sat 21/09/2024

tv

Man in an Orange Shirt, BBC Two review - soft-focus view of 1940s gay love affair

Mark Sanderson

As chat-up lines go, “I can’t do my fly up single-handed” is pretty full on – even if it is true. Thomas March (James McArdle) is speaking to James Berryman (Oliver Jackson-Cohen), who not only went to the same public school but has also just saved his life on the Italian front during World War Two. Furthermore, the come-on works. The wounded soldiers are soon sucking face.

Read more...

The Handmaid's Tale, Series 1 finale, Channel 4 review - exquisite to look at but glacially slow

Adam Sweeting

Come awards time, it’s inevitable that Elisabeth Moss will be collecting a few for her portrayal of Offred, the endlessly-suffering lead character in The Handmaid’s Tale (her real name is June). But I reckon the real stars of the show are cinematographer Colin Watkinson plus the production design and art direction teams.

Read more...

Queer as Art, BBC Two review - showbusiness and the gay revolution

Marina Vaizey

Part of the BBC's Gay Britannia season, here was a programme fulfilling what it said on the tin: prominent LGBTQ (when will all these expanding acronyms cease to confuse us all) figures narrating, examining, discussing, analysing, letting it all hang out about LGBTQ folk and the arts during the past half-century.

Read more...

Top of the Lake: China Girl, BBC Two review - thrillingly murky

Jasper Rees

In the riveting first series of Top of the Lake, it was personal for Down Under detective Robin Griffin. She headed to a hilly corner of New Zealand to be around for the death of her mother while looking into the disappearance of a young girl.

Read more...

Against the Law, BBC Two review - uplifting and deeply moving

David Benedict

The thing almost no one remembers about the great Nora Ephron/Rob Reiner 1989 romcom When Harry Met Sally is that the love story is intercut with real couples talking to camera about the mechanics and longevity of their true-life loves. It shouldn’t work, but it does. Remarkably, Fergus O’Brien’s deeply moving BBC film Against the Law, armed with far darker material, pulls off the self-same trick.

Read more...

Diana, Our Mother: Her Life and Legacy, ITV review – intimate revelations from William and Harry

Adam Sweeting

The death of Princess Diana 20 years ago had an extraordinary emotional effect on millions of people who had never met her, so what on earth must it have felt like for her two young sons? Prince Harry, aged 12 when his mother died, reflected on that in this much-anticipated programme.

Read more...

It's So Easy and Other Lies, Sky Arts review - uneven rock bio outstays its welcome

Barney Harsent

Duff McKagan is a survivor. He’s a bass player too, from the fledgling Seattle punk/proto-grunge outfit 10 Minute Warning to the stadium-filling behemoth of Guns N’ Roses, but if you were judging by the narrative weight of this 2015 documentary, you’d have to conclude that he’s mostly survivor.

Read more...

Fearless, Series Finale, ITV review - big build-up to an anticlimax

Adam Sweeting

It was a coup by ITV to get Homeland writer Patrick Harbinson to pen this paranoid-conspiracy series, and rather droll to get Helen McCrory (wife of Homeland’s Damian Lewis) to play the lead.

Read more...

Game of Thrones, Series 7, Sky Atlantic review – slow, but it's just the beginning

Adam Sweeting

If nothing else, Game of Thrones has surely been the greatest boon to the British acting profession since they invented tights and greasepaint. Part of the fun is trying to think of somebody who hasn’t been in it yet.

Read more...

I Know Who You Are, BBC Four review - preposterous but hypnotic

Jasper Rees

All’s fair in love and law in I Know Who You Are. BBC Four’s latest Euro-import hails from Spain and, as per the channel’s practice, is coming at you in intense double doses, two 70-minute episodes every Saturday night.

Read more...

Pages

 

latest in today

Bavouzet, Nemecz, McLachlan, Manchester Camerata, Takács-Nag...

Mozart, made in Manchester”, the project to perform and record...

A Very Royal Scandal, Prime Video review - a fairly sound re...

Why do production companies think the world needs yet another reconstituted TV drama involving famous people in infamous situations? Newspapers...

The law's sick voyeurism - director Cédric Kahn on...

The trial of the left-wing intellectual Pierre Goldman, who was charged in April 1970 with four armed robberies, one of which led to the death of...

Album: Katy Perry - 143

Life can be unfair, and Katy Perry can’t be alone in finding herself having to take the rough with the smooth. Still, anyone would have thought...

Nightsleeper, BBC One review - strangers on a runaway train

“Let the train take the strain”, as the old advertising slogan urged us. The train in this...

Notes from Sheepland review - her farm is her canvas

Orla Barry laughed when she was advised to take up sheep farming, and not just because she had no experience. “Orla with the sheep eyes,” she...

The Substance review - Demi Moore as an ageing Hollywood cel...

If you like a body-horror movie to retain a semblance of logic in its plot line, then The Substance – grotesque, gory and finally...

Moby, O2 review - ebullient night of rave'n'rock...

Sometimes a gig suddenly and completely elevates. Such is the case tonight when Moby, on his first UK tour in 12 years, plays “Extreme Ways”, his...

Strange Darling review - love really hurts

“Are you a serial killer?” asks a woman sitting in a pick up truck with a man she just met at a bar. The neon sign from the motel...

The Goldman Case review - blistering French political drama

It’s a bold move to give a UK cinema release to this fierce courtroom drama about a French left-wing intellectual who was assassinated in1979....