Forty years ago, Band Aid brought mad excitement to my generation
Watching the BBC’s The Making of Do They Know It’s Christmas?, what was once such a big deal dematerialised in…
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.
Watching the BBC’s The Making of Do They Know It’s Christmas?, what was once such a big deal dematerialised in…
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Blood stains, Battenberg cakes and a brilliant older woman – what a treat this series is.
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In this second series, based on the final novel in Hilary Mantel’s trilogy, the mood is hushed. What volumes are…
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Rivals makes the 1980s look like sunlit uplands.
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In this slick adaptation of Freddie Forsyth’s novel, Eddie Redmayne’s cheekbones shine.
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How did this series, in which dastardly pensioner zombies feast on teenagers, get made?
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This film from Hope Not Hate – pulled from the London Film Festival on safety grounds – has a lot…
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Richard E Grant is glorious in this Rolls-Royce production from Armando Iannucci and Sam Mendes.
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This Disney+ take on Jilly Cooper’s Rutshire Chronicles is very funny and deeply satisfying. And what a multiplicity of backsides!
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Sophie Turner shines in this TV biopic of an Eighties jewellery thief.
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There are bathroom tiles more expressive than Nicole Kidman in her latest in a long line of increasingly hollow TV…
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The second series of James Graham’s Nottinghamshire-set BBC drama is event television at its best.
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The rock star’s plea to save the badgers is strangely captivating.
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The ex-England pro leads his young team for a second series of self-discovery.
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This, for me, is the antidote to those appalling race riots. If only all those involved could be made to…
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This series set in a police training academy is by turns laugh-out-loud funny and simply embarrassing.
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This series based on Barbara Nadel’s bestselling novels is really rather good summer viewing.
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Steven Moffat’s delicious satire is unafraid to take aim at youthful snowflakes and puritans.
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It sounds absurd, but this series featuring Benedict Cumberbatch, a missing child and a huge furry puppet is the best…
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This new adaptation – the bastard child of early Taggart and Happy Valley – reimagines Ian Rankin’s detective.
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