and returns home to find that civilian life doesn't fit anymore. The series excelled at the "coming home" episodes—the awkward supermarket trips, the silent distance from a fiancé who doesn't understand, the desperate need to go back because "out there" makes more sense than "in here."
In the end, Our Girl is a love letter to resilience. It is a reminder that heroism is not the absence of fear, but the decision to treat a wound while the bullets are still flying. Whether she was Molly or Georgie, she was never just a soldier. She was our daughter, our friend, our conscience, and our girl. And we were better for having her on patrol. Georgie doesn’t just shoot; she heals
Our Girl ended its five-season run in 2020, but its resonance lingers. In a landscape dominated by male anti-heroes (think Homeland ’s Brody or The Americans ’ Philip Jennings), Georgie Lane offered a different archetype: the female hero who is not invincible. She cries. She fails her fitness tests. She falls in love with the wrong men.
When Our Girl first aired on BBC One in 2014, it could have easily been dismissed as just another entry in a crowded field of military dramas. On the surface, it had all the familiar ingredients: dusty combat zones, the crackle of radio static, and the high-stakes tension of a soldier’s life. But beneath the helmet and the webbing, the show carved out a unique space in British television. It wasn’t really about the Army; it was about the person wearing the boots.
The show succeeded because it treated a female soldier not as a novelty or a love interest, but as the default human. It argued that a woman’s loyalty to her unit, her moral struggle with a difficult evacuation, and her grief over a fallen comrade are just as cinematic and compelling as any male counterpart’s.