In the opening of Riptide, we meet Alison Weston, a woman who has just begun what appears to be a new chapter in her life. She has married Sean Weston, an older, wealthier Australian man, and relocated with him to a beautiful surf-coast home. On the surface everything looks perfect: seaside vistas, familial comfort, a new family unit. But beneath that tranquillity, tensions simmer — Alison’s past, the children’s adjustment, and the vague stress of blending two families all hint that not everything is as idyllic as it seems.
When Sean disappears one morning after going out surfing, the plot pivots sharply. The police quickly suspect he drowned in a rip-tide, and the community begins to accept this tragic outcome. Yet Alison cannot shake the suspicion that something else is going on. The quiet surf becomes ominous, the fault lines in Alison and Sean’s life begin to crack, and the promise of a safe marriage dissolves into uncertainty.

As Alison struggles to process Sean’s disappearance, the supporting characters begin to emerge as shadows in her world. Her stepson Ethan, Sean’s ex-wife Rachel, Alison’s ex-husband Michael, her daughter Hannah and Hannah’s friend Logan all feel as though they are keeping secrets. Alison’s investigation deepens and she begins to question everyone’s story, including her own instincts. The more she pursues the truth, the more unstable her new life becomes, and the more she realises she may have married not just Sean, but a whole set of hidden relationships.
The setting of the series plays a silent yet powerful role: the Australian surf coast, the crash of waves, the morning sun on the water, all become part of the mood and metaphor. Filmed in Victoria, including Melbourne, Mount Eliza and the Dandenong Ranges, the scenery offers beauty that belies danger, and calm that contains secrets beneath. The idea of a “riptide” is both literal and symbolic: a current that sweeps you away when you least expect it.

Gradually the story shifts from mystery to confrontation as Alison and the audience learn that there is far more at stake than a presumed drowning. The deeper she delves, the more the case becomes about truth, identity and betrayal. New revelations emerge: wrong identities, hidden motives, and the possibility that Sean’s fate wasn’t an accident. Alison’s own world is shaken as she realises that her life, her marriage and her new home may be built on unstable ground.
The conclusion of Riptide delivers a tense yet cathartic payoff. Alison must face the person who has manipulated her, confront painful truths and reclaim her life under the weight of what has been revealed. The surf, the home, the marriage — all of it must be re-examined in light of the deception. Ultimately, Riptide is not just about one man’s disappearance, but about one woman’s journey to the truth, and about how easily the peaceful surface of life can mask turbulent undercurrents.





