Archive for Amazon Prime

Culture Vulture 30th May – 5th June 2026

A large vulture soaring in the sky with mountains in the background, accompanied by bold text reading 'CULTURE VULTURE' and a banner for 'COUNTER CULTURE' event from 30th May to 5th June 2026.

Culture


From Tudor intrigue and American paranoia to Bowie beneath the floodlights and Aretha reclaiming the airwaves, this week’s Culture Vulture ranges widely across cinema, television and sound. There is something quietly defiant about these selections. History refuses to stay buried, old scandals echo into the present and entertainment itself becomes a way of understanding power, identity and memory. Whether it is Gordon Banks and football folklore, Muhammad Ali refusing to fit into easy categories or Russell T Davies returning to themes of love and belonging, the week rewards curiosity.

Three selections stand out. 🌟 The Lion in Winter remains one of the sharpest battles of wills ever committed to film, a royal family drama that could have been written yesterday. 🌟 Shergar: The Racehorse and the IRA revisits one of Ireland’s great unsolved mysteries where sport, politics and organised violence intersect. And 🌟 Dear England arrives as a reminder that football stories are rarely just about football at all, but about national identity, expectation and the fragile business of collective belief.

Culture Vulture, as ever, offers an alternative route through the schedules.

Saturday 30th May 2026

🌟 Shergar: The Racehorse and the IRA
Channel 4, 8.00pm
Catch up via Channel 4 streaming

The disappearance of Shergar remains one of those stories that feels suspended between crime thriller and national myth. The Derby winner who seemed destined for sporting immortality vanished in 1983 and was never recovered, leaving behind rumour, accusation and unanswered questions. Channel 4 revisits the case through the complicated intersection of horse racing, Irish politics and the shadow world of paramilitary activity.

What gives the story its grip is that Shergar was more than a horse. He represented prestige, money and status, and his disappearance carried emotional resonance well beyond racing circles. Even now the case provokes disagreement over motive, culpability and what may have happened during those lost days.

Good documentaries know when mystery matters more than neat resolution. This looks set to recognise that uncertainty is often part of the story itself.

The Count of Monte Cristo (2002)
5Star, 6.20pm

Revenge dramas live or die on the audience believing not merely in injustice but in the wounded intelligence of the person seeking redress. Kevin Reynolds’ adaptation of Alexandre Dumas understands this instinctively. Jim Caviezel’s Edmond Dantès begins as an ordinary sailor betrayed by jealousy and greed, only to emerge from imprisonment transformed into a calculating avenger.

The story remains irresistible because its pleasures are both emotional and theatrical. Dantès does not simply seek revenge; he curates it. His enemies are dismantled piece by piece, and the audience enjoys the spectacle even while sensing the moral cost.

Guy Pearce makes an especially effective Mondego, his treachery rooted not in grand villainy but insecurity and entitlement. Pearce understands that envy often wears the face of friendship before revealing its sharper edges.

The film compresses and simplifies Dumas, sometimes drastically, yet retains the novel’s central heartbeat — the fantasy that intelligence and patience might defeat privilege and corruption.

There is also something enduringly appealing about its romantic sweep. Modern cinema can sometimes be nervous about emotional sincerity, but Monte Cristo embraces melodrama with confidence and charm.

A handsome, entertaining adventure that still carries enough darkness beneath the swordplay to linger.

Ghost Trail (2024)
BBC Four, 9.05pm

Jonathan Millet’s Ghost Trail plays less like a thriller and more like a man trying to walk through the wreckage of his own mind. The Syrian war sits in the background like a bruise that never quite fades, and the film follows a lone figure moving across Europe in pursuit of a man he believes once held the power to destroy him.

What gives the film its quiet force is the way it refuses to turn suffering into a set‑piece. Trauma isn’t staged or stylised; it’s carried. You see it in the way the protagonist holds himself, in the pauses before he speaks, in the way memory seems to press down on him like weight rather than narrative.

Millet keeps the pacing spare, almost ascetic. Scenes breathe. Silences stretch. The tension comes not from the machinery of genre but from the unease of not knowing what justice might look like, or whether it’s even possible after so much damage. Suspicion becomes a kind of weather system the characters move through.

It sits comfortably in that European tradition where filmmakers trust the audience to live with ambiguity. No explanatory flashbacks, no moral signposts, no tidy catharsis — just the slow, unsettling drift of a man trying to decide what he owes to the past and what he can still salvage from the future.

A reminder, stark and unadorned, that crossing a border doesn’t mean leaving a war behind.

David Bowie: Serious Moonlight
Sky Arts, 9.00pm

As a lifelong Bowie obsessive, I always return to 1983 with a kind of fascinated ambivalence. This was the moment when the great shape‑shifter — the man who’d spent a decade outrunning categories — suddenly became a global pop phenomenon. Serious Moonlight captures him right at that pivot point, balancing mass adoration with the cool intelligence that made him Bowie in the first place.

The setlist is almost indecently rich: Heroes, Fashion, Space Oddity, Young Americans, Life on Mars?, and the irresistible, sun‑lit swagger of Let’s Dance. But what holds the attention isn’t just the songs — it’s the way he moves through them. There’s that familiar Bowie duality: fully present yet somehow hovering above the moment, performer and anthropologist of his own fame.

Concert films often wilt as decades pass, victims of their own hairstyles and shoulder pads. Bowie, though, rarely dates. He seems to exist slightly outside the calendar, as if time bends a little to accommodate him. Even here, in his most commercially accessible era, he’s still playing with persona, still testing the edges of what a pop star can be.

A reminder, for those of us who’ve followed him through every incarnation, that even at his most mainstream he never stopped being singular.

Playboy: Secrets of the Centrefolds
12.35am

The Playboy empire remains one of the twentieth century’s strangest cultural contradictions — marketed as liberation while frequently entangled in exploitation and image-making. This documentary strand explores the experiences behind the mythology.

The Great Fire: London Burns
PBS America, 7.35pm
The Great Fire: Death and Destruction
PBS America, 8.35pm
The Great Fire: A City Rebuilt
PBS America, 9.35pm

This three-part examination of the Great Fire promises not simply disaster reconstruction but social history. Fires reveal inequalities as much as architecture, and London’s catastrophe of 1666 reshaped the city physically and psychologically.

Sunday 31st May 2026

🌟 Dear England
BBC One, 9.00pm
Episode 3 of 4 – All episodes on iPlayer

Football dramas often stumble by mistaking fandom for storytelling. James Graham’s Dear England avoids that trap by recognising that Gareth Southgate’s England represented something larger than tournament results.

The drama explores pressure, vulnerability and the attempt to rebuild a national sporting culture too often trapped by fear and nostalgia.

Even viewers indifferent to football may find themselves unexpectedly drawn in.

The Book of Life (2014)
BBC One, 10.00am

Animated cinema occasionally dares to look genuinely distinctive. Jorge Gutierrez’s The Book of Life does precisely that, drawing on Mexican folklore and Day of the Dead traditions with vivid imagination.

Rather than chasing generic fantasy, the film embraces cultural specificity, giving it warmth and personality.

There is romance, humour and adventure, but also reflection on family expectation and memory.

The visual design alone deserves admiration.

A colourful and heartfelt alternative to formula animation.

Genevieve (1953)
Talking Pictures TV, 1.00pm

There’s a particular strain of British comedy that thrives on mild disorder — not slapstick, not farce exactly, but the gentle unravelling of people who think they’re far more dignified than they are. Genevieve remains one of the loveliest examples. Built around the London–Brighton veteran car run, it turns a simple motoring jaunt into a quietly escalating contest of pride and wounded male ego.

Kenneth More and John Gregson spark off each other with an ease that feels almost accidental. The humour doesn’t come from contrived set‑pieces but from personality: two men who can’t quite admit how much they care about winning, or how ridiculous that makes them look.

Yes, there’s nostalgia — the soft glow of post‑war Britain, the charm of old engines and older manners — but there’s also a slyness to it. A knowing look at masculinity, rivalry, and the middle‑class urge to turn everything into a test of character.

A small, bright pleasure of a film, and very British in the best sense.

The Searchers (1956)
BBC Two, 3.30pm

The Searchers is one of those films that refuses to settle neatly into the heroic myth of the American West. John Ford gives you the sweeping vistas, yes — those vast, indifferent landscapes that seem to swallow people whole — but the emotional terrain is far more jagged. And at the centre stands John Wayne’s Ethan Edwards, a figure who is both magnetic and deeply troubling.

Wayne plays him with a hard, unyielding intensity. He’s a man driven by purpose, but the purpose curdles. What begins as a rescue mission slowly reveals itself as something darker: obsession, prejudice, a worldview so rigid it threatens to break everyone around him. Ford never softens it, never reassures the audience with easy moral signposting.

The Monument Valley backdrops are majestic, almost mythic, yet the story they frame is anything but comforting. The film keeps circling the same uneasy question: what happens when the man riding out to save the day is also the one carrying the deepest poison?

Few westerns have the courage to look that squarely at hatred, or to acknowledge how violence can twist a person long after the shooting stops. And the older the film gets, the more unsettling it becomes — as if time only sharpens its edges.

A classic, yes, but one that sta.

Top Hat (1935)
BBC Four, 7.15pm

Pure elegance from Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. Depression-era escapism at its most graceful.

The Manchurian Candidate (1962)
Sky Arts, 9.00pm

Few films capture the texture of political paranoia as cleanly as The Manchurian Candidate. Even now, its Cold War anxieties feel uncomfortably close to home. Frank Sinatra gives one of his sharpest performances, playing a man circling a truth he can barely articulate, let alone face.

What makes the film endure isn’t just its thriller mechanics but its sense of psychological intrusion — the idea that the real danger isn’t out on the battlefield but inside the mind, quietly rewired. The satire is razor‑edged, the mood icy, and the implications still sting.

A reminder that conspiracy, manipulation and manufactured certainty are not relics of another era but recurring features of political life.

The Nice Guys (2016)
BBC One, 10.30pm

Shane Black’s scruffy detective comedy pairs Russell Crowe and Ryan Gosling to glorious effect.

The Blues Brothers (1980)
BBC Two, 10.45pm

Some films strain for cool; The Blues Brothers simply assumes it. Part musical, part anarchic road movie, it barrels forward with the confidence of two men who believe — quite sincerely — that God wants them to save an orphanage and that the best way to do it is by assembling the greatest rhythm‑and‑blues band in Illinois.

What keeps it irresistible is the film’s total commitment to its own glorious absurdity. Car chases that defy physics, musical numbers that erupt without warning, and a parade of legends — Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, James Brown — who treat the chaos as perfectly normal.

It shouldn’t work. It absolutely does. A hymn to deadpan mayhem and the healing power of a good horn section.

South Bank at 75: You Are Here
BBC Two, 10.00pm
Catch up via iPlayer

A celebration of one of Britain’s great cultural institutions and the conversations that have shaped it.

Monday 1st June 2026

🌟 Tiptoe
Channel 4, 9.00pm
Episodes 1 and 2 – also available via Channel 4 streaming

Russell T Davies has spent much of his career exploring the spaces where private lives and public attitudes collide. From Queer as Folk to It’s A Sin, he has shown a gift for mixing wit, emotion and social observation without reducing characters to arguments. Tiptoe arrives carrying inevitable expectation.

The drama promises to examine relationships and identity with Davies’ familiar combination of warmth and confrontation. His scripts rarely avoid discomfort, but they also recognise humour and tenderness as survival mechanisms.

That matters because television drama can sometimes become strangely bloodless when attempting seriousness, mistaking solemnity for emotional truth. Davies understands that life rarely behaves so tidily.

The shadow of Queer as Folk inevitably hangs nearby, particularly with Channel 4 making his breakthrough series newly available again. Yet revisiting Queer as Folk is a reminder not only of how provocative it once felt, but how playful and alive it remains.

Television has changed enormously since 1999. So too has the political and cultural atmosphere surrounding sexuality and belonging. Tiptoe enters that conversation at a moment when questions of identity again dominate public debate.

Whether it becomes essential television remains to be seen, but Davies rarely lacks ambition and almost never lacks something worth saying.

Monolith (2022)
Film4, 9.00pm

Science fiction does not require giant budgets to generate unease. Monolith proves the point through admirable restraint. Much of the film unfolds through the voice and experience of a disgraced journalist investigating strange reports connected to mysterious black bricks.

The set-up sounds eccentric and, admittedly, it is. Yet the film cleverly uses isolation and ambiguity to create atmosphere.

There is something distinctly contemporary about its concern with information, credibility and digital storytelling. The protagonist lives in a world where truth competes with rumour and attention itself becomes currency.

The limited setting works to the film’s advantage. Rather than feeling constrained, the story develops an almost claustrophobic intimacy.

Genre cinema sometimes benefits from knowing exactly what not to explain.

A quietly unnerving piece of speculative storytelling.

🌟 Dear England
BBC One, 9.00pm
Episode 4 of 4

James Graham’s drama reaches its conclusion with Gareth Southgate and England confronting the pressures that accompany modern football. Yet the appeal of Dear England lies not in match results but emotional architecture.

Southgate emerges less as sporting saviour than reluctant national therapist, trying to reshape attitudes inherited through decades of disappointment and defensive masculinity.

Football occupies an unusual place within British life — simultaneously entertainment, identity and emotional shorthand. Graham’s drama understands this instinctively.

By exploring vulnerability alongside competition, the series offers something richer than simple sporting biography.

Even those who know the outcomes may find themselves invested in the emotional journey.

Ancient Greece: The Dark Chronicles
Begins Monday – Part 1 of 5

Civilisation documentaries sometimes present antiquity as settled fact, all marble certainty and textbook chronology. The attraction of this new series lies in its promise to examine the more shadowy and uncertain origins of Ancient Greece.

The “dark” in Dark Ages history often refers not to barbarism but gaps in evidence — periods where archaeology and scholarship must work harder to reconstruct vanished worlds.

That uncertainty makes history exciting.

Leonora Carrington: The Lost Surrealist
BBC Four, 10.50pm

Carrington remains one of surrealism’s most fascinating and frequently overlooked figures. Artist, novelist and myth-maker, she moved through twentieth-century upheaval refusing easy categorisation.

Documentaries about artists often reduce creative lives to chronology. Carrington deserves something stranger and more adventurous.

BBC Four generally understands this territory well.

King Rat (1965)
Talking Pictures TV, 1.45am

Bryan Forbes’ adaptation of James Clavell’s novel turns the prison camp drama into something morally slippery and psychologically revealing.

George Segal’s opportunistic anti-hero survives through barter and manipulation, exposing how systems of deprivation reshape ethics.

The film avoids patriotic simplification and instead studies power in miniature.

Uncomfortable and intelligent.

Tuesday 2nd June 2026

Belle (2013)
Film4, 6.45pm

Amma Asante’s Belle begins with historical curiosity and develops into something more resonant — a period drama attentive not only to romance and costume but race, inheritance and social status.

Inspired by the life of Dido Elizabeth Belle, the film explores eighteenth-century Britain through a perspective too rarely granted centre stage.

Gugu Mbatha-Raw brings intelligence and emotional nuance to the role.

The film recognises that privilege and exclusion often coexist in uneasy proximity.

Beautifully staged and quietly political.

Carlito’s Way (1993)
Legend, 9.00pm

Brian De Palma’s crime drama deserves discussion alongside the director’s better-known gangster films. Al Pacino plays Carlito Brigante, recently released from prison and desperate to escape criminal life.

What makes the film moving is that Carlito genuinely wants redemption.

Pacino gives a performance filled with melancholy and self-awareness, while Sean Penn delivers one of cinema’s great performances as crooked lawyer Dave Kleinfeld.

The tension comes not from whether violence exists, but whether history can be escaped.

De Palma stages suspense with characteristic elegance.

A tragic gangster picture about fate, loyalty and the impossibility of outrunning reputation.

Artsnight: A Tribute to Carla Lane
BBC Four, 8.00pm
Catch up via iPlayer

Carla Lane possessed a rare ability to write comedy grounded in recognisable human frustration. From The Liver Birds to Bread, her work balanced humour with social observation and emotional truth.

This tribute revisits a writer who understood ordinary lives without patronising them.

Muhammad Ali
BBC Four, 10.00pm

Ken Burns’ portrait of Muhammad Ali remains one of the most complete attempts to understand a man who refused to be contained by any single role. Boxer, activist, showman, dissenter — Ali kept shifting shape, and the documentary’s strength lies in acknowledging that complexity rather than sanding it down.

Burns doesn’t chase a tidy narrative. Instead, he sits with the contradictions: the bravado and the vulnerability, the political courage and the personal cost, the way Ali could be both a unifying symbol and a divisive presence. It’s a study of a man who changed sport and then stepped beyond it, becoming a figure onto whom entire eras projected their anxieties and hopes.

This conveys the sense of a life lived at full voltage — principled, provocative, and never less than compelling. Ali didn’t just transcend boxing; he rewrote the terms on which an athlete could exist in public.

Wednesday 3rd June 2026

The Future with Hannah Fry
BBC Two, 7.30pm
Full series available via iPlayer

Television science can sometimes drift towards the reassuringly spectacular — dazzling graphics, simplified certainties and declarations of imminent revolution. Hannah Fry tends to resist that temptation. Her strength lies in curiosity and clarity rather than grandstanding.

This edition turns to nuclear fusion, that tantalising scientific horizon forever described as both transformative and frustratingly distant. Fusion has occupied a strange place in public imagination for decades — part engineering challenge, part technological dream, forever hovering between promise and practical reality.

Fry is particularly good at translating complexity without patronising her audience. That matters because science is often treated as something delivered from on high rather than explored collectively.

Fusion, if realised, carries obvious implications for energy, economics and environmental policy, but the human drama behind scientific endeavour is equally compelling — persistence, rivalry, failure and breakthrough.

At its best, science television reminds us that knowledge itself is an adventure.

Penny Serenade (1941)
Talking Pictures TV, 9.10am

Hollywood melodrama has fallen out of fashion among critics wary of open emotion, yet Penny Serenade is a reminder of why audiences once embraced it so fiercely. There’s a sincerity to it — unguarded, unembarrassed — that feels almost radical now.

Irene Dunne and Cary Grant play a couple weathering love, disappointment and the fragile hope of parenthood. The story edges towards sentimentality, of course it does, but it earns its weight through the performances. Grant, so often remembered for his wit and immaculate poise, gives one of his most vulnerable turns here; the mask slips, and what’s underneath is raw and deeply human.

The film understands grief not as a grand collapse but as something that gathers quietly — a slow accumulation of moments, losses, compromises. It’s in the silences, the hesitations, the way two people try to keep moving forward even when the ground shifts beneath them.

Its emotional honesty lingers long after the final scene. A small reminder, delivered without apology, that sincerity still has its place.

Its emotional honesty lingers long after the closing scenes.

The Caine Mutiny (1954)
Film4, 12.45pm

Military dramas frequently present leadership as either noble certainty or outright villainy. The Caine Mutiny wisely prefers ambiguity.

Humphrey Bogart’s Captain Queeg remains one of cinema’s most fascinating authority figures — insecure, obsessive and gradually destabilised under pressure.

The film asks difficult questions about obedience and responsibility. Was mutiny justified, or did the crew simply lose faith too quickly? Such uncertainty keeps the drama alive.

Courtroom scenes crackle with tension and moral complexity. A superb study of hierarchy and doubt.

Corsage (2022)
Film4, 1.30am

Historical drama can become trapped inside museum glass, reverential and lifeless. Corsage refuses that fate.

Vicky Krieps plays Empress Elisabeth of Austria not as decorative icon but restless, intelligent and constrained woman resisting the suffocating rituals of imperial life.

The film deliberately unsettles expectations.

Modern flourishes and tonal dislocation prevent history becoming comfortable heritage.

Krieps delivers a remarkable performance full of wit, sadness and defiance.

The result feels unexpectedly contemporary.

A fascinating portrait of rebellion against image and expectation.

Bombshell (2019)
Film4, 11.40pm

The downfall of Roger Ailes and the sexual harassment scandal surrounding Fox News became one of the defining media stories of recent years. Bombshell dramatises those events with energy and star power.

Charlize Theron, Nicole Kidman and Margot Robbie anchor the film, though Theron’s transformation into Megyn Kelly remains particularly striking.

The film moves briskly, sometimes at the expense of deeper analysis, yet it captures something vital about institutional culture and the pressures surrounding power.

Media organisations often market themselves as truth-tellers while quietly reproducing their own internal silences.

That contradiction gives Bombshell its charge.

Sharp, unsettling and highly watchable.

Fire Island (2022)
Channel 4, 1.55am

Austen and queer comedy might sound like an unlikely pairing, but Fire Island makes the connection feel effortless. It lifts the bones of Pride and Prejudice and relocates them to the sun‑bleached chaos of the famous holiday enclave, where romantic misreadings and class anxieties play out with a distinctly modern charge.

The humour is bright, quick on its feet, and affectionate rather than arch. But beneath the jokes sits something more attentive: a clear‑eyed look at friendship, exclusion, and the quiet negotiations of belonging that shape queer spaces. The film never treats representation as homework. Instead, it lets its characters exist with warmth, contradiction and the kind of emotional looseness that feels lived‑in rather than symbolic.

Playful, clever, and unexpectedly touching — a reminder that reinvention can be both joyful and sincere.

Thursday 4th June 2026

🌟 The Lion in Winter (1968)
Sky Arts, 9.00pm

Some family gatherings end in awkward silences; Henry II’s Christmas court makes most domestic disputes look like a mild disagreement over the turkey. Anthony Harvey’s The Lion in Winter gathers a cast operating at full, almost operatic intensity, with Peter O’Toole’s combustible Henry squaring off against Katharine Hepburn’s Eleanor of Aquitaine — a woman who has turned wounded brilliance into a political art form.

James Goldman’s dialogue is a feast in itself: barbed, witty, and laced with the kind of intelligence that assumes the audience can keep up. Every exchange feels like a duel, every line a strategic move. Royal politics here aren’t about crowns and territories so much as psychological warfare — old grievances sharpened into weapons, love and resentment tangled beyond separation.

Hepburn is extraordinary: amused one moment, furious the next, always calculating, always alive to the shifting balance of power. She gives Eleanor a dangerous sparkle, a sense that she’s playing three games at once and winning at least two of them.

What the film understands — and what gives it its enduring bite — is that the great political struggles of history often begin at the dinner table, long before they spill into the chronicles. Power, after all, is a family business.

Timeless, literate, and gloriously savage.

Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased)
Rewind TV, 12 noon and 8.00pm
Catch up via Freeview Play

Few television premises sound quite as cheerfully eccentric as a detective aided by his dead partner. Yet Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) possesses the charm and imaginative confidence characteristic of late-1960s British television.

There is nostalgia here, certainly, but also invention.

Lion (2016)
Film4, 11.20pm

True stories often arrive already heavy with emotion, but Lion earns its power by refusing to push or manipulate. It trusts the story — and the audience — enough to let the feeling emerge naturally.

Dev Patel plays Saroo Brierley, a boy separated from his family in India and later adopted by an Australian couple. Patel gives the film its emotional spine, charting the long, uncertain journey between the life he remembers and the life he’s built. Nicole Kidman and David Wenham offer quietly affecting support, their performances grounded in the everyday tenderness and strain of parenting a child shaped by loss.

What the film captures so well is the complexity of identity: the pull of memory, the ache of belonging, the way home can be both a place and a longing. Modern technology — so often a narrative shortcut — becomes here a bridge, a way of stitching together two halves of a life without diminishing either.

The result is deeply moving without tipping into sentimentality. A film about home in its deepest sense: the one you come from, the one you make, and the one you spend years trying to find again.

Friday 5th June 2026

The Ballad of Lefty Brown (2017)
Great Action, 6.45pm

Revisionist westerns often examine the myth of heroism through damaged or overlooked figures. The Ballad of Lefty Brown does precisely that.

Bill Pullman gives an engaging performance as ageing sidekick Lefty, unexpectedly pushed into the foreground after violence overturns familiar loyalties.

The western landscape remains beautiful, though melancholy hangs over it.

A modest but rewarding genre piece.

🌟 Nope (2022)
Film4, 9.00pm

Jordan Peele has rapidly become one of modern cinema’s most intriguing filmmakers because he recognises horror as social language rather than simple fright mechanism.

Nope begins with spectacle and gradually becomes an inquiry into spectatorship itself — our hunger to witness, record and commodify the extraordinary.

Daniel Kaluuya and Keke Palmer provide contrasting energies, one inward and cautious, the other charismatic and restless.

The film blends science fiction, western imagery and monster movie tradition.

Yet beneath the thrills sits something more unsettling about entertainment culture and our appetite for disaster.

Strange, ambitious and visually extraordinary.

Celebrity Gogglebox
Channel 4, 9.00pm
Episode 1 of 7 – catch up via Channel 4 streaming

The appeal of Gogglebox has always rested on a simple truth: people enjoy watching other people react. Celebrity editions risk gimmickry, yet often succeed because familiar faces prove unexpectedly candid.

This year’s cast — from Vernon Kay and Paddy McGuinness to Bez and Shaun Ryder, Rylan and his mother Linda — promises the usual mixture of wit, irritation and affectionate chaos.

Have I Got News for You
BBC One, 9.00pm

Yet HIGNFY survives through sharp improvisation and the pleasure of watching certainty punctured.

David Tennant hosts, joined by Michael Gove and Chloe Petts. In politically turbulent times, satire increasingly finds itself competing with reality.

Aretha Franklin Night
BBC Four, from 9.00pm
Catch up via iPlayer

Aretha Franklin possessed one of those voices capable of sounding both intimate and monumental. BBC Four devotes the evening to the Queen of Soul, celebrating a performer whose artistry transcended genre and era.

Music television rarely needs elaborate justification when the subject is Aretha.

Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022)
BBC One, 11.20pmA horror film on the surface, but really a scalpel aimed at wealth, performance and the jittery anxieties of the very online generation. Bodies Bodies Bodies dresses itself as a murder‑mystery, yet the real bloodletting happens in the group chat — status, insecurity and self‑curation turning toxic long before anyone picks up a weapon.

The satire is razor‑clean. Every accusation feels like a performance, every confession a bid for sympathy, every friendship a negotiation of power. It’s funny, vicious and uncomfortably accurate about how quickly people implode when the Wi‑Fi drops and the masks slip.

A thriller for the age of curated selves and catastrophic overthinking — sharp, stylish and far more revealing than its neon chaos suggests.

The Lighthouse (2019)
Channel 4, 1.05am

Robert Eggers’ The Lighthouse is less a film than a fever — a two‑handed descent into isolation, superstition and the kind of madness that grows when the sea won’t stop howling. It turns confinement into delirium, the walls closing in as reality begins to warp.

Willem Dafoe and Robert Pattinson clash magnificently, two men circling each other like rival myths. Dafoe’s barnacled old keeper speaks in curses and sea‑dog poetry; Pattinson’s younger man unravels in fits and starts, as if the island itself is prying him open.

Shot in stark black‑and‑white, the film feels ancient and alien, as though dredged up from some forgotten maritime

Radio Selections

Archive on 4: The Louisville Lip
Saturday, 8.00pm – Radio 4

Muhammad Ali continues to echo across this week’s schedules. This documentary revisits the boxer whose brilliance and provocation reshaped sport and public life.

Voices from the Beach
Sunday, 7.15pm – Radio 4

At the heart of Voices from the Beach is poet Sali Katebe, who arrived in Britain from landlocked Zambia and fell, almost immediately, for the strange, shifting magic of our coastlines. The programme uses his perspective as its anchor: someone encountering the sea not as a familiar backdrop but as a revelation — a place where sound, weather and memory seem to rearrange themselves.

Katebe’s voice threads through the piece like a tide‑line. He speaks of beaches as thresholds, as invitations, as spaces where the mind loosens and the past drifts closer. Around him, Radio 4 builds an immersive soundscape: gulls cutting across the air, waves folding over themselves, the soft percussion of shingle underfoot. It’s radio that breathes.

What emerges is part memoir, part meditation. Katebe reflects on belonging, on the pull of water for someone raised far from it, and on how coastlines can become a kind of emotional shorthand — for arrival, for solitude, for the quiet work of remaking a life. The programme listens closely to the small things: the way light changes on a grey afternoon, the rhythm of a walk taken to clear the head, the stories beaches seem to hold without ever speaking.

Reflective, atmospheric and quietly moving, it’s a reminder that the sea means different things depending on where you began — and that sometimes the most powerful journeys happen at the water’s edge.

Podcast Picks

We Was Robbed (Audible – available 28th May)

Gabriel Gatehouse investigates one of English football’s enduring mysteries — what derailed England’s 1970 World Cup defence, and was Gordon Banks somehow “knobbled”? The series mixes sporting folklore, forgotten detail and investigative curiosity with real verve.

Stateside with Kai and Carter

The Guardian launches a podcast for listeners exhausted by the churn of modern news. Three times weekly, Kai Wright and Carter Sherman unpack American stories with guests able to explain rather than inflame.

Kingdom of Fraud

Michele McPhee investigates a billion-dollar tax fraud involving Armenian mafia figure Levon Termendzhyan and Mormon sect leader Jacob Kingston.

True crime with scale, intrigue and stranger-than-fiction alliances.

Streaming Choice

Netflix


The Murder of Rachel Nickell

A sober, unsettling retelling of a case that scarred the 1990s. The documentary avoids lurid reconstruction, focusing instead on institutional failure, media frenzy and the human cost of a police force chasing the wrong man. Clear‑eyed, compassionate and quietly devastating.

Office Romance Available from Friday, 5 June 2026

It Ends With Us Available now

Colleen Hoover’s bestseller arrives on screen as a glossy, emotionally forthright drama about love, trauma and the patterns people struggle to break. Blake Lively anchors it with a performance that balances charm and bruised resolve. Melodrama with purpose, and more bite than expected.


Michael Jackson: The Verdict Available Wednesday, 3 June 2026

A cool, methodical examination of the legal battles that reshaped Jackson’s final years. Rather than reheating scandal, it traces the machinery of accusation, defence and public perception. The result is stark, unsettling and revealing about the pressures placed on a man already living inside a global myth.

Channel 4 Streaming


Walter Presents: The Devil’s Throat All 12 episodes from Friday, 5 June 2026

A taut Bulgarian thriller that blends crime drama with political unease. The investigation winds through corruption, folklore and buried trauma, giving the series a brooding, wintry charge. Dark, deliberate and quietly gripping.


Prime Video
The Legend of Vox Machina – Season 4
Rose

Leave a Comment

Culture Vulture 21-27 February 2026

Your Week in TV and Film

A large vulture soaring in the sky with bold text reading 'CULTURE VULTURE' above, and a banner at the bottom displaying the event name 'Counter Culture' with dates '21-27 February 2026'.

A week of films that understand people caught in machinery — political, historical, emotional — and the strange, stubborn ways they try to reclaim themselves. Across the schedules you’ll find institutional rot, private mythologies, cosmic indifference, and the small acts of care that keep communities alive. Even the borderline picks earn their place by revealing something about the world that produced them.

Below, you’ll find the highlights, followed by the full Culture Vulture selection.

Highlights of the Week

Malcolm X — Tuesday, BBC2

Spike Lee’s towering epic remains one of the most intellectually rigorous portraits of political transformation ever put to screen. A foundational text.

Relic — Friday, BBC2

A grief‑stricken horror film that treats dementia as a collapsing architecture. Emotionally devastating, formally precise.

Call Jane — Monday, Film4

A reminder that care is political labour, and that survival often depends on the systems women build for each other when institutions fail.

2001: A Space Odyssey — Sunday, ITV4

Kubrick’s cosmic riddle — still thinking ahead of us.

Scrapper — Friday, BBC2

The International 11.15pm, 5Star (2009)
A steel‑toned thriller that treats global finance as a shadow state. Tom Tykwer follows a dogged Interpol agent through a maze of lawyers, politicians, and intelligence operatives, all orbiting a crime too large and too abstract to prosecute. The film understands corruption not as a plot but as an atmosphere — something breathed in, normalised, and quietly devastating. British social realism with imagination and heart. A small miracle of a film.

Saturday 21 February 2026

The International 11.15pm, 5Star (2009)
Tom Tykwer’s steel‑toned thriller treats global finance as a kind of shadow state — a jurisdiction without borders, answerable to no electorate, and fluent in the quiet coercions that shape the modern world. Clive Owen’s Interpol agent isn’t so much a hero as a man slowly realising he’s chasing smoke: every lead dissolves into a boardroom, every crime scene into a contract, every culprit into a committee. What he’s really pursuing is a structure, not a suspect.

Tykwer shoots the whole thing with a cold, architectural precision. Glass towers loom like fortresses; public spaces feel surveilled even when empty. The famous Guggenheim sequence isn’t just spectacle — it’s the film’s thesis made kinetic, a museum turned battleground to show how institutions built to civilise us can be repurposed to contain violence rather than prevent it.

What stays with you is the film’s understanding that corruption isn’t a twist but an atmosphere. It’s something inhaled, normalised, and quietly devastating — a world where accountability is always deferred upwards, where the people pulling the strings are too abstract to touch and too embedded to dislodge. Tykwer isn’t offering catharsis; he’s mapping the architecture of impunity, and letting the dread accumulate in the margins.

Sunday 22 February 2026

The Lady ITV1 9pm

ITV’s The Lady opens with a quietly devastating portrait of precarity. Jane Andrews, skint and running out of exits, steps into royal service hoping for stability. What she finds is a workplace where hierarchy is oxygen and every corridor hums with unspoken rules.


Mia McKenna‑Bruce gives Jane a raw, searching vulnerability, while Natalie Dormer’s Sarah, Duchess of York, is all brittle charm and bruised resilience — a woman who knows exactly how the institution metabolises outsiders. Their bond becomes the show’s emotional ballast: two women navigating a system that mistakes proximity for protection.


It’s royal drama without the sugar‑coating — a story about labour, loneliness, and the cost of being useful to power.

American Made 9.00pm, Legend (2017)
Doug Liman’s true‑crime caper wears the grin of a breezy Tom Cruise vehicle, but underneath the swagger sits a surprisingly sharp political anatomy lesson. Cruise’s Barry Seal is a pilot who thinks he’s stumbled into a lucrative side‑hustle, only to find himself absorbed into the CIA’s covert machinery — a world where policy is improvised on the fly, oversight is optional, and deniability is the closest thing anyone has to a moral compass.

Liman frames American foreign policy as a kind of carnival: loud, chaotic, and permanently on the verge of collapse. Every operation feels like a gamble placed with someone else’s chips, and the film is clear about who ends up paying the bill. The humour is deliberate — a sugar‑coating that makes the eventual rot easier to swallow — and when the consequences finally land, they do so with a thud that cuts through the film’s earlier buoyancy.

Beneath the hijinks is a portrait of empire behaving exactly as you’d expect when accountability is treated as an optional extra. It’s funny until it isn’t, and that tonal pivot aligns neatly with our interest in stories where systems misfire, institutions overreach, and ordinary people get caught in the blast radius.

2001: A Space Odyssey 6.20pm, ITV4 (1968)
Kubrick’s monolith remains cinema’s great act of cosmic contemplation — a film less watched than encountered, as if it were an artefact we’ve stumbled across rather than something made by human hands. Its sweep from bone tools to cold machinery charts not just humanity’s evolution but its estrangement, asking what intelligence becomes when it outgrows its makers and begins to dream in algorithms rather than instincts.

The film’s beauty is glacial, almost ceremonial. Kubrick composes images like architecture, letting spacecraft drift with the slow inevitability of tectonic plates. And then there’s the music: Richard Strauss’s Also sprach Zarathustra turning a sunrise into a secular hymn, Johann Strauss II’s Blue Danube waltzing us through orbital ballet. The score isn’t accompaniment so much as cosmology — a reminder that the universe can be terrifying and transcendent in the same breath.

What lingers is the sense of scale. 2001 treats humanity as a brief flare in a much older story, a species fumbling towards something it can’t yet name. Its ambition is limitless, its silence eloquent, its mysteries deliberately unresolved. Half a century on, it still feels like a message from the future, waiting for us to catch up.

Storyville: The Srebrenica Tape BBC Four — 10:00pm

A quietly devastating return to one of Europe’s deepest wounds. The Srebrenica Tape follows a young woman retracing her father’s final days before the 1995 genocide, moving through a landscape where memory and evidence are still fiercely contested. The film’s power lies in its intimacy: a daughter’s search becomes a reckoning with the machinery of ethnic hatred, the fragility of truth, and the long afterlife of atrocity.

For Culture Vulture readers, this is essential viewing — a documentary that refuses sensationalism, instead foregrounding testimony, archival integrity, and the human cost of political violence. It’s a reminder that history is not past; it’s something people must continue to survive.

Calendar Girls 10.00pm, BBC2 (2003)
A deceptively gentle comedy that understands how radical it can be for women — especially older women — to claim the frame on their own terms. What begins as a small act of fundraising mischief becomes a quiet revolution in self‑representation, as a group of Yorkshire friends decide they’re no longer willing to be tidied away by a community that underestimates them.

The film’s charm is disarming, but never flimsy. It treats ageing not as a retreat but as a phase of renewed agency, where confidence is earned rather than assumed. Helen Mirren and Julie Walters lead with a kind of lived‑in defiance, reminding us that visibility is political, and that humour can be a form of resistance when the world expects you to shrink.

Beneath the warmth lies a story about ownership — of image, of narrative, of the right to be seen without apology. It’s a softer pick, yes, but rich in social texture: a portrait of friendship as mutual uplift, and of ordinary women discovering that stepping into the light can be its own small act of rebellion.

Terminator Genisys 9.00pm, E4 (2015)
Genisys is revealing: a blockbuster wrestling with the very anxieties its story is built on — technological determinism, the fear of being outpaced by your own creations, and the uneasy weight of legacy in a culture that keeps rebooting the past to avoid confronting the future.

The film’s temporal gymnastics aren’t just narrative gimmickry; they’re a kind of industrial self‑diagnosis. Hollywood, like Skynet, keeps generating new timelines to correct old mistakes, hoping that enough retconning will restore a sense of inevitability. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s return becomes a meta‑gesture — a legacy figure trying to anchor a story that no longer knows what shape it wants to take.

Genisys is a cultural artefact of a moment when franchises began openly acknowledging their own exhaustion, folding nostalgia into spectacle while quietly asking whether the machinery can keep running. It’s messy, but thematically rich: a blockbuster about systems trying to outrun their own programmed fate.

Dog 11.00pm, Channel 4 (2022)
A wounded, humane road movie that treats trauma not as spectacle but as residue — something carried in the body long after the institution that produced it has moved on. Channing Tatum plays a ranger tasked with escorting a fallen soldier’s dog to a funeral, and what begins as a logistical errand becomes a study in guarded masculinity, moral injury, and the uneasy afterlife of military service.

The film understands how veterans are shaped by systems that offer structure, purpose, and belonging, then provide no map for what comes next. Both man and dog are trained for vigilance, primed for threat, and unsure how to inhabit a world that no longer requires their hyper‑alertness. Their journey becomes a kind of mutual rehabilitation — two beings learning to trust again, to soften without feeling exposed, to exist outside the rigid codes that once kept them alive.

What makes Dog quietly affecting is its emotional intelligence. It resists the easy catharsis of redemption arcs, instead tracing the slow, halting work of healing in the absence of institutional support. The landscapes are wide, the performances unshowy, and the film’s compassion feels earned rather than sentimental.

Breathless 12.25am, Talking Pictures (1960)
Godard’s debut still feels like a rupture — a film that breaks cinema open and rebuilds it in real time, as if the medium were discovering its own grammar on the fly. What begins as a petty‑criminal caper becomes a manifesto about freedom: of movement, of form, of thought. Michel and Patricia drift through Paris with the weightlessness of people who haven’t yet learned to take the world seriously, their romance doubling as a provocation to the culture around them.

The film’s jump cuts, street‑corner philosophising, and documentary looseness weren’t just stylistic flourishes; they were acts of rebellion. Godard treats the city as an open set, the camera as a conspirator, and narrative as something to be shrugged off whenever it becomes too obedient. Breathless isn’t interested in plot mechanics so much as the electricity of being alive in a moment when everything — politics, art, identity — feels up for renegotiation.

What makes it essential is that sense of reinvention. You can feel cinema shedding its skin, embracing imperfection, and trusting spontaneity over polish. It’s a film that insists culture doesn’t evolve politely; it lurches, fractures, and reassembles itself through people bold enough to ignore the rules. Breathless remains a reminder that art can be both playful and revolutionary, and that sometimes the most radical act is simply to move differently through the world.

Monday 23 February 2026

The Lady 9pm, ITV1 (episode two)

If the first hour charts Jane’s tentative ascent, the second shows how fragile that foothold really is. The palace, with all its soft furnishings and hard edges, begins to exert pressure — not through overt hostility but through the slow, grinding enforcement of norms Jane was never taught. Every misstep becomes a mark against her; every kindness from Sarah carries its own political weight.

Natalie Dormer leans into the contradictions of the Duchess: warm, wounded, and acutely aware of how the institution weaponises vulnerability. Her rapport with Jane is still the show’s emotional anchor, but here it becomes more precarious — a friendship lived under surveillance, where affection can be misread as overfamiliarity and loyalty is always a one‑way transaction.

Meanwhile, Philip Glenister’s DCI Jim Dickie begins to flicker at the edges of the narrative, a reminder that this story is heading somewhere darker. The tonal shift is subtle but unmistakable: the camera lingers a beat longer, the silences thicken, and the sense of inevitability creeps in.

It’s a tense, morally charged hour — the anatomy of a woman being slowly squeezed by a system that only ever pretends to protect her.

Dirty Business Channel 4 9pm (one of three)

The opener lands with the quiet fury of a system pushed past breaking point. Episode 1 sketches the landscape of a country where rivers are treated as collateral damage and accountability is a rumour. David Thewlis gives the drama its moral spine — a man who’s spent too long watching institutions shrug their shoulders — while Jason Watkins brings the bureaucratic dread of someone who knows exactly how the machinery works and how easily it can be gamed.

What makes the episode sing is its refusal to sensationalise. Instead, it sits with the slow violence of environmental harm: the paperwork, the evasions, the communities who’ve learned not to expect answers. It’s a story about pollution, yes, but also about the emotional sediment left behind when public trust is treated as disposable.

Call Jane 10.55pm, Film4 (2022)
A quietly urgent drama about reproductive rights in 1960s America, told with the steadiness of a film that knows its history is still painfully present. Elizabeth Banks plays a suburban woman whose medical crisis forces her into contact with the Jane Collective — an underground network offering safe abortions when official structures refused to see, hear, or protect the women who needed them.

Rather than leaning on melodrama, the film treats care as political labour: the phone calls, the whispered logistics, the emotional steadiness required to build systems of survival in the shadows. It honours the women who stepped into the vacuum left by institutions that preferred to look away, and it does so with a humane, unshowy clarity. A vital reminder that rights are built — and rebuilt — through collective courage.

Tuesday 24 February 2026

Dirty Business Channel 4 9:00pm (two of three)

Episode 2 tightens the screws. The investigation widens, and with it comes a portrait of a regulatory ecosystem that’s been hollowed out by design. The drama is at its strongest when it shows how power operates in the shadows: the off‑the‑record calls, the “miscommunications,” the way data can be massaged until it tells a comforting lie.

There’s a bleak humour running through the hour — the kind that comes from watching people try to do the right thing inside a system calibrated to make that impossible. The whistleblowers are drawn with care, not as martyrs but as ordinary workers who’ve reached the point where silence feels like complicity. It’s a story about courage, but also about the cost of it.

Malcolm X 11.00pm, BBC2 (1992)
pike Lee’s monumental biographical epic refuses simplification, tracing Malcolm’s evolution with intellectual rigour and emotional clarity. The film grounds his politics not in abstraction but in lived experience — the violence that shaped him, the faith that steadied him, and the historical pressures that demanded a new language for liberation.

Denzel Washington’s performance is mythic yet intimate, capturing a man constantly revising himself in response to a world determined to contain him. Lee’s direction matches that restlessness: bold, searching, and unwilling to sand down the contradictions that made Malcolm such a vital figure.

A foundational text for any conversation about power, resistance, and the cost of telling the truth in a country built on racial hierarchy.

Wednesday 25 February 2026

Dirty Business Channel 4 9:00pm (three of three)

The finale is a reckoning — not triumphant, not tidy, but painfully honest. The series understands that environmental harm doesn’t resolve neatly; it accumulates. Episode 3 follows the consequences outward: political, ecological, personal. Thewlis and Watkins are superb here, playing men who’ve spent years navigating a system that punishes transparency and rewards inertia.

What lingers is the show’s moral clarity. It refuses to let anyone off the hook, but it also resists the easy catharsis of naming a single villain. Instead, it shows how a culture of neglect becomes policy, and how policy becomes damage that communities must live with long after the headlines fade. It’s a sobering, necessary end to a series that treats the British landscape — its rivers, its people — as something worth fighting for.

Tolkien 1.00am, Channel 4
A biographical drama that treats creativity as both refuge and wound, tracing how a young Tolkien learned to build worlds as a way of surviving the one he was born into. The film follows him through friendship, first love, and the psychic shrapnel of the First World War, sketching the emotional and intellectual roots of the mythologies he would later write.

Rather than myth‑making about the man, it leans into interiority: the private languages, the obsessive pattern‑seeking, the way imagination becomes a shelter when reality turns hostile. It’s a quiet piece, almost literary in its pacing, and all the more affecting for how gently it links fantasy to grief, fellowship, and the need to impose meaning on chaos. A thoughtful late‑night watch — and one that speaks directly to Culture Vulture readers attuned to the politics and psychology of storytelling.

Thursday 26 February 2026

The 39 Steps 10.00pm, BBC4
Hitchcock in his early, taut, politically anxious mode — already fascinated by the ordinary man swallowed by systems he barely understands. Robert Donat’s fugitive hero is less a suave adventurer than a citizen abruptly caught in the gears of state power, forced to navigate a landscape where surveillance, suspicion, and bureaucratic indifference close in from all sides.

What makes it endure isn’t just the brisk pacing or the proto‑Hitchcock set‑pieces, but the film’s modernity: its sense that identity can slip through the cracks, that innocence offers no protection, and that the machinery of national security is both omnipresent and opaque. A thriller that still feels startlingly contemporary in its paranoia and political edge.

Can You Ever Forgive Me? 12.35am, Channel 4
A beautifully sad character study about loneliness, literary fraud, and the uneasy ethics of storytelling. Melissa McCarthy gives a career‑best performance as Lee Israel, a once‑respected biographer whose career has stalled and whose capacity for self‑sabotage is almost operatic. What begins as a petty survival tactic — forging letters from dead writers — becomes a strangely intimate act, a way of slipping into voices she finds easier to inhabit than her own.

Marielle Heller directs with a wry, humane touch, refusing to tidy up Lee’s rough edges or turn her crimes into a caper. Instead, the film sits with the ache of someone who feels more at home in other people’s sentences than in her own life. Quietly devastating, unexpectedly funny, and deeply attuned to the emotional economies of friendship, failure, and the stories we tell to stay afloat.

Friday 27 February 2026

Scrapper 11.00pm, BBC2
A tender, sharply observed piece of British social realism that understands how children metabolise loss in ways adults often miss. Charlotte Regan’s debut follows a fiercely self‑sufficient girl whose imaginative inner world — bright, funny, defiantly odd — becomes both a shield and a survival strategy after her mother’s death.

What could have been miserabilist is instead buoyed by humour, colour, and a genuine curiosity about how working‑class families patch themselves back together. The film’s emotional precision lies in its refusal to sentimentalise resilience; it shows how hard‑won it is, and how fragile. A small film with a big heart, and one that earns every beat of it.

The Creator 9.00pm, Film4
A visually ambitious sci‑fi epic that wears its influences proudly — from Apocalypse Now to A.I. — yet still finds room for its own anxieties about technology, militarism, and the blurred line between invention and responsibility. Gareth Edwards builds a world of sweeping vistas and tactile futurism, but the film’s real charge comes from its moral ambiguity: humans waging war on the very systems they engineered, then recoiling at the consequences.

It’s a story about creation without stewardship, about the ease with which fear becomes policy, and about the uncomfortable possibility that the “threat” might be more humane than its makers. The spectacle impresses, but it’s the ethical unease — the sense of a species losing control of its own narrative — that gives the film its weight.

Relic 12.20am, BBC2
A grief‑soaked horror‑drama that treats dementia with a seriousness the genre rarely musters. Natalie Erika James builds the film around a decaying house that mirrors a collapsing mind — rooms shifting, memories rotting, the familiar turning quietly hostile. The horror isn’t in jump‑scares but in the slow, devastating recognition of what it means to watch someone you love disappear by degrees.

What emerges is a story about mothers and daughters, inherited wounds, and the terror of becoming what you fear. It’s one of the most affecting horror films of the last decade, not because it’s frightening, but because it understands how grief reshapes a family from the inside out.

Green Book 12.35am, BBC1
A culturally significant film that benefits from a bit of framing. Peter Farrelly’s polished, awards‑hungry road‑movie pairs Mahershala Ali and Viggo Mortensen with undeniable charm, but its soft‑focus approach to America’s racial history reveals as much about Hollywood’s comfort zones as it does about the era it depicts. The film’s tidy moral arc — prejudice confronted, friendship forged — sits uneasily beside the structural realities it gestures toward but never fully engages with.

Still, as a mainstream text it’s useful: a chance to talk about who gets to tell stories about racism, and why the industry so often gravitates toward narratives that reassure rather than unsettle. Worth watching, especially if you treat it as the beginning of a conversation rather than the end of one.

Streaming Picks

Netflix — From Thursday

Crap Happens
A German comedy built on deadpan absurdity, where everyday humiliation becomes oddly tender. Beneath the jokes lies a quiet recognition of how people stumble through life trying to keep their dignity intact.

Channel 4 Streaming — From Friday

Walter Presents: Crusade
A Polish drama steeped in faith, politics, and personal conviction. Every character carries a private wound; every decision feels weighted by history. A slow burn with real moral texture.

Prime Video — From Friday

Man on the Run (Documentary)
A portrait of Paul McCartney rebuilding himself in the aftermath of cultural upheaval. Less about celebrity than the private work of surviving your own legend.

Prime Video — From Monday

The CEO Club
A glossy docuseries peeling back the lacquered surface of corporate mythology. Ambition, ego, and the curated performance of leadership — power at its most fragile.

Apple TV — From Wednesday

Monarch: Legacy of Monsters
Yes, there are creatures, but the real story is the human wreckage left behind: families fractured by secrecy, soldiers carrying unspoken trauma, civilians rebuilding in the shadow of forces too big to comprehend. Surprisingly emotional, quietly melancholy.

Prime Video — From Wednesday

The Bluff
Zoe Saldaña anchors this 19th‑century Caribbean action drama with grit and vulnerability. Pirates, buried secrets, and colonial tension collide in a story that refuses to flatten its heroine into a trope. Muscular, moody, and rich with historical unease.

Advert

Book cover for 'The Angela Suite' by Anthony C. Green featuring a pair of feet and a vintage camera against a backdrop of city buildings.

Leave a Comment

Culture Vulture 18th to 24th of October 2025

A logo for 'Culture Vulture' featuring an eagle in flight against a blue sky, with text prominently displaying the show's name and the dates 18-24 October 2025 at the bottom.

From silver screen sirens to post-human futures, this week’s cultural lineup covers everything from Bette Davis’s volcanic brilliance to real-world reckonings on power, politics, and performance. As ever, Culture Vulture swoops low across the week to bring you a handpicked selection of what’s worth watching — whether it’s beloved cult, canonical classic, or new-wave curiosity. Popcorn’s optional. Curiosity isn’t. Selections and reviews are by Pat Harrington.


SATURDAY 18 OCTOBER

Now, Voyager — BBC Two, 12:30 PM — (1942)

Now, Voyager arrives like a small domestic thunderstorm: a classic studio melodrama polished until every ache shows through the gloss. Bette Davis carries the film with that fierce, weathered generosity that makes reinvention feel both perilous and inevitable.

Watching it at midday feels right — the film’s slow, patient unspooling suits a quieter part of the day, when you can let the film’s long looks and faint music settle into you. It rewards attention rather than noise, and you notice how costume and mise-en-scène track the heroine’s slow reclamation of self.

This is the kind of film that asks you to feel complicated things for other people, to understand sacrifice as something that reshapes identity rather than merely punishes it. Seen now, it still has a charge: romantic, melancholic, humane.


Dark Victory — BBC Two, 2:25 PM — (1939)

Dark Victory is another resilience story from Hollywood’s classical machinery, but it’s leaner in its melancholia. The film makes mortality legible through small gestures — letters, a patient’s posture, the measured kindness of those around her — and it refuses sentimentality by keeping its gaze steady.

This is not a melodrama to be swallowed in the dark but one to be held in the open air, where its elegiac moments can breathe. The performances are worn-in and honest, the kind that make you listen harder to ordinary dialogue.

What impacts is the film’s insistence on dignity in decline and the quiet courage of facing limits without grandstanding. It’s intimate, disciplined, and quietly devastating.


Star Trek Beyond — ITV2, 8:35 PM — (2016)

Star Trek Beyond is kinetic and unapologetically crowd-pleasing, a film that remembers how to have fun in a universe that can easily lapse into reverence. It pares back some of the franchise’s doctrinal weight in favour of speed, colour, and an amiable humanism.

The pacing is built for communal viewing, with set-piece after set-piece that reward attention but never demand deep mulling. It’s affectionate to the canon without being shackled by it, which is a hard trick for any franchise entry.

What carries it, finally, is its optimism — a belief in cooperation and curiosity that feels like a civic virtue in action, framed as spectacle rather than sermon.


The Menu — Channel 4, 9:00 PM — (2022)

The Menu is a tightly plated thriller that skewers haute cuisine with surgical precision and a devilish grin. Set on a remote island where an elite group of diners gather for an exclusive tasting menu prepared by the enigmatic Chef Slowik (Ralph Fiennes), the film unfolds like a multi-course descent into moral reckoning. What begins as a satire of foodie pretension quickly curdles into something darker, as each dish reveals not just culinary flair but psychological torment.

Fiennes delivers a masterclass in controlled menace — his chef is part cult leader, part performance artist, orchestrating a dinner that’s equal parts ritual and revenge. Opposite him, Anya Taylor-Joy plays Margot, a last-minute guest whose outsider status becomes the film’s moral compass. Her performance is sharp, reactive, and quietly defiant, grounding the film’s escalating absurdity with emotional clarity. Nicholas Hoult, as her insufferably sycophantic date, adds comic acidity to the ensemble, while Hong Chau, Judith Light, and Janet McTeer round out a cast that knows exactly how to play with tone.

The Menu doesn’t just satirise the luxury industry — it interrogates the hunger for status, the cruelty of taste, and the voyeurism baked into elite consumption. Every course is a provocation, and every reaction is part of the spectacle.

If you’re after a film that blends genre play with moral bite — one that keeps you guessing, laughing, and wincing in equal measure — The Menu serves up a feast that’s as theatrical as it is thoughtful.


Bone Tomahawk — Film4, 11:05 PM — (2015)

Bone Tomahawk is a film that reconfigures genre expectations: it begins in a laconic western register and slowly reveals a more brutal, existential core. The late slot is perfect — its measured dread benefits from the quiet and the small hours.

There’s an odd tenderness beneath the violence, an attention to character and community that makes the horror feel rooted rather than indulgent. The film asks you to stay with its characters as situations harden and choices become terrible but necessary.

It’s the sort of film that goes beyond shocks, asking uneasy questions about civilisation and the costs of anthropological curiosity. Disturbing, rigorous, and strangely humane.


SUNDAY 19 OCTOBER

The Longest Day — BBC Two, 1:00 PM — (1962)

The Longest Day unfolds like a civic memory, an ensemble epic that treats collective sacrifice with the careful dignity of an oral history given cinematic scale. Its panoramic staging resists easy sentiment and instead asks you to hold many small human reckonings inside a vast logistical machine.

Watching it in the early afternoon suits its steady, procession-like rhythm: the film never rushes; it lets strategy and chance collide in a way that makes heroism feel complicated rather than theatrical. The attention to detail — uniforms, accents, the choreography of panic — rewards viewers who relish craft as moral demonstration.

Taken now, the film works as a kind of public pedagogy, a reminder of the slow, procedural courage that great events require; it’s both exhibition and elegy, grand in form but humane in its insistence on the individual faces within the operation.


River of No Return — Film4, 2:55 PM — Broadcast 1954

River of No Return is a western that keeps surprising you with tender, stubborn humanism beneath its genre trappings. The river itself acts as protagonist at times, a living, indifferent force that exposes character and reorders priorities with weathered clarity.

An afternoon showing gives the film an odd intimacy: the light makes the landscape both beautiful and treacherous, and the quieter moments — a look across the water, a reluctant tenderness — read less as plot devices and more as moral reckonings. Performances are all muscle and restraint, giving the film an unmannered honesty.

It’s the kind of picture that makes you feel the outsize stakes of small decisions; romance and risk are braided tightly, and the result is surprisingly moving without ever losing a sense of toughness.


Lord Mervyn King Remembers The Age of Uncertainty — BBC Four, 10:00 PM

This is a reflective hour of economic memoir, the kind of programme that asks you to sit with expertise rather than spectacle. Lord King’s recollections carry the authority of someone who has watched policy and markets bend under pressure, and the film is wise enough to let those memories complicate received narratives.

Late-evening viewing suits its tone: it’s the kind of broadcast you want when you’ve got room to think. The programme balances the personal and the technical, making policy debates accessible without flattening them into slogan.

For anyone interested in how public life is steered — the moral trade-offs, the moments of risk — this is sober, illuminating television that privileges nuance over headline-grabbing certainty.


The Age of Uncertainty: The Profits and Promise of Classical Capitalism — BBC Four, 10:15 PM

This instalment interrogates a creed with the patience of a good seminar: folklore, figures, and institutions are taken apart and put back together with an eye for consequence rather than caricature. It feels like intellectual theatre, at once forensic and quietly passionate.

At this hour it functions as late-night stimulation for the curious: archival moments and expert testimony are edited to make argument brisk without betraying complexity. The programme’s strength is its willingness to show that economic ideas have moral lives and social fallout.

If you care about the long shadows cast by abstract theories on ordinary life, this is exactly the sort of programme that sharpens, rather than comforts, your understanding.


Amy Winehouse Live at Shepherd’s Bush Empire — Sky Arts, 9:00 PM

This concert film catches the performer in the electric, precarious moment where brilliance and vulnerability co-exist on the same stage. The close-up moments — a half-smile, a dragged breath — make the performance feel both triumphant and fragile.

Early evening is a generous slot: the energy of a live set functions as a bridge between the day’s mundanity and the night’s reflection. The footage doesn’t mythologise; it lets the music and the immediacy of the performance do the talking.

For viewers who love the textures of live music — the audience’s roar, the small improvisations that reveal an artist’s craft — this is engrossing and bittersweet viewing.


Amy — Sky Arts, 10:15 PM — (2015)

Amy is forensic and humane in equal measure: a documentary that resists sensationalism by concentrating on the small domestic traces of a life in public. It accumulates detail — voice notes, home footage, interviews — until the scale of loss becomes heartbreakingly specific.

The later slot is fitting; the film asks for solitude and attention, and rewards it with a careful unpicking of fame’s machinery. It is unsparing but compassionate, refusing easy villains while indicting systems that commodify vulnerability.

This is the kind of documentary that stays with you because it insists on the human interior beneath headlines, turning celebrity narrative into cautionary civic history.


Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (1 of 10) — ITV1, 10:20 PM

The premiere episode stakes a claim for optimism in the franchise while reminding us that exploration is as much moral as it is scientific. It balances procedural curiosity with character moments that let the show’s idealism feel lived-in rather than preachy.

At this hour the episode plays like a compact evening drama — brisk, thoughtful, and designed to start conversations. The production values are high, but what matters is the show’s refusal to let spectacle eclipse questions of responsibility and community.

It’s an encouraging return to a version of science fiction that foregrounds companionship and ethical puzzlement as engines of plot rather than mere visual spectacle.


Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (2 of 10) — ITV1, 11:20 PM

The second instalment deepens the tonal promise of the first: character dynamics loosen slightly, allowing for quieter stakes and a sense that the series will trade in ongoing moral puzzles as much as episodic thrills. There’s room for small, human jokes alongside larger ethical dilemmas.

Late-night viewing suits the episode’s subtler beats: when spectacle recedes, the show’s thoughtful writing and the actors’ chemistry become more visible, and the universe feels broader because the drama is careful with detail.

This episode confirms the series’ potential to be both fleet-footed and reflective, a show that can satisfy genre appetite while keeping an eye on the emotional costs of exploration.


Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy — BBC Two, 10:45 PM — (2011)

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is a study in cool pressure: a spy drama that privileges mood and method over action beats, asking you to read silences and inflections as intently as you would a confession. It’s interior, meticulous, and quietly brutal in its moral arithmetic.

The late slot is ideal: the film’s patient tempo and layered puzzle demand solitude and concentration, and you get more from it when the world is quieter. The cast works like a measured orchestra, each small gesture telling you more than any explication could.

What endures is the film’s melancholic sense that systems corrupt quietly and that truths, when they emerge, do not restore so much as reconfigure the debts we must carry.


The Age of Uncertainty: The Manners and Morals of High Capitalism — BBC Four, 11:10 PM

This concluding instalment takes a wide-angle view of how elite norms circulate and harden into structures. It’s an episode that pairs archival detail with contemporary critique, showing how manners can be policy and morals can be institutionalised.

In the small hours it reads as an invitation to think — not to rage — about the longue durée of ideas. The programme’s patient assembly of evidence is persuasive without being triumphant, preferring careful argument to polemic.

For anyone tracing the lineaments of modern economic life, it offers measured insight and leaves you with sharper questions about who benefits from the status quo.


MONDAY 20 OCTOBER

Dispatches: Will AI Take My Job? — Channel 4, 8:00 PM

The programme cuts through the usual anxiety around automation with a clear, humane curiosity; it is less a paranoia piece and more a careful audit of what work asks of us. It frames the question in everyday terms — skillsets, routine tasks, managerial choices — and keeps returning to the lived consequences for real people rather than lurid futurism.

Presenters and interviewees are given room to speak plainly, and the editing favours moments of human specificity over technocratic shorthand. That restraint makes the programme feel generous: it acknowledges loss and reinvention as simultaneous possibilities and resists the simple narrative that technology equals inevitability.

What lingers is the programme’s insistence that policy and culture matter as much as algorithms. It’s useful television because it treats audiences like civic actors, not passive consumers of headlines, and leaves you thinking about what infrastructure and politics are needed so people don’t simply become collateral in a productivity story.


Hot Fuzz — ITV4, 9:00 PM — (2007)

Hot Fuzz wears its affection for genre like a badge and then gleefully subverts it; the film is a love letter to action movies filtered through a distinctly British sensibility. Its humour is sharp and often tender, and the central performances find an emotional core beneath the parody, which is why the jokes land without ever feeling gratuitous.

As an evening watch it functions brilliantly: crowd-pleasing set pieces punctuate quieter comic beats, and the film’s structural confidence means you can settle into it and enjoy both the craft and the absurdity. The formal precision — framing, montage, soundtrack — does a lot of the heavy lifting, letting the character dynamics breathe.

Ultimately Hot Fuzz rewards you with a kind of moral amusement: it laughs at violence while refusing to be cynical about community. It’s funny, smart, and, beneath the explosions and faux-gravitas, quietly affectionate about the small towns and people it riffs upon.


The Lost Letters of Mary, Queen of Scots — BBC Two, 9:00 PM

This is the kind of archival programme that makes the past feel alive in the most domestic sense: letters are not relics but conversation partners, and the documentary treats them as such. It privileges texture — ink, paper, marginal notes — and through that tactility reconstructs intimacy and political manoeuvre in equal measure.

The film’s strength is its patient staging: historians and curators are allowed to think aloud, and the camera lingers on the small things that tell larger stories. That approach resists easy mythologising and instead offers a more nuanced portrait of power, gender, and communication in a fraught historical moment.

It’s a careful unpicking of how private correspondence shaped public fate, and how the traces left behind can reframe the stories we thought we knew. It’s thoughtful, modest, and unexpectedly moving.


Arena: Bette Davis – The Benevolent Volcano — BBC Four, 10:00 PM

This Arena profile treats a star’s ferocity as a public emotion as much as a private trait, and it does so with an editor’s patience and a critic’s appetite for complexity. Bette Davis emerges here as a force that remade roles and expectations, and the programme is wise enough to show the toll alongside the triumphs.

It blends archival footage, critical commentary, and a tone that balances affection with interrogation; the result is a portrait that doesn’t flatten Davis into legend but insists on her contradictions. The piece is cine-literate without being elitist, making the argument that Davis’s career matters to how we imagine female ambition on-screen.

Late-night viewing suits the subject: the profile invites reflection rather than celebration, and you come away with renewed appreciation for a performer who made vulnerability and ferocity feel like two sides of the same artistry.


Manhunter — BBC Two, 11:00 PM — (1986)

Manhunter carries itself with a cool, clinical elegance that makes it one of those crime films that feels more interested in states of mind than procedural tick-boxing. It is a study of obsession and method, an attempt to map empathy and pathology without sentimentalising either.

Its electronica-inflected soundscape and stylised visuals give it a dreamlike unease, which the late slot amplifies: the film’s quiet dread and aesthetic precision are best appreciated when the world outside has gone still. Performances are focused and contained, and the director’s restraint makes the film’s violence more unsettling because it arrives without flourish.

What remains is a film that trusts the intelligence of the viewer — it asks you to follow the contours of a disturbed mind while holding a mirror up to the observers, suggesting that the act of watching itself can be a form of complicity. It’s elegant, unnerving, and quietly persistent.


TUESDAY 21 OCTOBER

Storyville: Sanatorium — BBC Four, 10:00 PM

Storyville: Sanatorium — BBC Four, 10:00 PM

Sanatorium is a quietly mesmerising documentary that turns a crumbling health resort in Odessa into a prism for Soviet memory, architectural decay, and the fragile rituals of care. Once a celebrated retreat for workers and party elites, the sanatorium now stands as a half-functioning relic — part medical facility, part social theatre, part ghost of utopia.

The film doesn’t rush to explain; instead, it observes. Patients shuffle through corridors, nurses perform routines with weary grace, and the building itself — all peeling paint and faded grandeur — becomes a character in its own right. The camera lingers on details: a hand resting on a balustrade, a cracked mosaic, a moment of laughter in a therapy room. These fragments build a portrait of a place where time has layered itself unevenly.

What makes Sanatorium so affecting is its refusal to romanticise or condemn. It treats the resort as a living archive — of Soviet ideals, of post-Soviet survival, of bodies trying to heal in a system that no longer quite knows what it is. It’s a film about endurance, both institutional and human, and it leaves you with a quiet ache for the spaces we inherit and the meanings we try to preserve within them.

In My Own Words: Frederick Forsyth — BBC One, 10:40 PM

This is an oddly intimate appraisal of a public figure whose spare prose has always disguised a more complicated interior life. Forsyth’s account, given space to breathe, becomes less the triumphalist memoir you might expect and more an exercise in professional stubbornness — a catalogue of choices, compromises and unlikely gambles that shaped a career in popular geopolitics.

The programme balances archival evidence and contemporary reflection with a critic’s scepticism and a friend’s generosity; it doesn’t flatten controversy but it refuses to reduce a life to scandal. There’s a pleasurable straightforwardness to the way the narrative is constructed: anecdote followed by context, with each claim measured rather than boasted about.

This film invites quiet attention, a readiness to follow the logic of reportage and craft rather than the spectacle of celebrity. It’s not a hagiography; it’s a study in how talent and temperament meet a peculiar historical moment.

Mr and Mrs 55 — Channel 4, 3:25 AM — Broadcast 2025 (1955)

Guru Dutt’s Mr. & Mrs. ’55 is a sparkling romantic comedy that dances between satire and sentiment, using the framework of a marriage of convenience to explore gender politics, modernity, and the uneasy inheritance of post-independence India. Madhubala plays Anita Verma, a westernised heiress whose misandrist aunt arranges a sham marriage to secure her inheritance — only for Anita to fall, inconveniently and irrevocably, for the cartoonist she’s meant to discard.

The film’s charm lies in its tonal agility: it’s breezy without being trivial, and its humour — often delivered through Johnny Walker’s comic timing and Dutt’s own understated performance — is laced with social critique. The screenplay, penned by Abrar Alvi, balances farce with feeling, and the cinematography by V.K. Murthy gives even domestic scenes a quiet elegance. It’s a film that rewards unhurried viewing and invites reflection beneath the laughter.

Seen today, Mr. & Mrs. ’55 remains a cultural touchstone — not just for its wit and star power, but for the way it stages the tension between tradition and autonomy, romance and reform. It’s a film that understands love as both personal and political, and its legacy endures because it treats both with grace and curiosity


WEDNESDAY 22 OCTOBER

The Hunting Party: You and Alibi — 9:00 PM

The Hunting Party trims the true-crime itch into a procedural that cares about method as much as outcome; it is a programme pitched at the forensic pleasures of viewers who like their mysteries ordered and their suspicions tested. The episode frames the investigation around technique and testimony, privileging the small, corroborated detail over breathless speculation.

Its evening slot makes it feel like sober appointment television: you watch to assemble facts rather than to be swept along by sensationalism, and that measured pace allows character and context to emerge in the spaces between headlines. The editing is economical, the interviews unshowy, and the cumulative effect is persuasive rather than performative.

What stays with you is the programme’s civic temper — a reminder that criminal narratives are not only about perpetrators but about institutions, neighbours and the habits of attention that let truth surface. It’s the kind of viewing that leaves you more thoughtful about evidence than anxious for drama.


Bullet Train — Film4, 9:00 PM — (2022)

Bullet Train is a bright, bruising piece of genre plumbing: an action film that revels in choreography and characterful violence, its humour sharpened by a taste for the absurd. It’s maximal without being heedless, a film that knows how to make chaos feel like architecture rather than accident.

Watching it at night suits its adrenaline; the set-pieces land hardest when your attention is uncluttered and you can enjoy the precision of timing, the choreography of bodies and camera, and the slyness of a script that rewards familiarity with genre tropes. Performances lean into the cartoonish but find small human notes that stop the film from dissolving into mere mayhem.

At its best the film feels like a carnival with a moral spine — loud, playful, but oddly affectionate about the characters it sends careering through the rails. It’s spectacle with a wink, tuned for communal enjoyment rather than solitary contemplation.


Point Break — BBC One, 12:00 AM — (1991)

Point Break is a midnight adrenaline rush wrapped in existential longing — a film that uses the grammar of action to ask deeper questions about identity, loyalty, and the seductive pull of freedom. Directed by Kathryn Bigelow with a painter’s eye for motion and myth, it follows rookie FBI agent Johnny Utah (Keanu Reeves) as he infiltrates a gang of bank-robbing surfers led by the charismatic Bodhi (Patrick Swayze), whose philosophy of living on the edge is both intoxicating and quietly tragic.

Reeves plays Utah with a mix of earnestness and latent conflict — a man torn between duty and the allure of a life unbound. Swayze, meanwhile, delivers one of his most iconic performances: Bodhi is not just a thrill-seeker but a spiritual provocateur, a man who sees surfing as communion and crime as rebellion against a hollow system. Their chemistry is electric, not just in the chase scenes but in the quieter moments where ideology and intimacy blur.

🪂 The film’s set-pieces — skydives, surf breaks, foot chases — are choreographed with reverence, not just for spectacle but for ritual. Bigelow’s direction elevates these sequences into rites of passage, where movement becomes metaphor and risk becomes revelation. The cinematography captures bodies in motion with a kind of liturgical grace, making the film feel like a hymn to physicality and transgression.

What endures is the film’s emotional undertow: beneath the testosterone and explosions lies a story about yearning — for connection, for transcendence, for something more than the roles we’re assigned. Point Break doesn’t just thrill; it mourns. It’s a film that understands that the pursuit of freedom often comes at the cost of belonging, and that the most dangerous thing isn’t the wave or the fall — it’s the moment you realise you’ve gone too far to come back.


THURSDAY 23 OCTOBER

The Remarkable Miss North — PBS America, 6:05 PM

This documentary is a quiet triumph of archival storytelling, foregrounding a life that shaped civic and cultural landscapes without ever demanding the spotlight. Miss North’s legacy is traced through letters, interviews, and institutional memory, and the programme wisely lets those fragments speak for themselves.

Early evening viewing suits its tone: it’s reflective without being sombre, and the pacing allows viewers to absorb the emotional and historical texture of a life lived in service. The narration is restrained, and the visuals — photographs, documents, landscapes — are given space to breathe.

What stays with you is the programme’s generosity: it treats its subject not as a curiosity but as a figure of consequence, and in doing so, it invites viewers to reconsider the quiet architecture of change. It’s a portrait of influence that feels earned and deeply human.


The Bells of St Trinian’s — Great TV, 9:00 PM — Broadcast 1954

This classic British comedy remains a riot of anarchic charm, its schoolgirls more revolutionary than rebellious, and its satire sharper than its slapstick. The film’s gleeful disregard for authority is matched by its affection for chaos, and the result is a kind of comic utopia where mischief is a moral stance.

In the evening slot, it plays like a tonic: brisk, witty, and full of visual gags that still land. The performances are pitched perfectly — knowing, theatrical, and just the right side of absurd — and the film’s pacing keeps the energy high without ever feeling rushed.

What endures is its spirit: a celebration of unruly intelligence and collective defiance, wrapped in a school uniform and delivered with a wink. It’s not just funny — it’s liberating.


Life After People — Sky History, 9:00 PM

This speculative documentary imagines a world without humans, and it does so with a mix of scientific rigour and poetic melancholy. The programme’s strength lies in its ability to make decay beautiful — rust, collapse, and overgrowth become metaphors for time and resilience.

As a primetime broadcast, it offers both spectacle and reflection: the visuals are striking, but the narration invites deeper thought about legacy, infrastructure, and the fragility of permanence. It’s not apocalyptic; it’s contemplative, asking what remains when memory and maintenance disappear.

It’s the kind of programme that leaves you looking differently at buildings, systems, and the quiet labour that keeps civilisation upright. Thoughtful, eerie, and oddly moving.


The Dark Knight Rises — ITV1, 10:50 PM — Broadcast 2012

Christopher Nolan’s trilogy finale is operatic in scale and ambition, a film that trades the intimacy of earlier entries for mythic grandeur and civic allegory. It’s a story about broken systems and stubborn hope, and it stages those themes with muscular precision and emotional weight.

Late-night viewing suits its density: the film demands attention, and its layered narrative — revolution, redemption, sacrifice — benefits from the quiet of the hour. The performances are committed, the score relentless, and the visuals often breathtaking in their scale.

What lingers is the film’s moral architecture: it’s not just about heroes and villains, but about the structures that shape them. It’s a blockbuster with a conscience, and it earns its gravitas.


Saint Maud — Film4, 1:15 AM — (2019)

Saint Maud is a psychological horror that whispers rather than screams, its dread built from silence, devotion, and the slow unraveling of certainty. The film’s power lies in its restraint — every gesture, every flicker of light, feels charged with spiritual and emotional consequence.

In the small hours, it’s devastating: the quiet amplifies the film’s unease, and the viewer is drawn into Maud’s world with a kind of helpless intimacy. The performance at its centre is extraordinary — brittle, luminous, and terrifying in its sincerity.

This is horror as moral inquiry, a film that asks what happens when faith becomes obsession and care becomes control. It’s haunting, precise, and unforgettable.


FRIDAY 24 OCTOBER

The Wicked Lady — Talking Pictures, 2:45 PM — (1945)

The Wicked Lady is a gloriously unruly period piece, full of corsets, candlelight, and criminal mischief. Margaret Lockwood’s performance is all sly glances and moral ambiguity, and the film delights in letting its heroine misbehave with style. It’s not just melodrama — it’s a proto-feminist romp in disguise.

The afternoon slot suits its theatricality: you can enjoy the film’s heightened emotions and lavish costumes without needing the hush of midnight. The dialogue crackles, and the plot twists with the kind of gleeful excess that makes you forgive its improbabilities.

What endures is its refusal to moralise. The film lets its central character be wicked without apology, and in doing so, it offers a kind of liberation — not from consequence, but from the need to be liked.


Unreported World: Sex, Power, Money – South Africa’s Slave Queens — Channel 4, 7:30 PM

This episode of Unreported World examines South Africa’s controversial “slay queen” phenomenon, following young women who monetise dating culture through social media and relationships with wealthier benefactors. The film moves between intimate first‑person testimony, on‑camera interviews and street‑level reporting to show how aspiration, survival and status collide in Johannesburg’s digital scene. Viewers see how carefully curated feeds and staged luxury blur into transactions that can range from entrepreneurial hustles to exploitative dependencies, and how the language of romance, gift and investment can mask power imbalances and criminal risk.

The reporting is both attentive and unsentimental, allowing contributors to speak in their own voices while probing the wider forces that shape their choices. Close interviews reveal the ambitions and compromises that animate many of the participants’ decisions; filmed interactions with followers and benefactors expose the performative economy that sustains this subculture; and on‑the‑ground reporting situates those individual stories within high unemployment, gendered labour markets and a booming influencer economy. The filmmakers are careful with access, repeatedly privileging consent and context over sensationalism, and they frame personal testimony alongside structural analysis so viewers can see the difference between individual agency and systemic pressure.

Ultimately the piece leaves the viewer unsettled and better informed, not with easy moral judgments but with a clearer sense of how inequality is lived in private transactions and public displays. The documentary operates as a form of witness: it documents a phenomenon that provokes admiration, debate and alarm, and it stresses the need for responsible reporting that illuminates the social and economic arrangements behind the spectacle


‘Allo ‘Allo: 40 Years of Laughs — Channel 5, 10:00 PM

This retrospective is a warm, slightly chaotic celebration of one of Britain’s most enduring sitcoms, which imagines a farcical, sometimes surreal version of life under occupation — playing on the dynamic between a small band of French resisters and the bumbling local collaborators and occupiers, including Nazi officers. The show’s premise turns a brutal historical context into a stage for slapstick, petty schemes and running gags, and that very premise now reads strange: it’s odd, and revealing, that so many viewers once delighted in a comedy built around Nazis and the French Resistance. The retrospective doesn’t shy away from that dissonance.

Interviews and archival clips make clear why the series appealed — its cast sell absurd situations with warmth and comic precision, and the rhythms of repetition and character-based silliness create a peculiar kind of national comfort. There’s also a slightly risqué edge to some of the humour: double entendres, suggestive situations and cheeky staging that would today feel bolder than the show’s broad surface suggests. The programme treats those moments with affectionate curiosity rather than simple excuse-making.

Framed through nostalgia, the film invites viewers to reckon with both affection and awkwardness: the laughter the show produced is part of a shared cultural inheritance, but so too is the question of what it means that audiences found mirth in a setting shaped by violence and occupation. The retrospective suggests that remembering can be both consoling and corrective, offering a chance to enjoy the performances while also asking why certain subjects were, and sometimes still are, fair game for comedy. This retrospective is a warm, slightly chaotic celebration of one of Britain’s most enduring sitcoms. It treats the show’s absurdity with affection, and the interviews and clips remind you that farce, when done well, is a kind of cultural glue — silly, yes, but also strangely comforting.

At 10 PM, it functions as a nostalgic wind-down: the jokes are familiar, the faces beloved, and the tone forgiving. The programme doesn’t shy away from the show’s datedness, but it frames it as part of a broader conversation about comedy’s evolution.

It’s a reminder that laughter, even when lowbrow, can be a shared inheritance — and that sometimes, the best way to understand a country is through the jokes it tells about itself.


X — Film4, 11:20 PM — (2022)

X is a horror film that plays with genre memory: it’s self-aware, stylish, and unafraid to be both grotesque and oddly tender. The setup — a film crew making an adult movie in rural Texas — becomes a vehicle for exploring voyeurism, repression, and the violence that simmers beneath surfaces.

Late-night viewing amplifies its dread: the film’s slow build and sudden shocks are best experienced when the world outside is quiet. The cinematography is lush, the performances committed, and the pacing deliberate enough to let unease settle in.

What makes X stand out is its emotional intelligence — it doesn’t just scare, it mourns. Beneath the blood is a meditation on ageing, desire, and the stories we tell to feel alive.


Bros — Channel 4, 12:10 AM — (2022)

Bros foregrounds a groundbreaking theme with the ease of a classic rom-com and the urgency of something wholly new. The plot moves briskly from awkward first encounters to quietly devastating truths, each scene calibrated to reveal how messy, hopeful connection really is. Performances are uniformly excellent; the leads generate an effortless chemistry that makes their highs sweeter and their missteps genuinely affecting. The screenplay pairs sharp satire with heartfelt sincerity, updating romantic-comedy conventions with wit, bite, and cultural specificity. The film’s rhythm and tone feel unmistakably queer, not merely in subject but in voice and pacing. Watch it late and alone and its emotional beats hit harder; watch it aloud and its humour lands like an intimate conversation. Funny, smart, and quietly radical, Bros earns every moment of its sentiment by refusing easy answers about vulnerability and pride.


Shadow in the Cloud — BBC Two, 12:30 AM — (2020)

Shadow in the Cloud unfolds aboard a World War II B-17 flying over the Pacific, where warrant officer Maude Garrett arrives with a mysterious top‑secret package and finds herself battling both mechanical breakdowns and a far stranger menace. The plot moves rapidly from cramped cockpit politics and casual misogyny to high‑altitude dogfights and claustrophobic monster encounters, each escalation exposing the bomber as a pressure cooker of fear, superstition, and sudden solidarity. Pulp adventure collides with wartime bureaucracy: routine inspection procedures and rank‑driven suspicion are interrupted by pure, pulpy survivalism, and the film steadily pushes its central dilemma from disbelief to a desperate, combustible clarity.

Chloë Grace Moretz anchors the piece with a fierce, physically committed performance that keeps the film honest amid growing absurdity. She gives Maude a quicksilver blend of competence, sarcasm, and quietly accumulating vulnerability, selling both the character’s tactical resourcefulness and the emotional toll of being routinely underestimated. The supporting cast supplies effective counterpoints: skeptical officers whose condescension becomes a plot engine, nervous gunners whose fear humanises the stakes, and a pilot whose tentative trust opens crucial emotional space. The chemistry between Moretz and the ensemble is less romantic than functional—an evolving, fraught camaraderie that makes the action feel consequential.

Roseanne Liang directs with an appetite for pulp that never tips into parody, staging tight, kinetic set pieces that feel immediate and dangerously fun. Practical effects, selective CGI, and forceful sound design render the creature sequences viscerally tense, while the camera often privileges Maude’s point of view, turning narrow bomber corridors into a labyrinth of threat and possibility. Beneath the mayhem the film reads as a feminist allegory: Maude’s literal fight against a monster doubles as a confrontation with institutional dismissal and sexist assumptions. The script refuses sermonising, instead marrying absurd bravado and dark humour to a surprisingly sincere emotional core. Noisy, occasionally ridiculous, and frequently thrilling, Shadow in the Cloud rewards viewers who surrender to its momentum and reveals something oddly moving beneath the chaos about belief, agency, and the monsters people carry with them.


Starter for 10 — BBC One, 12:35 AM — (2006)

Starter for 10 is a coming-of-age film that treats knowledge as both aspiration and armour. Set in the 1980s, it follows a working-class student navigating university life, love, and the peculiar pressures of quiz culture. It’s funny, tender, and quietly political.

The late slot suits its introspection: the film’s emotional beats — embarrassment, longing, self-discovery — feel more resonant when the day is done. The performances are warm, and the soundtrack adds texture without nostalgia overload.

It’s a film that understands that intellect doesn’t protect you from heartbreak, and that growing up often means learning when to buzz in and when to stay silent.


🎬 STREAMING PICKS

Harlan Coben’s Lazarus — Prime Video, from Wednesday

Lazarus begins in 1998 with the murder of Sutton Lazarus, a trauma that fractures her family and casts a long shadow over the decades that follow. Her siblings, Joel and Jenna Lazarus, are left to navigate the aftermath — Joel as a former detective haunted by visions, Jenna as a journalist determined to uncover the truth. When their father, Dr. Jonathan Lazarus, dies by suicide in the present day, Joel returns home, triggering a chain of events that reopens old wounds and exposes new dangers.

The series blends psychological thriller with supernatural undertones, using memory, grief, and family loyalty as its emotional scaffolding. Sam Claflin and Alexandra Roach anchor the drama with performances that feel lived-in and quietly volatile. The pacing is deliberate, with flashbacks and present-day revelations interwoven to build tension without sacrificing character depth.

What makes Lazarus compelling is its emotional intelligence: it’s not just about solving a mystery, but about reckoning with the past and the stories families tell to survive it. Coben’s trademark twists are present, but they’re grounded in a deeper inquiry into guilt, resilience, and the fragile architecture of truth. It’s a haunting, humane thriller that earns its weight.

Nobody Wants This, Season 2 — Netflix, from Thursday

Season 2 of Nobody Wants This doubles down on the emotional messiness that made its first run so quietly addictive. Kristen Bell and Adam Brody return as Joanne and Noah, a couple whose interfaith romance is now less about falling in love and more about staying there — through compromise, chaos, and the slow erosion of certainty.

The writing is sharp, funny, and emotionally literate. Leighton Meester’s arrival as Joanne’s high school nemesis adds a layer of social satire, while Seth Rogen’s guest turn brings warmth and mischief. The show’s strength lies in its refusal to tidy things up: relationships are flawed, gestures misfire, and love is shown as a practice, not a prize.

This season feels like a love letter to grown-up romance — the kind that’s less about grand declarations and more about showing up, listening, and surviving the awkward bits. It’s a rom-com that respects its audience’s intelligence and emotional history, and it’s all the better for it.

A House of Dynamite — Netflix, from Friday

Kathryn Bigelow’s A House of Dynamite is a real-time political thriller that imagines the final 18 minutes before a nuclear missile hits Chicago. It’s tense, procedural, and terrifyingly plausible — a film that asks what happens when one person must decide the fate of millions, with incomplete information and no time to spare.

The narrative unfolds in three overlapping segments, each from a different perspective — a White House watch officer (Rebecca Ferguson), a junior advisor (Gabriel Basso), and the President himself (Idris Elba). This structure is technically impressive, but emotionally uneven: the first act is riveting, the second intriguing, and the third slightly diluted by repetition.

Still, the film’s moral urgency is undeniable. It’s less about spectacle than about fragility — of systems, of leadership, of human judgment under pressure. Bigelow doesn’t offer easy answers, but she does pose the right questions: who do we trust with power, and what happens when the clock runs out?

Eden — Prime Video, from Friday

Ron Howard’s Eden is a cautionary tale disguised as a period drama, tracing the doomed utopian experiment of European settlers on a remote Galápagos island in 1929. The cast — Jude Law, Ana de Armas, Vanessa Kirby, Sydney Sweeney — brings star power, but the film’s real focus is on the slow collapse of idealism under pressure.

Visually, Eden is stunning: the island is both paradise and prison, and the cinematography captures that duality with painterly precision. But the narrative drags in places, weighed down by overambition and a reluctance to commit to any one emotional thread. The ensemble is strong, but the script doesn’t always give them room to breathe.

What remains is a story about the limits of escape — how even the most beautiful visions can curdle when confronted with ego, scarcity, and the human need for control. It’s not a perfect film, but it’s a thoughtful one, and its melancholy stays with you.

Leave a Comment

Culture Vulture: 11th – 17th October 2025


A vulture soaring in front of a mountainous backdrop with the text 'CULTURE VULTURE' prominently displayed at the top and 'COUNTER CULTURE' at the bottom.

This week’s Culture Vulture moves between courage, conscience, and cinematic craft. 🌟 Highlights include Le Mans ’66 on Channel 4, the haunting Martin Luther King trilogy on BBC Four, and The Maxwell Night on Sky Documentaries. Elsewhere, classic and contemporary films bring heart, humour, and tension — from Terms of Endearment to Attack the Block. Selections and reviews are by Pat Harrington.


Saturday, 11th October 2025

Terms of Endearment (1983) — Channel 4, 6:15 PM

James L. Brooks’s Oscar-winning masterwork remains emotionally devastating and quietly radical, even four decades on. It’s a film that refuses tidy resolutions, instead tracing the messy contours of love between a mother and daughter with rare honesty and bite.

Shirley MacLaine is formidable as Aurora Greenway — brittle, imperious, and heartbreakingly vulnerable. Debra Winger’s Emma is her perfect foil: earthy, impulsive, and incandescent with life. Together, they navigate the push-pull of familial intimacy — the kind that bruises and binds in equal measure. Their performances are luminous not because they shine, but because they flicker with truth.

Brooks’s direction is deceptively light, allowing comedy and tragedy to coexist without warning. One moment you’re laughing at Aurora’s barbed wit, the next you’re floored by a hospital corridor scene that feels too raw to be scripted. It’s cinema that understands grief isn’t a climax — it’s a texture.

What makes Terms of Endearment endure isn’t just its emotional heft, but its refusal to sentimentalise. It honours the contradictions of family: the resentment that simmers beneath affection, the forgiveness that arrives too late, and the love that survives it all. In an age of polished dysfunction, this film still feels lived-in — awkward, tender, and unforgettable.

A reminder that sometimes the most radical thing a film can do is tell the truth, quietly.

Le Mans ’66 (2019) — Channel 4, 11:10 PM 🌟

Released internationally as Ford v Ferrari, James Mangold’s high-octane drama is more than just a racing film — it’s a precision-built character study wrapped in the roar of engines and the ache of ambition.

Matt Damon plays Carroll Shelby, the American car designer tasked with building a Le Mans-winning vehicle for Ford. Christian Bale is Ken Miles, the British driver and engineer whose brilliance is matched only by his volatility. Together, they take on Ferrari’s dominance at the 1966 24 Hours of Le Mans — and the corporate inertia of Ford itself.

What makes the film sing isn’t just the racing — though the sequences are thrilling, edited with a muscular grace that earned the film an Oscar for Best Film Editing. It’s the emotional torque beneath the hood: the friendship between Shelby and Miles, the stubborn pursuit of excellence, and the quiet toll of integrity in a world that rewards compromise.

Bale’s performance is a masterclass in controlled chaos. His Ken Miles is twitchy, principled, and utterly consumed by the pursuit of perfection — a man who’d rather crash than coast. Damon, by contrast, plays Shelby with a weary charm, navigating boardroom politics with the same finesse he once brought to the track.

This is cinema for anyone who’s ever fought to make something work their way — or been punished for trying. It’s about the beauty of obsession, the cost of vision, and the rare moments when art and engineering align at 200 mph.

The Alabama Solution — Sky Documentaries, 10:00 PM 🌟

This is documentary filmmaking at its most courageous — not because it shouts, but because it listens. The Alabama Solution turns its lens on one of America’s deadliest prison systems, revealing a humanitarian crisis through the voices of those living it.

Directors Andrew Jarecki and Charlotte Kaufman build the film around contraband recordings, personal testimony, and years of clandestine communication with incarcerated men. What emerges isn’t just a portrait of institutional failure — it’s a reckoning with the machinery of punishment, profit, and silence. Families speak. Prisoners speak. The system, by contrast, evades.

There’s no bombast here. The power lies in restraint — in grainy footage, quiet interviews, and the slow accumulation of truth. The film doesn’t editorialise; it documents. And in doing so, it exposes the violence not just of abuse, but of indifference.

This is essential viewing for anyone who still believes justice and decency can coexist — or who needs reminding that they must. It’s not easy to watch, but it’s harder to ignore. A film that doesn’t just inform — it indicts. Quietly, relentlessly, and with devastating clarity.


Sunday, 12th October 2025

The Yardbirds — Sky Arts, 9:00 PM

The Yardbirds — Sky Arts, 9:00 PM
Before Led Zeppelin, before Cream, before the guitar gods were crowned — there was The Yardbirds. This documentary dives headfirst into the electric chaos of a band that didn’t just play music, but detonated it.

Spanning their explosive five-year run from 1963 to 1968, the film charts how a suburban blues outfit became the crucible for three of the most influential guitarists in rock history: Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, and Jimmy Page. Rare footage and candid interviews reveal not just the music, but the friction — creative, personal, and generational — that sparked a seismic shift in sound.

Clapton walked when the band veered too far from purist blues. Beck brought distortion and swagger. Page, the quiet architect, laid the groundwork for something darker, heavier, mythic. Together — and sometimes apart — they forged a sonic vocabulary that still echoes through amps today.

But this isn’t just a history lesson. It’s a celebration of noise as invention, of chaos as catalyst. The Yardbirds didn’t smooth edges — they sharpened them. Their legacy isn’t just in the riffs, but in the refusal to settle.

A joyous, unruly reminder that rock wasn’t born clean. It was born loud, messy, and gloriously uncontained.

Strauss – The Waltz King — BBC Four, 9:15 PM

Strauss – The Waltz King — BBC Four, 9:15 PM
This elegant documentary-drama offers a richly staged portrait of Johann Strauss II, the composer who transformed the waltz from salon diversion into cultural phenomenon. Set in 19th-century Vienna, it explores how Strauss’s music became synonymous with joy and sophistication — even as his personal life was marked by rivalry, expectation, and quiet rebellion.

Simon Williams plays Strauss with a mix of charm and melancholy, capturing a man caught between public adoration and private constraint. Lesley Garrett narrates with warmth and clarity, guiding viewers through the composer’s rise, his fraught relationship with his father, and the pressures of maintaining a legacy built on grace.

The performances — from The Blue Danube to Tales from the Vienna Woods — are sumptuous, but never merely decorative. They underscore the film’s central tension: how beauty can coexist with compromise. Strauss’s melodies may glide, but the man behind them wrestled with ambition, identity, and the cost of acclaim.

This isn’t a tale of political resistance like Richard Strauss’s. It’s a quieter meditation on artistic integrity — how it survives in a world of expectation, and what it sounds like when everything else is collapsing. A graceful, emotionally resonant watch.

Reputations – Dr Martin Luther King: Days of Hope (1997) — BBC Four, 10:15 PM 🌟

This quietly devastating profile strips away the monument to reveal the man. Days of Hope doesn’t canonise Martin Luther King Jr. — it humanises him. Through rare interviews, archival footage, and restrained narration, the film traces King’s evolution not just as a civil rights leader, but as a strategist, preacher, and deeply conflicted individual.

We see the pressure mount: FBI surveillance, internal movement tensions, and the relentless weight of expectation. King’s eloquence never falters, but the film makes clear that doubt and danger were constant companions. His courage wasn’t innate — it was forged, tested, and reasserted in moments of fear and fatigue.

The documentary’s strength lies in its tone. There’s no bombast, no myth-making. Just the slow, steady accumulation of truth. It invites viewers to reckon with King’s complexity — his tactical brilliance, moral clarity, and the toll of leadership in an era of violence and upheaval.

A reminder that courage isn’t born perfect. It’s made — moment by moment, choice by choice, in the quiet spaces between speeches. Essential viewing for anyone who wants to understand not just what King achieved, but what it cost.

Face to Face – Martin Luther King (1961 interview) — BBC Four, 11:15 PM

This remarkable broadcast captures Martin Luther King Jr. at a pivotal moment — not yet the icon carved in stone, but a young minister navigating the weight of a movement and the scrutiny of the world. Interviewed by John Freeman for the BBC’s Face to Face, King responds to probing, often sceptical questions with a calm intensity that’s both disarming and profound.

There’s no script, no podium, no crowd. Just King, seated, speaking plainly about fear, loneliness, and the moral conviction that drove the Montgomery bus boycott. His answers are measured, but never evasive. He speaks of nonviolence not as strategy, but as spiritual necessity. Of leadership not as destiny, but as burden.

What makes the interview timeless is its intimacy. Freeman’s questions are sharp, but never cruel. King’s responses are thoughtful, sometimes weary, always dignified. You see the man behind the movement — principled, vulnerable, and quietly resolute.

It’s a half-hour of television that feels like a conversation across decades. A reminder that clarity and grace don’t need amplification.

The Blues Brothers (1980) — BBC Two, 10:45 PM

Jake and Elwood Blues are back — black suits, black shades, and still on a mission from God. John Landis’s riotous musical comedy remains a singular creation: part redemption tale, part demolition derby, and wholly devoted to rhythm and soul.

John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd reprise their Saturday Night Live personas with deadpan brilliance, navigating a plot that’s gloriously unhinged. Fresh out of prison, Jake joins Elwood to save the Catholic orphanage that raised them — by reuniting their old R&B band and staging a gig to raise $5,000. What follows is a symphony of chaos: police chases, neo-Nazis, country singers, and one very vengeful ex-girlfriend.

But beneath the absurdity lies reverence. The film’s musical numbers — featuring Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, James Brown, Cab Calloway — aren’t just performances; they’re acts of worship. Each scene is staged with joy and precision, turning diners, pawn shops, and churches into sanctuaries of sound.

The car chases are ludicrous, the destruction gleeful, and the humour bone-dry. Yet it’s the soundtrack that elevates The Blues Brothers into myth — a hymn to rhythm, rebellion, and the redemptive power of music.

Lawless, loud, and loved.


Monday, 13th October 2025

999 Undercover: NHS in Crisis (Dispatches) — Channel 4, 8:00 PM

This is journalism with its sleeves rolled up. Dispatches sends an undercover reporter into a 999 control room, revealing the brutal reality behind Britain’s emergency services. What emerges is not just a crisis of logistics, but of conscience — a system where targets are missed, decisions delayed, and callers in pain are left waiting for ambulances that may never arrive.

The footage is raw, the tone restrained. There’s no need for dramatics when the truth is this stark. Staff are shown juggling impossible choices, offering calm in chaos, and absorbing the emotional toll of a system stretched to breaking point. You see the strain etched into every shift — and the quiet heroism that persists despite it.

It’s uncomfortable viewing, but suffused with humanity. Despair and devotion sit side by side, and the programme never loses sight of the people behind the statistics — both those calling for help and those trying to answer.

It’s a quiet call to cherish what remains of Britain’s greatest institution — and to demand better before the cracks become chasms. A sobering, essential watch.

Professor Angie Hobbs Remembers The Great Philosophers — BBC Four, 10:30 PM

his quietly luminous programme sees Professor Angie Hobbs revisit Bryan Magee’s landmark 1987 series The Great Philosophers, not as a detached scholar but as a thoughtful companion. With warmth and clarity, she reflects on how Plato, Aristotle, and their successors continue to shape how we think, act, and live.

Hobbs doesn’t lecture — she converses. Her insights are grounded in lived experience, making ancient ideas feel startlingly contemporary. Whether discussing Plato’s theory of justice or Aristotle’s ethics of flourishing, she invites viewers to see philosophy not as abstraction, but as a toolkit for navigating complexity with grace.

The tone is gentle, but never slight. Archival clips from Magee’s interviews are woven with Hobbs’s reflections, creating a dialogue across decades. It’s a reminder that philosophy isn’t remote — it’s rooted in questions we still ask: What matters? How should we live? What does it mean to be free?

This is television that rewards curiosity. A quiet overture to deeper reflection, and a celebration of thoughtfulness in an age of noise.

The Great Philosophers — BBC Four, 10:45 PM

This enduring series, originally hosted by Bryan Magee, remains a benchmark for televised intellectual inquiry. Each episode pairs Magee with a leading philosopher to explore foundational ideas — truth, virtue, freedom, identity — with a clarity that feels both rigorous and humane.

There’s no jargon, no gatekeeping. Just lucid conversation that treats viewers as capable of deep thought. Whether unpacking Plato’s theory of forms or Kant’s moral imperative, the programme never condescends. It invites reflection, not reaction.

The production is spare — two chairs, a quiet set, and minds at work. But the impact is lasting. Magee’s gift lies in his ability to ask the right questions, and to let his guests answer without interruption or spectacle. It’s scholarly without pomposity, accessible without dilution.

In an age of soundbites and hot takes, The Great Philosophers offers something rare: television that rewards curiosity, not clicks. A gentle provocation to think more deeply — and to listen more generously. Big ideas meet clear storytelling. Concepts of truth and virtue unfold with rare lucidity.

It’s scholarly without pomposity, accessible without dilution.

The kind of TV that rewards curiosity rather than clickbait.

Harriet (2019) — BBC Two, 11:00 PM

Kasi Lemmons’s Harriet is a biopic that refuses to flatten its subject into iconography. Instead, it traces Harriet Tubman’s transformation from enslaved woman to freedom fighter with urgency, reverence, and emotional clarity. Cynthia Erivo leads with a performance that is both luminous and fierce — embodying Tubman’s spiritual conviction and tactical brilliance with every glance and breath.

The film opens in 1849 Maryland, where Tubman — born Araminta Ross — escapes bondage and journeys north alone, guided by faith and instinct. But it’s her decision to return, again and again, to rescue others that defines the film’s emotional core. Each mission is a testament to her courage, and each setback a reminder of the brutal system she defied.

Erivo’s portrayal is the film’s heartbeat. She captures Tubman’s prophetic intensity, her physical resilience, and her quiet grief. The supporting cast — Leslie Odom Jr., Janelle Monáe, Joe Alwyn — enrich the narrative, but it’s Erivo who carries the weight of history with grace.

Harriet doesn’t shy away from brutality, but it prioritises dignity. It’s a story of relentless conviction, told with clarity and compassion. A film that honours its subject not by mythologising her, but by showing her as she was: visionary, vulnerable, and utterly unforgettable.


Tuesday, 14th October 2025

Dogfighting Exposed: Spotlight — BBC Two, 9:00 PM

This is investigative journalism at its most unflinching. Spotlight pulls back the curtain on a world built on cruelty, secrecy, and profit — exposing the underground dogfighting networks that operate in the shadows of British life.

The tone is steady, never sensationalist. But the evidence is damning: covert footage, whistleblower accounts, and the grim logistics of a sport where suffering is the spectacle. The documentary lays bare not just the brutality of the fights, but the complicity that sustains them — from breeders and handlers to the silence of neighbours and the gaps in enforcement.

What emerges is a portrait of a system that thrives on greed and evasion. There’s no need for graphic narration; the images speak for themselves. And yet, amid the horror, there’s humanity — in the voices of those trying to dismantle the trade, and in the quiet resilience of the animals rescued from it.

Hard to watch, yes. But impossible to ignore. A film that doesn’t just document cruelty — it demands accountability.

The Truth About Franco’s Spain: Forgotten Dictatorship — PBS America, 8:20 PM 🌟

This quietly devastating documentary confronts the legacy of Francisco Franco’s near forty-year dictatorship with rare clarity and restraint. Drawing on survivor testimony, archival footage, and newly unearthed documents, it traces the long shadow cast by civil war, repression, and silence — a history often buried beneath Spain’s modern democratic veneer.

The film opens with the 1936 military coup that ignited the Spanish Civil War, supported by Hitler and Mussolini, and follows Franco’s rise to power through brutal purges and authoritarian control. But its focus isn’t on the dictator’s biography — it’s on the lives fractured by his rule. Survivors speak with quiet urgency, breaking decades of fear to recount imprisonment, exile, and the erasure of memory.

There’s no sensationalism here. The tone is measured, the storytelling forensic. Stark footage of mass graves, censored broadcasts, and state propaganda is juxtaposed with calm, intimate interviews that reveal the emotional cost of forgetting. The documentary doesn’t just recount events — it asks why so much was left unsaid, and what justice might still mean.

History’s ghosts rarely speak this clearly. A haunting, necessary reckoning with a past that refuses to stay buried.

Romeo + Juliet (1996) — BBC One, 11:40 PM

Baz Luhrmann’s audacious reimagining of Shakespeare’s tragedy remains a visual and emotional firestorm. Set in the feverish sprawl of Verona Beach, this version trades Renaissance garb for Hawaiian shirts, swords for pistols, and candlelit ballrooms for neon-lit altars — yet keeps the original text intact, word for word.

Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes bring raw vulnerability to Romeo and Juliet, their chemistry pulsing with urgency and innocence. They’re not just star-crossed lovers — they’re teenagers caught in a world of corporate feuds, televised violence, and spiritual yearning. The film’s iconography — neon crosses, angel wings, gun-brandishing priests — turns Shakespeare’s poetry into pop opera.

Luhrmann’s style is maximalist: rapid cuts, saturated colours, and a soundtrack that swings from Radiohead to gospel. But beneath the chaos lies clarity. The Elizabethan dialogue, delivered with conviction and clarity, never feels out of place. It’s a testament to how timeless the language is — and how universal the heartbreak.

This is Shakespeare for the MTV generation, yes — but also for anyone who’s ever felt love as rebellion, as urgency, as fate.


Wednesday, 15th October 2025 – The Maxwell Night 🌟

The Man Who Played With Fire — Sky Documentaries, 7:00 PM

This quietly electrifying documentary reopens one of Europe’s most enduring political wounds: the assassination of Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme in 1986. But it’s not just a whodunit — it’s a meditation on conviction, vulnerability, and the cost of speaking truth to power.

Palme was no ordinary statesman. He championed nuclear disarmament, condemned apartheid, and dared to believe that politics could still serve peace. His murder — a single shot on a snowy Stockholm street — shattered that belief, leaving behind not just grief, but a fog of suspicion that still hasn’t lifted.

The film draws on the investigative legacy of Stieg Larsson, whose unpublished research into Palme’s death forms the spine of this series. Through archival footage, interviews, and newly surfaced documents, the filmmakers reconstruct not just the crime, but the climate — Cold War paranoia, domestic unrest, and the quiet fury of entrenched interests.

What makes the documentary so compelling is its restraint. There’s no rush to judgment, no forced resolution. Instead, it allows uncertainty to breathe, giving space to the contradictions and silences that still surround the case. The snow-covered streets of Stockholm become a kind of visual elegy — beautiful, brutal, and unresolved.

This is storytelling that honours complexity. It’s taut, humane, and deeply political — not in partisanship, but in its insistence that ideals matter, and that their betrayal leaves scars. The Man Who Played With Fire doesn’t offer closure. It offers something rarer: the courage to keep asking.

Ghislaine Maxwell: Epstein’s Shadow – Queen Bee — Sky Documentaries, 8:00 PM

This opening chapter in the three-part docuseries lays bare the gilded origins of Ghislaine Maxwell — daughter of media tycoon Robert Maxwell, socialite, and eventual accomplice to one of the most notorious sex offenders of our time. But Queen Bee isn’t interested in spectacle. Its power lies in restraint.

Through archival footage, interviews with former friends, journalists, and biographers, the film traces Maxwell’s journey from elite boarding schools and Oxford soirées to the inner circle of Jeffrey Epstein. The tone is calm, almost clinical, but the revelations are chilling. What emerges is a portrait of entitlement weaponised — a world where wealth and charm shielded abuse, and denial became doctrine.

Director Barbara Shearer avoids easy moralising. Instead, she builds a forensic case, brick by brick, showing how Maxwell’s privilege insulated her from scrutiny — until it didn’t. The documentary doesn’t excuse; it exposes. And in doing so, it asks uncomfortable questions about complicity, silence, and the systems that protect predators.

Hidden in Plain Sight — Sky Documentaries, 9:00 PM

This stark follow-up to Queen Bee shifts focus from biography to infrastructure — the legal, financial, and social machinery that shielded Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell for decades. It’s not just about what happened, but how it was allowed to happen.

The tone is chillingly restrained. Through court records, leaked emails, and interviews with investigators, the documentary traces a web of enablers: lawyers who deflected scrutiny, institutions that looked the other way, and networks of influence that blurred the line between privilege and impunity.

There’s no melodrama, no overstatement. Just the slow, methodical exposure of a system that failed — or chose not — to protect the vulnerable. The film’s power lies in its quiet precision. Each revelation lands with weight, not shock.

What emerges is a portrait of corruption not as conspiracy, but as culture — embedded, normalised, and ignored. Hidden in Plain Sight doesn’t scream. It doesn’t need to. Its implications are vast, and its message clear: silence isn’t innocence. It’s complicity.

The Reckoning — Sky Documentaries, 10:00 PM

This final instalment in The Maxwell Night trilogy shifts the lens from perpetrators to survivors. Where earlier episodes dissected privilege and complicity, The Reckoning centres on testimony — raw, unfiltered, and quietly devastating.

Victims of Epstein and Maxwell’s abuse speak with clarity and courage, recounting not just what was done to them, but how systems failed to protect them. The camera doesn’t intrude; it listens. There’s no redemptive arc, no neat resolution — only the dignity of truth-telling and the weight of what’s been endured.

The filmmaking is restrained, almost reverent. No dramatic score, no editorialising. Just voices reclaiming agency, and a structure that honours their stories without distortion. It’s journalism at its finest — relentless in pursuit, humane in tone.

The Reckoning doesn’t offer closure. It offers witness. And in doing so, it reminds us that survival isn’t passive — it’s an act of resistance. A powerful end to a harrowing trilogy, and a testament to the strength of those who speak when silence would be easier.

The Last King of Scotland (2005) — Film4, 12:45 AM

Forest Whitaker’s Oscar-winning turn as Ugandan dictator Idi Amin is the gravitational centre of this taut, unsettling political thriller. Directed by Kevin Macdonald and adapted from Giles Foden’s novel, the film filters Amin’s brutal regime through the eyes of Nicholas Garrigan (James McAvoy), a young Scottish doctor drawn into the dictator’s inner circle.

What begins as adventure quickly curdles into complicity. Garrigan is seduced by Amin’s charisma — his joviality, his apparent affection for Scotland, his promises of reform. But beneath the charm lies paranoia, violence, and a chilling unpredictability. Whitaker captures it all: the warmth that wins trust, the volatility that destroys it, and the monstrous ego that consumes everything.

The film doesn’t flinch from the horror, but it also doesn’t simplify. It’s a study in how tyranny seduces before it terrorises — how power, unchecked, distorts even the most magnetic personality. The tension builds not just from political events, but from the psychological trap Garrigan finds himself in, unable to escape the orbit of a man who once seemed like a saviour.

Amin’s reign is history. Whitaker’s performance is legend. And the film remains a chilling reminder that charisma, without conscience, is a dangerous thing.


Thursday, 16th October 2025

Mercury Prize Album of the Year — BBC Four, 9:30 PM 🌟

From Newcastle’s stage comes a night of bold sounds and restless talent. Fontaines D.C., Pulp, FKA Twigs, C-Mat, Wolf Alice and Pa Salieu blaze through genre boundaries.

The energy is infectious; the artistry undeniable.

A celebration of everything unruly and brilliant in British music.

Ordinary Love (2019) — BBC Two, 11:00 PM

In this tender, unshowy drama, Liam Neeson and Lesley Manville portray Tom and Joan, a long-married couple whose quiet routines are upended by a breast cancer diagnosis. What follows isn’t melodrama, but something rarer: a portrait of enduring love under pressure, rendered with grace, humour, and aching honesty.

Directors Lisa Barros D’Sa and Glenn Leyburn keep the focus intimate — morning walks, supermarket trips, hospital corridors — allowing the emotional weight to build in the silences between words. Owen McCafferty’s script, drawn from personal experience, captures the rhythms of a relationship forged over decades: the shorthand, the bickering, the deep well of care that surfaces when it matters most.

Manville is luminous, charting Joan’s journey through treatment with quiet resilience and flashes of wit. Neeson, in a career-best performance, plays Tom as a man whose stoicism masks a deep fear of loss. Together, they create a love story that feels lived-in and profoundly real.

Ordinary Love doesn’t shout. It listens. And in doing so, it devastates — not with grand gestures, but with the small, everyday acts that define devotion

Mean Streets (1973) — Film4, 11:50 PM

Martin Scorsese’s breakout film still pulses with the urgency of lived experience. Shot on a shoestring budget and steeped in the rhythms of New York’s Little Italy, Mean Streets isn’t just a gangster movie — it’s a confessional, a fever dream of Catholic guilt, street loyalty, and moral compromise.

Harvey Keitel’s Charlie is torn between faith and family, trying to reconcile his Mafia ties with a conscience that won’t stay quiet. Robert De Niro’s Johnny Boy, meanwhile, is pure chaos — a reckless, magnetic force who drags everyone into his orbit. Their friendship is both tender and doomed, a microcosm of the film’s central tension: how to live decently in a world that rewards violence and bravado.

Scorsese’s handheld camerawork, kinetic editing, and doo-wop soundtrack create a raw, immersive atmosphere. It’s cinema born on the street, not in the studio — improvised, intimate, and unflinchingly honest. You feel the heat, the claustrophobia, the desperation.

Mean Streets marked the arrival of a new kind of American filmmaking — personal, gritty, and morally complex. Fifty years on, it still crackles.

The Omen (2023) — Channel 4, 1:00 AM

A modern re-imagining of the antichrist myth. Slickly shot and surprisingly restrained, it favours dread over gore.

Its success lies in atmosphere — unease that seeps rather than strikes.

A stylish descent into quiet terror.


Friday, 17th October 2025

Patriot Games (1992) — Great TV, 9:00 PM

Harrison Ford steps into the role of Jack Ryan with quiet authority in this lean, muscular adaptation of Tom Clancy’s novel. A former CIA analyst turned history professor, Ryan is thrust back into the world of espionage after thwarting an IRA assassination attempt in London — and killing the brother of a radical terrorist in the process.

What follows is a tightly wound revenge thriller, where personal stakes and geopolitical tensions collide. Sean Bean simmers with menace as Sean Miller, the vengeful terrorist whose vendetta against Ryan escalates into a deadly game of cat and mouse. The film’s strength lies in its economy: no wasted scenes, no bloated exposition — just clean, efficient storytelling.

Director Phillip Noyce keeps the tension high and the action grounded, favouring grit over gloss. There’s a satisfying old-school sensibility here — a time before CGI overload, when thrillers relied on character, pacing, and plausibility. Anne Archer and a young Thora Birch add emotional weight as Ryan’s family, caught in the crossfire of a conflict they never chose.

Patriot Games may be a product of its era, but its themes — loyalty, vengeance, the cost of intervention — still resonate.

Fawlty Towers: A Very British Comedy — Channel 5, 10:00 PM

This documentary checks into one of Britain’s most iconic sitcoms with both affection and scrutiny. Fawlty Towers, created by John Cleese and Connie Booth, ran for just twelve episodes between 1975 and 1979 — yet its influence on British comedy is immeasurable. Basil’s volcanic temper, Sybil’s icy sarcasm, and Manuel’s linguistic chaos remain etched in the cultural memory. But does the humour still land?

Comedians, critics, and cultural historians gather to debate its legacy. Some celebrate its precision — the timing, the farce, the sheer density of gags. Others question its portrayals, its tone, and its place in a more inclusive comedic landscape. The programme doesn’t shy away from the edits and disclaimers now attached to certain episodes, nor from the broader conversation about how comedy ages.

Archival interviews with Cleese and Booth offer insight into the show’s creation, while behind-the-scenes footage reveals the meticulous craft behind the chaos. There’s warm nostalgia here — but also sharp critique. The documentary treats Fawlty Towers not as untouchable canon, but as a living text: one that can be admired, questioned, and reinterpreted.

Attack the Block (2011) — Channel 4, 12:20 AM

Joe Cornish’s debut feature is a genre mash-up with bite — a sci-fi horror that swaps sleek spaceships for South London tower blocks and casts teenage boys in hoodies as unlikely heroes. When alien creatures crash-land on Guy Fawkes Night, a gang led by Moses (John Boyega, in a breakout role) must defend their estate from a growing invasion. But the real battle is layered: against prejudice, neglect, and the assumptions that come with postcode and accent.

The film is fast, funny, and fiercely political. Cornish blends creature-feature thrills with sharp social commentary, never losing sight of the humanity beneath the bravado. The aliens — black-furred, eyeless, with glowing fangs — are terrifying, but it’s the way the gang is perceived by police, neighbours, and even the audience that gives the film its edge.

Boyega is magnetic, playing Moses with quiet intensity and moral complexity. As the story unfolds, his character shifts from mugger to protector, revealing the cost of being written off too soon. The supporting cast — Jodie Whittaker, Nick Frost, and a crew of young newcomers — bring humour and heart.

Attack the Block still feels fresh because it never settles for easy answers. It’s a film about monsters, yes — but also about who gets called one. Proof that rebellion sometimes wears a hoodie, and that heroism can come from the margins.


Streaming Choice

Netflix – The Diplomat, Season 3 (Thursday 16 October) Debora Cahn’s political thriller returns with the chessboard flipped. Kate Wyler (Keri Russell) finds herself in a role she never wanted — Vice President under Grace Penn (Allison Janney), the very woman she accused of orchestrating a terrorist plot. Bradley Whitford joins the cast as First Gentleman Todd Penn, adding West Wing pedigree to the mix. Expect sharp dialogue, shifting loyalties, and moral ambiguity. Diplomacy has never felt so personal — or so perilous.

Netflix – The Perfect Neighbour (Friday 17 October) Geeta Gandbhir’s harrowing documentary uses police bodycam footage to reconstruct the killing of Ajike Owens in Florida. Told with restraint and raw intimacy, it exposes how prejudice, grievance, and “stand your ground” laws collided with devastating consequences. The footage is unflinching; the implications are vast. A Sundance winner and early contender for documentary of the year. Essential viewing for anyone who still believes justice is neutral.

Apple TV+ – Mr. Scorsese, five episodes (Friday 17 October) Rebecca Miller’s five-part portrait of Martin Scorsese is a cinephile’s dream. From student films to Killers of the Flower Moon, it traces the director’s obsessions — Catholic guilt, moral ambiguity, cinematic truth — with warmth and rigour. Interviews with De Niro, DiCaprio, Schoonmaker, Spielberg, and Scorsese’s own family add texture. It’s not just a career retrospective — it’s a meditation on art, faith, and the cost of vision. Scorsese speaks; cinema listens.

Netflix – Dexter, all eight seasons (Friday 17 October) Michael C. Hall’s blood-spattered antihero returns to Netflix UK. The original run — from Born Free to Remember the Monsters — is now available in full. Yes, the finale still divides opinion. But the journey remains gripping: forensic precision meets moral decay. A binge-worthy descent into Miami’s darkest corners. Just don’t expect closure — Dexter never did.

Prime Video – Inside the Mind of a Killer: The Raoul Moat Case (Sunday 12 October) This chilling documentary revisits one of Britain’s most infamous manhunts. Through voice recordings, letters, and survivor testimony, it reconstructs Moat’s descent from possessive partner to fugitive gunman. PC David Rathband’s audio recollections are devastating; the footage is haunting. A portrait of unchecked rage, institutional failure, and the fragility of public safety. Not just a true-crime retelling — a reckoning.


Leave a Comment

Culture Vulture 7th-13th of June 2025

Curated by Pat Harrington | Original music in our video edition by Tim Bragg

Welcome to Culture Vulture, your guid to the week’s entertainment from an alternative standpoint. This week’s viewing offers a powerful mix of historical reflection, contemporary drama, and late-night provocation. From early Powell and Pressburger to post-financial crash San Francisco, we witness questions of identity, morality, and social fabric play out on screen. Pat Harrington’s selections lean into stories of disruption and transformation, whether through criminal underworlds, bureaucratic absurdities, or simple human loneliness.


Saturday 7 June

I Know Where I’m Going! (1945) – BBC Two, 2:00 PM

Powell and Pressburger’s wartime romance offers more than a tale of love thwarted by weather. Joan, a headstrong Englishwoman, travels to the Hebrides to marry a wealthy industrialist but finds herself stranded and slowly falling for a modest naval officer. What begins as a romantic caprice unfolds into a meditation on fate, class, and cultural identity.

The backdrop of the Scottish islands is not just scenic; it represents a different moral universe. Joan’s certainty is challenged by a community that prioritises tradition over transaction, humility over ambition. In wartime Britain, with social roles being renegotiated, the film’s suggestion that true value lies in character rather than status must have rung true.

Eighty years on, this remains a quietly radical film. Its politics are gentle but unmistakable: class mobility is not simply about marrying upwards, and progress does not mean severing ties with rootedness. In many ways, the film anticipates today’s cultural fault lines around modernisation and authenticity.

Doctor Who Unleashed: 20 Years in Wales – BBC Three, 7:00 PM

A nostalgic and affectionate behind-the-scenes celebration of the revival of Doctor Who, showcasing its cultural significance, regional pride, and the creativity it sparked in a generation of viewers and writers.

This evening’s BBC2 programming is notably dedicated to Billy Joel, a musician whose career has spanned decades and whose influence on popular music is undeniable. From his early days as a piano-driven storyteller to his status as a stadium-filling icon, Joel’s work has resonated across generations. His ability to craft deeply personal yet universally relatable songs has cemented his place as one of America’s most enduring musical figures.

Billy Joel at the BBC – BBC Two, 8:40 PM

A rich retrospective that showcases Joel’s appearances on the BBC over the years. This documentary highlights his evolution from a working-class troubadour to a global superstar, offering a blend of biography and musical exploration. Expect performances of classics like Just the Way You Are and The River of Dreams, alongside interviews that provide insight into his artistry and longevity

Billy Joel: The 100th – Live at Madison Square Garden – BBC Two, 9:55 PM

A landmark event celebrating Joel’s 100th performance at Madison Square Garden. This concert is a testament to his enduring appeal, featuring beloved hits, hidden gems, and surprise guest appearances. With a staggering 18,000 fans in attendance, the show is both a nostalgic journey and a showcase of Joel’s unparalleled ability to connect with audiences.

Billy Joel: Old Grey Whistle Test – BBC Two, 11:55 PM

rare glimpse into Joel’s early career, featuring a stripped-back performance and an insightful interview. This archival footage captures him at a pivotal moment, revealing the anxieties and ambitions that shaped his music. Expect performances of Just the Way You Are and The Entertainer, offering a raw and intimate look at his artistry.

This line-up is a fitting tribute to Joel’s legacy, interwoven with thought-provoking historical programming that ensures a night of both entertainment and reflection.

Road to Perdition (2002) – ITV1, 11:20 PM

Sam Mendes directs this sombre gangster tale with a painterly touch. Set during the Great Depression, it follows hitman Michael Sullivan (Tom Hanks) and his young son on the run after a betrayal inside the Irish-American mob. The film probes the costs of loyalty, masculinity, and the myth of redemptive violence.

Economic hardship haunts every frame. The icy streets and fading grandeur of Chicago echo a world of scarcity, both financial and emotional. Mendes presents crime as a corrupt refuge from the poverty of ordinary life—but not one without its own hierarchy and brutality.

What lingers is the film’s moral ambiguity. Sullivan is both protector and killer, father and destroyer. As economic despair forces men into morally grey choices, the film asks whether virtue is even possible in a corrupt system—or if the most one can hope for is to limit the damage done to others.

Bad Lieutenant (1992) – Legend, 12:55 AM

Abel Ferrara’s film is a nightmarish descent into the soul of a corrupt New York police officer. Played with searing intensity by Harvey Keitel, the titular lieutenant is both predator and penitent, committing crimes as often as he investigates them. When a nun is raped, her refusal to condemn her attackers sends him spiralling.

This is no standard crime film. It explores the rot within institutions and the hollow centre of performative morality. The lieutenant’s crisis is spiritual as much as physical—a post-Reagan parable of a society that prizes appearance over substance, retribution over justice.

Ferrara’s New York is bleak, but never indifferent. Amid the horror is a strange sort of grace. The nun’s forgiveness offers a radical alternative to the lieutenant’s world of deals and debts. It’s a brutal film, but also one of the most theologically daring in American cinema.


Sunday 8 June

Julius Caesar (1953) – BBC Two, 2:00 PM

Joseph L. Mankiewicz’s version of the Shakespeare play is rich in oratory and intrigue. With Marlon Brando as Antony, James Mason as Brutus, and John Gielgud as Cassius, the film explores the collapse of a republic under the weight of ambition, paranoia, and noble delusion.

Though set in ancient Rome, the film resonates with Cold War anxieties. The fear that democracy could crumble from within mirrored mid-century American unease with McCarthyism and creeping authoritarianism. Brutus, the idealist, finds that honour alone is no match for realpolitik.

The film’s enduring relevance lies in its depiction of populism and manipulation. Antony’s funeral speech is a masterclass in the power of rhetoric. As modern democracies face their own challenges, this adaptation remains a timely warning that good intentions are not enough to save a republic from itself.

Groundhog Day (1993) – Film4, 4:40 PM

At first glance, Groundhog Day appears to be a lighthearted comedy about an arrogant weatherman stuck in a bizarre time loop. But beneath its charming surface, Harold Ramis’s film is a profound meditation on self-improvement, morality, and the human condition.

Bill Murray plays Phil Connors, a cynical TV weatherman sent to cover the annual Groundhog Day festivities in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania. When he wakes up to find himself reliving the same day over and over again, his initial response is frustration, then reckless indulgence. He exploits his predicament—seducing women, manipulating events, and indulging in hedonistic pleasures—only to find that none of it brings lasting satisfaction.

The film’s brilliance lies in how it transforms repetition into revelation. As Phil cycles through the same day, he is forced to confront his own flaws. His journey from selfishness to selflessness mirrors a philosophical awakening, echoing ideas from Buddhism, existentialism, and even Aristotelian ethics. The time loop becomes a metaphor for personal growth: only by embracing kindness, humility, and genuine connection can Phil break free.

Socially, Groundhog Day speaks to the monotony of modern life—the feeling of being trapped in routines, unable to escape the cycles of work, relationships, and societal expectations. It asks whether change is possible, not just for individuals but for communities. Phil’s transformation suggests that redemption is within reach, but only through conscious effort.

Ethically, the film raises questions about free will and moral responsibility. If given infinite chances, would we choose to become better people? Or would we remain trapped by our worst instincts? Phil’s evolution suggests that morality is not innate but cultivated through experience and reflection.

More than just a romantic comedy, Groundhog Day is a fable about the power of choice, the weight of time, and the possibility of renewal. It remains one of the most quietly profound films of the 1990s, blending humour with deep philosophical inquiry.

The Gold – BBC One, 9:00 PM

The first episode of this compelling drama dives into one of Britain’s most notorious crimes—the Brink’s-Mat robbery. A staggering £26 million in gold bullion was stolen from a Heathrow warehouse in 1983, setting off a chain of events that reshaped the UK’s financial crime landscape.

This dramatization meticulously intertwines the police investigation, the shadowy world of money laundering, and the far-reaching socio-economic consequences of the heist. It offers a gripping portrayal of the officers determined to uncover the truth, the criminals entangled in a web of greed and betrayal, and the systemic vulnerabilities that allowed illicit wealth to flow into legitimate channels.

With a keen eye for detail and a sophisticated narrative approach, the series doesn’t just recount events—it explores themes of corruption, power, and justice, making for a thought-provoking watch.

Alison Steadman Remembers Girl – BBC Four, 10:00 PM

Alison Steadman reflects on her breakthrough role in Girl, connecting past performances with shifting views on gender, class, and performance in Britain. Girl was notable for the first broadcast of a lesbian kiss between Steadman with Myra Frances way back in 1974.

Tonight’s programming on BBC Two serves as a tribute to Alan Yentob, a towering figure in British broadcasting who passed away on the 24th of May 2025 at the age of 78. Yentob was a champion of the arts, shaping decades of cultural programming at the BBC. His influence extended across television, film, and theatre, with a passion for storytelling that left an indelible mark on British culture.

As the long-time editor and presenter of Imagine, Yentob brought audiences intimate and thought-provoking portraits of creative visionaries. His work celebrated originality, risk-taking, and artistic ambition, making the BBC a home for creativity and curiosity.

Imagine: Mel Brooks – BBC Two, 9:00 PM

An affectionate profile of the anarchic genius behind Blazing Saddles and The Producers, this episode is both a career retrospective and an insight into how humour can act as cultural critique.

David Bowie: Cracked Actor – BBC Two, 10:15 PM

Alan Yentob’s interview style in Cracked Actor was as much a part of the documentary’s impact as Bowie himself. Filmed in 1974, Yentob approached Bowie with a quiet, observational technique, allowing the musician’s own words and demeanor to shape the narrative.

Rather than pressing Bowie with direct questions, Yentob created an atmosphere where Bowie could reflect freely, often in the back of a limousine or in dimly lit hotel rooms. This method captured Bowie at his most vulnerable—physically drained, creatively restless, and grappling with the effects of fame and addiction. Yentob’s ability to draw out Bowie’s introspective musings without intrusion resulted in moments of startling honesty.

The documentary’s most memorable exchanges show Bowie speaking in fragmented, poetic thoughts, revealing his fascination with identity, reinvention, and alienation. Yentob’s presence is felt more as a guide than an interrogator, allowing Bowie’s words to unfold naturally rather than forcing a structured narrative. This approach made Cracked Actor one of the most intimate portraits of Bowie ever filmed, offering rare insight into his psyche at a critical turning point in his career.

Gateways Grind – BBC Four, 10:50 PM

A rare look at Britain’s first lesbian nightclub and the women who frequented it. More than nostalgia, it’s a piece of queer history reclaimed.

Our Ladies (2019) – Film4, 11:05 PM

Michael Caton-Jones adapts Alan Warner’s novel about six Catholic schoolgirls cutting loose on a trip to Edinburgh. What could have been a light coming-of-age comedy becomes a fierce, foul-mouthed celebration of teenage rebellion and female friendship.

The film is set in the mid-1990s—a time when Scotland was still negotiating its cultural and political identity. These young women push back against repressive religious authority and a society that expects little from them. Their antics may be juvenile, but they are acts of defiance.

There’s a raw honesty to how the film handles class and aspiration. These girls don’t dream of escape to London or New York. Their rebellion is local, bodily, and immediate. The humour is crude, the emotions sincere. And the film dares to let its protagonists be chaotic, even unlikable, without apology.


Monday 9 June

Jamie’s Dyslexia Revolution – Channel 4, 9:00 PM

Jamie Oliver’s Dyslexia Revolution is more than just a personal journey—it’s a call to rethink how we support individuals with dyslexia in education and beyond. The documentary takes a deeply personal look at Oliver’s own experiences, shedding light on the struggles and triumphs of those who navigate a world often designed for a single learning style.

Oliver critiques the education system’s rigid structure, arguing that traditional classroom methods often fail to recognize the diverse ways in which people absorb and process information. He advocates for a more inclusive approach, one that values creativity, problem-solving, and alternative learning techniques rather than focusing solely on standardized metrics.

The film doesn’t just highlight the challenges of dyslexia—it also celebrates the unique strengths that come with thinking differently. By sharing his own story and engaging with experts, educators, and those living with dyslexia, Oliver pushes for systemic change, urging schools and workplaces to rethink how they support neurodivergent individuals.

It’s a compelling and necessary conversation about education, inclusion, and the need for a more holistic understanding of intelligence. With Oliver’s characteristic passion and commitment, Dyslexia Revolution promises to spark debate and encourage a more accommodating approach to learning


Tuesday 10 June

The Gold – BBC One, 9:00 PM

In this gripping second episode, the stakes rise as investigators and criminals alike feel the pressure of the Brink’s-Mat heist fallout. The stolen gold, now laundered into the financial system, begins to seep into legitimate businesses, demonstrating how illicit wealth can distort economies and institutions.

The episode meticulously examines the mechanics of systemic corruption—how layers of deception, financial loopholes, and complicit insiders allow criminal profits to blend seamlessly into everyday commerce. It’s a study not just of crime, but of the fragility of accountability within the financial and legal structures meant to prevent such infiltration.

With intense performances and sharp storytelling, the series continues to unearth the uncomfortable reality that crime is rarely confined to the criminal underworld; it’s a shadow that stretches across the economic landscape, implicating figures far removed from the original act.

Master Gardener (2022) – Great Movies, 9:00 PM

Paul Schrader’s latest drama centres on a horticulturist with a violent past who becomes entangled with a young woman in need of protection. The film is a slow-burning examination of redemption and identity in a nation scarred by racism and generational trauma.

What makes the film arresting is its refusal to offer easy forgiveness. The protagonist’s past as a white supremacist is not glossed over, and his transformation is tentative. The garden becomes a metaphor for cultivation and control—of the self and society.

This is a film about inherited guilt and the hope that care can be more powerful than destruction. Schrader’s Calvinist sensibility makes it heavy viewing, but in its own way, it’s a political film about American decay and spiritual yearning.

Storyville: Wedding Night – BBC Four, 10:00 PM

This documentary offers a rare and intimate look into the experiences of ultra-Orthodox Jewish couples on their wedding night, a moment steeped in tradition and expectation. In this community, men and women are raised separately, with little interaction before marriage. When the time comes, the expectation is that they will consummate their union, navigating a deeply personal and often overwhelming transition.

Through candid interviews, Wedding Night explores the emotional and psychological impact of these customs, revealing how modesty, religious doctrine, and societal pressures shape the experience. Men and women speak openly about their feelings during matchmaking, engagement, the wedding ceremony, and their first night together, offering a nuanced perspective on a tradition rarely discussed outside the community.

Directed by Rachel Elitzur and produced by Avigail Sperber, the film provides a sensitive yet unflinching portrayal of a world where deeply held beliefs intersect with personal realities


Wednesday 11 June

Witchfinder General (1968) – Legend, 3:05 AM

Michael Reeves’s horror classic stars Vincent Price as the sadistic Matthew Hopkins, hunting so-called witches during the English Civil War. A historical horror rooted in real repression, the film’s power lies in its exposure of mob justice and authority gone mad.

The English countryside is depicted as bleak and paranoid, where superstition thrives in the absence of law. Reeves’s direction is unforgiving—less gothic and more brutal realism. It is, above all, a warning about the uses of fear to control communities.

Often seen as a comment on Vietnam-era violence and state-sanctioned cruelty, its themes have not aged. From moral panics to modern witch hunts, this remains a visceral critique of unchecked authority.


Thursday 12 June

The Banshees of Inisherin (2022) – Film4, 9:00 PM

Martin McDonagh’s black comedy is about a friendship’s abrupt end on a remote Irish island. It quickly becomes an allegory for civil war, grief, and the slow erosion of community.

Brendan Gleeson and Colin Farrell play former friends, their quarrel taking absurdly tragic turns. Inisherin is portrayed as stagnant and inward-looking, where isolation breeds cruelty. The war in the background echoes the pettiness and pointlessness of human conflict.

As with McDonagh’s earlier work, there’s moral ambiguity and biting dialogue. But the lasting effect is mournful. This is a fable about the pain of being human, and the damage we do when we sever connection.

The Last Bus (2021) – BBC Two, 11:00 PM

Timothy Spall delivers a touching performance in this quietly powerful film about love, loss, and resilience. He plays Tom, an elderly widower who embarks on a poignant journey across the UK, travelling from John o’ Groats to Land’s End using only his free bus pass. His mission is deeply personal—one final trip to honour the memory of his late wife.

As Tom moves through towns and cities, he encounters strangers who each add something to his story, whether through moments of kindness, curiosity, or reflection. Along the way, the film gently explores themes of ageing, grief, and the enduring bonds that shape our lives. Flashbacks reveal his younger years with his beloved Mary, showing the love that fuels his determination to complete this journey.

With its heartfelt storytelling and Spall’s understated but deeply expressive performance, The Last Bus is a tribute to quiet perseverance and the simple yet profound connections we make in life. It’s a film that lingers, reminding us of the journeys we take—not just across landscapes, but through time and memory.


Friday 13 June

The Last Black Man in San Francisco (2019) – BBC Two, 11:00 PM

Joe Talbot’s semi-autobiographical debut tells the story of a young man trying to reclaim his childhood home in a rapidly gentrifying city. The film is a lyrical meditation on place, memory, and cultural displacement.

It focuses on Jimmie and his best friend Mont as they navigate friendship, loss, and identity in a city that no longer feels like theirs. San Francisco is portrayed as a living organism—its wealth, tech invasion, and erasure of Black culture weighing on every frame.

Visually stunning and emotionally restrained, the film resists easy answers. It instead offers a poetic portrait of what it means to belong somewhere—and what it feels like to lose that place to time and power.

Naked (1993) – Film4, 11:20 PM

Mike Leigh’s darkest film stars David Thewlis as Johnny, a drifter whose verbal tirades mask deep despair. Set in Thatcher’s London, it exposes a society fractured by inequality, misogyny, and existential dread.

Johnny wanders the capital, leaving ruin in his wake. His encounters with women and strangers are both intellectually charged and emotionally violent. Leigh refuses to redeem him, showing how rage, even when insightful, can be corrosive.

A bleak portrait of a man—and a city—adrift, Naked still feels provocatively contemporary. It asks how a society that has lost its soul can expect its citizens to behave morally.


Streaming Choices

FUBAR Season 2 – Netflix

Arnold Schwarzenegger returns as a retired CIA agent juggling spycraft and family drama. More absurd than thrilling, but it embraces its campiness with gusto.

Deep Cover (1992) – Prime Video

Deep Cover (1992) is a gripping neo-noir thriller that blends crime, identity, and social critique into a tense and thought-provoking narrative. Directed by Bill Duke, the film stars Laurence Fishburne as Russell Stevens Jr., a principled cop with a troubled past who is recruited by the DEA to go undercover in an international cocaine cartel2. As he assumes the alias John Q. Hull, Stevens finds himself navigating the murky waters of law enforcement, morality, and personal transformation.

What sets Deep Cover apart is its unflinching examination of race, power, and the drug war’s devastating impact. The film doesn’t just follow the familiar beats of an undercover cop story—it interrogates the very system Stevens is meant to uphold. As he climbs the ranks of the criminal underworld, the lines between justice and corruption blur, forcing him to question whether he is truly fighting crime or merely perpetuating a cycle of systemic exploitation.

Duke’s direction infuses the film with a stylish yet gritty atmosphere, capturing the tension and paranoia of Stevens’ double life. The screenplay, co-written by Michael Tolkin and Henry Bean, delivers sharp dialogue and layered character development, making Deep Cover as intellectually engaging as it is thrilling. Fishburne’s performance is magnetic, portraying a man torn between duty and survival, while Jeff Goldblum, in a strikingly unconventional role, plays a morally ambiguous lawyer entangled in the drug trade.

Beyond its crime-thriller framework, Deep Cover serves as a searing indictment of the drug war’s moral cost, exposing how law enforcement policies disproportionately affect marginalized communities. The film’s themes remain remarkably relevant, making it a standout in the genre and a must-watch for those interested in socially conscious cinema.

Hereafter (2010) – Paramount+

Hereafter (2010) is a contemplative drama directed by Clint Eastwood, weaving together three parallel narratives that explore themes of grief, mortality, and the search for meaning. The film follows an American factory worker, played by Matt Damon, who has a psychic connection to the afterlife, a French journalist, portrayed by Cécile de France, who survives a near-death experience during the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, and a British schoolboy, played by Frankie and George McLaren, who struggles with the loss of a loved one.

Eastwood’s direction lends the film a quiet, meditative tone, steering clear of grand spectacle in favor of a restrained and personal approach. Hereafter focuses on the emotional weight of loss and the human desire for connection, offering a reflection on the different ways people process death. The film’s pacing is deliberate, allowing its characters to navigate their personal struggles with realism, though some critics found its emotional beats inconsistent.

With a screenplay by Peter Morgan, Hereafter balances its supernatural elements with grounded storytelling, making it more of a philosophical exploration than a traditional thriller. The cinematography, particularly in its depiction of the tsunami sequence, is striking, setting the stage for the existential questions that follow. While the film received mixed reviews, it remains a compelling watch for those interested in introspective, character-driven narratives.

Picture credits

Cracked Actor
May be found at the following website: https://www.discogs.com/ru/release/6889562-David-Bowie-Cracked-Actor-A-Film-about-David-Bowie, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=74574080
I Know Where I’m Going! (1945)
By http://www.impawards.com/1945/i_know_where_im_going.html, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=10548579
Road to Perdition (2002)
May be found at the following website: IMP Awards, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1026190
Bad Lieutenant (1992)
May be found at the following website: IMDb, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=26387547
Julius Caesar (1953)
Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6717381
Groundhog Day (1993)
May be found at the following website: IMP Awards, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=7596535
Our Ladies (2019)
By http://www.impawards.com/intl/uk/2019/our_ladies.html, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=67802038
Master Gardener (2022)
By http://www.impawards.com/2022/posters/master_gardener.jpg, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=71679382
Witchfinder General (1968)
The poster art can or could be obtained from American International Pictures., Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6120541
The Banshees of Inisherin (2022)
By http://www.impawards.com/2022/posters/banshees_of_inisherin_xxlg.jpg, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=71458552
The Last Bus (2021)
By http://www.impawards.com/intl/uk/2021/last_bus_ver3.html, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=68583124
The Last Black Man in San Francisco (2019)
By A24 Films, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=60292326
Naked (1993)
By https://uk.movieposter.com/poster/MPW-53927/Naked.html, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=48434515
Hereafter (2010)
By May be found at the following website: http://www.movieposterdb.com/poster/77bc13c4, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=28805505
Deep Cover (1992)
By IMDb, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=15521015
Mel Brooks
By Angela George, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=10257010
Alan Yentob
By Financial Times – https://www.flickr.com/photos/financialtimes/34788802943/in/dateposted/, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=64029981
Alison Steadman
By Flickr user Andy from London, UK – You’ll Have Had Your Tea – Alison Steadman as Mrs Naughtie from Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2256855
Billy Joel
By David Shankbone – David Shankbone, CC BY 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=7866968
Jamie Oliver
By Karl Gabor – http://www.mynewsdesk.com/uk/scandic_hotels/images/jamie-oliver-192908, CC BY 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=31594070

Leave a Comment

Galadriel vs. Sauron: A Clash of Ideologies in Season 2 By Patrick Harrington

569 words, 3 minutes read time.

In the richly woven tapestry of “The Rings of Power,” (on Amazon Prime) Sauron emerges as a figure steeped in mystery. He is also shrouded in darkness. He is driven by a complex desire for order and dominion over Middle-earth which is revealed further in Season 2. This portrayal offers a nuanced perspective, suggesting that his malevolent actions stem from a distorted vision of a greater good.

The intricacies of his motivations come to life in his charged interactions with Galadriel. They form a dynamic that is multifaceted and antagonistic. Their relationship embodies a compelling clash of ideologies. Galadriel is fiercely determined to protect Middle-earth and stands as a formidable opponent to Sauron’s insidious plans.

The tension between Sauron and Galadriel serves as one of the central plot points of the series. It presents a dance of power and deception that captivates viewers. Their rivalry goes beyond a battle of strength. It is a profound exploration of moral conflict. This makes it one of the most engaging storylines in the show.

Adding further depth to the narrative are the Istari, the enigmatic wizards tasked with safeguarding Middle-earth. The Istari are comprised of primordial spirits known as Maiar. Is The Stranger one of them? The Stranger’s identity is pivotal to the unfolding drama. Exploring the Istari’s purpose enriches the lore of Middle-earth. This exploration gives viewers insight into the cosmic order. This cosmic order influences the fate of this beloved realm.

As Season 2 unfolds, it promises to delve deeper into the complexities of Sauron, Galadriel, and the Istari. It also aims to broaden the universe of Tolkien’s works. The narrative has blossomed into an intricate exploration of character motivations. It examines the rich histories that define Middle-earth. It captivates audiences with its emotional depth and revelations.

One of the standout elements of this season is the layered portrayal of the Dark Wizard, played by Ciarán Hinds. His mysterious origins and intentions challenge viewers’ perceptions, as speculation arises regarding his true identity. Could he be one of the Istari, potentially a younger Saruman or one of the lesser-known blue wizards? His complex motivations and the power dynamics he embodies set the stage for an epic confrontation with The Stranger.

Equally compelling is the character of Adar, who emerges as a fan favourite in the second season. Adar was initially portrayed by Joseph Mawle. Later, Sam Hazeldine took on the role. He is a tragic figure—a fallen Elf striving for what he believes is best for his people. His journey explores themes of moral ambiguity, redemption, and the nature of evil within Tolkien’s universe. The poignant nature of his character arc resonates deeply.

Season 2 of “The Rings of Power” has elevated the storytelling within this cherished universe. It masterfully blends familiar elements with original narratives. These narratives keep viewers on the edge of their seats. The series captures the essence of Tolkien’s work. It ventures into new territories. It expands character depth and enriches the lore of Middle-earth.

We are eagerly awaiting the next chapter in this epic saga. It is clear that the journey through Middle-earth is far from over. “The Rings of Power” mesmerizes with its stunning visuals. Its intricate narrative captivates audiences. Profound character arcs continue to honour the legacy of J.R.R. Tolkien, ensuring that audiences remain eagerly invested in the unfolding tale of light versus darkness, power, and redemption.

By Pat Harrington

Leave a Comment