Archive for Documentaries

Culture Vulture 6th to the 12th of September 2025

A soaring vulture in flight with a mountainous backdrop, overlaid with text reading 'CULTURE VULTURE' and 'COUNTER CULTURE' representing a cultural commentary theme.

Selections and commentary by Pat Harrington

This week’s Culture Vulture offers a mix of history, politics, and cinema both classic and contemporary. We look back at Alexander the Great, the Tudors, and Amerigo Vespucci. We also have raw examinations of modern life in Thailand and through the lens of addiction in Fame and Fentanyl. Films bring us from courtroom drama to musical comedy, from Vietnam to the American underworld. Streaming choices expand the field even further, with thrillers, satire, and the return of Homeland.


Saturday 6th September

Freddie Mercury: A Secret Daughter – Channel 5, 9:10 p.m.
This documentary promises to stir up intrigue around one of rock’s most magnetic figures. Freddie’s life has already been told and retold, yet claims of a hidden family connection will draw in even sceptical viewers. Expect a blend of interviews, conjecture, and footage that seeks to add another layer to his myth.

It raises the question of what we really know about our icons. Is it possible to separate fact from rumour when the subject lived so flamboyantly and left such a powerful mark? Programmes like this thrive on ambiguity, but they also remind us that legends like Mercury belong to the public imagination as much as to history.

Whether you take it all as gospel or gossip, there is no denying the appeal. Freddie was larger than life. Any suggestion of mystery or hidden legacy only deepens his aura.

Groundhog Day (1993) – Channel 5, 4:40 p.m.
There’s a reason Groundhog Day has burrowed its way into the cultural lexicon—not just as a film, but as shorthand for the sensation of being caught in life’s loops. At its core is a conceit so simple it borders on mythic: a man wakes up to the same day, again and again, until he learns how to live it differently. But what elevates this premise from gimmick to parable is the way it’s handled—with wit, warmth, and a surprising philosophical depth.

Bill Murray’s Phil Connors, a weatherman marooned in Punxsutawney, begins the cycle as a man of smug detachment. He’s cynical, self-absorbed, and visibly irritated by the rituals of small-town America. Yet as the days repeat, something shifts. What could have been a one-note farce becomes a layered character study. Murray plays the transformation with exquisite control—never losing his edge, but gradually revealing vulnerability, curiosity, and finally, grace.

Director Harold Ramis deserves credit for the tonal balance. The film never lectures, never wallows. Instead, it uses comedy as a vehicle for introspection. The laughs are genuine—Phil’s failed seductions, botched suicide attempts, and slapstick despair—but so is the emotional arc. Redemption here isn’t grand or religious; it’s incremental, human, and earned through empathy.

What’s remarkable is how fresh the film remains. Repetition, in lesser hands, would breed fatigue. But Groundhog Day finds variation in the familiar. Each loop is a chance to reframe, to notice what was missed, to try again. It’s a structure that mirrors real life more than most dramas do. We all know the feeling of being stuck—whether in jobs, relationships, or routines. Watching Phil break free isn’t just satisfying; it’s hopeful.

Three decades on, the film still resonates. It’s been cited in psychology lectures, spiritual retreats, and even political commentary. But its power lies in its accessibility. You don’t need a degree in philosophy to understand its message: change is possible, but only when we stop trying to control the world and start engaging with it.

Groundhog Day is more than a comedy. It’s a meditation disguised as entertainment—a reminder that even the most ordinary day can be extraordinary, if we choose to live it well.

Sound of Metal (2019) – BBC Two, 1:15 a.m.
Riz Ahmed plays a drummer who begins to lose his hearing. The performance is raw and deeply human. It captures the shock of sudden change and the struggle for acceptance.

The film doesn’t just tell the story – it makes you experience it. Sound design is central, pulling the audience into the protagonist’s perspective. Silence, distortion, and vibration become part of the narrative.

This is cinema that lingers. It asks how we define ourselves when what we love is taken away. Ahmed’s work earned him acclaim, and rightly so.


Sunday 7th September

Witness for the Prosecution (1957) – BBC Two, 12:35 p.m.
Billy Wilder directs this courtroom drama with twists and turns to spare. Charles Laughton, Tyrone Power, and Marlene Dietrich bring star power to a story that never lets the tension drop.

The pacing is sharp. Just when you think you know the verdict, Wilder pulls the rug. Dietrich in particular delivers a performance that is layered and cunning.

Few courtroom dramas have matched its mix of suspense and style. It stands as one of the genre’s best.

A Room with a View (1985) – Film4, 4:40 p.m.
Merchant Ivory at their best. Helena Bonham Carter plays Lucy, torn between convention and passion. Italy provides the backdrop, lush and romantic.

The cast is impeccable. Daniel Day-Lewis is suitably repressed, while Julian Sands brings energy as the free spirit. Maggie Smith and Denholm Elliott offer support with comic touches.

It is a film about choices, about freedom and restraint. Beautifully shot and performed, it still enchants.

Our Ladies (2019) – Film4, 11:15 p.m.
A group of Scottish schoolgirls head to Edinburgh for a choir competition. They are more interested in fun than singing. The result is both riotous and tender.

Set in the 1990s, it captures youth, rebellion, and the bonds of friendship. The soundtrack and humour keep things lively, but there is depth in how it deals with class and identity.

It is bawdy, heartfelt, and very human. The performances feel natural, and the film resonates with honesty.

I Fought the Law (Episode 3 of 4) – Channel 4, 9:00 p.m.
This episode continues the story of Ann Ming, whose daughter Julie Hogg was murdered in 1989. After two failed trials, the suspect later confessed—but under the then-standing double jeopardy law, he couldn’t be retried. This episode dramatises the moment Ann receives that confession and begins her campaign to challenge the centuries-old legal barrier2.

The series is based on Ming’s memoir For the Love of Julie, and stars Sheridan Smith as Ann. It’s a powerful blend of personal grief and public advocacy, showing how one woman’s persistence led to a landmark legal reform in 2003, allowing retrials in cases with compelling new evidence.

Alexander the Great – Sky History, 7:00 p.m.
The story of a man who conquered much of the known world. Yet behind the victories lay ambition, flaws, and questions of legacy.

This documentary sets out not only to chart battles but also to understand personality. Was Alexander a visionary leader or a tyrant chasing glory? Both, perhaps.

The scale of his achievements remains astonishing. The programme seeks to place him in context, balancing awe with critique.

Royal Bastards: The Rise of the Tudors – Sky History, 9:00 p.m., 10:00 p.m., 11:00 p.m.
The Tudors are often remembered for splendour and scandal. This series digs into the roots, showing how a dynasty clawed its way to power.

Plots, betrayals, and shifting allegiances dominate. It is a reminder that history is often decided by chance and ruthlessness. The series moves at pace, never dry.

If you enjoy historical drama, this is the real thing. Blood and politics combined to create one of England’s most famous dynasties.


Monday 8th September

Hope and Glory (1987) – BBC Two, 11:00 p.m.
John Boorman’s semi-autobiographical tale of childhood during the Blitz. It is full of warmth, humour, and resilience. War is present but filtered through a boy’s eyes.

The destruction and danger are offset by moments of play and discovery. It is nostalgic without being sentimental. Boorman shows how even in chaos, life goes on.

A unique perspective on war cinema. Less about battles, more about human spirit.

Thailand: The Dark Side of Paradise – BBC Three, 10:00 p.m.
Tourists see beaches and nightlife. This series pulls back the curtain. Crime, exploitation, and inequality lurk beneath the postcard image.

The first episode is unflinching. It explores trafficking, corruption, and lives caught in the shadows. The contrast with the tourist dream is stark.

It raises uncomfortable questions about global travel and responsibility. Hard viewing, but important.

Amerigo Vespucci: Forgotten Namesake of America – PBS America, 9:50 p.m.
Columbus gets the headlines, but Vespucci gave his name to a continent. This documentary restores him to the story.

It looks at the voyages, the maps, and the reasons his name endured. Exploration is presented not as a lone act but as part of a larger web of discovery and competition.

Vespucci emerges as more than a footnote. His role in shaping how Europe understood the New World is made clear.


Tuesday 9th September

The Killing Fields (1984) – Film4, 9:00 p.m.
A harrowing account of Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge. Based on true events, it follows a journalist and his interpreter caught in the upheaval.

The film spares nothing. Atrocities are shown, but the focus is on survival and friendship. Haing S. Ngor, himself a survivor, gives a performance of heartbreaking authenticity.

It is not easy viewing, but it is essential. It brings history close, personal, and unforgettable.

C’mon C’mon (2021) – Film4, 11:50 p.m.
Joaquin Phoenix plays a radio journalist who bonds with his young nephew. Shot in black and white, it is tender and reflective.

The film explores family, responsibility, and the ways children see the world. The dialogue feels natural, unscripted even.

It is quiet cinema, but deeply moving. Small moments linger longer than big gestures.

Clemency (2019) – BBC Two, 12:00 a.m.
A prison warden confronts the moral toll of overseeing executions. Alfre Woodard delivers a restrained but powerful performance.

The film is slow, deliberate, heavy with silence. It forces the audience to sit with discomfort.

Capital punishment is the subject, but humanity is the core. A film that leaves questions hanging in the air.

Stonehouse (Part One) – ITV1, 10:45 p.m.
The true story of Labour MP John Stonehouse, who faked his own death in the 1970s. Fact more bizarre than fiction.

It captures the absurdity of politics, ego, and desperation. Matthew Macfadyen plays Stonehouse with a mix of charm and folly.

The story grips because it really happened. The collapse of a man and a career is laid bare.

Thailand: The Dark Side of Paradise (Part Two) – BBC Three, 10:00 p.m.
The second episode goes deeper into hidden problems. Issues of drugs and organised crime dominate.

Locals speak about the realities often unseen by visitors. There is anger, fear, and resignation in their stories.

The glossy image fades even further. The show is determined to tell what the brochures never will.


Wednesday 10th September

Memento (2000) – Film4, 11:15 p.m.
Christopher Nolan’s breakthrough film. Told in reverse, it follows a man with short-term memory loss trying to solve his wife’s murder.

The structure is daring. Each scene pulls you further into confusion, mirroring the character’s fractured perception. Guy Pearce delivers a performance that keeps you hooked.

It is puzzle cinema that rewards attention. Dark, clever, and influential.

Stonehouse (Part Two) – ITV1, 11:20 p.m.
The saga continues as Stonehouse’s faked death unravels. The spectacle of his downfall is both comic and tragic.

Politics, betrayal, and hubris remain centre stage. The absurdity of the whole affair becomes clear.

A reminder that truth is often stranger than fiction.

Thailand: The Dark Side of Paradise (Part Three) – BBC Three, 10:00 p.m.
The third part keeps up the momentum. It shows how power structures protect corruption.

Victims tell stories that expose systemic failures. The glossy tourist paradise seems more like a façade.

The series refuses to let viewers look away. The message is clear: paradise has a cost.

Fame and Fentanyl – Crime and Investigation, 10:00 p.m.
Fame and Fentanyl is not an easy watch, nor should it be. This hard-hitting documentary peels back the glittering veneer of celebrity to expose the brutal undercurrent of addiction—specifically, the opioid epidemic that has claimed lives across every social stratum, including those who seemed untouchable.

The programme traces the stories of high-profile figures whose public personas masked private battles. These are not cautionary tales in the traditional sense. They are human stories—complex, painful, and often unresolved. The juxtaposition is stark: red carpets and rehab clinics, fan adoration and fatal overdoses. The glamour of fame is shown not as a shield, but as a pressure cooker. Visibility becomes vulnerability.

What makes the documentary resonate is its refusal to sensationalise. It doesn’t linger on tabloid drama or exploit grief. Instead, it offers context: the pharmaceutical roots of the crisis, the systemic failures in treatment and accountability, and the cultural machinery that rewards performance while punishing weakness. Interviews with family members, medical experts, and addiction specialists lend weight and nuance. The tone is sober, the message urgent.

Visually, the programme balances archival footage with present-day testimony. We see stars in their prime—radiant, adored—and then hear the voices of those left behind. It’s a contrast that lands with force. The editing is restrained, allowing silence to speak when words falter.

But Fame and Fentanyl is not just about celebrity. It’s about society. It asks uncomfortable questions: Why do we romanticise self-destruction in artists? Why is access to help so uneven? And how did a drug designed for pain relief become a silent epidemic?

For viewers who care about public health, media ethics, or the human cost of entertainment, this is essential viewing. It doesn’t offer easy answers. It offers clarity—and a challenge to look beyond the headlines.

Fame and Fentanyl is a reminder that addiction is not a moral failing, but a public crisis. And that behind every overdose statistic is a story worth telling.


Thursday 11th September

Patton (1970) – Film4, 1:05 p.m.
George C. Scott’s towering performance as the American general dominates the film. From the famous opening speech before the American flag to battlefield strategy, Patton is presented as both genius and liability. It is a study in contradictions.

The film balances spectacle with character. Patton is brilliant and brutal, visionary and reckless. Scott plays him with such conviction that it is impossible to look away. The battles are staged on an epic scale, but it is the man’s psychology that fascinates.

Still debated by historians and audiences alike, Patton remains one of the great military biopics. It asks us to admire and to question, often at the same time.

Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) – BBC Four, 8:00 p.m.
Some musicals dazzle for a season. Gentlemen Prefer Blondes has shimmered for decades. Beneath its Technicolor sparkle lies a film that understands performance—not just in the theatrical sense, but as a mode of survival, seduction, and solidarity. Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell don’t just star in this 1953 classic; they anchor it with charisma, chemistry, and a knowing wink that still ripples through pop culture.

Monroe’s Lorelei Lee is often remembered for one number—“Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend”—and rightly so. Draped in pink satin, flanked by tuxedoed dancers, she delivers the song with a blend of innocence and calculation that became her signature. But to reduce her to the image is to miss the intelligence behind it. Monroe plays Lorelei not as a gold-digger, but as a woman who understands the currency of beauty in a world that trades on appearances. Her performance is layered: flirtatious, strategic, and quietly subversive.

Jane Russell’s Dorothy Shaw is the perfect foil—earthy, sardonic, and refreshingly direct. Where Lorelei seeks financial security, Dorothy seeks emotional honesty. Russell brings dry humour and a grounded presence that balances Monroe’s sparkle. She’s never overshadowed, never reduced to sidekick. Together, they form a duo that defies the usual tropes of female rivalry. Their friendship is the film’s true love story—loyal, playful, and built on mutual respect.

Director Howard Hawks keeps the tone buoyant, but never careless. The film is light entertainment, yes, but it’s also sharp in its satire. It pokes fun at male vanity, social climbing, and the absurdity of wealth as virtue. The musical numbers are lavish, the dialogue snappy, and the pacing brisk. Yet beneath the surface lies a commentary on gender roles and the performance of femininity. These women know the game—and they play it better than the men.

What makes Gentlemen Prefer Blondes endure isn’t just its glamour, but its camp sensibility. It’s a film that revels in excess while winking at its own artifice. That energy continues to influence fashion, music videos, and drag performance. From Madonna to Beyoncé, echoes of Monroe’s pink satin moment abound. But it’s the film’s spirit—bold, unapologetic, and joyfully self-aware—that keeps it relevant.

In an era of disposable entertainment, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes reminds us that style, when paired with substance, can be timeless. It’s a celebration of friendship, agency, and the art of knowing exactly who you are—and how to shine.

I Fought the Law: The An Ming Story – ITV1, 9:00 p.m.
This documentary revisits one of the most consequential legal battles in modern British history—not through dramatisation, but through testimony, reflection, and quiet resolve. I Fought the Law: The Ann Ming Story tells the true account of a mother who refused to accept the limits of the law when it failed her daughter. It’s a story of grief turned into action, and of one woman’s campaign to change the legal system from the inside out.

Sheridan Smith, who portrayed Ming in ITV’s earlier drama series, returns here not in character but as narrator—bridging performance and reality with a voice that’s measured, empathetic, and deeply respectful. Her presence lends continuity, but it’s Ming’s own words and archival footage that give the programme its emotional weight.

Julie Hogg was murdered in 1989. The man suspected was tried twice and acquitted. Years later, he confessed. But under the double jeopardy rule, he could not be retried. What follows is not just a legal battle—it’s a moral reckoning. Ming’s campaign to overturn the rule spanned years, challenged centuries of precedent, and ultimately led to reform under the 2003 Criminal Justice Act.

The documentary doesn’t flinch from showing the toll. We see the bureaucracy, the stonewalling, the emotional cost of persistence. But we also see the clarity of purpose. Ming is not cast as a crusader, but as a mother who refused to be silenced. Her fight is framed not as exceptional, but as necessary—a reminder that justice is not automatic, and that the law, while powerful, is not infallible.

Visually, the programme is restrained. Interviews are intimate, the pacing deliberate. There’s no sensationalism, no courtroom theatrics—just the slow, determined work of reform. It’s a portrait of activism rooted in personal loss, and of a system forced to confront its own limitations.

For viewers invested in legal accountability, civil rights, or simply the power of individual action, this is essential viewing. It’s engaging, troubling, and timely—not just because of its historical significance, but because it reminds us that justice must be fought for, not assumed.

It forces viewers to question who the system serves. Engaging, troubling, and timely.

The M Factor – PBS America, 8:35 p.m.
The M Factor: Shredding the Silence on Menopause is not just a documentary—it’s a long-overdue intervention. In a media landscape that routinely sidelines women’s health, this programme steps forward with clarity, compassion, and a quiet fury. It confronts the cultural neglect surrounding menopause and demands that we listen.

Produced by Women in the Room and Take Flight Productions, the film blends personal testimony with expert insight. Doctors, workplace advocates, and women from all walks of life speak candidly about the physical, emotional, and professional toll of a life stage that affects over a billion women globally. The result is a portrait of pain too often dismissed, and resilience too rarely acknowledged.

What makes The M Factor compelling is its refusal to reduce menopause to symptoms or stereotypes. Instead, it explores the ripple effects—lost wages, stalled careers, strained relationships, and the psychological weight of being told to “just get on with it.” The documentary doesn’t wallow, but it doesn’t flinch either. It’s direct, dignified, and deeply human.

Visually, the film is clean and intimate. There’s no melodrama, no medical jargon overload. Just stories—clear, credible, and often quietly devastating. The narration is measured, the pacing deliberate. It gives space for reflection, and for anger.

For viewers invested in gender equity, workplace reform, or simply the right to be heard, this is essential viewing. It’s not just about menopause—it’s about visibility, dignity, and the cost of silence. The M Factor reminds us that health is political, and that ignoring women’s experiences isn’t just negligent—it’s systemic.


Friday 12th September

My Grandparents’ War: Kristin Scott Thomas – PBS America, 6:30 p.m.
The actress traces her family’s history through World War Two. Personal stories are placed against the wider conflict.

It blends intimate detail with global history. The result is moving and informative.

A reminder that behind every war statistic lies a family story.

Vienna Philharmonic at the Proms – BBC Four, 8:00 p.m.
An evening of Mozart and Tchaikovsky performed by one of the world’s greatest orchestras. Music at its finest.

The Proms offer accessibility while retaining grandeur. This concert shows the tradition at its best.

It is a chance to immerse yourself in beauty. No distractions, just music.

Training Day (2001) – BBC One, 10:40 p.m.
Denzel Washington and Ethan Hawke in a gritty tale of corruption. Washington won an Oscar for his role as a rogue cop.

The film crackles with tension. Power, fear, and morality are all tested. The city becomes a character itself.

It is brutal, compelling, and unforgettable.

Out of the Furnace (2013) – Legend, 11:00 p.m.
Out of the Furnace is not a film that shouts. It broods. It simmers. And when it finally erupts, the violence is sudden, brutal, and deeply personal. Directed by Scott Cooper, this slow-burning drama places Christian Bale in the role of Russell Baze, a steel mill worker navigating grief, guilt, and the moral wreckage of a forgotten town. It’s a story of justice, yes—but also of place, of family, and of the quiet corrosion that sets in when systems fail and hope thins.

Set in the rusted heartlands of Pennsylvania, the film is steeped in atmosphere. The landscape is bleak—factories shuttered, bars dimly lit, woods thick with menace. It’s not just backdrop; it’s character. The setting speaks to economic abandonment, to the kind of communities where violence festers not out of thrill, but out of necessity. The American Dream here is not deferred—it’s dismantled.

Bale delivers a performance of quiet intensity. His Russell is a man of few words, shaped by hard labour and harder losses. When his brother Rodney (Casey Affleck), a volatile Iraq war veteran, disappears after crossing paths with a local crime ring, Russell’s search for answers becomes a descent into moral ambiguity. Revenge is never glamorised. It’s portrayed as a grim inheritance—passed down through trauma, poverty, and the absence of justice.

The supporting cast adds texture. Woody Harrelson is terrifying as Harlan DeGroat, a backwoods sociopath who rules through fear. Zoe Saldana, Forest Whitaker, and Willem Dafoe bring nuance to roles that could have been mere archetypes. But it’s the silence between characters—the pauses, the glances, the weight of what’s left unsaid—that gives the film its emotional heft.

Out of the Furnace is as much about atmosphere as it is about plot. It’s a meditation on masculinity, on the limits of endurance, and on the cost of doing what’s “right” when the law offers no comfort. The pacing is deliberate, the tone unrelenting. It asks viewers to sit with discomfort, to witness pain without spectacle.

For those drawn to character-driven drama with a conscience, this is essential viewing. It doesn’t offer catharsis. It offers clarity—about the lives lived in the margins, and the choices made when justice is no longer a given.

Chopper (2000) – Channel 4, 12:35 a.m.
Eric Bana plays notorious Australian criminal Mark “Chopper” Read. It is violent, strange, and blackly comic.

Bana transforms himself, both physically and emotionally. The result is unsettling and fascinating.

A cult film that still shocks.

Flag Day (2021) – Film4, 1:25 a.m.
Flag Day is a film about stories—those we tell, those we inherit, and those we try to outrun. Directed by Sean Penn and starring his daughter Dylan Penn, it’s a personal project in every sense. The film adapts Jennifer Vogel’s memoir Flim-Flam Man, tracing the life of a daughter forced to reconcile love with betrayal, truth with myth, and the enduring ache of a parent who cannot be trusted.

At its core is John Vogel (Sean Penn), a charismatic conman whose schemes range from petty fraud to counterfeiting. He’s a man who believes in the power of performance—whether selling dreams or dodging consequences. Dylan Penn plays Jennifer with quiet strength, capturing the emotional whiplash of a child who sees the cracks but still wants to believe. Her performance is restrained, never overwrought, and all the more affecting for it.

The film moves between timelines, showing Jennifer’s coming-of-age against the backdrop of her father’s unraveling. There are moments of tenderness—campfires, confessions, shared laughter—but they’re undercut by deception. The emotional terrain is uneven, and so is the film’s structure. At times, it leans too heavily on montage and voiceover. At others, it lingers beautifully on silence and space. It’s a film that feels like memory: fragmented, flawed, and deeply felt.

Visually, Flag Day is rich in Americana—sun-drenched highways, diners, and motels that evoke both freedom and rootlessness. The cinematography, by Danny Moder, captures the melancholy of landscapes that promise escape but rarely deliver. The score, featuring original songs by Eddie Vedder and Glen Hansard, adds texture without overpowering the narrative.

What makes the film resonate is its emotional honesty. It doesn’t excuse John Vogel’s actions, nor does it vilify him. Instead, it presents a portrait of a man who lived by illusion and a daughter who had to learn to live without it. The dynamic between Penn and his daughter adds a layer of authenticity that’s hard to fake. Their scenes together crackle with tension, affection, and unresolved grief.


Streaming Choices

From Saturday 6th September, Homeland (all eight seasons) becomes available on Channel 4 streaming. When Homeland first aired in 2011, it arrived with the urgency of a post-9/11 world still grappling with the moral cost of its own security apparatus. Over eight seasons, the series evolved from a taut psychological thriller into a sprawling geopolitical drama—one that never lost sight of its central question: what does it mean to serve your country when the country itself is divided?

At its heart is Carrie Mathison, played with raw intensity by Claire Danes. A CIA operative with bipolar disorder, Carrie is brilliant, volatile, and often deeply compromised. Her pursuit of truth is relentless, but never clean. She operates in a world where loyalty is fluid, facts are weaponised, and the line between patriot and traitor is constantly redrawn. Danes’ performance anchors the series—emotional, erratic, and utterly compelling.

The show’s early seasons revolve around Nicholas Brody (Damian Lewis), a U.S. Marine returned from captivity under suspicious circumstances. Is he a hero, a victim, or a sleeper agent? The ambiguity is sustained with masterful tension, and the series uses this uncertainty to explore themes of trauma, surveillance, and the seductive power of ideology.

But Homeland doesn’t rest on its initial premise. As the seasons progress, the scope widens—moving from domestic counterterrorism to global diplomacy, cyber warfare, and the shifting sands of Middle Eastern politics. The writing remains sharp, the stakes high, and the moral terrain increasingly murky. There are no easy heroes here. Just people making impossible choices in impossible circumstances.

What makes the series endure is its refusal to simplify. It’s not just about action—though there’s plenty of that—it’s about consequence. Every drone strike, every intelligence leak, every betrayal carries weight. The show asks viewers to sit with discomfort, to question the narratives we’re fed, and to consider the cost of safety when it comes at the expense of truth.

Visually, Homeland is sleek but never flashy. The tension is built through dialogue, silence, and the slow erosion of trust. The score is minimal, the pacing deliberate. It’s a show that rewards attention and punishes complacency.

Now available in full on Channel 4 streaming, Homeland offers a chance to revisit—or discover—a series that helped redefine the spy genre for a new era. It’s gripping, yes. But it’s also thoughtful, troubling, and timely. In a world still negotiating the balance between liberty and security, Homeland remains essential viewing.

On Sunday 7th September, Poor Things arrives on Prime Video. Yorgos Lanthimos’ surreal tale with Emma Stone won acclaim for its boldness. It is strange, funny, and visually stunning.

On Wednesday 10th September, Netflix drops The Dead Girls and a.k.a. Charlie Sheen. This Wednesday, Netflix offers a double release that invites viewers to confront two very different kinds of darkness. The Dead Girls and a.k.a. Charlie Sheen arrive with distinct tones—one a fictionalised descent into criminal horror, the other a documentary portrait of fame in freefall. Yet both ask uncomfortable questions about power, complicity, and the spectacle of downfall.

The Dead Girls Inspired by the real-life case of the González Valenzuela sisters—infamously known as “Las Poquianchis”—this Mexican crime series is a chilling blend of drama and social critique. Set in the 1960s, it follows the Baladro sisters as they rise from petty operators to brothel owners and, eventually, murderers. The show doesn’t just depict crime—it interrogates the conditions that allow it to flourish: poverty, corruption, and gendered violence.

The tone is grim but compelling. Performances are sharp, and the production design evokes a world where morality is negotiable and justice is elusive. It’s not just a period piece—it’s a study in systemic rot. The series refuses to sanitise, and in doing so, it demands that viewers reckon with the real cost of silence and complicity.

a.k.a. Charlie Sheen If The Dead Girls is about power abused in the shadows, a.k.a. Charlie Sheen is about fame unravelled in full view. This two-part documentary traces Sheen’s rise, implosion, and slow reckoning with the chaos he once courted. Narrated by Sheen himself, it’s candid, chaotic, and surprisingly introspective.

The film doesn’t seek redemption—it seeks understanding. Through interviews with ex-wives, co-stars, and even his former drug dealer, it paints a portrait of a man who became a brand, then a cautionary tale. The documentary doesn’t excuse Sheen’s behaviour, but it does contextualise it—within the machinery of celebrity, the appetite for scandal, and the blurred line between persona and person.

Together, these releases offer a study in extremes: criminal enterprise and celebrity excess, hidden violence and public collapse. But they also share a deeper theme—how systems, whether legal or cultural, shape the stories we tell and the ones we ignore.

For viewers drawn to narratives that unsettle and illuminate, this is a release day worth marking. These aren’t just stories—they’re provocations.

On Friday 12th September, Maledictions lands in full, all six episodes. Expect gothic atmosphere, family secrets, and supernatural overtones. Perfect for a weekend binge.

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Culture Vulture 30 August – 5 September 2025

A vulture soaring through a clear blue sky with mountains in the background, accompanied by bold text that reads 'CULTURE VULTURE' and a graphic banner featuring colorful elements.

This week takes us from classic westerns and psychological horror to modern political thrillers and intimate musical portraits. We see how cinema and television reflect society’s fears and dreams, whether in dusty frontier towns, Cold War Berlin, or the polluted rivers of corporate America. Music and art documentaries bring added richness, reminding us of creativity’s power to challenge and inspire. Selections and commentary are by Pat Harrington.


Saturday, 30th August

Bee Movie (2007)

ITV2, 3.20 p.m.

On the surface this is a bright, colourful family animation about a bee with big ideas. Barry B. Benson dares to leave the hive and discovers the human world. The humour is light, the characters silly, and it plays well with children. But there’s another layer that makes it interesting for older viewers.

Barry decides to sue humanity for stealing honey. That premise is both absurd and biting. It becomes a satire on exploitation and the way humans treat the natural world as theirs to plunder. It is rare for a mainstream animation to tackle such themes head on.

You can take it at face value, enjoy the fun, or think more deeply about what is being said. Either way, it’s an unusual and entertaining watch. A children’s comedy with an eco-political sting in its tail.

Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957)

5 Action, 6.25 p.m.

This is a western steeped in American myth. The title promises action, and the film builds inexorably to the famous showdown in Tombstone. Burt Lancaster as Wyatt Earp and Kirk Douglas as Doc Holliday make a striking pair. The lawman and the outlaw forge an unlikely bond.

What drives the film is not only the gunfight but the contrast between the two leads. Lancaster plays it straight, a man of order and justice. Douglas is reckless, living on borrowed time. Their friendship feels fragile yet compelling.

As with many Hollywood westerns, historical accuracy is less important than creating a legend. What remains is an exciting story that shaped popular images of the Old West.

Night of the Demon (1957)

Talking Pictures TV, 9.00 p.m.

There’s something quietly terrifying about Night of the Demon. It’s not the monster itself—though its appearance still sparks debate—but the way the film builds dread through suggestion. A rational academic, confident in science and logic, finds himself pulled into a world of curses, cults, and creeping shadows. The deeper he digs, the less certain everything becomes.

Jacques Tourneur directs with remarkable restraint. He doesn’t rely on jump scares or gore. Instead, he lets the mood do the work—dark woods, flickering candles, whispers in the wind. You’re never quite sure what’s real, and that uncertainty is what lingers. It’s a film about belief and fear, and how easily the line between them blurs.

For me, it’s the atmosphere that makes it unforgettable. That slow, creeping sense that something is watching, just out of frame. It’s one of the most quietly unsettling horror films of its time—and still holds its power today.

The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada (2005)

Great Movies Action, 9.00 p.m.

Tommy Lee Jones’s directorial debut is a western, yes—but not the kind with saloon brawls and shootouts. It’s slow-burning, mournful, and deeply human. The story follows a rancher who sets out to honour a promise: to bury his friend Melquiades Estrada in his hometown, after he’s killed in the borderlands between Texas and Mexico. What begins as a quest for justice becomes something more intimate—a journey through grief, guilt, and the fragile bonds between men.

Jones directs with a steady hand and a poet’s eye. He lingers on the heat and dust, the cracked earth and strained silences of people living in harsh terrain. The tone is elegiac, mixing gritty realism with flashes of surreal beauty. Time slips and loops. Landscapes stretch endlessly. And through it all, the question remains: what do we owe the dead?

This isn’t a film about vengeance. It’s about responsibility. About the weight of promises made and the cost of keeping them. It’s a meditation on friendship, honour, and the quiet dignity of doing what’s right—even when no one’s watching.

Legend (2015)

BBC One, 11.55 p.m.

I’m drawn to Legend because it’s not just a gangster film—it’s a study in duality, power, and the strange magnetism of violence. Tom Hardy’s double performance as Ronnie and Reggie Kray is extraordinary. He gives each brother a distinct presence—Ronnie is wild and unpredictable, Reggie is smooth and calculating—but they feel inseparable, like two halves of the same storm. Watching Hardy shift between them is part of the thrill.

The film captures 1960s London with real style—sharp suits, smoky clubs, and the seductive pull of fame. But it never loses sight of the brutality beneath. Director Brian Helgeland doesn’t glorify the Krays, but he doesn’t flinch from their charisma either. It’s a film fascinated by power—how it’s built, how it’s abused, and how it poisons even the closest bonds.

What stays with me is the tension between loyalty and ambition. The Krays are bound by blood, but ego and violence drive them apart. Hardy’s performance keeps you watching, even when the story turns dark. It’s about corruption, control, and the myths we build around dangerous men—and it never lets go.


Sunday, 31st August

Stagecoach (1939)

5 Action, 2.35 p.m.

Stagecoach is one of those films that changed everything. It’s not just a western—it’s a turning point, where the genre stepped into serious cinema. I love how it throws together a group of strangers, each carrying their own baggage, and sets them on a dangerous journey. The stagecoach becomes a kind of pressure cooker, revealing tensions around class, morality, and prejudice. It’s a moving society on wheels.

John Wayne’s Ringo Kid is central to that shift. He’s both outlaw and hero, and that ambiguity gives the film its edge. You’re not just watching a shootout—you’re watching a man try to find his place in a world that’s already judged him.

What makes Stagecoach timeless is its balance. The action is gripping, but it’s the characters and the landscape that stay with me. Ford’s direction gives space for silence, for glances, for the weight of the journey. It’s a film that entertains, but also asks questions. And it set the pattern for so many westerns that followed.

Misery (1990)

BBC Two, 10.00 p.m.

Misery grips you from the start. It’s not just the violence—it’s the slow, suffocating tension between two people trapped in a room, each trying to control the story. James Caan plays the writer, broken and desperate. Kathy Bates is unforgettable as Annie Wilkes, his “number one fan.” She’s tender one moment, terrifying the next. That unpredictability makes her one of the most chilling characters I’ve seen.

The film is stripped down—no big set pieces, no distractions. Just glances, silences, and the creeping dread of psychological control. It’s claustrophobic in the best way. You feel the walls closing in, not just physically but emotionally.

What stays with me is the question it asks: what happens when admiration turns obsessive? Where’s the line between devotion and madness? Misery doesn’t just explore fear—it explores power, authorship, and the strange intimacy between creator and audience. And it never lets you look away.

War for the Planet of the Apes (2017)

ITV1, 10.15 p.m.

This entry closes the modern trilogy with a sombre, thoughtful tone. Caesar, the ape leader, is tested by war, loss, and betrayal. The story draws heavily on biblical themes of sacrifice and leadership.

The special effects are stunning but never overwhelm. The performance-capture work gives the apes depth and humanity. Andy Serkis as Caesar anchors the film with dignity and emotion.War for the Planet of the Apes is its quiet power. It’s not just a sci-fi spectacle—it’s a sombre, reflective story about leadership, sacrifice, and survival. Caesar, played with extraordinary nuance by Andy Serkis, isn’t just a hero—he’s a figure of moral weight, tested by war, betrayal, and grief. His journey feels biblical, almost mythic, but grounded in raw emotion.

The effects are stunning, but they never distract. The apes feel real—not just visually, but emotionally. You see pain, doubt, resolve. That performance-capture work gives the film its soul.

What stays with me is the film’s heart. It’s about resistance, yes—but also about coexistence, identity, and the cost of holding onto hope. Even in its quietest moments, it asks big questions. And it reminds me that science fiction, at its best, doesn’t just imagine other worlds—it helps us understand our own.

Starship Troopers (1997)

ITV4, 11.30 p.m.

Starship Troopers is one of those films that’s easy to misread—and that’s part of the brilliance. On the surface, it’s all explosions and giant bugs, with square-jawed heroes charging into battle. But beneath the gloss, Paul Verhoeven is pulling the strings, turning the whole thing into a razor-sharp satire of fascism, propaganda, and blind obedience.

I love how the film mimics the style of wartime recruitment ads—heroic speeches, glamorous uniforms, and a relentless push toward violence. It’s so over-the-top that you start to question what you’re being asked to cheer for. Some critics missed the joke, but for me, that’s the point. It’s a film that weaponises spectacle to make you think.

What stays with me is the discomfort. You’re laughing, but uneasily. You’re thrilled, but also complicit. Starship Troopers reminds me that satire doesn’t always come with a wink—it can arrive dressed as the very thing it’s mocking. And that’s what makes it so subversive.


Monday, 1st September

The Life and Death of Peter Sellers (2004)

BBC Two, 11.00 p.m.

Geoffrey Rush inhabits the comic genius with uncanny accuracy. The film traces Sellers’ rise, his brilliance, and his troubled personal life. It shows a man of masks, dazzling on screen but unsure of himself away from it.

What stands out is the use of fantasy and pastiche to explore his psyche. Scenes shift suddenly, blurring reality and imagination. It feels fitting for a performer who lived through characters.

It’s both homage and critique. Sellers was funny, original, but also difficult and self-destructive. This film captures that complexity.


Tuesday, 2nd September

Planet of the Apes (1968)

BBC Two, 11.55 p.m.

This science fiction landmark is famous for its twist ending, but there is far more to admire. Charlton Heston plays the astronaut who finds himself in a world where apes rule and humans are slaves.

The film critiques racism, war, and human arrogance through allegory. The society of apes mirrors our own divisions and hypocrisies. The satire is sharp, making the film more than just adventure.

Its closing revelation remains powerful, a bleak warning about humanity’s capacity for destruction. A true classic.

Corsage (2022)

Film4, 1.30 a.m.

Corsage stays with you because it refuses to flatter history. It’s not a reverent portrait of Empress Elisabeth—it’s a bold reimagining, full of wit, melancholy, and quiet rage. Vicky Krieps gives her a pulse, a voice, and a defiant edge. This Sisi isn’t content to be admired—she wants to be understood, even if that means breaking the frame.

What I admire most is how the film questions the roles imposed on women, especially those trapped in gilded cages. Elisabeth is expected to be beautiful, graceful, silent. She resists. She rebels. And she suffers for it. The tension between duty and desire, myth and reality, runs through every scene.

Visually, it’s stunning—rich costumes, stark landscapes, and moments of playful anachronism that jolt you out of period drama expectations. It’s a costume piece with bite, not polish. Corsage doesn’t just revisit history—it interrogates it. And that makes it feel urgent, even now.


Wednesday, 3rd September

Far From the Madding Crowd (1967)

Film4, 3.00 p.m.

Thomas Hardy’s tale of love and independence comes alive through Julie Christie’s Bathsheba Everdene. She is strong, proud, and determined to control her own fate. The story unfolds against sweeping rural landscapes.

The film contrasts three suitors: steady Gabriel Oak, reckless Sergeant Troy, and wealthy Boldwood. Each represents a different path, and Bathsheba’s choices shape her life. The tragedy is both personal and social.

The cinematography is lush, capturing the Dorset countryside with painterly beauty. A fine adaptation of Hardy’s themes of passion, pride, and consequence.

Bridge of Spies (2015)

BBC One, 10.40 p.m.

What I admire about Bridge of Spies is its quiet conviction. It’s not a thriller built on chase scenes or shootouts—it’s about negotiation, principle, and the courage to do what’s right when it’s least convenient. Tom Hanks plays James Donovan with understated strength—a lawyer, not a spy, but someone who refuses to bend under pressure. His decency drives the story.

Mark Rylance is extraordinary as Rudolf Abel. He barely raises his voice, yet every line carries weight. There’s a dignity in his stillness, a kind of grace that makes the stakes feel personal.

The Cold War setting adds tension, but what lingers is the moral clarity. Donovan insists on fairness, even when the world around him is hostile and suspicious. Bridge of Spies reminds me that history isn’t just shaped by grand gestures—it’s shaped by quiet persistence, by people who hold the line when it matters most.


Thursday, 4th September

Some Like It Hot (1959)

BBC Four, 8.00 p.m.

Some Like It Hot still makes me laugh, no matter how many times I’ve seen it. There’s something timeless about the way it balances chaos, charm, and sharp social commentary. Two musicians, on the run from gangsters, disguise themselves as women and join an all-girl band—and from there, everything spirals. Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis are pitch-perfect, bouncing off each other with comic timing that feels effortless. Their chemistry carries the farce, but it’s Marilyn Monroe who lights up the screen. She’s funny, vulnerable, and magnetic.

What I love most is how the film plays with disguise—not just for laughs, but to explore gender roles, attraction, and identity. It’s silly on the surface, but there’s bite underneath. The humour comes from situation, yes—but also from how people perform themselves in public and private.

And that final line? Still one of the greatest in film history. It’s cheeky, subversive, and oddly tender. Some Like It Hot isn’t just a comedy—it’s a masterclass in timing, tone, and the joy of letting things spiral beautifully out of control.

Reality (2023)

Film4, 9.00 p.m.

Based on the real story of whistleblower Reality Winner, this tense drama explores truth and secrecy. Sydney Sweeney gives a compelling performance, capturing both vulnerability and resolve.

The action is confined to an interrogation room, but the script crackles with intensity. The dialogue is drawn from transcripts, making it both authentic and unsettling.

It raises sharp questions about government power, surveillance, and the price of telling the truth.

The Lady in the Van (2015)

BBC One, 11.40 p.m.

There’s something quietly profound about The Lady in the Van. It’s funny, yes—but also deeply moving. Maggie Smith is extraordinary as Miss Shepherd, a woman who parks her van in Alan Bennett’s driveway and stays for years. She’s stubborn, eccentric, and often maddening—but never less than human. Smith gives her dignity without sentimentality, and that’s what makes the performance unforgettable.

What I love is how the film blurs the line between life and art. Bennett appears as both narrator and character, reflecting on his own role—not just as observer, but as participant. It’s a story about generosity, but also about boundaries. About what we owe each other, and what we choose to give.

The humour is gentle, the sadness unspoken. And through it all, there’s a quiet question: how do we write about someone who didn’t ask to be written about? The Lady in the Van doesn’t offer easy answers—but it does offer compassion, curiosity, and one of Maggie Smith’s finest turns.

Citizen Kane (1941)

BBC Four, 11.55 p.m.

Often hailed as the greatest film ever made, Orson Welles’ masterpiece still astonishes. It tells the rise and fall of Charles Foster Kane, newspaper tycoon and enigma.

Citizen Kane still astonishes me. It’s not just the technique—though the camerawork and design are groundbreaking—it’s the way the story unfolds. Orson Welles doesn’t give us answers. He gives us fragments. Each person who knew Charles Foster Kane offers a different version of him, and none quite match. That structure—layered, contradictory, elusive—makes Kane feel real. Not a symbol, but a man we’ll never fully understand.

The famous “Rosebud” is part of that mystery. It’s a riddle, yes, but also a reminder that even the most powerful lives are shaped by private grief. What I find moving is how the film explores memory—not as fact, but as feeling. It’s about power, ambition, and the cost of trying to control your own story.

Welles was only 25 when he made it, and yet it feels like the work of someone who’s seen everything. Citizen Kane isn’t just a masterpiece—it’s a meditation on what we leave behind, and how little of it can ever be truly known.


Friday, 5th September

Classic Thriller Soundtracks at the Proms

BBC Four, 8.00 p.m.

Music and cinema combine in thrilling style. The Proms turn their attention to the soundtracks that keep us on edge.

Hearing these pieces performed live reminds us how much music shapes our emotions. A few notes can summon suspense, fear, or excitement.

It is a celebration of composers who make thrillers unforgettable. A perfect evening for lovers of film and music alike.

The Inspection (2022)

BBC Three, 10.00 p.m.

The Inspection moved me deeply. It’s raw, intimate, and quietly powerful. The story follows a young gay Black man who joins the Marines, not out of patriotism, but out of desperation—for survival, for belonging, for a place in the world that keeps shutting him out. What I admire is how the film doesn’t soften the brutality of that choice. The training is harsh, the environment hostile, but the resilience of its subject shines through.

There are moments of solidarity, flickers of connection, and scenes of quiet self-discovery that give the film its emotional weight. It’s not just about physical endurance—it’s about identity, dignity, and the cost of being true to yourself in a system built to erase you.

What stays with me is the honesty. It’s semi-autobiographical, and you feel that lived experience in every frame. The Inspection doesn’t ask for pity—it demands recognition. It’s a vital film, and one that reminds me how courage often looks like simply showing up, again and again, when everything tells you not to.

Dark Waters (2019)

BBC Two, 11.00 p.m.

Dark Waters is the kind of film that stays with you—not because it’s flashy, but because it’s quietly relentless. Mark Ruffalo plays a lawyer who takes on a chemical giant over toxic pollution, and what I admire is how unglamorous the fight is. It’s slow, exhausting, and deeply personal. He sacrifices comfort, reputation, and time—all for justice. That persistence is the heart of the story.

What makes the film powerful is its restraint. It doesn’t shout—it builds. The case spans decades, and you feel every setback, every compromise, every moment of doubt. Ruffalo plays it dogged, not heroic, and that makes it more real.

It’s a warning, too. About secrecy, corporate power, and the cost of looking the other way. Dark Waters reminds me that change doesn’t come from grand gestures—it comes from people who refuse to give up, even when the odds are stacked against them. It’s sobering, yes—but necessary.


Streaming Choices

Omerta 6/12

Channel 4 Streaming, from Friday 5th September

A taut political thriller from Walter Presents. Terrorism, corruption, and state secrets intertwine in a story both urgent and chilling. It feels current, reflecting real fears about power and violence.

The pacing is sharp, with twists that keep you alert. It has the European edge of realism that Walter Presents is known for.

A strong choice if you want drama with bite.

Winter, Spring, Summer or Fall

Paramount Plus, from Saturday 30th August

A romantic drama framed around the seasons. It explores the cycles of love and the passing of time. The tone is gentle, wistful, and reflective.

Characters grow and change across the seasons, learning from loss and joy. The story is simple but carried by emotional truth.

For those who like character-driven romance, it offers warmth and reflection.

NCIS – Tony and Ziva Return

Paramount Plus, first three episodes from Thursday 4th September

Long-time fans of NCIS will welcome this reunion. Tony and Ziva were central to the show’s success, their chemistry sparking drama and humour.

The new episodes give them fresh challenges, reconnecting with old fans while offering new storylines. It is part nostalgia, part revival.

For crime drama followers, it’s a big event.

Wednesday, Season 2 Part 2

Netflix, from Wednesday 3rd September

The Addams Family’s daughter continues her gothic adventures. The mix of horror, comedy, and teen rebellion has made it a global hit.

This second part deepens the mystery while keeping the dark humour intact. Jenna Ortega’s performance anchors the show with charisma.

It’s spooky, witty, and stylish. A fun return to Nevermore Academy.


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Culture Vulture: 26 July – 1 August 2025

Selections and commentary by Pat Harrington

This week music and memory loom large—from the soaring vocals of Whitney to the ethereal poetry of Fleetwood Mac. Political echoes resound too, whether in the wreckage of the Jesus Army or the fog of ethics and politics in All the President’s Men. And if you need a dose of nostalgia or sharp comedy, 9 to 5 and When Harry Met Sally do the trick. Streaming platforms, meanwhile, open their vaults with a new slate of drama, documentary and espionage to binge at your pace. As ever we bring you the week’s entertainment from an alternative viewpoint.


Saturday, 26th July

Spellbound (1945): BBC Two, 2:25 PM
Hitchcock’s foray into psychoanalysis, Spellbound, is often overshadowed by his more bombastic thrillers, but this is a film of delicate tension and cerebral intrigue. Ingrid Bergman brings both intelligence and intensity to her role as a psychiatrist who believes in the innocence of Gregory Peck’s troubled amnesiac. The film combines romantic longing with a simmering air of dread.

At the time, the idea of exploring the subconscious on screen was daring; Hitchcock’s visual flourishes, including Salvador Dalí’s iconic dream sequence, give the interior world of the mind a palpable texture. But beyond the technique lies a question of trust: can love really see past doubt? The result is a suspenseful and strangely tender tale.

Today, Spellbound remains a bold psychological drama that refuses to simplify its characters. It is less about the ‘whodunnit’ and more about whether redemption is possible through understanding. In an era of suspicion and fear, Hitchcock urged audiences to look within as much as without.

Whitney Houston Night: BBC Two, from 8:00 PM
BBC Two devotes a night to Whitney Houston, and rightly so. Kicking off at 8 PM, the tribute builds towards the feature film Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance with Somebody at 9 PM, a biopic that tries to do justice to her voice, her pain, and her power. What it lacks in structural finesse it makes up for in sincerity, with Naomi Ackie offering a performance that captures the essence of Whitney’s vulnerability and strength.

Following that, Whitney Houston Live in South Africa 1994 at 11:15 PM is the real gem. Here, we see not the myth, but the woman—her voice alive with gospel influence, her performance full of grace and command. This was not just a concert but a cultural event: post-apartheid South Africa welcoming a Black American icon.

In curating a full evening around Whitney, BBC Two reminds us that her legacy isn’t only her music but the complex life behind it. There’s no glossing over the tragedy, but the tribute doesn’t dwell in it either. It lets Whitney sing, and in doing so, lets her speak for herself.

The 1001 Musical Lives of Fleetwood Mac: Sky Arts, 9:00 PM
Fleetwood Mac are often remembered for their drama as much as their harmony. This Sky Arts documentary gets under the skin of the band’s mythology, moving beyond the tabloid fare to reveal their musical evolution from British blues to Californian soft-rock juggernauts. It’s a tale of reinvention, resistance, and reintegration.

What’s compelling here is the attention to craft. We hear how Mick Fleetwood and John McVie held the rhythm together while the front end of the band constantly shifted. Stevie Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham, Christine McVie—each gets space to shine, their songwriting dissected with due respect. For once, the soap opera doesn’t overshadow the soundtrack.

As a primer or refresher, this is rich and rewarding. It frames Fleetwood Mac not just as a successful band but as a cultural barometer, reflecting the highs and lows of the post-60s era. By the time the credits roll, you might feel the need to reach for Rumours and start again.

I Am Raquel Welch: Sky Documentaries, 9:00 PM
This revealing documentary digs beneath Raquel Welch’s bombshell image to uncover the woman behind the legend. Too often remembered for her fur bikini in One Million Years B.C., Welch’s story is richer, more complicated. The film traces a career marked by bold reinvention and a refusal to be typecast, highlighting dramatic roles that show her range as an actor—not just a sex symbol.

What stands out most are the contradictions. Welch broke rules in an industry that wanted her silent and compliant, yet she did so with poise and calculation. Her clashes with studios weren’t tantrums—they were negotiations for respect. And the fallout she endured says more about Hollywood’s treatment of women than it does about her.

I Am Raquel Welch isn’t just a biography—it’s a quietly moving reflection on how fame shapes and distorts female artists. It reminds us that Welch was more than a face or a figure. She was a fighter, a craftswoman, and a survivor of a system that rarely made space for either.

Fleetwood Mac Live in Boston: Sky Arts, 10:15 PM

Fleetwood Mac’s Live in Boston, airing tonight on Sky Arts at 10:15 PM, captures more than a band—it traces a lineage of heartbreak, reinvention, and sheer musical durability. There’s something almost mythic in the way they return to the stage: harmonies reawakened, instrumentation sharp, and a palpable sense of emotional reckoning. Stevie Nicks’ vocals in particular hover between invocation and lived memory, each phrase steeped in loss and legacy.

Though this concert marks a late chapter—Fleetwood Mac have announced a farewell tour for 2026—their sound remains resilient, a kind of haunted joy threaded through every note. Christine McVie’s absence lingers, yes, but what remains is no less vital: a group refusing nostalgia’s soft lens in favour of something more raw, more real.

If that emotional clarity resonates, The Fleetwood Mac Story by Night Owl Shows offers a kindred experience at this year’s Edinburgh Fringe. Running 1–23 August at theSpaceUK, it’s part of their award-winning tribute series, weaving the band’s journey—from blues beginnings to Rumours-era drama—into live performance and storytelling. If you are up at the Fringe go see it. You can buy tickets directly here .

Captain Phillips (2013): BBC One, 10:35 PM
Paul Greengrass brings his signature verité style to this high-seas thriller, anchoring the story in tense realism and human drama. Tom Hanks plays the titular captain with weary authority, capturing a man caught in events larger than himself. The hijacking by Somali pirates is nerve-racking, but it never tips into cartoon villainy.

Much credit is due to Barkhad Abdi, whose portrayal of pirate leader Muse is complex and haunting. Rather than a one-dimensional antagonist, Muse is a product of desperation and geopolitical neglect. The film subtly asks: who are the real pirates in a world of global inequality?

At the end, the emotional toll on Phillips is rendered with such rawness that it lingers long after the credits. This is more than a suspense film; it’s a meditation on power, fear, and survival. Hanks’s breakdown in the final scene may be one of the finest pieces of acting in his career.

Whitney Houston Live in South Africa 1994: BBC Two, 11:15 PM
This powerful concert film captures Whitney at her artistic and cultural peak. Taking the stage in newly liberated South Africa, her voice resonates with spiritual clarity, framed by the context of a country beginning to breathe in a new era. Whitney’s presence is magnetic, but it’s the political backdrop that lends the performance its lasting significance.

This was more than entertainment—it was a symbolic embrace between African American artistry and African liberation. Her renditions of “I Will Always Love You” and “Greatest Love of All” are not just hits but expressions of healing and hope, delivered with astonishing poise and sincerity.

It’s a testament to Whitney’s power that, even decades on, this concert retains emotional weight. Her voice, her timing, and her grace combine into something close to transcendence. A must-watch for those who want to understand not just her voice but her impact.

The Eagles: Desperado: Sky Arts, 12:35 AM
This late-night documentary eschews the glitz of rock stardom in favour of something more grounded: storytelling. Anchored around Desperado—arguably The Eagles’ most cinematic album—it casts the band not as superstars but as chroniclers of an American myth. Outlaws and dreamers drift through harmony-rich ballads, their stories etched in steel guitar and heartbreak.

The film leans into the archival: backstage snapshots, poignant anecdotes, and grainy concert footage that catch the band at their most introspective. Interviews with surviving members reveal not just artistic ambition but quiet regret—a group haunted by its own precision.

If anything, it’s a portrait of obsessive craftsmen chasing beauty, even when it cost them connection. The camaraderie faltered, but the melodies endured. A contemplative watch, this is The Eagles as builders of a bittersweet legacy.

And if that melancholy strikes a chord, The Rise of The Eagles by Night Owl Shows offers a live counterpart at this year’s Edinburgh Fringe. Part of their award-winning series, the show runs 1–23 August at theSpaceUK and weaves the band’s journey into song and storytelling. Tickets available here

Pan’s Labyrinth (2006): BBC Two, 1:10 AM
Guillermo del Toro’s dark fairy tale remains one of cinema’s most haunting allegories. Set against the brutal backdrop of Francoist Spain, the story follows young Ofelia as she discovers a mystical underworld that mirrors and distorts her grim reality. It’s a world of fauns, monsters, and labyrinths—but also of moral complexity.

Blending fantasy with political horror, del Toro asks what it means to resist and survive. The villainous Captain Vidal is more terrifying than any mythical creature, while Ofelia’s quiet rebellion is a testament to hope amid totalitarianism. The film’s visuals are breathtaking, but it’s the emotional undercurrent that stays with you.

Few films manage to feel both intimate and epic. Pan’s Labyrinth does, and it achieves this by trusting its audience to sit with ambiguity and sorrow. A cinematic triumph.

Sunday, 27th July

The Great American Songbook with Samara Joy: BBC Four, 8:00 PM
Samara Joy doesn’t just sing the classics—she inhabits them. With a voice that already carries the weight of a legacy, she breathes new life into the Great American Songbook, blending technical finesse with genuine emotional depth. Her phrasing feels instinctive and timeless, echoing the greats without ever sounding like an imitation.

But this isn’t an exercise in nostalgia. Joy’s take is refreshingly contemporary—never forced, never flashy. The arrangements dance between eras, giving old standards new shimmer while honouring their heart.

The performance itself is quietly electrifying. In a musical landscape full of filters and studio gloss, Joy reminds us that honesty, craft, and a remarkable voice can still cut through the noise. This is jazz with a pulse—and a soul.

Inside the Cult of the Jesus Army: BBC Two, 9:00 PM
This harrowing documentary investigates the rise and fall of the Jesus Army, a cult that grew out of 1960s evangelicalism and turned into something far darker. Combining survivor testimony with archival material, the programme reveals an organisation that blurred the line between faith and authoritarian control.

The stories are difficult but necessary—abuse, isolation, and manipulation, all cloaked in religious language. The filmmakers let victims speak without sensationalism, giving them space to unpack the psychological toll.

A sharp indictment of unchecked power in spiritual spaces, this documentary raises urgent questions about accountability. It’s a challenging but vital watch.

Operation Dark Phone: Murder by Text: Channel 4, 9:00 PM
Operation Dark Phone: Murder by Text takes us inside Operation Venetic, the international police task force that breached the EncroChat network in 2020. Over 74 tense days, analysts decrypted messages from some 60,000 anonymous handsets, exposing a shadow world of drug smuggling, kidnapping and murder plotted in real time.

The series shuns over-the-top dramatics, laying out each breakthrough with surgical clarity and always tracing the human grudges and old-fashioned malice behind the encrypted chatter. Alongside the case files, it quietly but powerfully calls out tech platforms for their blind spots and questions law-enforcement’s readiness for digital crime,

Thirteen Lives (2022): BBC Two, 10:00 PM
Ron Howard’s film chronicles the real-life Thai cave rescue of 2018 with tension, care, and humanity. Colin Farrell and Viggo Mortensen lead a cast that emphasises quiet competence over heroics. The result is a procedural with heart—a tribute to collaboration across borders and backgrounds.

What makes this so affecting is its humility. The film doesn’t centre on the white saviour narrative, instead highlighting local efforts, cultural complexity, and the quiet courage of those involved. The cinematography claustrophobically captures the peril inside the cave.

In an age of bombast, Thirteen Lives stands out for its restraint and dignity. It tells us what we already know—that people are capable of astonishing decency—without ever preaching.

Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017): BBC One, 10:30 PM
Tom Holland’s first solo outing as Peter Parker resets the tone for Spider-Man with youthful energy and emotional honesty. Eschewing origin tropes, the film jumps into a world where Peter is already balancing school, social awkwardness, and crime-fighting, all while craving the approval of Tony Stark.

Director Jon Watts brings a lightness to the storytelling, more John Hughes than superhero epic. But it works, grounding the character in teenage chaos while still delivering action and stakes. Michael Keaton’s Vulture is one of the MCU’s more grounded and sympathetic antagonists.

It’s a film that understands both web-slinging and adolescent insecurity. Not the deepest Marvel entry, but one of the most enjoyable.

Monday, 28th July

Kamikaze: An Untold History: BBC Four, 9:00 PM
This illuminating documentary uncovers the complex history behind Japan’s kamikaze pilots during World War II. Far from the caricatures of fanatical suicide bombers, it explores the human beings behind the myths—young men caught in a nationalist machine, coerced into martyrdom for emperor and empire.

The film shines when it interrogates the ideology that cultivated these pilots. Through letters, diaries, and survivor interviews, it paints a vivid picture of lives torn between duty and despair. A nuanced study of nationalism and sacrifice, it offers no easy answers, but plenty to reflect on.

In a time when martyrdom and military ideology are once again in the spotlight, Kamikaze reminds us how propaganda can sculpt patriotism into tragedy. It’s chilling, thoughtful, and essential viewing.

9 to 5 (1980): BBC Two, 11:00 PM
This classic workplace comedy remains as subversive and funny as ever. Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin, and Dolly Parton make a formidable trio as three working women fed up with their sexist boss. What begins as satire soon morphs into a revenge fantasy—brimming with charm, wit, and proto-feminist critique.

More than just a product of its time, 9 to 5 continues to resonate in an age of ongoing inequality. Its skewering of corporate hierarchy and gender politics is as biting as ever, and its optimism about collective action feels oddly radical now.

It’s also riotously entertaining. The chemistry between the leads is electric, and Parton’s title song remains an anthem of resilience. A joy to revisit.

Tuesday, 29th July

Nelson’s Caribbean Hellhole: BBC Four, 9:00 PM
Nelson’s Caribbean Hellhole – BBC Four, 9:00 PM

Historian Sam Willis takes us to Antigua’s English Harbour, long called “the graveyard of the Englishman,” where scores of 18th-century sailors—victims of fever, scurvy and brutal naval discipline—were buried in unmarked mass graves. Through on-site excavations and Willis’s clear-eyed narration, those weathered bones become witnesses to the human cost of empire.

As the camera pans over rusted buttons and fragments of uniform, we feel the relentless heat, the tainted rations and the psychological toll of life at sea. The film also visits a nearby plantation dig, hinting at the even harsher fate of the enslaved people whose toil underpinned Britain’s sugar trade.

Interwoven with these archaeological revelations is a nuanced portrait of Horatio Nelson—celebrated hero, but also a man shaped by the same system that discarded his sailors. Nelson’s Caribbean Hellhole reminds us that history isn’t just about great names; it’s about the countless lives buried beneath them, and the stories we choose to surface.

A Thousand Men and Me: The Bonnie Blue Story: Channel 4, 10:00 PM
Bonnie Blue was a trailblazing Black British trans woman who emerged from the shadows of 1980s Soho to become a community icon. This moving documentary tells her story through archival footage, interviews, and her own poetry, constructing a portrait as defiant as it is tender.

The film doesn’t flinch from the hardship—addiction, marginalisation, and violence—but it celebrates Bonnie’s resilience and advocacy. Her life becomes a lens through which to explore the broader struggle for queer visibility and survival in the UK.

At a time when trans rights are under attack, A Thousand Men and Me is a fierce, beautiful act of remembrance. Bonnie Blue is not just honoured—she’s heard.

All the President’s Men (1976): BBC Two, 12:00 AM
This paranoid classic of 1970s cinema remains a masterclass in journalistic doggedness and slow-burn suspense. Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman star as Woodward and Bernstein, the Washington Post reporters who uncovered the Watergate scandal. Alan J. Pakula’s direction is lean, atmospheric, and utterly gripping.

What stands out is the film’s faith in journalism—not as sensationalism, but as painstaking, methodical truth-seeking. Long scenes in libraries, phone booths, and typewriter-filled newsrooms become thrilling in their quiet intensity.

At a time when trust in media is low, All the President’s Men is a reminder of the fourth estate’s power—and responsibility. It’s a film that rewards patience and attention, much like the job it depicts.

Wednesday, 30th July

Michael Aspel Remembers The War Game: BBC Four, 10:00 PM
In this concise retrospective, Michael Aspel returns to Peter Watkins’s 1966 drama-documentary The War Game, a work the BBC shelved for nearly twenty years. Aspel—one of the film’s original voices—blends personal memory with political observation, recalling how its stark depiction of a nuclear strike rattled both public and officials.

He lays out the social and government anxieties the film unearthed, noting that the very act of banning it testifies to its unflinching honesty about war’s consequences. Through his commentary, we’re reminded how easily state power can silence unsettling truths and how critical responsibility and accountability remain today.

The War Game (1966): BBC Four, 10:10 PM
Peter Watkins’ controversial docudrama remains a gut-punch of a film. Simulating a nuclear strike on Britain, it blends fiction and reportage to paint a bleak, unsparing picture of social collapse. Shot in stark black and white, its documentary style is eerily convincing.

What makes The War Game so powerful is its moral clarity. It does not try to shock gratuitously, but to depict with unflinching honesty what governments refused to acknowledge. The horror isn’t just in the mushroom clouds, but in the slow decay of civil society.

Nearly 60 years on, it still feels like a provocation—and a warning. Required viewing for anyone who thinks nuclear deterrence is a game.

Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019): BBC One, 10:40 PM
In his second solo film, Tom Holland’s Peter Parker wrestles with grief, identity, and the burden of legacy after Tony Stark’s death. Set mostly in Europe, it’s a breezy, visually inventive adventure that pits Spidey against Jake Gyllenhaal’s manipulative villain, Mysterio.

The film explores fake news and illusion with surprising bite, reflecting on a world saturated with spin. It’s also an effective coming-of-age tale, with Peter navigating first love and superhero responsibility in equal measure.

Light, fun, and more subversive than it first appears, Far From Home is popcorn cinema with a thoughtful twist.

Thursday, 31st July

Queen Victoria: Secret Marriage, Secret Child: Channel 4, 9:00 PM
This historical documentary delves into the rumoured affair between Queen Victoria and her servant John Brown, and the possible existence of a secret child. Drawing on letters, court documents, and speculative biography, it teases out a provocative narrative from contested history.

While not conclusive, the programme offers a compelling re-examination of Victoria’s inner life. Far from the dour widow often portrayed, she emerges here as a passionate, complicated woman constrained by duty and image.

Whether or not the story is entirely true, the documentary succeeds in unsettling official mythologies. It suggests that history, like monarchy, is often a curated illusion.

The Graduate (1967): BBC Four, 11:10 PM
Mike Nichols’ seminal coming-of-age film still sparkles with sharp satire and emotional disquiet. Dustin Hoffman’s Benjamin Braddock drifts through post-collegiate malaise before falling into an affair with Anne Bancroft’s iconic Mrs. Robinson. What follows is both absurd and achingly real.

Visually inventive and narratively bold, The Graduate captures a generational crisis with humour and pathos. Simon & Garfunkel’s soundtrack adds texture to Benjamin’s isolation and yearning, making the film as much about mood as plot.

It’s a film that questions everything: love, adulthood, and success. And in its famous final scene, it refuses to offer easy answers. A timeless masterpiece.

Friday, 1st August

The Secret Life of Trees: To a Tree Adulthood: Channel 5, 9:00 PM
This gentle yet profound documentary explores the stages of growth in a tree’s life, treating it not as static background but as a living witness to change. Through elegant cinematography and poetic narration, it invites viewers to slow down and marvel at nature’s quiet strength.

The science is there—root systems, carbon capture, symbiosis—but it’s never dry. The film finds wonder in the ordinary, arguing that to understand trees is to understand something essential about endurance, cooperation, and time.

Perfect for a contemplative evening, this is television that asks nothing but attention—and rewards it with beauty.

When Harry Met Sally (1989): BBC One, 11:20 PM
Nora Ephron’s rom-com classic endures because it understands that love is both complicated and hilarious. Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan turn what could have been a formulaic romance into something layered, prickly, and utterly human.

The film asks whether men and women can truly be friends, and offers no easy resolution—only a witty, touching journey through miscommunication and emotional honesty. Every line feels carefully crafted, every scene a small revelation.

By the time Harry runs through New York on New Year’s Eve, we’re rooting for them—not because the genre demands it, but because the characters have earned it. A pitch-perfect end to the week.

Streaming Choices

The Facebook Hunny Trap: Catching a Killer – Prime Video, available from Sunday, 27th July
This gripping true crime documentary follows the extraordinary story of Lehanne Sergison, a British woman who used a fake Facebook profile to ensnare her aunt’s killer—6,000 miles away in South Africa. When Christine Robinson, a beloved expat and lodge owner, was brutally raped and murdered in 2014, the investigation stalled. Authorities failed to extradite the prime suspect, a former employee who fled the country, and justice seemed out of reach.

But Sergison, driven by grief and a fierce sense of duty, took matters into her own hands. Despite suffering from severe asthma and unable to travel, she created a fictional online persona and began a months-long digital seduction—ultimately leading police to the killer’s location.

The Facebook Honeytrap: Catching a Killer is more than a tale of amateur sleuthing. It’s a chilling meditation on how digital intimacy can mask predatory intent, and how the illusion of connection can be weaponised. But it’s also a testament to resilience, and to the quiet power of one woman’s refusal to let her aunt’s story be forgotten.

Berlin Station – ITVX, all three series available from Sunday, 27th July
Long overlooked in the crowded field of spy thrillers, Berlin Station deserves a second glance—and now, with all three seasons landing on ITVX, it finally gets one. Created by Olen Steinhauer, the series follows CIA analyst Daniel Miller (Richard Armitage) as he’s thrust into the shadowy world of Berlin’s intelligence community. What begins as a hunt for a whistleblower soon spirals into a web of political manipulation, far-right extremism, and moral compromise.

The cast is quietly stellar—Rhys Ifans, Michelle Forbes, Leland Orser, and Ashley Judd among them—and the writing leans into ambiguity rather than easy answers. Across its 29 episodes, the show explores the post-Snowden landscape with a kind of bruised realism: surveillance, loyalty, and the cost of truth. It’s taut, cerebral, and often unsettling, ideal for fans of The Americans or Le Bureau who crave espionage with emotional depth.

Though cancelled after its third season in 2019, Berlin Station remains a compelling study in how institutions fracture—and how people try to hold the line.

Lianne – Netflix, all 16 episodes available from Thursday, 31st July
Stylishly directed by Steve Haining, Lianne is a psychological drama that trades jump scares for slow-burning dread. At its centre is Erin, a teenage influencer who livestreams herself inside an abandoned haunted house to raise money for the illness that claimed her stepsister’s life. But what begins as a performative act of grief soon spirals into something far more unsettling—an encounter with trauma that refuses to stay buried.

As Erin navigates the house, accompanied only by Lianne’s ashes in an urn, the film builds tension through eerie stillness and fractured memory. Jessica Chin King delivers a breakout performance, anchoring the story with vulnerability and grit. The narrative unfolds in real time, with Erin responding to live comments from her followers—an unnerving reminder of how digital intimacy can both expose and isolate.

Lianne isn’t a cult escape drama in the literal sense, but it resonates with similar themes: coercion, grief, and the long shadow of survival. It’s a meditation on how we perform healing, and what happens when the ghosts we carry demand to be seen.

Chief of War – Apple TV, first two episodes available from Friday, 1st August
Set in the fractured political landscape of 18th-century Hawai‘i, Chief of the Islands dramatizes the rise of a local ali‘i (chief) as he defends his people against the creeping tide of European imperialism. Inspired by the real-life consolidation of power under Kamehameha I, the series blends sweeping visuals with intimate storytelling, capturing the tension between tradition and survival as foreign ships begin to circle the archipelago.

The drama unfolds amid rival factions, sacred obligations, and the arrival of muskets and missionaries—each reshaping the islands’ fate. Battles are choreographed with reverence for indigenous martial arts, while the emotional core rests on a leader torn between diplomacy and defiance. It’s a portrait of sovereignty under siege, and of a culture fighting to preserve its soul.

For viewers drawn to Shogun or The Last Kingdom, this is a bold addition to the historical drama canon—one that reframes empire through a Pacific lens and centres Native Hawaiian agency.

Whatever your appetite—fact or fiction, history or harmony—this week’s Culture Vulture offers you windows into worlds familiar and strange. Settle in. There’s much to savour.

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Carlos: The Jackal Speaks reviewed

699 words, 4 minutes read time.

Carlos: The Jackal Speaks – available on BBC Iplayer – is a gripping and deeply unsettling documentary that opens the door to the enigmatic and terrifying life of Ilich Ramírez Sánchez, better known as Carlos the Jackal. Directed by Israeli filmmakers Yaron Niski and Danny Liber – the duo behind Killing Escobar – the film stitches together chilling prison interviews, rare archival footage, and contemporary insights to present a nuanced portrait of one of the 20th century’s most infamous international terrorists.

Born into a wealthy Venezuelan family with Marxist leanings, Carlos studied in Moscow before being recruited into the Palestinian cause. He initially trained with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), quickly rising through the ranks due to his language skills, cosmopolitan background, and ideological fervour. The film carefully traces his trajectory from radical ideologue to high-profile gun-for-hire. By the mid-1970s, Carlos was a central figure in a wave of international terror, orchestrating bombings, shootings, and kidnappings across Europe and the Middle East.

Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, who is also known as Carlos the Jackal.

Among the most notorious of his acts was the 1975 raid on the Vienna headquarters of OPEC, in which he and his team took more than 60 hostages, including 11 oil ministers. The operation ended in Algiers after days of negotiations, with many believing that several states tacitly cooperated to ensure its resolution – and Carlos’s safe passage. This marked the beginning of his mythic status as an elusive figure whose operations blurred the lines between political violence and calculated mercenarism. He is also believed to have carried out or ordered a string of bombings in Paris in the early 1980s, including the 1982 attack on the Le Capitole train, killing five and injuring dozens. Other attacks included car bombs, grenade assaults on commercial and diplomatic targets, and the 1974 grenade attack on a Paris shopping arcade that left two dead.

Carlos’s ability to operate across continents, aided by Cold War alliances and connections to state intelligence services, made him a unique figure in the international terror landscape. The documentary delves into these murky waters, highlighting the covert support he received from countries like East Germany, Romania, Syria, and Libya. He lived luxuriously in exile for years, evading justice while maintaining a shifting ideological stance grounded in anti-imperialist and anti-Zionist rhetoric.

Carlos: The Jackal Speaks also scrutinises his arrest and incarceration. Captured in Sudan in 1994 by French agents, Carlos has been imprisoned in France ever since, where he is serving multiple life sentences. The film includes chilling footage of Carlos in his cell, still grandiose and unrepentant, recounting his exploits with a disturbing blend of pride and detachment. He describes his campaign of terror as legitimate warfare, downplaying the suffering of victims. The filmmakers do not shy away from the brutal consequences of his actions – or the psychological toll they inflicted on survivors. Nor do they gloss over the allegations of his mistreatment in prison, including extended solitary confinement and sleep deprivation, which became the basis of an appeal to the European Court of Human Rights.

Carlos emerges as a man of profound contradictions: ideologically committed yet hedonistic, calculating yet reckless, charming yet capable of indiscriminate violence. His romantic entanglements – including with fellow militants like Magdalena Kopp – are portrayed alongside the cold, transactional logic that often guided his political work. At one point, he is shown threatening to blow up nuclear power stations in France to force her release – a move emblematic of his audacity and disregard for civilian life.

Despite everything, Carlos remains defiant. He sees himself as a historical figure, a revolutionary, a prisoner of conscience. Yet the documentary resists giving him the final word. Instead, it offers a sober and comprehensive view of the devastation he caused and the geopolitical games that enabled him to operate for so long.

Carlos: The Jackal Speaks is a compelling, sometimes harrowing documentary that dissects a man who made terrorism a brand and shaped an era of political violence. For viewers fascinated by Cold War intrigue, the mechanics of ideological extremism, or the psychology of those who wage war without armies, this film is essential viewing.

By Pat Harrington

Here’s the direct link to watch Carlos: The Jackal Speaks Storyville – The Jackal Speaks – BBC iPlayer

Please note: If you’re located outside the UK, BBC iPlayer may be geo-blocked. The documentary premiered on June 3, 2025, during Storyville on BBC Four

Picture credit: By Anonymous – NBCNews.com, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=130451174

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Review: Greggs vs McDonald’s – The Fast Feud (Channel 4)

607 words, 3 minutes read time.

This Channel 4 documentary, aired Monday night at 8pm, took a look at an unlikely but very real rivalry: Greggs versus McDonald’s. It’s not a matchup that would have seemed likely a decade ago, but today the homegrown bakery chain is going head-to-head with the American fast food giant in ways that are impossible to ignore.

Gregg’s has emerged as an unlikely UK rival to the US multinational McDonald’s and we’re lovin’ it!

Presented by Dani Dyer, the programme mixed light investigation with sharp business analysis, making it more than just a foodie show. It explored how Greggs has muscled in on territory McDonald’s once had all to itself – breakfast, lunch, and now even the evening trade. Dyer’s approach was informal and accessible, sometimes cheeky but never flippant. The format combined interviews with customers, insiders and experts, along with archive clips and current footage showing how the two brands stack up on price, popularity and strategy.

Greggs, once a regional bakery from the North East, has undergone a dramatic transformation. What began as a small business in 1939 has become a staple on high streets and retail parks across the UK. Its growth has been driven by sharp decisions – moving beyond sausage rolls and pasties to take on the breakfast and lunch markets with meal deals and fast service, and more recently entering the dinner scene with hot pizzas, burgers and other filling options. They’ve even opened drive-throughs – still only a handful so far, but clearly aimed at competing with McDonald’s on convenience as well as price.

Where Greggs has really shown its strength, though, is in reading the room. They’ve been fast on their feet with social media, using humour and popular culture to stay relevant and visible. Their marketing campaigns – often irreverent and self-aware – cut through the noise in a way that bigger brands can struggle to do. They’ve also been clever about choosing store locations, moving into stations, petrol stations, universities and retail parks – not just relying on the high street.

That said, it’s not just about expansion. The documentary rightly pointed out that Greggs has made an effort to offer healthier choices too. Over the past few years, they’ve introduced lower-calorie options, more vegetarian and vegan lines, and reformulated some recipes to cut salt and fat. It’s progress, but there’s room to go further – especially now that they’re offering more dinner-style foods. We’d like to see them push on with this, not just to tick boxes but to genuinely support better eating habits.

One of the strengths of the film was how it placed Greggs’ success in the context of changing British habits. It showed how, despite being a national chain, Greggs has kept a sense of regional identity – rooted in its Northern beginnings, still treating staff relatively well, and managing to feel familiar rather than corporate. It’s this mix of accessibility, affordability and adaptability that makes it a real competitor to McDonald’s, particularly in the UK where American-style fast food doesn’t always have the final word.

The tone of the documentary was light without being shallow. It didn’t pretend Greggs was perfect, and the contrast with McDonald’s wasn’t forced. Instead, it allowed viewers to see just how far Greggs has come, and how its ability to adapt, experiment and stay culturally relevant has made it a genuine force in the fast food world.

We wish Greggs well. It’s encouraging to see a British firm not just holding its own against a multinational, but actively taking ground. That said, as the menu expands and sales grow, we hope they keep up the momentum when it comes to healthier options. The sausage roll will always be there – but it’s what sits alongside it that will shape the future.

By Pat Harrington

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Culture Vulture 15th to the 21st of March 2025

5,085 words, 27 minutes read time.

Welcome to Culture Vulture, your alternative, non-mainstream weekly entertainment guide. Our aim is to highlight films and programmes that offer something deeper—whether through social critique, political subtext, or psychological insight. Selection and writing are curated by Pat Harrington, with music provided by Tim Bragg.

Here are three highlights from this week’s schedule:

  • The French Connection (1971) – BBC Two, 22:00, Sunday 16th March A gritty, uncompromising crime thriller that delves into police obsession, systemic corruption, and the brutal realities of law enforcement. Gene Hackman’s portrayal of Popeye Doyle remains one of cinema’s most fascinating antiheroes.
  • The Northman (2022) – Film 4, 21:00, Monday 17th March Robert Eggers’ visually stunning Viking epic explores revenge, destiny, and the destructive cycles of violence, questioning whether vengeance ever leads to true justice.
  • Aftersun (2022) – BBC Three, 21:00, Friday 21st March A deeply moving drama about memory, fatherhood, and self-discovery, Aftersun offers a quiet yet powerful meditation on nostalgia and intergenerational trauma.

Longer reviews of some of the featured films are available at Counter Culture, where we explore the cultural, philosophical, and political themes embedded within these works.

Now, on to this week’s full schedule:

Saturday, 15th March 2025

The Third Man (1949)

BBC Two, 14:50
Carol Reed’s The Third Man is a masterclass in post-war noir cinema, dripping with shadowy intrigue and moral ambiguity. Set in a divided, war-torn Vienna, the film follows an idealistic American writer, Holly Martins (Joseph Cotten), as he arrives in the city to meet his old friend Harry Lime (Orson Welles), only to discover that Lime is dead—under suspicious circumstances. As Martins digs deeper, the lines between truth and deception blur, leading him into a web of corruption, espionage, and betrayal.

Beyond its gripping narrative, The Third Man is a film about disillusionment and the erosion of idealism in the face of harsh political realities. Reed’s use of canted angles and deep shadows heightens the sense of unease, while the haunting zither score by Anton Karas underscores the melancholy of a city divided by war. The film asks uncomfortable questions about loyalty and morality—who gets to decide what is right and wrong in a world recovering from the trauma of global conflict?

Orson Welles’ enigmatic portrayal of Harry Lime elevates the film to legendary status. His brief yet unforgettable performance, particularly in the famous Ferris wheel scene, reveals the chilling pragmatism of a man who sees human suffering as an economic opportunity. In an age where corporate greed and political maneuvering continue to dominate global discourse, The Third Man remains as relevant as ever.

War for the Planet of the Apes (2017)

GREAT!Movies, 18:25
In a franchise often associated with science-fiction spectacle, War for the Planet of the Apes stands out as a meditation on leadership, revenge, and the cost of war. The film follows Caesar (Andy Serkis), the reluctant leader of the apes, as he seeks to protect his people from a ruthless human military faction led by the fanatical Colonel (Woody Harrelson). As the war escalates, the film pivots into a deeply introspective journey, exploring Caesar’s internal struggle between his quest for justice and his growing desire for vengeance.

Unlike its predecessors, War for the Planet of the Apes places a heavier emphasis on themes of morality and power. While it draws clear parallels to historical conflicts—including the American Civil War and Vietnam—the film also resonates in today’s era of authoritarianism and xenophobia. The apes, once portrayed as the ‘other,’ become a reflection of humanity’s own capacity for resistance and unity in the face of oppression.

Andy Serkis delivers one of the most remarkable motion-capture performances in cinema history, bringing depth and gravitas to Caesar’s character. His nuanced portrayal allows us to see a leader burdened by the weight of responsibility, forced to navigate a world where survival often comes at the cost of one’s soul. In an era where political leadership is under intense scrutiny, War for the Planet of the Apes asks what it truly means to lead—and at what cost.

Lady Gaga: Inside the Chaos

BBC Two, 20:30
Lady Gaga: Inside the Chaos features an insightful conversation between Lady Gaga and BBC’s music correspondent, Mark Savage. In this intimate documentary, Gaga discusses the creation of her latest album, Mayhem, her growing connection with a younger audience, and offers a glimpse into her personal life.

She shares the inspiration and creative freedom behind Mayhem, a blend of various genres reflecting her artistic evolution. Working with producers like Andrew Watt and her fiancé, Michael Polansky, Gaga has crafted an album that’s both personal and universally relatable.

Additionally, Gaga talks about how her music resonates with a younger audience, attributing this to her unique style and genre-defying music. Her use of visual storytelling and social media has strengthened her bond with fans, allowing her to engage directly and create a sense of unity.

On the personal front, Lady Gaga opens up about her relationship with Michael Polansky and the impact it has had on her life. She reflects on her journey, the pressures of fame, and the importance of mental health, emphasizing self-care and resilience.

Overall, Lady Gaga: Inside the Chaos is a must-watch for those interested in the behind-the-scenes realities of creative industries and the personal sacrifices involved in achieving success.

Lady Gaga at the BBC

BBC Two, 21:00
A retrospective of Lady Gaga’s performances and interviews, this programme showcases her growth as both a musician and a cultural icon. Her ability to blend avant-garde artistry with mainstream appeal is highlighted through key moments in her career, from early pop hits to experimental projects that challenge industry norms.

Enya at the BBC

BBC Two, 22:00
Enya at the BBC is a captivating retrospective that celebrates the ethereal sound and enduring appeal of Enya. This collection of performances and interviews showcases her unique ability to blend haunting melodies with lush, atmospheric arrangements. The programme highlights key moments in her career, from her early days with Clannad to her solo success with hits like “Orinoco Flow” and “Only Time.”

Enya’s music has always provided a refuge for listeners, offering a sense of tranquility and escape from the chaos of everyday life. Her distinctive style, characterized by layered vocals and intricate instrumentation, is beautifully captured in this compilation. The documentary also delves into her creative process, revealing the meticulous craftsmanship behind her timeless compositions.

As I Roved Out

BBC Two, 22:45
As I Roved Out is a captivating BBC programme that delves into the rich tradition of Irish folk music. This documentary offers an exploration of how Irish ballads and folk songs have preserved history, identity, and resistance through the ages.

Featuring rare performances and in-depth discussions with contemporary musicians, the programme highlights the enduring relevance of these traditional songs. It examines the role of oral storytelling in shaping national memory and the way these ballads have been passed down through generations.

The documentary also provides insights into the personal and cultural significance of the songs, showcasing their power to evoke emotion and convey the struggles and triumphs of the Irish people. Through evocative performances and thoughtful commentary, As I Roved Out celebrates the beauty and resilience of Irish folk music, making it a must-watch for anyone interested in cultural heritage and musical traditions.

St. Patrick’s Day at the BBC

BBC Two, 23:15

St. Patrick’s Day at the BBC is a vibrant celebration of Irish culture and music, showcasing some of the finest performances from the BBC archives. The programme features a diverse lineup of artists, including U2, Sinead O’Connor, Van Morrison, The Pogues, The Corrs, and The Cranberries, reflecting the immense impact of Irish music on the global stage.


A musical celebration featuring performances that capture the spirit of Ireland. Beyond the revelry, the programme subtly acknowledges the historical struggles tied to Irish identity and the role of music in cultural resilience.

Sunday, 16th March 2025

Dark Victory (1939)

BBC Two, 13:30
Bette Davis delivers a powerhouse performance in Dark Victory, a deeply moving drama that explores mortality, resilience, and self-discovery. Davis plays Judith Traherne, a wealthy socialite whose carefree existence is upended when she is diagnosed with a terminal illness. Instead of dwelling on despair, she embarks on a journey of personal transformation, embracing love and purpose in the face of her fate.

What makes Dark Victory stand out is its raw emotional honesty. Rather than portraying Judith as a passive victim, the film highlights her strength in choosing how to live her final days. The narrative critiques societal expectations of women, showing Judith breaking free from superficial concerns to find a deeper sense of identity. The film’s handling of terminal illness is refreshingly progressive for its time, avoiding melodrama in favor of introspective realism.

The chemistry between Davis and co-star George Brent lends the film additional depth, but it is Davis who commands every scene. Her ability to portray vulnerability without sacrificing agency ensures that Dark Victory remains a standout in Hollywood’s Golden Age. The film’s themes of self-determination and dignity in the face of mortality continue to resonate today, making it a timeless meditation on what truly matters in life.

Stardust (2007)

E4, 15:15
A fantastical adventure that blends fairy tale charm with sharp wit, Stardust is a modern classic that subverts traditional storytelling tropes. Directed by Matthew Vaughn, the film follows Tristan (Charlie Cox), an unassuming young man who embarks on a quest to retrieve a fallen star for his beloved. However, the star turns out to be a celestial woman (Claire Danes), and the journey becomes far more perilous than he anticipated.

Beyond its enchanting visuals and thrilling action, Stardust offers a deeper critique of power, ambition, and gender dynamics. The film’s antagonist, Lamia (Michelle Pfeiffer), embodies the dangers of unchecked greed, while its heroines challenge the passive roles often assigned to women in fantasy. Yvaine, the fallen star, is no mere damsel but a force of agency and independence.

A standout aspect of Stardust is its playful examination of identity. Tristan’s transformation from insecure villager to confident adventurer is not just about winning a romantic prize—it’s about self-discovery. In an era where traditional masculinity is being reevaluated, the film’s depiction of personal growth through emotional openness feels especially relevant. Stardust reminds us that true heroism is not about conquest but about understanding one’s own worth.

The French Connection (1971)

BBC Two, 22:00
William Friedkin’s The French Connection redefined the crime thriller genre, presenting a gritty, unflinching look at law enforcement and organised crime. The film follows NYPD detectives Jimmy “Popeye” Doyle (Gene Hackman) and Buddy Russo (Roy Scheider) as they attempt to dismantle a French heroin-smuggling operation. What sets The French Connection apart is its commitment to realism—filmed on location in New York, its documentary-like aesthetic immerses viewers in a world where justice is often as murky as the criminal networks it seeks to dismantle.

The French Connection is a film about obsession. Doyle, an unorthodox and deeply flawed protagonist, is driven not by noble ideals but by an almost pathological need to bring down the criminals he hunts. His reckless methods blur the line between law enforcement and vigilantism, forcing the audience to question whether the ends justify the means. In an age where discussions around police accountability are more urgent than ever, Doyle’s character serves as a stark reminder of the dangers of unchecked authority.

One of the film’s most celebrated sequences is the heart-stopping car chase beneath an elevated train track—a sequence that remains one of the most thrilling in cinema history. But beyond its technical brilliance, the film is a study in contrasts: the meticulous, disciplined criminals versus the erratic, relentless detective. This dynamic creates a tension that keeps viewers on edge throughout.

Friedkin’s decision to eschew a traditional Hollywood ending reinforces the film’s bleak realism. Unlike conventional crime dramas where justice is served, The French Connection ends on an ambiguous note, reflecting the frustrating reality of real-world law enforcement. In doing so, it captures the moral ambiguity of its time, where corruption and crime often go hand in hand.

The film also offers an early exploration of the global drug trade, an issue that continues to plague societies worldwide. The impact of such trade—on communities, law enforcement, and international politics—remains just as relevant today. By immersing the audience in the mechanics of a transatlantic smuggling operation, The French Connection forces viewers to confront the systemic nature of crime and its far-reaching consequences.

Decades after its release, The French Connection remains a landmark film, not just for its technical achievements but for its unflinching look at the complexities of justice. In an era where crime dramas have become increasingly stylised, this film’s raw, uncompromising storytelling stands as a testament to cinema’s ability to provoke, challenge, and unsettle.

Monday, 17th March 2025

The Northman (2022)

Film 4, 21:00
Robert Eggers’ The Northman is a brutal, visually arresting Viking epic that delves into themes of revenge, destiny, and the cyclical nature of violence. Inspired by the Scandinavian legend of Amleth, the film follows a young prince (Alexander Skarsgård) seeking vengeance for his father’s murder. Eggers’ meticulous attention to historical accuracy gives the film a mythic yet grounded quality, immersing viewers in a raw, elemental world where fate is inexorable.

Unlike conventional revenge narratives, The Northman examines the psychological and ethical weight of vengeance. Skarsgård’s Amleth is not a glorified hero but a deeply troubled figure, trapped in a cycle of retribution that threatens to consume him. The film subtly critiques traditional notions of masculinity and honor, questioning whether violence truly brings justice or merely perpetuates suffering.

Visually, The Northman is stunning, with haunting landscapes, hypnotic battle sequences, and surreal dream imagery that reinforce the film’s mythological underpinnings. Anya Taylor-Joy and Nicole Kidman deliver standout performances, adding depth to the narrative’s exploration of power, survival, and agency. The film’s unflinching brutality may not be for everyone, but its thematic richness makes it a compelling, thought-provoking work of historical fiction.

What Do Artists Do All Day? Jack Vettriano

BBC Four, 22:00
This insightful documentary offers a rare glimpse into the life and creative process of Jack Vettriano, one of Scotland’s most commercially successful yet critically divisive artists. Known for his evocative, film-noir-style paintings, Vettriano has long been dismissed by the art establishment despite his enduring popularity. The documentary follows him in his studio, capturing his meticulous approach to painting and his reflections on success, rejection, and artistic integrity.

Vettriano’s art is often associated with themes of longing, seduction, and nostalgia, drawing comparisons to cinematic storytelling. While some critics deride his work as overly commercial, his ability to evoke strong emotional responses from audiences speaks to its cultural significance. The documentary subtly explores this tension, raising broader questions about what defines ‘serious’ art in the contemporary landscape.

Beyond the studio, What Do Artists Do All Day? presents Vettriano’s personal journey, from his working-class roots to his unexpected rise in the art world. It highlights the ways in which class dynamics shape access to and recognition within artistic circles, making it a fascinating study of both an artist and the institutions that determine artistic legitimacy.

Jack Vettriano: Heaven and Hell XS

BBC Four, 22:30
A deeper exploration of Vettriano’s career, this follow-up programme examines his most iconic works and the controversies surrounding his artistic reputation. Through interviews with collectors, critics, and the artist himself, Heaven and Hell XS investigates how Vettriano has navigated fame, criticism, and the shifting perceptions of his work over time.

Tuesday, 18th March 2025

The Mouse That Roared (1959)

Film 4, 11:00
A biting political satire wrapped in a charming comedy, The Mouse That Roared follows the fictional, impoverished European microstate of Grand Fenwick, which declares war on the United States in the hopes of receiving post-war aid. What begins as an absurd military campaign takes an unexpected turn when Grand Fenwick accidentally wins the war, sending international politics into chaos.

Beyond its whimsical premise, the film cleverly critiques Cold War-era geopolitics and the absurdities of superpower rivalries. The notion that a tiny, unassuming nation could upend global affairs underscores the arbitrary nature of political influence and military might. Peter Sellers shines in multiple roles, delivering a satirical yet oddly sincere performance that reinforces the film’s underlying message.

In an era still dominated by discussions of international power struggles, The Mouse That Roared remains a relevant and witty exploration of how small actions can have outsized consequences. Its humor, rooted in sharp social commentary, ensures that it endures as a classic farce with serious undertones.

Can You Ever Forgive Me? (2018)

Channel 4, 02:15
A gripping drama based on true events, Can You Ever Forgive Me? tells the story of Lee Israel (Melissa McCarthy), a struggling biographer who turns to literary forgery to make ends meet. What starts as a desperate attempt to survive soon escalates into a sophisticated con, forcing Lee to navigate the ethical and legal consequences of her actions.

Melissa McCarthy delivers a career-defining performance, shedding her comedic persona to embody a deeply flawed but sympathetic character. The film’s nuanced portrayal of isolation, financial hardship, and moral compromise makes it a compelling character study that resonates far beyond its crime plot.

At its heart, Can You Ever Forgive Me? is a meditation on artistic legitimacy and societal neglect of those who fall outside the mainstream. It critiques the publishing industry’s elitism while also exploring how personal struggles can drive individuals to make impossible choices.

The Undercover Police Scandal: Love and Lies Exposed

ITV1, 22:45
This episode, titled There Are Others, delves into the shocking revelations surrounding undercover police officers who infiltrated activist groups, forming long-term relationships under false identities. Helen and Alison are introduced by a mutual friend and soon discover that their former partners belonged to a special Met Police squad tasked with infiltrating political groups. As they piece together the truth, they find that the media are not interested in their stories. Despite the lack of attention, the women rebuild their lives until a social media post seven years later unmasks one of the spy cops, Mark Kennedy, whose undercover name was Mark Stone.

The programme examines the devastating personal and legal consequences for those deceived, many of whom unknowingly built their lives around fictional personas. It does not just document the scandal but interrogates the wider implications for civil liberties and state surveillance. In an era where police accountability is a growing concern, Love and Lies Exposed highlights systemic failures and the ethical breaches within law enforcement.

Through interviews with victims, legal experts, and former officers, the documentary paints a chilling portrait of institutional deception. It forces viewers to ask whether such tactics are ever justified and what protections should exist to prevent future abuses of power.

Wednesday, 19th March 2025

The Swimmer (1968)

Film 4, 15:10
A surreal and deeply introspective drama, The Swimmer follows Ned Merrill (Burt Lancaster), a seemingly successful suburban man who decides to “swim” his way home by hopping from pool to pool in his affluent neighborhood. What begins as an eccentric, light-hearted journey slowly morphs into a devastating exploration of loss, self-delusion, and the collapse of the American Dream.

Lancaster delivers one of his most poignant performances, portraying a man whose self-perception crumbles with each interaction. As Ned encounters friends and acquaintances, the film peels away layers of his past, revealing uncomfortable truths about his financial ruin, personal failures, and emotional isolation. The film’s structure is deceptively simple, yet its impact lingers long after the credits roll.

Visually, The Swimmer uses the idyllic suburban landscape to reinforce its themes of nostalgia and disillusionment. The pools, initially symbols of luxury and freedom, become markers of Ned’s slow descent into a tragic reality he refuses to acknowledge. This underappreciated classic remains a powerful allegory for the dangers of clinging to illusions in a world that has already moved on.

French Connection II (1975)

GREAT!Action, 21:00
A sequel that dares to break convention, French Connection II follows Gene Hackman’s iconic character, Popeye Doyle, as he travels to France to track down his nemesis, drug kingpin Alain Charnier. Unlike its predecessor, which focused on high-stakes surveillance and action-packed chases, this film delves deeper into Doyle’s psyche, portraying his struggle with addiction and cultural alienation.

Hackman delivers a riveting performance, showcasing Doyle’s brash arrogance alongside his vulnerabilities. The film’s most harrowing sequence sees Doyle forcibly addicted to heroin, a stark contrast to the confident, reckless detective audiences met in the first film. His detox scenes are gut-wrenching, reinforcing the brutal realities of drug dependency and its dehumanizing effects.

While French Connection II lacks the kinetic energy of the original, it makes up for it with psychological depth and a gripping character study. The film’s critique of American exceptionalism, as Doyle flounders in a country that does not play by his rules, adds another layer of complexity to the narrative. It is a bold, often overlooked sequel that deserves more recognition.

A Cruel Love: The Ruth Ellis Story (3/4)

ITV1, 21:00
The third episode of this gripping series continues its examination of Ruth Ellis, the last woman to be executed in Britain. This episode follows Ruth, who has been found guilty and is due to hang in three weeks’ time. Initially, she accepts her fate, but as her execution date draws nearer, she grows more desperate. Her lawyer, played by Toby Jones, seeks a reprieve from the Home Office, hoping to save her from the gallows.

The Tower of London Special: Elizabeth I and Anne Boleyn, The Prisoner Queens

Channel 5, 21:00
This historical special juxtaposes the lives of two of England’s most famous queens, both of whom spent time in the Tower of London under vastly different circumstances. While Anne Boleyn met her tragic fate there, her daughter Elizabeth I later emerged from imprisonment to become one of the most powerful monarchs in history.

The documentary traces the parallels between mother and daughter, highlighting how political intrigue, gendered power struggles, and personal resilience shaped their respective legacies. Featuring expert historians and dramatic reenactments, it offers a fresh perspective on how the Tower served both as a prison and a place of transformation.

By shedding light on their personal struggles and triumphs, The Prisoner Queens challenges viewers to see beyond the myths and consider the human cost of power. It is a compelling watch for those interested in Tudor history and the lasting impact of these formidable women.

Thursday, 20th March 2025

The Old Man and the Gun (2018)

Film 4, 19:15
A charming farewell to a Hollywood legend, The Old Man and the Gun stars Robert Redford in what was widely regarded as his final acting role. The film tells the true story of Forrest Tucker, a lifelong criminal who escapes from San Quentin prison and embarks on a series of audacious heists—all carried out with remarkable politeness and charm.

Redford delivers a performance imbued with warmth, charisma, and a quiet melancholy, embodying an aging outlaw who refuses to conform to societal expectations. His dynamic with Sissy Spacek adds depth to the narrative, elevating the film beyond its crime elements to become a meditation on aging, purpose, and the joy of doing what one loves—even if it is outside the law.

Director David Lowery employs a nostalgic visual style, evoking 1970s crime films while reinforcing the story’s themes of nostalgia and time slipping away. In an era that often glorifies youthful rebellion, The Old Man and the Gun presents an alternative perspective—that of a man who has lived by his own rules and refuses to let age define him.

Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse (1991)

Film 4, 01:25
A legendary behind-the-scenes documentary, Hearts of Darkness chronicles the near-disastrous production of Apocalypse Now, revealing the chaos, ambition, and near-madness that fueled Francis Ford Coppola’s Vietnam War epic. Through on-set footage and candid interviews, the documentary exposes the psychological toll of artistic obsession, as Coppola battles financial ruin, uncooperative weather, and an increasingly erratic Marlon Brando.

The film offers a rare glimpse into the extremes of filmmaking, highlighting the fine line between creative genius and self-destruction. Coppola’s struggles mirror the themes of Apocalypse Now itself, with both narratives exploring power, control, and the human cost of ambition.

Beyond the film industry, Hearts of Darkness speaks to broader questions about leadership and perseverance under pressure. It is a must-watch not just for cinephiles but for anyone fascinated by the lengths to which individuals will go in pursuit of artistic vision.

St. Patrick: Born in Britain, Made in Ireland

BBC Two, 21:00
This historical documentary re-examines the life and legacy of St. Patrick, Britain’s most famous expatriate and Ireland’s most celebrated saint. Tracing his journey from a kidnapped youth to a religious icon, the programme challenges the myths surrounding his story, offering a nuanced view of his historical significance.

While St. Patrick is often romanticized as a bringer of Christianity, this documentary presents a more complex picture—one of a man navigating the political and cultural landscapes of early medieval Ireland. It explores the role of religion as both a tool of unification and division, drawing parallels to modern struggles over identity and faith.

Through expert interviews and stunning cinematography, St. Patrick: Born in Britain, Made in Ireland invites viewers to reconsider the narratives we inherit and how historical figures are shaped by the times in which they lived.

The Undercover Police Scandal: Love and Lies Exposed (3/3) – Neither Confirm Nor Deny

ITV1, 21:00
The concluding episode of this gripping investigative series delves into the long-term consequences of the undercover policing scandal that shattered lives and raised serious ethical concerns about state surveillance.

This episode focuses on the legal and emotional aftermath, highlighting the victims’ fight for justice and the institutional resistance they continue to face. Through interviews with those directly affected, the documentary uncovers how the policy of “Neither Confirm Nor Deny” has been used to evade accountability, leaving many questions unanswered.

The series as a whole stands as a powerful indictment of unchecked governmental power, exposing how trust can be systematically weaponized for the sake of intelligence gathering. It forces viewers to confront the delicate balance between security and civil liberties, a conversation that remains as urgent today as ever.

Stacey Dooley: Meet the Shoplifters

BBC Three, 21:00
Stacey Dooley’s latest investigative piece explores the rise of organized shoplifting and its connection to economic hardship, addiction, and shifting social attitudes towards crime. With her signature blend of empathy and direct questioning, Dooley speaks with shoplifters, security professionals, and those impacted by retail theft to paint a comprehensive picture of this growing issue.

The documentary goes beyond sensationalism to examine the structural factors that drive theft, highlighting how poverty, corporate policies, and law enforcement responses contribute to the cycle. It also questions whether harsher penalties or alternative rehabilitation approaches would be more effective in addressing the problem.

Dooley’s ability to humanize both perpetrators and victims makes Meet the Shoplifters a thought-provoking watch that challenges viewers to consider the broader implications of crime and punishment in contemporary society.

Friday, 21st March 2025

Aftersun (2022)

BBC Three, 21:00
A deeply introspective drama, Aftersun is a quiet yet emotionally devastating exploration of memory, childhood, and the bonds between a father and daughter. Paul Mescal delivers an understated but powerful performance as Calum, a young father trying to give his daughter Sophie (Frankie Corio) a joyful holiday while struggling with his own internal battles.

Charlotte Wells’ direction lends the film an almost dreamlike quality, where past and present blur through Sophie’s recollections of their time together. The film subtly explores themes of mental health and intergenerational trauma, with its most poignant moments emerging not from grand dramatic reveals but from quiet, unspoken interactions.

Aftersun is a meditation on nostalgia, the fleeting nature of happiness, and the way we attempt to reconcile our memories with reality. Its emotional resonance has solidified it as one of the most powerful films in contemporary cinema.

And finally, Streaming

Walter Presents: Flowers Over the Inferno

Channel 4 Streaming, available from 21st March
A psychological thriller that delves into the mind of a brilliant but haunted detective, Flowers Over the Inferno follows Teresa Battaglia, a seasoned investigator with a sharp mind but a deteriorating memory. Tasked with solving a series of gruesome murders in the Alps, she must confront both the killer and her own encroaching vulnerability.

This Italian drama, based on Ilaria Tuti’s bestselling novel, weaves an intricate narrative filled with psychological depth, rich character development, and breathtaking scenery. Unlike many crime thrillers that focus purely on action and mystery, Flowers Over the Inferno deeply examines aging, resilience, and the cost of dedicating one’s life to justice.

With a gripping storyline and a protagonist unlike any seen in crime dramas before, this series promises to be an unforgettable viewing experience for fans of dark, character-driven mysteries.

Icons of Style is a captivating new series streaming on BBC iPlayer, with the first episode available from Sunday, 16th March 2025. Presented by the esteemed journalist Kirsty Wark, this two-part series delves into the rich and influential history of Scottish fashion.

Episode One: A Journey Through Time

The first episode takes viewers on a journey through 60 years of Scottish fashion, highlighting the designers, influencers, and celebrities who have left an indelible mark on the global fashion scene. From the historical connections between Dior and Scotland to the impact of the Scottish landscape on designers like Bernat Klein, the episode offers a comprehensive look at how Scotland has shaped the fashion industry.

Celebrating Iconic Figures

Kirsty Wark meets with a diverse array of fashion icons, including actor Alan Cumming, designers Pam Hogg and Bill Gibb, and singer Sharleen Spiteri. Each interview provides unique insights into how these figures have championed Scotland’s distinctive style and contributed to its enduring appeal.

A Blend of Tradition and Modernity

The series beautifully captures the essence of Scottish fashion, showcasing how traditional elements like tartan and tweed have been reimagined for contemporary audiences. The episode also explores the role of iconic Scottish mills, such as Lochcarron, in producing fabrics for major fashion houses worldwide.

A Must-Watch for Fashion Enthusiasts

Icons of Style is a must-watch for anyone interested in the intersection of fashion, culture, and history. The series not only celebrates the creativity and innovation of Scottish designers but also highlights the importance of sustainability and the timeless nature of well-crafted garments.

Icons of Style is a visually stunning and intellectually engaging series that offers a fresh perspective on the global impact of Scottish fashion.

Picture Credits

The French Connection (1971)
By RogerEbert.com: [1], Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=4368613
The Northman (2022)
By https://twitter.com/TheNorthmanFilm/status/1508806210451091463, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=69558144
Aftersun (2022)
The Third Man (1949)
By “Copyright 1949 Selznick Releasing Organization, Inc. Country of Origin U.S.A.” – Scan via Heritage Auctions. Cropped from the original image and lightly retouched to repair the torn upper-left corner., Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=85714336
War for the Planet of the Apes (2017)
By http://www.impawards.com/2017/war_for_the_planet_of_the_apes_ver3.html, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=48616125
Dark Victory (1939)
By http://www.movieposterdb.com/poster/94189217, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=7200777
Stardust (2007)
By May be found at the following website: MoviePosterDB.com, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=11120362
The Swimmer (1968)By http://www.movieposterdb.com/poster/3d02fcee, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=35940227
French Connection II (1975)
By RogerEbert.com, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=7942921
The Old Man and the Gun (2018)
By https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2837574/, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=57635090
Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse (1991)
By American Zoetrope – IMDb, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=39124787
Lady Gaga
By Carlos M. Vazquez II – 210120-D-WD757-1720, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=121269563
Enya
By Orlando Sentinel/ Associated Press – The Orlando Sentinel, January 22, 1989, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=151569434
Jack Vettriano -The Singing Butler
Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3809260
SpyCops
Used with kind permission of KollectivFutur
Ruth Ellis
Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=29759349
The Tower Of London
By Joy – Tower of London, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=10578253
Stacey Dooley
By War on Want – https://www.flickr.com/photos/waronwant/3930619275/, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=74634102
Can You Ever Forgive Me? (2018)
By Fox Searchlight Pictures, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=56873249
Saint Patrick
By Nheyob – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=39732088

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The Life and Deaths of Christopher Lee: A Must-See Documentary By Patrick Harrington

Christopher Lee was a man of extraordinary versatility. The Life and Deaths of Christopher Lee seeks to give him the recognition he has long deserved. His legendary association with horror should not overshadow this recognition. Jon Spira wrote this documentary. It is narrated by Peter Serafinowicz. This two-hour film provides a deep dive into Lee’s incredible career. It also explores his personal history and the many layers of his remarkable life.

Lee’s life was already the stuff of legend, beginning with his aristocratic background. His mystery-shrouded wartime service added to this aura. This was before he even set foot in a film studio. The documentary delves into this enigmatic period, hinting at his involvement in covert operations. His post-war rise to fame through Hammer Films cemented his status as the quintessential horror icon. Still, as this documentary makes clear, he was so much more than that.

His performance as Lord Summerisle in The Wicker Man remains one of his greatest. His chilling portrayal of Francisco Scaramanga in The Man with the Golden Gun is also remarkable. This is made all the more fascinating given that the film was written by Ian Fleming, his cousin. Ian Fleming had, sadly, passed away before seeing Lee embody one of his characters. His turn as Mycroft Holmes further showcased his ability to slip seamlessly into roles beyond horror.

One of the highlights of the documentary is its exploration of Lee’s underappreciated talents. He was a skilled linguist, fencer, and puppeteer. He was also an incredibly talented singer. His voice lent itself to everything from opera to heavy metal. His Charlemagne project led him into symphonic and heavier metal. Surprisingly, his Christmas single Jingle Hell even reached No. 18 on the Billboard charts when he was 91. These elements help paint a picture of a man whose career was never stagnant, always evolving.

The documentary benefits greatly from interviews with those who knew him best. These include his family, his co-star Caroline Munro, and his son-in-law Juan Aneiros. It even features The Lord of the Rings director Peter Jackson. Jackson introduced Lee to a new generation. He did this through his work in both The Lord of the Rings and Star Wars franchises.

A particularly compelling moment in the film comes after his knighthood. A journalist refers to him as the ‘king of horror’. Lee was never comfortable with this title. It speaks to the way he was often typecast, despite his many other achievements. The documentary does an excellent job of highlighting this struggle. It shows how early success in horror both defined and confined him. This happened despite his immense range.

Beyond its well-researched content, The Life and Deaths of Christopher Lee also excels in its presentation. It makes excellent use of puppetry and narration. These techniques bring elements of his life to vivid life. The talented team at Blind Summit Theatre created the puppetry. It adds a unique and theatrical quality to the storytelling. It blends seamlessly with the archival footage and interviews. These creative choices add depth and texture to a story that is already full of intrigue.

This documentary is an essential watch for film buffs and casual fans alike. It offers a much-needed reevaluation of Christopher Lee. The documentary finally gives due credit to a man whose career spanned decades, genres, and artistic disciplines. Lee had a truly unique voice with his deep baritone. He had an imposing screen presence. His love of metal music highlighted his uniqueness. Lee was a truly unique figure in entertainment history. The Life and Deaths of Christopher Lee does him justice.

By Pat Harrington

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Culture Vulture 11th to the 17th of January 2025

Welcome to Culture Vulture your alternative guide to the week’s entertainment. Writing and selections are by Pat Harrington and music is from Tim Bragg.

Highlights include:

  1. Cra: A haunting Irish-language crime noir set in the boglands of County Donegal, where a grisly discovery unravels buried secrets.
  2. Smile (2022): A chilling horror film. It explores a curse passed from person to person. The story delves into fear and personal trauma.
  3. The Electrical Life Of Louis Wain (2021): A vibrant biopic exploring the life of the eccentric artist Louis Wain. He is known for his whimsical cat illustrations. The film also depicts his tender romance with his sisters’ governess.

Saturday 11th of January 2025

Our Tiny Islands 8pm Channel 4
This poetic documentary explores Britain’s smallest and most remote islands. Each island has a story, shaped by the interplay of nature and human presence. The film captures the resilience of those who choose to live in isolation. They find beauty in their connection to the land. The cinematography is breathtaking, showcasing rugged landscapes and stormy seas. Beneath the surface, it raises questions about community, belonging, and the changing relationship between humans and their environment. A reflective and visually stunning watch.

Cra BBC4 9pm
This Irish-language crime noir, Cra, unfolds amidst the haunting boglands of County Donegal. It offers a deeply atmospheric exploration of mystery and memory. The story begins with the chilling discovery of human remains. These remains are buried deep in the bogs. This discovery sets off an investigation that slowly peels back layers of long-hidden secrets. As the narrative unravels, the audience is drawn into a world. The quiet isolation of the landscape mirrors the unspoken tensions. It also reflects the hidden truths of its characters.

The stark beauty of the bogs is undeniable. Their windswept grasses and ever-changing skies provide a striking backdrop to the darkness of the narrative. The filmmakers expertly juxtapose the serenity of the Irish countryside with the unsettling nature of the crime at its center. Themes of guilt, loyalty, and the unrelenting grip of the past weave through the story. They create a tapestry of intrigue that reflects the weight of history. This tapestry shows its impact on the present.

The cast delivers compelling performances, with lead roles portrayed by some of Ireland’s finest actors. Their subtle, restrained performances add depth to the story’s tension. They navigate a tightly wound script filled with both personal and communal conflict. The sparse dialogue enhances the narrative, allowing the actors to convey much through nuanced expressions and silences. The haunting score further amplifies the sense of unease, drawing viewers into the emotional gravity of the investigation.

Steeped in the unique culture and landscape of Ireland, Cra feels both timeless and rooted in its setting. The film’s commitment to the Irish language adds a layer of authenticity and pride, highlighting the region’s rich heritage. The haunting visuals captivate viewers. Compelling performances enhance the storytelling. Together, they create an unforgettable cinematic experience. This experience lingers long after the credits roll, making Cra a standout addition to the crime noir genre.

The Hurt Locker (2008) BBC1 12am
The movie offers a visceral portrayal of modern warfare. It follows a bomb disposal unit in Iraq. Each mission is a heart-stopping game of survival. The film’s true power lies in its portrayal of the psychological toll of war. Jeremy Renner delivers a career-defining performance as a soldier addicted to the adrenaline of danger. The chaotic streets of Baghdad are brought to life with unflinching realism, immersing the audience in the soldiers’ world. As the story progresses, it questions what it means to live a normal life after experiencing extreme circumstances. Tense, thought-provoking, and deeply human.


Sunday 12th of January 2025

Falstaff: Chimes At Midnight (1965) Talking Pictures 12.50am
Orson Welles delivers one of his most compelling performances as the boisterous Falstaff. This reimagining of Shakespeare’s history plays is both comedic and tragic, reflecting the complexity of its titular character. Falstaff’s loyalty to Prince Hal and the latter’s betrayal form the emotional core of the film. The battle scenes are raw and chaotic, contrasting with the tender moments of friendship and merriment. Welles’ direction is masterful, blending theatricality with cinematic innovation. The film is a poignant exploration of loyalty, power, and the inevitability of change. A must-watch for lovers of classic cinema.

Sweet Country (2017) Film4 1.15am
Set in the harsh Australian outback, Sweet Country is a gripping tale of injustice and survival. When an Aboriginal stockman kills a white farmer in self-defence, a manhunt ensues. The film doesn’t shy away from depicting the brutal realities of colonialism and prejudice. The stark beauty of the landscape contrasts with the violence and cruelty of its inhabitants. As the story unfolds, moments of compassion and solidarity provide glimmers of hope. It’s a powerful and haunting film. It stays with you long after it ends. The film offers no easy resolutions but plenty to reflect on.


Monday 13th of January 2025

Walter Presents: Sleepers (one of six) Channel 4 12.20am
This gripping spy drama takes viewers into a world of secrets and deception. The plot is set during a time of political tension. It follows two former agents who return to a web of intrigue. The characters are complex, their choices driven by both survival and personal convictions. The story unfolds with precision, balancing tense action with quieter moments of introspection. The period setting adds authenticity, immersing the audience in a time of uncertainty and shifting loyalties. A strong start to what promises to be a compelling series.

Patti Cake$ (2017) 1.30am Film4
A heartfelt story of ambition, Patti Cake$ follows an aspiring rapper from a small New Jersey town. Patti’s dream of making it big is met with obstacles, from financial struggles to societal expectations. Danielle Macdonald shines in the lead role, bringing both vulnerability and grit to her character. The film’s energy is infectious, fuelled by a dynamic soundtrack and moments of humour. Beneath the surface, it’s a tale of resilience and the power of self-belief. A celebration of underdogs, it’s as uplifting as it is entertaining.


Tuesday 14th of January 2025

Smile (2022) 9pm Film4
Smile is a horror film that thrives on its unsettling atmosphere. The story revolves around a curse passed from person to person, bringing dread and despair. Sosie Bacon gives a chilling performance as the protagonist, whose grip on reality begins to unravel. The film is masterful in its use of silence and subtle scares, keeping viewers on edge throughout. Its exploration of personal trauma and the fear of being believed adds layers of depth. A modern horror that combines psychological tension with spine-tingling visuals, it’s a must-watch for genre fans.

The Lost Women Spies Sky History 9pm
This documentary sheds light on the lives of women who worked as spies during pivotal moments in history. Their courage and ingenuity often went unnoticed, but their contributions were invaluable. Through interviews and archival footage, the programme brings their stories to life. The risks they faced and the sacrifices they made are portrayed with empathy and respect. It’s a moving tribute to their legacy, highlighting the enduring impact of their work. A fascinating and poignant watch.

Marilyn Manson: Unmasked (one of three) Channel 4 10pm
This documentary series delves into the controversial life and career of Marilyn Manson. The first episode sets the stage, exploring his rise to fame and the persona he created. Interviews with those who knew him paint a complex picture, filled with contradictions. Archival footage adds depth, capturing moments of creativity and chaos. The programme doesn’t shy away from difficult topics, asking challenging questions about art, identity, and responsibility. A bold and compelling start to the series.


Wednesday 15th of January 2025

Will You Get Dementia? 7pm Channel 5
This informative programme offers a compassionate exploration of a condition that affects millions worldwide. Through personal stories and expert insights, it sheds light on early signs, prevention, and care. The stories of those living with the condition bring a deeply human element, breaking down stigma and fostering understanding. While the scientific aspects are engaging, it’s the emotional weight of the personal accounts that resonates most. A balanced and empathetic look at a vital topic, it’s both educational and moving.

The Electrical Life Of Louis Wain (2021) 9pm Film4
This vibrant biopic tells the story of Louis Wain. He was an eccentric artist best known for his playful and whimsical cat illustrations. Benedict Cumberbatch delivers a heartfelt performance, capturing both Wain’s genius and his struggles with mental health. The film also explores his romance with his sisters’ governess. Claire Foy plays the governess. Her love profoundly shaped his life and art. Their relationship brings tenderness and hope to a life marked by challenges and tragedy. The vivid colour palette mirrors Wain’s imaginative inner world, blending joy with sorrow. Ultimately, the film celebrates individuality, creativity, and the enduring power of art to connect us.

Marilyn Manson: Unmasked (two of three). Channel 4 10pm
The second episode delves into Marilyn Manson’s complex persona. It explores the dynamics of his relationships and the controversies that surrounded him. The documentary carefully examines why so many initially dismissed the allegations against him as exaggerated or untrue. Archival material and interviews reveal the cultural and psychological factors behind this perception. It’s an unsettling yet vital exploration of power, fame, and public complicity, raising questions about how such narratives are shaped.


Thursday 16th of January 2025

The Man Who Destroyed Oscar Wilde PBS America 8.50pm
This documentary examines the life of the man whose actions led to Oscar Wilde’s downfall. Through dramatic reenactments and historical accounts, it reveals the societal forces that allowed prejudice to triumph. Wilde’s wit and brilliance shine through, even as he faces betrayal and injustice. The film highlights the destructive power of hypocrisy and the cost of living authentically in an unforgiving world. A deeply affecting look at one of history’s great tragedies, it offers both sorrow and admiration for Wilde’s enduring legacy.

Marilyn Manson: Unmasked (three of three) Channel 4 10pm
The final episode examines the events after Evan Rachel Wood’s testimony to Congress. Her testimony brought renewed attention to allegations against Marilyn Manson. The programme explores the aftermath. It delves into the legal battles and the impact on his career. It also examines the broader cultural shift in holding powerful figures accountable. Survivor interviews offer insight into the quest for justice and the complexities of confronting such allegations. It’s a gripping conclusion to a bold and thought-provoking series. It leaves viewers to reflect on the intersection of fame and responsibility.

Q&A (1990) 10.50pm Legend
This gritty crime drama delves into the murky waters of justice and corruption. Nick Nolte delivers a commanding performance as a cop whose actions blur the lines between right and wrong. The film exposes the systemic failures that allow power to go unchecked. Its dialogue crackles with intensity, and the moral dilemmas faced by the characters feel disturbingly real. A masterclass in tension and storytelling, Q&A is a film that demands reflection as much as it entertains.


Friday 17th of January 2025

Hombre (1967) 6.30pm Talking Pictures
Paul Newman stars in this quietly powerful western about an outsider forced to take a stand. As a white man raised by Native Americans, his character challenges the prejudices of those around him. The film’s minimalist style underscores the stark moral choices its characters face. The desert landscape becomes a metaphor for human isolation and resilience. The story’s moral complexity deepens as the characters grapple with survival and their own biases. It’s a tale of courage, sacrifice, and the fight for dignity in a world that offers none. A timeless classic that resonates with modern audiences.

World War Z (2013) 9pm GREAT!movies
This apocalyptic thriller delivers relentless action and nail-biting tension. Brad Pitt anchors the film with a grounded performance as a man racing against time to stop a global pandemic. The film’s globe-trotting narrative showcases humanity’s resourcefulness and fragility in the face of catastrophe. The zombie sequences are both terrifying and exhilarating, with large-scale set pieces that leave a lasting impression. Beneath the chaos lies a story about family, survival, and the lengths we go to protect those we love. A blockbuster with heart.

Sexy Beast (2000) 10.50pm Film4
This stylish crime thriller explores the consequences of escaping a life of violence. Ray Winstone delivers a powerful performance as a retired gangster drawn back into the underworld. Ben Kingsley is terrifying as a volatile figure who disrupts his idyllic life. The tension between the two characters crackles, driving the film towards its explosive climax. The film features sharp dialogue. It presents stunning visuals. Additionally, it includes a haunting soundtrack. Sexy Beast is both a character study and a masterful piece of storytelling. Unforgettable and utterly gripping.


Streaming Selections

Walter Presents: Blackwater – Season One available from January 17th on Channel 4 Streaming
Blackwater is a chilling Scandi-noir set in a remote Swedish town, where a grisly murder sets off a chain of events that reveals dark secrets. The icy landscape becomes a character of its own, amplifying the tension and isolation faced by its characters. This series masterfully intertwines personal trauma, small-town dynamics, and a mystery that keeps viewers guessing until the end. Fans of The Bridge or The Killing will find much to love in this atmospheric thriller.

Pennyworth – All three seasons available from January 12th on ITVX
For fans of the DC Universe, Pennyworth provides a fresh take on the backstory of Alfred Pennyworth, the iconic butler of Bruce Wayne. Set in a stylish, alternate-history London, the series explores Alfred’s life as a former SAS soldier. He navigates a world of espionage, rebellion, and political intrigue. Rich character development, sharp writing, and a blend of action and drama make this a standout series. Whether you’re a superhero fan or simply enjoy gripping storytelling, Pennyworth offers something for everyone.


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FDR Miniseries: Immersive Depiction of FDR’s Triumphs and Trials

FDR in real life

451 words, 2 minutes read time.

The three-part miniseries “FDR” stands out as an extraordinary portrayal of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s life, seamlessly blending historical accuracy, captivating performances, and breath-taking cinematography. Christian McKay’s portrayal of FDR captures his charisma, resilience, and unwavering determination during pivotal moments in American history.

The series delves into FDR’s leadership during tumultuous times, effectively illustrating the impact of his decisions. Notably, it showcases FDR’s efforts to prepare a reluctant nation for World War II, navigating through key moments like the attack on Pearl Harbor. The series expertly portrays FDR’s resolve and visionary leadership during this defining period.

What sets “FDR” apart is its reliance on dramatizations based on letters and diaries, providing an intimate perspective on FDR’s personality. Interactions with Eleanor Roosevelt and Winston Churchill humanize the statesman, revealing the complexities of his character.

The cinematography deserves special mention, transporting viewers to iconic locations like the Oval Office and wartime strategy rooms. Coupled with sparing yet impactful reenactments, it enhances the storytelling, immersing the audience in the historical narrative.

A central theme is the significance of FDR’s legacy, prompting viewers to reflect on the sacrifices, the weight of leadership, and the enduring impact on the nation. FDR’s triumphs and struggles, presented with nuance, serve as a powerful reminder that leadership is often forged in adversity.

“FDR” transcends the conventional documentary, acting as a living time capsule. Whether you’re a history enthusiast or intrigued by the man who shaped modern America, the series offers an immersive experience. The sepia-toned past comes to life, allowing viewers to witness the triumphs and trials of a truly remarkable leader.

In comparison to other historical documentaries or dramas, “FDR” stands out for meticulous attention to detail, compelling performances, and a nuanced exploration of FDR’s legacy. It goes beyond a mere retelling of events, providing a rich and immersive experience that resonates with both history buffs and casual viewers alike. At its core is McKay’s remarkable portrayal of FDR, capturing the essence of a leader who guided America through tumultuous times, defining an era. The series draws strength from dramatizations based on letters and diaries, offering an intimate glimpse into FDR’s personality, from sociability and optimism to strategic brilliance. As Hitler’s shadow looms over Europe, FDR faces the task of preparing a reluctant nation for war, showcasing his unwavering resolve and visionary leadership. The series confronts the complexities of Roosevelt’s legacy, prompting viewers to ponder the sacrifices and the profound impact on a nation. “FDR” transcends documentary boundaries, acting as a living time capsule for those intrigued by the man who shaped modern America.

Reviewed by Pat Harrington

Picture credit:

FDR
By Photograph: Leon PerskieScan: FDR Presidential Library & Museum – CT 09-109(1), CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=71911951

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Review: Delia Derbyshire: The Myths and the Legendary Tapes

Delia Derbyshire: The Myths and the Legendary Tapes

(Arena, 2021)

BBC iPlayer – Delia Derbyshire: The Myths and the Legendary Tapes

Reviewed by Anthony C Green

Delia Derbyshire at the BBC Radiophonic Workshop

1,836 words, 10 minutes read time.

I’ve written about Delia Derbyshire of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop before, in relation to Paul McCartney’s admiration of her work, and their sole mid-sixties meeting, to which I link at the end of this article. But amidst the generally, so far, not well received 60th anniversary celebrations of Doctor Who, to which I’ll probably return in a separate article, it was nice to find this little gem, a full ninety-minute documentary on Delia tucked away as part of the often excellent and long-running Arena series on the BBC iPlayer.

Delia is of course best known for her work on the theme tune for Who, which first aired on November 23rd, 1963, the day after the assassination of John F Kennedy. Although not technically the composer of the tune, it was her manipulation of tape to produce the eerie electronic, futuristic sound of the theme that was crucial to its success. Her treatment of Ron Grainer’s basic melody was so radical that when Grainer first heard the finished work, he was said to have exclaimed: ‘Did I really write that?’

Although, like the Doctor himself, the theme has gone through many incarnations over the decades, it has always remained close enough to Delia’s original as to be instantly recognisable. Indeed, a ‘Doctor Who’ which began without it simply wouldn’t be Doctor Who. If we require evidence of this assertion, then you need only look at the two mid-sixties none-canon ‘Doctor Who’ movies starring Peter Cushing. You know they are not canon precisely because they don’t begin with it, though other reasons also soon become apparent.

It’s sad that only posthumously, twelve years after her death, aged sixty-four in July 2001, following long periods of struggle with alcohol and mental health issues, was she at last awarded a full co-writing credit for the Who theme, her name finally taking its place alongside Grainer’s as the final credits rolled at the end of excellent The Day of the Doctor fiftieth anniversary special in 2013. She was also depicted, albeit too briefly in the otherwise equally excellent An Adventure in Space and Time television, a dramatisation of the birth and early days of the show.

But Delia was about so much more than Doctor Who in any case, and finally, in this documentary, she gets the acknowledgement her role in the development of modern electronic music she deserves.

The programme utilises a drama-documentary format, written and starring Caroline Catz, who turns in a superb performance playing Delia in the dramatised sections. The beautifully, suitably eerie, weird and eclectic soundtrack was created by musician and performance artist Cosio Fanni Tutti, utilising material found on 267 reel-to-reel tapes, the ‘Lost Tapes’ of the title, which were discovered in Delia’s flat at the time of her death, in what Fan Tutti has described as ‘a collaboration across time.’

Excerpts from a charmingly scatty, clearly intoxicated radio interview she gave not long before her death are also inserted at appropriate moments throughout the film.

Through Catz’ words and performance, we see Delia as a geeky Cambridge graduate in mathematics and Music, at a time when female Cambridge graduates were still something of a rarity, especially in such arcane subject-combinations, telling an incredulous Career’s Officer that she wants to work in a field which allows her to explore the relationship between mathematics and sound/music, casually dropping in a reference to Pythagoras work on the subject as she does so. ‘Have you considered working with deaf aids?’ offers the out of his depth officer. Delia looks at him with a bemusement which beautifully mirrored his own: ‘No, have you?’

The documentary is full of such scenes, which show Delia to be a talented, strong-willed young woman with a clear idea of what she wanted to achieve, and an equally clear awareness that very few avenues existed through which she might achieve them.

In the Britain of the late nineteen fifties/early nineteen sixties, there was perhaps only one such avenue was open to her; and that was the BBC Radiophonic Worksop.

Despite being opened by the equally important electronic music pioneer Daphne Oram in 1958, the Workshop was very much a man’s world. It was also a place to which BBC operatives who didn’t really fit in anywhere else ‘sent,’ rather than a location of desire. The fact that Delia fought for the right to work in such an environment was seen within the Beeb as the height of eccentricity, but this keenness, once it was acknowledged, virtually guaranteed her the position she coveted.

We see the likes of Oram and Brian Hodgson, who would become her most important collaborator, doing their best in very difficult, cramped, under-funded circumstances to produce whatever sound effects would be required for this or that radio or television production using the limited equipment at their disposal.

These were seen as purely technical tasks. The idea that these BBC workers could also be creatives, fully-fledged composers using tape, found-sound and new-fangled ‘oscillators’ as the means to create new music was effectively born with Delia and her Workshop colleagues. Indeed, despite being accomplished on piano, violin, double-bass and harpsichord, Delia was informed on her arrival at the BBC in 1962 that they didn’t use the ‘m’ (music) word at the Workshop, their job was to create ‘special sounds’, certainly not to compose.

(Britain was rather behind the loop here in comparison to America. The husband-and-wife team Bebe and Louis Baron had produced a purely electronic score for the great Science Fiction movie The Forbidden Planet in 1956).

Delia was always under-appreciated for her work at the Workshop, and so naturally sought to establish herself as part of the emergent sixties’ left-fielf musical Zeitgeist through outside projects like the short-lived Unit Delta Plus trio with Hodgson and Peter Zinoviev, during which time her meeting with McCartney took place. This outfit gave perhaps their one and only public performance at the Million Volt Light and Sound Wave in 1967, an event whose main claim to fame is that it marked one of only two occasions when the Beatles still to this day unreleased Carnival of Light track was played.

Perhaps her most influential and ahead of its time work was the White Noise album credited to Electric Storm, where she again partnered Hodgson, with input also from David Vorhaus, another key figure on this scene in this period. The British DJ and writer Stuart Maconie has described the experience of walking alone in the pitch-black of the English countryside late at night with the album blasting through his headphones as being one of the most sonically mind-blowing events of his life.

Fascinating clips from archived interviews with the likes of Hodgson, Zinovieff and Vorhaus are also featured at relevant points in the documentary, which help to place Delia in the context of her time, and properly allocate to her the pivotal role she played at the centre of the British musical Avant-Garde.

Interestingly, Delia herself ascribed her love of what she termed ‘abstract music’ as having been influenced by the ubiquitous sound of the air raid warning during the Second World War. Having been born in Coventry in 1938, and remained there, the most bombed city in Britain, with her family throughout hostilities, her young ears would have heard a lot of that siren.

Delia would often seek work outside of the BBC under a pseudonym, to help her to make something resembling a living, for instance in the early 1970’s on commercial television Science Fiction rivals to Doctor Who, such as The Tomorrow People and Timeslip (the latter being a show very few but me seem to recall).

Although you may not know the name of many of the titles of much of the music Delia composed whilst she was at the Workshop, anyone who grew up watching British television in the 1960’s and 1970’s will recognise the music once they hear it, especially those familiar with SF, nature programmes, and the more slightly ‘out there’ end of children’s television.

She left the BBC in 1972, and by 1974 she’d reached such a state of disillusionment that she gave up music entirely, spending over two decades in a variety of jobs, including as an operator and English French translator for British gas, and nomadic wanderings, only returning to music as new generations came to appreciate her towards the end of her life.

One very telling scene in the film shows young people dancing enthusiastically to a beat-heavy piece of music she’d composed in 1971. It sounded more like something that would have emerged from the Rave culture of almost three decades later.

It is thanks to the likes of Cosy Fanni Tutti that the ‘lost tapes’ have now been digitally preserved, the originals stored at Manchester University. Selections from them have now also become commercially available for the first time.

And thanks to films like this 2021 Arena special, it’s likely that more and more younger people will discover something of the fascinating life and music of the woman behind the Doctor Who theme, and that she about so much more than Doctor Who theme.

It’s also telling that, in that late-life radio interview, though certainly sounding a little the worse for wear, she shows no sign of bitterness at the direction her life took. This point is reinforced by Catz, who imagines her ridiculing the obituaries that attempted to make her into a tragic figure.

She acknowledges her fondness for booze but does not accept any form of cliched ‘struggle against addiction’.

‘Never a problem, always a pleasure,’ Catz has her say, and though the actor/author is using license to put these words into Delia’s mouth, they somehow ring true of everything we see and hear of the real Delia here.

From her interviews and from the accounts of those who knew and worked with her, she seems to have been a truly lovable British eccentric who was a lot of fun to be around.

It’s hard to imagine a woman with a fondness for snuff and for describing herself as being ‘tickled pink’ not being fun to be around.

She was also, of course, a key figure in the development of electronic music, and an important trailblazer and role-model for the position of women in the arts in Britain.

This is a documentary worthy of her life and accomplishments, which also beautifully captures her idiosyncrasies. The music is great too, Fanni Tutti doing a fine job in turning Delia’s unknown home experiments into the perfect sonic accompaniment to this fine account of her life.  

Anthony C Green, December 2023

My earlier article on Delia. Interestingly, her meeting with Brian Jones of The Rolling Stones is discussed in the film, but not the meeting with McCartney I covered here: Anthony C Green – A short article on the mid-sixties meeting… | Facebook

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