mon 18/08/2025

tv

The Cameron Years, BBC One review - quite interesting but a bit boring

Adam Sweeting

David Cameron has been a recluse since the fateful days of June 2016 when the referendum on EU membership didn’t go quite the way he’d hoped. He’s probably been living through a private purgatory. “I think I will think about this forever,” he murmured to the camera in this first instalment of BBC One’s two-part doc.

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City on a Hill, Sky Atlantic review - power, corruption and larceny in 1990s Boston

Adam Sweeting

Connoisseurs of gnarly Boston-based crime sagas like The Town, The Departed and Black Mass will quickly find themselves at home in this sleaze-ridden new show, made by Showtime and brought to us by Sky Atlantic.

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Defending the Guilty, BBC Two review - trials and tribulations of a trainee barrister

Adam Sweeting

This new legal comedy is based on a well-received book by Alex McBride, but the transition from print to the BBC Two screen hasn’t been an unalloyed success.

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Love in the Countryside, BBC Two review - reaping a harvest of marital bliss?

Adam Sweeting

If you’re a farmer who works round the clock to feed sheep, milk cows and so forth, how on earth do you make time to find a partner and reap a harvest of marital bliss?

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Temple, Sky 1 review - down in the tube station at midnight

Adam Sweeting

At first, the opening episode of Sky 1’s enticing new drama Temple looked like it was going to be mostly concerned with a heist gone wrong.

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Suicidal: In Our Own Words, Channel 5 review - why are so many men killing themselves?

Adam Sweeting

September 10 is World Suicide Prevention Day, and Channel 5 marked the occasion with this sobering documentary. Focusing on male suicide – incredibly, now the UK’s biggest killer of men under 45 – it studied six patients at the Riverside Mental Health Centre in Hillingdon, west London.

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Spotlight on The Troubles: A Secret History, BBC Four review - Ulster's bitter sectarian war revisited

Adam Sweeting

“The Troubles” is a polite euphemism for the ferocious storm of sectarian violence and political chaos which convulsed Northern Ireland for 30 years, before being brought to a close by 1998’s Good Friday Agreement.

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The Capture, BBC One review - gripping drama about the surveillance society

Veronica Lee

Ben Chanan's The Capture (BBC One), which he wrote and directed, is a bang-up-to-the-minute dystopian thriller about the increasingly surveilled society we live in.

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High Society: Cannabis Café, Channel 4 review - pointless investigation into drug-taking

Veronica Lee

This was the first of a two-part investigation into... well, I don't know what. The voiceover of High Society: Cannabis Café said it was an experiment “to test the alleged benefits of weed” and the people featured all had “a personal motivation for getting stoned” as they visited an Amsterdam coffee shop, where dope is sold legally.

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Sink or Swim, Channel 4 review - the Channel awaits for these celebrities

Veronica Lee

Is there any challenge that television producers haven't filmed celebrities doing? They won't be happy until they've followed a bunch of them snowboarding down an Alp while baking a cake, conducting an orchestra and researching their family history. And if it involves a little sob followed by a group hug, bonus!

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