The Succession finale was monstrous, near-Shakespearean perfection
Jesse Armstrong effected the most remarkable reversal of fortune of all, Logan now in the ascendant over his fractious, ingrate…
ByDiscover compelling insights into the latest TV shows with our selection of reviews, providing critical analysis, expert opinions, and captivating commentary on the most popular and thought-provoking series.
Jesse Armstrong effected the most remarkable reversal of fortune of all, Logan now in the ascendant over his fractious, ingrate…
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Can this derivative series really have cost $10m an episode to make? I went into a kind of death spiral…
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What does Jesse Armstrong want for his monsters now?
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A careful balance of well-loved routine and quiet reinvention means BBC One’s flagship talent show remains one of the few…
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9/11: One Day in America forces the viewer to experience the attacks in painful detail.
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Ice-cold and uncompromising, this series is grim enough to go out after the 9pm watershed.
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This weird, funny drama about a luxury hotel in Hawaii understands the rich and powerful are often uneasy in their…
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Why we should celebrate the ascent of popular erotica.
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Despite its tired jokes, absurd plots and dramatic clichés, Ted Lasso is universally acclaimed. Am I missing something?
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Ben Miller stars as an unnervingly observant Cambridge don with OCD called Jasper Tempest. It’s all incredibly strange.
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For years, we have lamented Love Island as commercialised and insincere. But after the past 15 months, who actually cares?
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The writer of Friday Night Dinner reflects on the tenth anniversary of Channel 4’s longest-running sitcom.
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Friends may appear an apolitical relic, but like many millenials I can’t be objective about a programme that raised me.
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How to bring to life such a woman, and how on earth to put her experiments in psychoacoustics on screen?
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Public approbation cannot, unlike a lover, be snared or pinned down. It is unreliable, fickle. It is a chimera.
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This new series produced by Jed Mercurio is exciting, and its plot is intricately tangled.
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If Graham Norton’s questions were far from searching, John’s answers were accompanied by neither feeling nor reflection.
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For 22 hours Rue has been entombed in her duvet watching Love Island. Time slips into nothingness, but Ian Stirling’s…
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The sexism and misogyny can be seen from the writing through to the paychecks.
ByIt wasn’t beauty, wealth or sex that enticed audiences – simply a bizarre fascination with other people’s filth.
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