Posts Tagged movie-review

Culture Vulture 30 August – 5 September 2025

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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 23 – 29 August 2025

Selections and commentary by Pat Harrington.

This week’s viewing is rich in history, politics, and sharp reflection. PBS America continues its monumental series on Vietnam, tracing the war’s roots, escalation, and legacy with a depth that few broadcasters could match. These documentaries are more than history lessons; they are meditations on power, pride, and human cost. Alongside them runs Iron Curtain: Living Under Soviet Occupation, which brings to light the daily realities of those trapped under Moscow’s grip. These are stories that force us to reckon with systems of control and the courage of resistance.

A graphic design featuring a soaring vulture against a blue sky, with bold text reading 'CULTURE VULTURE' at the top and a logo for 'COUNTER CULTURE' at the bottom.

Film lovers are in for something equally profound. Bong Joon-ho’s Snowpiercer (2013) offers a blistering allegory of class divides. Its train, circling endlessly in a frozen wasteland, becomes a stage for rebellion, inequality, and survival. It is as much a parable as it is a thriller, and one that resonates in a world still scarred by division. Alongside The Godfather trilogy, Atonement, and Just Mercy, the week balances classics with films that confront our collective conscience.

Culture Vulture exists to pick out the programmes that matter — for people who are political and socially engaged, who want to think as well as be entertained. We take an alternative stance, unafraid to highlight where art and politics meet, whilst also celebrating the very best in high standard entertainment.


Saturday 23rd August

Dark Hearts — BBC Four, 9:00pm

This taut French thriller focuses on a team of soldiers in Mali caught in the crossfire of war and morality. It captures not only the tension of battlefield missions but the shadows cast on the human spirit. The directing is tight, the atmosphere claustrophobic, and the moral dilemmas real.

The series shows how war is rarely straightforward. Soldiers are forced into impossible choices, and the lines between duty and humanity blur. This is drama rooted in reality, which makes it all the more unsettling.

It is also visually striking, making full use of the desert landscape. There is a beauty to the stillness which contrasts starkly with the violence of the action. It leaves you asking whether victory is ever possible in wars of this kind.

The Vietnam War: Déjà Vu, 1858–1961 / Riding the Tiger, 1961–63 / The River Styx, 1964–65 — PBS America, 3:20pm / 7:05pm / 9:30pm

These episodes lay the groundwork for America’s involvement in Vietnam, tracing roots deep into colonial history. The series excels at showing how decisions taken in faraway capitals lead to suffering on the ground. The combination of archive footage and testimony makes the story both sweeping and intimate.

What emerges is a tale of misjudgments, stubborn pride, and human cost. The sense of inevitability builds as each step leads further into the quagmire. Ken Burns and Lynn Novick’s work remains a monumental achievement.

This is not easy viewing, but it is vital. For those who want to understand how history repeats itself, this series provides both the facts and the emotions.


Sunday 24th August

The Vietnam War: The Veneer of Civilisation, June 1968 – May 1969 — PBS America, 7:10pm

This episode looks at a year when the war dragged on and the divisions at home grew sharper. The title points to the thin cover of order that masks brutality. Soldiers fought battles in the jungle while politicians fought battles in Washington. Neither side found resolution.

The programme makes clear how the Tet Offensive shattered illusions of victory. Violence abroad was matched by unrest on American streets. It was a time when trust in government collapsed, and protest became a defining feature of the era.

The strength of the series is in its voices. Veterans, families, and leaders all speak, giving human depth to what might otherwise be abstract. It’s a reminder that war corrodes not just lives but the very idea of civilisation itself.

The History of the World, April 1969 – May 1970 — PBS America, 9:35pm

This chapter continues the story, showing how the conflict ground on even as the world seemed to spin apart. From campuses in the United States to jungles in Southeast Asia, the war’s reach was global. Nixon’s promises of “peace with honour” rang hollow as the bombing spread.

The programme explores a year marked by contradictions: talk of withdrawal on one hand, escalation on the other. It shows how Vietnam was not an isolated struggle but part of a wider Cold War chess game. The title reminds us that these events shaped the course of the world, not just one nation.

It is a sombre watch. Yet it is vital, because it captures the sense of a society under strain, and a war that refused to end. The footage and testimony remind us how quickly hope can turn to despair when leaders cannot or will not change course.

The Godfather (1972) — BBC Two, 10:00pm

Francis Ford Coppola’s masterpiece needs little introduction. This is cinema at its richest, from the opening wedding to the closing door. It remains a haunting meditation on family, power, and corruption.

The performances are as magnetic as ever. Marlon Brando dominates as Vito, but Al Pacino’s transformation from reluctant son to ruthless Don is the film’s true arc. The dialogue, the pacing, and the moral weight never lose their grip.

Half a century later, the film still feels alive. It’s not nostalgia but timeless storytelling that makes The Godfather stand out this week.

California Dreaming: The Songs of The Mamas and The Papas — Sky Arts, 8:00pm

The Mamas and The Papas gave the 1960s its harmonies and heartbreaks. This programme looks at the group’s music and the bittersweet story behind it. Their songs capture both the lightness of Californian dreams and the sadness that lay beneath.

Hearing “California Dreamin’” or “Monday, Monday” again is to hear the 1960s in full colour. Yet behind the harmonies were tangled relationships and personal struggles. This show reminds us of how beauty and pain can live together in music.

The nostalgia is warm, but there’s a poignancy too. It’s a celebration that doesn’t flinch from the truth.


Monday 25th August (Bank Holiday)

The Vietnam War: Disrespectful Loyalty, May 1970 – March 1973 — PBS America, 6:10pm

This episode covers the final years of American combat in Vietnam, a time when loyalty between leaders, soldiers, and citizens frayed beyond repair. Nixon escalated the war into Cambodia and Laos, sparking fury at home. The Kent State shootings revealed how deep the divisions ran.

The title is apt: loyalty was demanded but rarely returned. Soldiers questioned why they were there, while families questioned why their children had to die. Politicians spoke of peace, yet the killing continued.

The programme captures the chaos of a country at war with itself as much as with Vietnam. It shows how betrayal, both real and perceived, eats away at the bonds that hold societies together.

The Vietnam War: The Weight of Memory, March 1973 onward — PBS America, 8:30pm

The final episode looks at the end of direct U.S. involvement and the long shadow that followed. American troops left, but the war did not end for Vietnam. South Vietnam collapsed, and the images of helicopters lifting from rooftops remain etched in history.

At home, the memory of the war proved just as heavy. Veterans returned to a nation unsure how to receive them, and the country struggled to process a defeat that many refused to name as such. The documentary gives space to these voices, which are too often overlooked.

This is not a story of triumph but of reckoning. The “weight of memory” lingers in every shot, reminding us that wars do not end when soldiers come home. They echo in politics, in culture, and in the lives of those who lived through them.

Snowpiercer (2013) — ITV4, 9:00pm

This film from Bong Joon-ho is a ferocious allegory of class and survival. The train circles endlessly, a closed system where the poor are crushed at the back and the elites thrive at the front. The story unfolds as a revolt, carriage by carriage.

It is brutal but also inventive. The imagery lingers, from frozen landscapes outside to the shocking excess inside. The tone is part thriller, part parable, part grotesque comedy.

Chris Evans leads a strong cast, but the real star is the concept. Few films capture inequality so vividly or so memorably.

The Godfather Part II (1974) — BBC Two, 10:00pm

Many sequels fall short. This one surpasses. Coppola delivers not just a continuation but a deepening. Pacino now owns the screen as Michael Corleone, his face colder and harder with each scene.

The film moves between Michael’s reign and Vito’s early life, played with delicate brilliance by Robert De Niro. The contrasts of past and present give the film its weight. This is not just crime drama but family tragedy.

It closes with an emptiness that chills. The Corleones gain power but lose their souls. It is one of the most powerful films in American cinema.


Tuesday 26th August

Iron Curtain: Living Under Soviet Occupation, Part One – The Hand of Moscow — PBS America, 8:40pm

The series begins with the immediate post-war years, when Eastern Europe fell under Soviet control. This episode shows how Moscow’s hand reached into every aspect of life, from politics to culture to family homes. It is chilling to see how quickly freedoms disappeared once the occupation set in.

Archive material and eyewitness accounts give weight to the story. We hear not only from leaders but from ordinary people forced to live under suspicion and fear. It’s a reminder of how fragile democracy can be, and how quickly it can be lost.

The programme is more than history — it’s a warning. What happened then is a lesson for our own age about the dangers of authoritarian power unchecked.

The Hurt Locker (2008) — BBC Three, 10:00pm

Kathryn Bigelow’s Oscar-winner is a tense and exhausting ride. It follows a bomb disposal team in Iraq, and every scene pulses with risk. The dangers are real, the explosions sudden, and the nerves fray.

Jeremy Renner plays Sergeant James, addicted to the thrill of defusing bombs. His recklessness makes him both heroic and frightening. The film asks if war is a drug, and whether those who fight can ever return home whole.

It is both intimate and overwhelming. The camera takes you inside the helmet, into the dust, and into the fear. Few war films have done it better.


Wednesday 27th August

Iron Curtain: Living Under Soviet Occupation, Part Two – The Reign of Stalin — PBS America, 8:20pm

This episode focuses on the brutal years when Stalin’s authority was absolute. The violence, purges, and forced conformity spread deep into the satellite states. It shows how terror was used not only to silence dissent but to reshape society itself.

The stories here are stark. Families torn apart, careers ended, lives erased for a careless word. The regime demanded loyalty but offered little in return beyond fear. Watching it, you understand how trauma can linger across generations.

The programme makes clear that Stalin’s reach was not limited to Russia — it was felt across Europe. For those living under his shadow, even small acts of resistance became acts of enormous courage.

Just Mercy (2019) — BBC One, 11:30pm

This moving film tells the true story of Bryan Stevenson, a lawyer who defends death row prisoners in the American South. Michael B. Jordan plays Stevenson with quiet determination, and Jamie Foxx gives a deeply affecting performance as a man wrongly condemned.

The story exposes not just one injustice but a system poisoned by racism and indifference. Yet it is also a tale of courage and hope, showing how perseverance can bend the arc of history.

It’s a courtroom drama, but one that cuts to the heart. By the end, you feel the weight of injustice but also the power of redemption.


Thursday 28th August

Iron Curtain: Living Under Soviet Occupation, Part Three – The Time of Rebellions — PBS America, 8:25pm

The final part moves into the 1950s and beyond, when cracks began to appear in the Soviet grip. From the Hungarian uprising of 1956 to the Prague Spring of 1968, people demanded freedom despite knowing the risks. The courage of these rebellions still inspires today.

The programme shows how moments of defiance were crushed with tanks and violence. Yet it also shows that hope never fully disappeared. Even in the darkest times, voices of resistance kept alive the possibility of change.

It ends with a sense of unfinished business. The rebellions were suppressed, but they planted seeds that would grow in the years to come. The lesson is clear: oppression can delay freedom, but it cannot destroy the human desire for it.

Douglas Adams: The Man Who Imagined Our Future — Sky Arts, 10:00pm

Douglas Adams made us laugh at the absurdity of existence. This affectionate documentary looks at his life and work, from The Hitchhiker’s Guide to his environmental activism. He was both a joker and a visionary.

The programme explores his wit, his imagination, and the enduring impact of his writing. Science fiction was never the same after him, because he made it playful, profound, and unpredictable.

Fans will smile in recognition, and newcomers will understand why Adams matters. He was a writer who made the future feel strange and funny — and still does.


Friday 29th August

Atonement (2007) — BBC Two, 11:00pm

Joe Wright’s adaptation of Ian McEwan’s novel is a story of love, lies, and memory. Keira Knightley and James McAvoy give luminous performances, but it is Saoirse Ronan’s turn as the young Briony that haunts.

The Dunkirk sequence is unforgettable, a long unbroken shot that captures chaos and despair. The film moves from summer lawns to wartime ruins, always with an eye on what is lost.

It is beautiful, tragic, and devastating. A film about stories we tell ourselves and the truths we cannot escape.


Streaming Choices

Babygirl — Prime Video, available now Vice Is Broke — MUBI, streaming from Friday 29th August

Two new streaming releases offer sharply contrasting but equally urgent reflections on power, desire, and collapse.

Babygirl is a provocative drama from Halina Reijn, starring Nicole Kidman as a high-powered CEO whose affair with a younger intern threatens to unravel both her career and her family. It’s a film of psychological tension and emotional risk, exploring the cost of ambition and intimacy in a world built on control. Stylish, unsettling, and emotionally raw, it refuses easy moral judgments.

Vice Is Broke, directed by Eddie Huang, is a documentary that charts the rise and fall of Vice Media—from its punk zine origins in 1990s Montreal to its billion-dollar implosion. Huang blends insider interviews with cultural critique, revealing how a movement built on rebellion was ultimately sold off piece by piece. It’s sharp, personal, and politically charged—a cautionary tale about selling out and the price of cultural capital.

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Culture Vulture (Saturday 9th – Friday 15th August 2025)



Selections and commentary by Pat Harrington 3,407 words, 18 minutes read time.

This week swings from the operatic highs of Carmen Jones to the paranoid corridors of power explored in Trump’s Power and the Rule of Law. Whether it’s noir, musical, bio-drama or the stylised violence and tragedy in Scarface you’re after, it’s all here. The past never sleeps on screen – it sings, seethes, and sometimes explodes. Highlights include Doctor Zhivago, The Imitation Game, and Patti Smith: Electric Poet. Settle in for an alternative view of this week’s entertainment.


Saturday, 9th August

BBC Two, 10:20 a.m. – Carmen Jones
A landmark in cinematic and cultural history, Carmen Jones reimagines Bizet’s opera with audacity and elegance, transplanting its fatal passions into a mid-century American military milieu. Otto Preminger’s adaptation is both a product of its time and a challenge to it: an all-Black cast led by the incandescent Dorothy Dandridge and the quietly magnetic Harry Belafonte, navigating desire, duty, and doom with operatic intensity.

Dandridge doesn’t just smoulder—she commands. Her Carmen is sensual, self-possessed, and tragic, a woman whose agency is both her power and her peril. Belafonte, meanwhile, lends Joe a wounded dignity, his descent into obsession rendered with aching restraint. Their chemistry is electric, but it’s the inevitability of their unraveling that gives the film its tragic weight.

Preminger’s direction is stylised yet unflinching. He doesn’t shy away from the racialised gaze of 1950s Hollywood, nor does he resolve its tensions. The film wrestles with stereotype and spectacle, sometimes awkwardly, often poignantly. It’s a work of contradictions—glossy yet gritty, progressive yet compromised.

The music, adapted from Bizet’s score with lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II, is the film’s beating heart: a collision of operatic grandeur and American vernacular, high art refracted through the lens of studio-era showmanship. It’s this fusion—of cultures, genres, and expectations—that makes Carmen Jones so compelling. Uneven, yes. But unforgettable.

BBC Two, 1:00 p.m. – Doctor Zhivago
David Lean’s Doctor Zhivago is cinema at its most expansive—three hours of snow-drenched yearning, political rupture, and poetic melancholy. It’s a film that dares to be slow, to linger, to ache. Omar Sharif plays Yuri Zhivago with a kind of haunted gentleness, a man torn between love and loyalty, art and ideology. Julie Christie’s Lara is luminous, yes, but also elusive—more symbol than certainty, a figure of beauty caught in the machinery of history.

This isn’t just a romance. It’s a requiem. The Bolshevik Revolution looms not as backdrop but as force—sweeping away the old world with brutal efficiency. What’s lost isn’t just privilege or poetry, but a sense of spiritual coherence. The Russia Zhivago loves is vanishing, replaced by something colder, harder, more mechanised. The tragedy is personal, but the grief is national.

Lean’s direction is painterly, almost operatic. Snow becomes metaphor. Trains become prisons. The score swells, and time collapses. It’s a film made for big screens and long afternoons—a cinematic cathedral where history and heartbreak echo in every frame.

Breathe it in. Then ask yourself: what does it mean to live through someone else’s revolution? To watch the world change, not by choice, but by decree?

Channel 4, 8:00 p.m. – The Manhattan Project in Colour
History rarely feels this close. This quietly devastating documentary uses restored, colourised footage to trace the birth of the nuclear age—from theoretical spark to mushroom cloud. Gone is the grainy abstraction of black and white. In its place: vivid uniforms, sunlit labs, and the unsettling clarity of faces that once seemed distant. It’s not just more lifelike. It’s more haunting.

We follow the Manhattan Project from its inception to the irreversible moment at Hiroshima. The scientists—brilliant, driven, often disturbingly detached—appear almost innocent in their pursuit. There’s a strange dissonance between their intellectual triumph and the horror it unleashes. Genius, here, is not absolution.

The film doesn’t sermonise. It doesn’t need to. By simply showing what happened—who built it, how it worked, what it cost—it invites reflection without forcing it. Some events resist narration. They demand silence, space, and clarity. This documentary offers all three.

Watch it not for answers, but for perspective. The footage breathes. The consequences linger.


Sunday, 10th August

BBC Two, 1:40 p.m. – Casablanca
Still the gold standard for romantic drama, Casablanca remains as taut, stylish, and emotionally resonant as ever. It’s a film of glances and silences, where Bogart and Bergman barely touch, yet the ache between them fills the room. Their love is doomed not by lack of feeling, but by the world they inhabit—a world fractured by war, compromise, and impossible choices.

Set against the chaos of wartime Europe, the film dances between personal desire and political duty. Rick’s café may be neutral ground, but neutrality is a myth. Everyone here is choosing sides, whether they admit it or not. Bogart’s Rick is all cynicism and wounded honour, a man who’s already lost too much. Bergman’s Ilsa is luminous, yes, but also torn—between love and loyalty, memory and mission.

The dialogue crackles. The shadows linger. And the moral ambiguity is the point. Sacrifice here isn’t clean—it’s complicated, painful, and necessary. Casablanca doesn’t just endure. It deepens. Watch it again. It never dulls.

PBS America, 8:55 p.m. – Trump’s Power and the Rule of Law
This is not a shout. It’s a whisper. And that’s what makes it so chilling. This documentary traces the slow, deliberate erosion of legal norms under Donald Trump—not with hysteria, but with clinical precision. The tone is restrained. The implications are not.

Through appointments, firings, and carefully orchestrated media narratives, we watch institutions bend. Some break. The film doesn’t dramatise the power grabs—it simply lays them out. And in doing so, it reveals how fragile the rule of law can be when confronted by sustained pressure and strategic ambiguity.

The scientists of The Manhattan Project may have unleashed horror without quite grasping its scale. Here, the architects of institutional decay seem to understand exactly what they’re doing. It’s not about ideology. It’s about control—how it’s seized, dodged, denied.

There’s no narrator telling you what to think. Just a sequence of facts, decisions, and consequences. If you care about democracy, watch it. The rule of law might seem abstract—until it’s gone. Then it’s not theory. It’s aftermath.

BBC Two, 10:00 p.m. – The Imitation Game
Alan Turing cracked codes, saved lives, and changed the course of history. And yet, in the eyes of his own country, he was a criminal. The Imitation Game captures that paradox with aching precision, anchored by Benedict Cumberbatch’s quietly devastating performance—a man of brilliance and vulnerability, logic and longing.

Yes, it’s a code-breaker’s thriller. The wartime stakes are high, the tension real. But beneath the ticking clocks and encrypted messages lies a deeper tragedy: how a society punishes those who don’t conform. Turing’s queerness, his eccentricity, his refusal to play by social rules—all become grounds for persecution. The film doesn’t just mourn his death. It indicts the system that made it inevitable.

Director Morten Tyldum keeps the surface polished, but the anger simmers underneath. It’s a rare mainstream film that takes a moral stand without shouting. The injustice is laid bare, not through polemic, but through character, consequence, and silence.

Watch it for the history. Stay for the heartbreak. It’s polished, moving, and quietly furious. A rare mainstream film that takes a moral stand.

BBC Two, 11:50 p.m. – The Three Faces of Eve
Long before dissociative identity disorder entered the public lexicon, The Three Faces of Eve dared to dramatise its contours with startling empathy. Joanne Woodward’s performance is a revelation—raw, fragmented, and deeply humane. She doesn’t just play a woman in crisis; she inhabits the splintering. You feel her confusion, her terror, the flickers of clarity that vanish as quickly as they arrive.

The film is restrained in its style but radical in its subject. Released in 1957, it treats psychological trauma not as spectacle but as mystery—something to be understood, not judged. There’s no lurid framing, no sensationalism. Just a woman trying to make sense of a mind that won’t hold still.

The final reveal is haunting. Not because it’s dramatic, but because it’s quiet. A reminder that trauma doesn’t always scream. Sometimes it whispers. Sometimes it speaks in different voices. And sometimes, it waits years to be heard.

Watch it not for answers, but for recognition. The pain here is real. And Woodward makes sure you don’t look away.


Monday, 11th August

BBC Two, 11:00 p.m. – In the Heat of the Night
“You’re in the South now.” With that line, Sidney Poitier’s Mr Tibbs steps into a town steeped in suspicion, hostility, and heat—both literal and metaphorical. What follows is more than a murder mystery. It’s a confrontation. Between law and prejudice. Between dignity and ignorance.

Poitier is magnetic—cool, composed, and quietly furious. His presence alone destabilises the town’s hierarchy. Rod Steiger, as the sheriff forced to reckon with his own bigotry, delivers a performance of grudging complexity. Their dynamic bristles with tension, but also with the possibility of change—however reluctant, however partial.

Norman Jewison’s direction is spare and deliberate. The film is shot in sweat and silence. Every glare tells a story. Every pause is loaded. And that slap—delivered by Poitier, returned without apology—is one of the most unforgettable moments in American cinema. Not just for its shock, but for its refusal to flinch.


Tuesday, 12th August

Film4, 9:00 p.m. – Nobody
What if the quiet dad next door wasn’t just quiet—but lethal? That’s the premise, and Bob Odenkirk runs with it. Known for his comic timing, he flips the script here: bruised, brooding, and oddly tender. His Hutch Mansell is a man worn down by routine, until violence gives him purpose—or at least a reason to feel again.

The film is a cocktail of black comedy and bone-crunching action, laced with a critique of middle-class masculinity. Hutch isn’t just fighting gangsters—he’s fighting the slow death of identity. The suburban grind, the performative restraint, the buried rage. It’s all there, under the blood and banter.

Director Ilya Naishuller keeps things lean and kinetic. The fights are brutal but balletic. The pacing is tight. And the tone? Somewhere between John Wick and Falling Down, but with more heart. There’s a family subplot that shouldn’t work—but does. And Christopher Lloyd, as Hutch’s father, steals scenes with gleeful menace.

By the end, you’ll be cheering. Maybe even fist-pumping. And then wondering what that says about you. Nobody is short, sharp, and strangely satisfying—a revenge fantasy with just enough soul to sting.

ITV4, 10:00 p.m. – Reservoir Dogs
Before the trunk shots and pop-culture monologues became Tarantino trademarks, there was this: a warehouse, a botched heist, and a group of men bleeding trust by the minute. Reservoir Dogs still feels volatile—like cinema with a lit fuse.

The suits are iconic. The ear scene is infamous. But it’s the dialogue that cuts deepest. These men talk like no one’s listening, revealing egos, insecurities, and loyalties that shift with every beat. It’s a film about paranoia, masculinity, and the stories we tell to survive.

Tarantino’s debut is lean and mean. There’s no fat on the script—just tension, blood, and bravado. The nonlinear structure keeps you guessing, while the performances (especially Harvey Keitel and Tim Roth) ground the chaos in something raw and human.

Love it or loathe it, Reservoir Dogs changed the game. Its impact still echoes in every slow-motion strut, every ironic soundtrack cue, every crime film that dares to talk before it shoots. It’s not just style—it’s a statement. And it still snarls.

BBC One, 10:40 p.m. – Confessions of a Steroid Gang (Parts 1–3)
This doc mini-series is lurid but fascinating. We follow a group of gym rats who start juicing and end up dealing. Vanity turns to violence.

There’s something tragic about it all. Men chasing an impossible body image, losing their minds and morals along the way.

The pacing is fast. The tone is bleak. Watch all three parts if you can stomach it. You’ll come away shaken.


Wednesday, 13th August

Film4, 3:35 p.m. – Oliver!
Say hello to Tony Montana. Brian De Palma’s neon-drenched epic is all excess—drugs, guns, ego, and ambition turned radioactive. Al Pacino doesn’t just chew the scenery; he devours it, delivering a performance so outsized it borders on operatic.

It’s not subtle. But it’s not stupid either. Beneath the shouting and shootouts is a brutal parable about the American Dream—how it seduces, corrupts, and ultimately consumes. The film’s violence is stylised, but the consequences are not. Every triumph is laced with dread.

Fans often quote the wrong lines. The real message isn’t in the rise. It’s in the rot. In the paranoia. In the loneliness that power brings. Scarface is a cautionary tale dressed as a gangster fantasy. Watch it for the spectacle. Stay for the tragedy..


Thursday, 14th August

Old Hollywood elegance, with shadows creeping in. Grand Hotel unfolds in a Berlin hotel where lives intersect—romance, theft, illness, ambition, escape. Greta Garbo yearns. John Barrymore broods. Joan Crawford sparkles. The performances are heightened, theatrical, and strangely intimate, as if each character knows they’re dancing on the edge of something irreversible.

The film is glossy, yes, but not frivolous. Beneath the art deco sheen lies a melancholy pulse. This is a world teetering on the edge of modernity—where glamour masks desperation, and every chandelier-lit corridor leads to a reckoning. It’s a story about fleeting connections and the quiet tragedies that unfold behind closed doors.

Grand Hotel won Best Picture and essentially invented the ensemble drama. Its influence is everywhere—from Magnolia to The White Lotus. Even if you’ve never seen it, you’ve felt its echoes. Time to correct that. Step inside. Everyone’s got a story. And not all of them end well.BBC Four, 7:00 p.m. – Grand Hotel
Old Hollywood elegance. Multiple storylines unfold in a Berlin hotel – romance, theft, illness, and escape. Garbo, Barrymore, Crawford.

It’s glossy, theatrical, and a touch melancholy. A world teetering on the edge of modernity.

The film won Best Picture and invented the ensemble drama. You’ve seen its influence even if you haven’t seen the film. Time to correct that.


Friday, 15th August

Channel 5, 9:00 p.m. – Lost in the Desert with Nick Knowles (Part 1)
A stripped-down survival show with a familiar face in unfamiliar terrain. Nick Knowles is dropped into a hostile desert environment—no crew comforts, no scripted rescues. Just sand, sweat, and the slow unraveling of certainty. It’s the kind of setup we’ve seen before, but Knowles brings a stubborn sincerity to the ordeal. You get the sense he’d attempt this even without the cameras rolling.

Part 1 sets the stakes: dehydration, disorientation, and the creeping dread of isolation. There’s no flashy editing or adrenaline-fuelled soundtrack—just the slow grind of survival and the quiet drama of a man testing his limits. It’s not reinventing the genre, but it doesn’t need to. The charm lies in Knowles himself: gruff, determined, occasionally baffled, but never performative.

Whether you stick around for Parts 2 and 3 may depend on your tolerance for self-inflicted hardship and sand-in-every-crevice realism. But if you’re drawn to the idea of discomfort as character study, this might just surprise you.

BBC Two, 11:00 p.m. – Colette
A biopic with bite. Colette isn’t just a period drama—it’s a reclamation. Keira Knightley plays the French literary icon with wit, fire, and a flicker of fury. Colette was a rule-breaker, a provocateur, and a woman who refused to be silenced. The film traces her journey from ghostwriter wife to cultural force, battling for ownership of her words, her body, and her name.

The costumes dazzle, yes—but they’re armour as much as ornament. The writing crackles with defiance. This is a story about authorship in every sense: who gets to speak, who gets credited, and who gets erased. Knightley’s performance is sharp and layered, capturing both Colette’s vulnerability and her steel.

If you’ve ever had your voice dismissed, diminished, or stolen, this one will land hard. It’s not just about literary fame—it’s about survival, reinvention, and the quiet revolution of saying “no” and meaning it.

Sky Arts, 11:00 p.m. – Patti Smith: Electric Poet
Patti Smith isn’t just a punk icon—she’s a mystic, a memoirist, a mother of reinvention. This documentary captures her in full: the poet who howls, the activist who listens, the artist who never stopped asking questions. It’s not a concert film, though music pulses through it. It’s a spiritual roadmap, tracing the fault lines between art and resistance, grief and grace.

We see Smith as seeker and witness—her voice raw, her gaze steady. There’s poetry, politics, and personal pain, all braided into a portrait that refuses easy categorisation. She speaks of loss and legacy, of Mapplethorpe and motherhood, of New York before it was polished and after it was broken. The film doesn’t idolise—it honours.

It’s a fitting tribute to an artist who made vulnerability a weapon and turned punk into prayer. If you’ve ever felt the need to scream, scribble, or stand still in defiance, this one’s for you.

Streaming Choices

Summer of 69 (Disney+, available from Friday 8th August)
Forget Woodstock—this one’s all strip clubs, sex coaching, and teenage awkwardness. Summer of 69 is a raunchy coming-of-age comedy starring Sam Morelos as Abby, a socially anxious gamer who hires an exotic dancer (Chloe Fineman) to help her seduce her high school crush. The plan? Master the infamous position he’s supposedly obsessed with. The reality? A crash course in self-confidence, friendship, and the kind of chaos only a $20,000 livestream budget can buy.

Directed by Jillian Bell, the film leans into its absurd premise with surprising sincerity. There’s pole dancing, high heel tutorials, and a subplot involving a strip club’s unpaid debt. But beneath the neon and nudity, there’s a sweet dynamic between Abby and her reluctant mentor—part Risky Business, part emotional bootcamp.

It’s messy, earnest, and occasionally cringe-inducing. But if you’re after laughs, libido, and a reminder that growing up is rarely graceful, this might just scratch the itch.

Harvest (MUBI, available from Friday 8th August)
Quiet, slow, and deeply affecting. This intimate rural drama explores the tension between tradition and change in farming life. Visually beautiful and emotionally restrained, it lets the landscape speak as much as the characters. A meditative piece about labour, loss, and the rhythms of the land. One for those who appreciate stillness and depth.

The Bus Driver and Britain’s Cocaine King (Discovery+, both available from Monday 11th August)
One man. One empire. One of the biggest cocaine trafficking operations in UK history—run by a bus driver. This feature-length documentary traces the rise and fall of Jesus Ruiz Henao, who flooded 1990s Britain with cocaine and built a billion-pound network that took police five years to dismantle. It’s a story of brutal efficiency, charm, and systemic blind spots.

Using real surveillance footage, court documents, and exclusive interviews, the film peels back the layers of Britain’s drug underworld. There’s no glamour here—just the human cost, laid bare. The tragedy isn’t just in the violence or the scale. It’s in how ordinary lives get pulled into something vast, corrosive, and impossible to control.

Gripping, unforgiving, and far from the stylised sheen of crime fiction. This is the system, exposed.

Outlander: Blood of My Blood (MGM+), first two episodes from Saturday 9th August)
The kilts are back—but this time, it’s the parents’ turn. Blood of My Blood is a sweeping prequel to Outlander, tracing the forbidden romance of Jamie Fraser’s parents, Brian Fraser (Jamie Roy) and Ellen MacKenzie (Harriet Slater), alongside the wartime love story of Claire’s parents, Henry Beauchamp (Jeremy Irvine) and Julia Moriston (Hermione Corfield). One tale unfolds in the clan-riven Highlands of the 18th century, the other in the mud and censorship offices of World War I.

There’s rebellion, aching love, and the kind of generational trauma that shaped the original series. But this isn’t just backstory—it’s a confident, emotionally rich drama in its own right. The production values are high, the performances nuanced, and the writing unshackled from source material, allowing for fresh invention and sharper stakes.

You don’t need to be an Outlander devotee to dive in. But if you are, you’ll spot the echoes—traits passed down, choices repeated, and the quiet heartbreak of history looping back on itself

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Culture Vulture 2-8 August 2025

Selected and reviewed by Pat Harrington

3,564 words, 19 minutes read time.

There’s a rich week ahead, with enough variety to suit any mood: from a spider-powered multiverse to a smoky Los Angeles noir. Look out especially for the thoughtful Johnny Vegas: Art, ADHD and Me on Wednesday, and a strong historical pairing of post-war documentaries on Thursday and Friday. Our streaming choices bring a fresh crop of true crime, European drama, and psychological thrillers to binge at your leisure. Let’s dive into what’s on this week, all from an alternative standpoint.


Saturday, 2nd of August
Now, Voyager on BBC Two at 12:30 PM (1942)

Bette Davis doesn’t just act in Now, Voyager—she unfurls. Her Charlotte Vale begins as a woman crushed by maternal tyranny and social expectation, and ends as something quietly radical: a person who chooses love without possession, freedom without fanfare. It’s a transformation steeped in restraint, but no less seismic for its softness.

This is melodrama, yes—but it’s also a study in emotional architecture. The cigarettes, the tears, the clipped dialogue—they’re scaffolding for something deeper: a portrait of female autonomy in a world that prefers its women obedient and untroubled. Davis, with her flinty vulnerability and unflinching gaze, makes Charlotte’s journey feel both personal and political.

The film’s famous final line—“Don’t let’s ask for the moon. We have the stars.”—still lands like a soft thunderclap. It’s not just romantic; it’s defiant. A declaration that compromise, when chosen freely, can be its own kind of liberation.

Eighty years on, Now, Voyager remains a touchstone for anyone who’s ever had to unlearn shame, redraw boundaries, or find beauty in the aftermath. It’s not just a classic—it’s a quiet revolution in gloves and pearls.


LA Confidential Legend, 9:00 PM

Curtis Hanson’s LA Confidential doesn’t just revive noir—it retools it for a postmodern age, where the shadows are deeper and the glamour more toxic. Set in a 1950s Los Angeles that gleams with promise and rots from within, it’s a tale of bent cops, broken dreams, and the seductive power of image.

Guy Pearce’s straight-arrow Ed Exley and Russell Crowe’s bruising Bud White form a moral axis that never quite aligns, while Kim Basinger’s Veronica Lake lookalike floats through the wreckage like a ghost of Hollywood past. Their performances are sharp, wounded, and unforgettable—each character caught between duty and desire, justice and survival.

The film’s style is impeccable: slick suits, bloodied knuckles, and a score that hums with menace. But beneath the surface lies something more unsettling—a meditation on institutional rot and the cost of truth in a city built on illusion. It’s brutal, yes, but also strangely tender in its moments of reckoning.

Twenty-five years on, LA Confidential still punches hard. It’s not just endlessly watchable—it’s a mirror held up to power, fame, and the stories we tell to keep the dream alive.

Gladiator on BBC One at 10:20 PM (2000)
Russell Crowe’s Maximus doesn’t just command the screen—he haunts it. Ridley Scott’s Gladiator is a blood-and-sand epic that marries brute spectacle with aching pathos. It’s a story of betrayal, vengeance, and the long shadow of empire, rendered in dust, steel, and sorrow.

Crowe’s performance is mythic yet human—his Maximus is a man of few words and deep wounds, driven by memory and honour. Joaquin Phoenix’s Commodus slithers through the film with a blend of cowardice and cruelty, a tyrant desperate to be loved. Their clash is operatic, tragic, and utterly absorbing.

But it’s Hans Zimmer and Lisa Gerrard’s score that elevates Gladiator into something transcendent. The music doesn’t just accompany the action—it mourns it. Ethereal vocals and swelling strings evoke a lost world, a man’s fading dream, and the quiet hope of reunion beyond death. The “Now We Are Free” theme lingers long after the final frame, a requiem for Rome and for Maximus himself.

Scott’s vision of ancient Rome is grand and grimy, but the emotional core is intimate: a father, a soldier, a man undone by power and redeemed by sacrifice. Every betrayal, every slash, every roar of the crowd feels earned—and every note of the score reminds us what’s at stake.

Gladiator isn’t just a historical drama—it’s a lament, a legacy, and a battle cry. Are you not entertained? Yes—but you’re also moved.


Sunday, 3rd of August
All About Eve on BBC Two at 3:00 PM (1950)
Theatre is war, and All About Eve is its most elegant battlefield. Joseph L. Mankiewicz’s Oscar-laden classic remains a masterclass in ambition, manipulation, and the fragile currency of fame. Bette Davis’s Margo Channing is a star in twilight—witty, weary, and unwilling to go quietly. Anne Baxter’s Eve Harrington is the ingénue with ice in her veins, climbing the ladder rung by stolen rung.

Their verbal sparring is exquisite—dialogue so sharp it draws blood. But beneath the barbs lies something more poignant: a meditation on ageing, authenticity, and the fear of being replaced. Davis, in one of her finest performances, gives Margo depth and defiance, turning vulnerability into power. Baxter’s Eve is all surface charm and subterranean calculation—a performance that still chills.

The film’s score, composed by Alfred Newman, is subtle but vital. It underscores the tension with theatrical flair, swelling in moments of revelation and retreating into silence when words do the wounding. It’s music that knows when to step back and let the drama breathe.

Seventy-five years on, All About Eve still crackles with relevance. In an age of curated personas and backstage politics, its insights into performance—onstage and off—feel as fresh as ever. Fasten your seatbelts. The ride is still deliciously bumpy.

Children of Men on BBC Two at 10:00 PM (2006)
Alfonso Cuarón’s Children of Men is a dystopia that doesn’t feel imagined—it feels inherited. Set in a near-future Britain hollowed out by infertility, xenophobia, and bureaucratic decay, it’s a film that trades in urgency and despair, but never lets go of hope. Clive Owen’s Theo is a reluctant guide through the wreckage, a man numbed by grief who finds purpose in protecting the last flicker of possibility.

The film’s visual language is astonishing. Long, unbroken takes plunge us into chaos with no escape hatch—bullets fly, blood spatters, and the camera never blinks. It’s not just technique; it’s immersion. Emmanuel Lubezki’s cinematography turns every alleyway and refugee camp into a crucible of tension and humanity.

John Tavener’s choral score, paired with ambient soundscapes and silence, adds a sacred weight to the film’s bleakness. Music arrives like grace—brief, haunting, and necessary. It reminds us that even in collapse, beauty survives.

Children of Men is a prophecy. A portrait of societal breakdown that feels eerily familiar, and a reminder that the future isn’t something we inherit—it’s something we shape, or fail to. In the end, it’s not the explosions that linger—it’s the quiet, the child’s cry, the possibility of renewal

Hustlers on E4 at 10:00 PM (2019)
Hustlers opens with sparkle but lands with steel. Lorene Scafaria’s true-crime drama is less about pole-dancing and more about power—who has it, who’s denied it, and what happens when women take it back. Jennifer Lopez’s Ramona is magnetic: a matriarch, mentor, and mastermind, striding through the film in fur and heels with the swagger of someone who’s survived more than she lets on.

The sting operation at the film’s heart—drugging and draining Wall Street clients—is morally murky, but Scafaria never lets the story slip into easy judgment. Instead, she foregrounds female camaraderie, economic desperation, and the blurred lines between hustle and harm. Constance Wu’s Destiny offers a quieter counterpoint to Ramona’s bravado, and together they form a duo built on trust, ambition, and shared trauma.

The soundtrack is a character in itself—Usher’s “Love in This Club,” Lorde’s “Royals,” and Chopin’s Nocturne in E-flat Major all land with precision, underscoring mood and motive. It’s music that seduces, stings, and sometimes mourns. The film’s rhythm is part pop video, part elegy.

Hustlers isn’t just glitz—it’s grit. A story of survival wrapped in sequins, where every dollar has a backstory and every dance is a negotiation. It’s funny, sharp, and quietly devastating. The American Dream, repackaged and resold—one lap dance at a time.

French Exit on Channel 4 at 12:00 AM (2020)
Michelle Pfeiffer’s Frances Price is the kind of character who doesn’t so much enter a room as alter its temperature. In French Exit, she’s a widow with dwindling wealth, a Paris-bound escape plan, and a cat who may be her reincarnated husband. What unfolds is a darkly whimsical chamber piece—odd, wry, and quietly devastating.

Azazel Jacobs directs with a light but deliberate touch, letting the absurdity breathe without ever tipping into farce. Frances is brittle and brilliant, her barbed wit masking a slow unraveling. Pfeiffer plays her with exquisite detachment, a woman who’s seen the world and decided it’s not worth the fuss. Lucas Hedges, as her son Malcolm, offers a muted counterpoint—adrift, loyal, and quietly complicit in their shared retreat.

Nick deWitt’s score is sparse and spectral, more mood than melody. It drifts through the film like a half-remembered tune, underscoring the emotional dislocation without insisting on it. The music, like Frances herself, is elusive—elegant, mournful, and hard to pin down.

French Exit won’t be for everyone. It’s a film that trades in tone rather than plot, where meaning flickers in the margins and grief wears designer gloves. But for those attuned to its frequency, it’s unforgettable—a portrait of decline rendered with style, strangeness, and surprising grace.


Monday, 4th of August
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse on Film4 at 1:20 PM (2018)
A blast of colour and heart that rewrote what superhero films could be. Miles Morales’ journey is visually thrilling and emotionally grounded—a Spider-Man for a new generation, and arguably the best yet.

As someone who grew up reading the comics and watching the cartoons, I’ve always felt a deep connection to Spidey. He wasn’t just a superhero with extraordinary powers—he was a teenager with very ordinary problems. That hit a chord then, and it still does now. Spider-Verse honours that legacy while expanding it, showing that the mask can belong to anyone, and that heroism is as much about heart as it is about strength.

The animation is revolutionary, the soundtrack electric, and the emotional beats land with real weight. It’s a joyful anomaly in a genre often weighed down by formula—a film that celebrates difference, honours tradition, and dares to imagine more.

What Happened at Hiroshima on BBC One at 8:30 PM
A solemn and essential documentary marking 80 years since the atomic bomb fell. Survivors speak, as do historians. Unflinching in its facts and dignified in tone, it lets the horror speak for itself.

There’s no narration to soften the blow—just the quiet authority of lived experience. The testimonies are resolute and devastating, a reminder that history isn’t distant or abstract. It’s personal, and still echoing. This is not a film for comfort, but for clarity. It asks us to witness, to remember, and to reckon with the cost of power.


Tuesday, 5th of August
Roman Holiday on Film4 at 4:50 PM (1953)
A dreamlike escape through post-war Rome. Audrey Hepburn is radiant; Gregory Peck is effortlessly charming. Their chemistry is gentle, unforced—two strangers colliding in a city still catching its breath.

There’s something quietly poignant about the setting: cobbled streets, Vespa rides, and a Europe rebuilding itself. The romance is sweet, yes, but also wistful—tinged with the knowledge that holidays end, and choices have consequences. Hepburn’s Princess longs for freedom; Peck’s journalist wrestles with truth and tenderness. What unfolds is a story of fleeting joy and quiet dignity.

It’s a classic for a reason. Not just because it’s beautiful, but because it understands that sometimes, the most meaningful connections are the ones we let go.

45 Years on Film4 at 11:25 PM (2015)
Charlotte Rampling and Tom Courtenay quietly devastate in this story of a marriage rocked by long-buried memories. A letter arrives days before their anniversary, and with it, a ghost from the past. What follows is a masterclass in restraint—grief, doubt, and disquiet ripple beneath the surface.

Still waters run deep. Director Andrew Haigh lets silence do the talking, and Rampling’s performance is a study in emotional precision. The ending doesn’t shout—it lingers, unsettling and unforgettable. A portrait of love, time, and the fragile architecture of trust.

Storyville: The Hijacker Who Vanished – The Mystery of D.B. Cooper on BBC Four at 11:10 PM
A playful yet probing look at one of aviation’s great unsolved mysteries. In 1971, a man boarded a plane, demanded $200,000, parachuted into the night—and was never seen again. Theories abound, suspects multiply, and the truth remains elusive.

But this isn’t just a true-crime curio. It’s a portrait of American myth-making—how mystery becomes folklore, and how the gaps in a story invite projection, obsession, and reinvention. The film balances archival footage with speculative flair, inviting us to consider not just who D.B. Cooper was, but why we’re still asking.


Wednesday, 6th of August
Miranda on Talking Pictures at 4:50 PM (1948)
Glynis Johns charms as a mermaid on dry land in this breezy post-war comedy. There’s light innuendo, seaside mischief, and a gently subversive streak as Miranda upends the lives of the men around her—all with a wink and a splash.

Post-war London provides a quaint backdrop, its austerity softened by whimsy and wit. The film doesn’t ask much of its audience, but it gives plenty in return: a frothy little gem that floats along on charm, cheek, and the sheer novelty of a mermaid in a nurse’s uniform.

Churchill: Winning the War, Losing the Peace on BBC Two at 8:00 PM
Churchill’s post-war decline is often overlooked. This documentary digs into why the public turned on their wartime leader—how victory gave way to fatigue, and how the mood of a nation shifted from defiance to domestic need.

It’s a portrait of power in transition: the man who rallied Britain through its darkest hours now struggling to connect with a country craving change. The film doesn’t seek to diminish Churchill’s legacy, but to complicate it—offering insight into the burdens of leadership, the limits of myth, and the quiet revolution of post-war democracy.

Johnny Vegas: Art, ADHD and Me (Part 1) on Channel 4 at 9:00 PM
Johnny Vegas opens up about neurodivergence and late-life diagnosis while exploring his artistic side. It’s honest, touching, and often funny—full of self-deprecation and quiet revelation. You get the sense he’s only just begun to know himself, and that the journey is as important as the destination.

There’s no neat arc here, no tidy resolution. Just a man reckoning with identity, creativity, and the labels that arrive late but land hard. It’s a portrait of vulnerability and reinvention, told with warmth and wit.


Thursday, 7th of August
Point Break
BBC One, Thursday 7 August at 10:40 PM (1991)

Bank-robbing surfers, Keanu Reeves as an undercover cop, and Patrick Swayze as a zen anarchist. It’s preposterous—and poetic. Kathryn Bigelow finds beauty in adrenaline and freedom in risk, crafting a film that’s as much about longing as it is about lawbreaking.

I first saw it on a ferry, travelling with my late friend Alan Midgley. We both enjoyed it immensely, and it brings back happy memories—of laughter, motion, and the kind of cinematic escapism that feels bigger than the screen. That sense of freedom, of chasing something just out of reach, still resonates.

The waves crash, the sky burns, and the line between duty and desire blurs. Beneath the action beats lies a meditation on masculinity, loyalty, and the lure of escape. It’s a cult classic for good reason: stylish, soulful, and utterly unafraid to take itself seriously, even when the plot goes airborne.

France: The Post-War Recovery (Part 1) on PBS America at 8:00 PM
Post-liberation France was a nation in flux—scarred, divided, but hopeful. This documentary traces the country’s slow climb from devastation, covering the social rebuilding, economic trials, and political scars that shaped a modern republic. It’s history told with depth and care, resisting easy triumphalism in favour of nuance.

There’s a quiet dignity to the way the film handles trauma and transformation. You see a country reckoning with collaboration, resistance, and the fragile promise of unity. It’s not just about policy—it’s about people, memory, and the long shadow of war.


Friday, 8th of August
Apocalypse Now on Film4 at 11:55 PM (1979)
Coppola’s Vietnam odyssey still mesmerises. From the thunderous Ride of the Valkyries to Brando’s brooding finale, it’s a descent into madness that reshaped war cinema. Not just conflict—this is cinema as fever dream, myth, and moral reckoning.

The jungle sweats, the soundtrack haunts, and the performances burn slow. It’s a film that asks not what war does to nations, but what it does to the soul. Nearly half a century on, it remains hypnotic, harrowing, and utterly singular.

France: The Post-War Recovery (Part 2) on PBS America at 8:00 PM
The Marshall Plan, Gaullism, and the birth of a modern state. This second instalment charts France’s political reconstruction and cultural rebirth, as the nation moves from fractured memory to forward momentum. It’s a study in resilience—how institutions were rebuilt, identities reshaped, and futures imagined.

Where Part 1 lingered in the rubble, Part 2 looks to the scaffolding: the policies, personalities, and philosophies that defined the new republic. Pairs beautifully with Thursday’s episode, offering a full-circle view of a country learning to live again.


Streaming Choices
Revenge (Channel 4 Streaming, from Saturday 22nd August)
Inspired by The Count of Monte Cristo, this glossy American drama stars Emily VanCamp as Emily Thorne—a young woman who returns to the Hamptons under an assumed identity to exact revenge on the wealthy elite who destroyed her father’s life. Stylish, emotionally charged, and full of twists, it’s a tale of deception, obsession, and the long arc of justice.

VanCamp brings steely resolve to a character driven by grief and calculation. The show blends soap opera intrigue with psychological thriller beats, turning high society into a battleground of secrets and sabotage.

Walter Presents: Promethea
All six episodes available from Friday, 8th August on Channel 4 Streaming

She should be dead. Instead, she stands up—naked, unharmed, and with no memory but a name: Promethea. So begins this eerie French thriller, where trauma, identity, and buried secrets collide in a story that’s part psychological mystery, part supernatural coming-of-age.

Fantine Harduin leads a strong female cast in a series that’s as stylish as it is unsettling. Taken in by the family who hit her with their car, Promethea begins to experience visions of a murdered student. The killer is still out there. But the deeper question is: what role did she play?

As the six-part drama unfolds, we’re drawn into a world of corporate cover-ups, missing girls, and strange abilities that hint at something far larger than memory loss. Director Christophe Campos keeps the tension taut, balancing emotional depth with genre flair. It’s a show that asks not just who you are, but what you might become when the truth is too dangerous to face.

September 5 (Paramount Plus, from Thursday, 7th August)
Broadcasting history was never meant to be written in blood. But in September 5, it is. This taut political thriller revisits the 1972 Munich Olympics, where a sports crew at ABC found themselves covering a hostage crisis that would shake the world—and reshape journalism.

Directed by Tim Fehlbaum and starring Peter Sarsgaard, John Magaro, and Leonie Benesch, the film doesn’t flinch. It follows the moment when eight gunmen from Black September stormed the Olympic village, killing two Israeli athletes and taking nine hostage. What begins as a celebration of global unity turns into a seventeen-hour standoff, watched live by millions.

But this isn’t just a retelling. It’s a reckoning. Through the eyes of producers scrambling to balance ethics, ambition, and survival, September 5 explores the collision of terror, diplomacy, and media spin. The control room becomes a crucible—where every decision could mean life or death, and every broadcast shapes the narrative.

Stylish, urgent, and deeply unsettling, it’s a film that asks what happens when the lens becomes the battlefield. Not just a thriller—this is history, refracted through the flicker of live TV.

Hunting the Yorkshire Ripper (Prime Video, from Sunday, 3rd August)
This isn’t just a retelling—it’s a reckoning. Hunting the Yorkshire Ripper (originally aired as This Is Personal: The Hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper) is a dramatised account of the late-1970s investigation into one of Britain’s most notorious serial killers. But the real story here isn’t just Peter Sutcliffe—it’s the institutional failure that let him slip through the cracks.

Alun Armstrong delivers a bruising performance as Assistant Chief Constable George Oldfield, a man slowly unravelled by the weight of the case. As the bodies mount, so do the missed chances: false leads, media pressure, and a chilling disregard for the women whose lives were lost. The series doesn’t flinch from showing how class, misogyny, and bureaucracy shaped the hunt—and how they obscured the truth.

Stylishly shot and emotionally raw, this two-part drama is unsettling but necessary viewing. It’s not about closure. It’s about accountability.

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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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Culture Vulture 28th of June to Friday the 4th of July 2025

6,021 words, 32 minutes read time.

Welcome to Culture Vulture, your guide to the week’s entertainment from an Alternative standpoint. Selections and writing are by Pat Harrington. Highlights this week include coverage of the Glastonbury Festival.

Saturday, 28 June 2025

Red River (1948, ITV4 at 12:15 p.m.) Howard Hawks’ Red River is less a standard Western than an inquiry into American identity, paternal legacy and the encroaching tension between rule and rebellion. John Wayne’s Tom Dunson is both lawmaker and tyrant, embodying the psychological tug-of-war between pioneering discipline and raw emotional possession. In opposition, Montgomery Clift’s Matt represents the emerging democratic impulse: restless, rational, and challenging the moral rigidity of frontier justice.

Set against the backdrop of post-Civil War expansion, the film taps into the economic origins of American capitalism, with the cattle drive functioning as a metaphor for wealth consolidation and land acquisition. In this landscape, people — and particularly Indigenous communities — are obstacles or invisible, a reflection of Manifest Destiny’s convenient blind spots.

Philosophically, it’s a film about inheritance — not just of land, but of ideology. Dunson’s refusal to change feels almost tragic, a Greek fate cloaked in boots and dust. His eventual surrender to a new order is less reconciliation than concession to time’s tide — a victory for flexibility over tyranny.

Steel Magnolias (1989, Film4 at 4:20 p.m.) A seemingly gentle Southern story about sisterhood and small-town life, Steel Magnolias is in fact a deeply psychological piece about endurance in the face of patriarchal limitation. The women of Chinquapin Parish navigate grief, motherhood and identity with wit and stubborn tenderness, their salon a confessional where emotion is permitted despite societal expectations of decorum.

The film is sharp in portraying how women’s labour — emotional, domestic, caregiving — is central yet undervalued. The intergenerational divide, particularly between M’Lynn and Shelby, reflects wider political tensions around autonomy and the politics of medical choice. The spectre of illness becomes a prism through which legacy and risk are debated without resort to melodrama.

It is not a film of heroes and villains, but of choices and coping. What sustains these women is community: an intimate rebellion against despair. That they’re allowed to be angry, sarcastic, irreverent — and still deeply loving — marks this as a work of quiet feminist insistence.

The Deer Hunter (1978, Legend at 10:45 p.m.) Michael Cimino’s The Deer Hunter remains one of the most harrowing and complicated meditations on war, patriotism and trauma in American cinema. Framed around the Vietnam War but grounded in the economic decay of a Pennsylvania steel town, its emotional journey is rooted in the psychological fragmentation of those who go and those who are left behind.

The political argument is implicit: patriotism is both armour and illusion. The game of Russian roulette, so controversial upon release, isn’t literal — it’s metaphoric: a brutal distillation of the randomness and senselessness of war. The act of pulling the trigger becomes an allegory for how young men are used as currency in geopolitics.

The film asks what makes life meaningful — and whether meaning can survive horror. Mike’s return is marked not by closure but by absence. The communal sing-along at the film’s end is both mourning and resistance, asserting memory in the face of destruction.

Glastonbury Saturday Coverage (BBC Two/BBC Four, 9:10 p.m. to 12:00 a.m.) This eclectic late-night thread, featuring Raye, Charlie XCX, Neil Young and more, operates less as a music showcase than a cultural temperature check. The setlist is richly intertextual: Raye’s presence as a female singer-songwriter reclaiming industry autonomy contrasts brilliantly with Charlie XCX’s neon maximalism and Neil Young’s enduring political ballads.

Each artist offers a different lens on the crisis of connection in modern life: from hyper-personal confessionals to anthems of social reckoning. There’s implicit commentary on the platforming of marginalised voices — Raye’s narrative of industry defiance particularly resonant in a post-#MeToo era — and the lasting influence of protest music in an age of digital noise.

Glory (1989, Channel 4 at 12:30 a.m.) Edward Zwick’s Glory confronts the historical erasure of Black agency in America’s Civil War narrative. Focusing on the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment — the first Black regiment in the Union Army — it reframes emancipation not as a gift from white generals but as an earned, blood-soaked claim to dignity.

The social critique is obvious: power resists revision. Colonel Shaw’s evolution from idealist to determined ally reveals the necessity — and limits — of white participation in liberation struggles. Yet it’s Denzel Washington’s Private Trip, complex and unruly, who embodies the full spectrum of psychological damage wrought by generational oppression.

The film refuses sentimentality. These soldiers fight for meagre wages, often denied basic equipment, and still press forward. Their courage is not mythic but logistical — born of necessity. The closing battle is both loss and legacy, a tragic culmination that forces the viewer to reconsider who gets remembered in history’s theatres.

Sunday, 29 June 2025

The 39 Steps (1935, BBC Two at 12:25 p.m.) Alfred Hitchcock’s The 39 Steps remains a masterclass in narrative propulsion and paranoiac tension. Beneath its brisk surface lies a persistent theme of the individual caught in bureaucratic machinery — a motif that would dominate much of 20th-century political thriller fiction. Richard Hannay, falsely accused and chased across a Scotland that oscillates between romantic wildness and claustrophobic suspicion, becomes an everyman battling not merely injustice, but the absurdity of systemic opacity.

The film has aged curiously well. Its depiction of espionage not as glamour but as grubby business carried out in shadowed corners reflects Britain’s own ambivalence about its place in the interwar world — declining empire, rising fascism. As Hannay moves through train cars, crofts and lecture halls, the very mobility of the modern age becomes suspect, reeking of uncertainty and surveillance.

It presages the fractured identities of post-war cinema: the man who doesn’t know whom to trust, or even if he can trust himself. The romance subplot is pragmatic, sceptical of fantasy. And therein lies its brilliance: a comedy of manners run through with existential dread.

North by Northwest (1959, BBC Two at 1:50 p.m.) If The 39 Steps is anxiety in tweed, North by Northwest is its suit-clad American cousin — an immaculately tailored indictment of corporate alienation and Cold War paranoia. Roger Thornhill is the epitome of post-war affluence: a man who believes he understands the world until it turns on him. In typical Hitchcock fashion, the state is opaque, the villain charming, and the line between performance and identity perilously thin.

What’s striking is the film’s philosophical dislocation. Thornhill’s self-constructed life — his name, job, standing — means nothing once he becomes the target of forces beyond comprehension. In a sense, it’s a proto-postmodern thriller: the man undone by his own semiotics. His journey across America becomes a symbolic search for meaning in a society where roles are scripted but motivations are obscure.

It mirrors an America swaggering into the Cold War, flush with wealth but suspicious of hidden threats. That the climax unfolds on Mount Rushmore feels less like patriotic affirmation and more like mythic confrontation — a man trying to carve out truth in stone already chiseled by national mythology.

Corpse Bride (2005, ITV2 at 2:35 p.m.) Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride may wear its gothic trappings with whimsy, but beneath the stylised animation is a surprisingly pointed critique of societal expectation. Victor, shackled by arranged marriage and propriety, finds accidental liberation among the dead — an inversion that suggests only in death are we free from the performative demands of the living.

The class satire is sharp and intentional. The living are drab, repressed and transactional — obsessed with wealth and status. The dead, conversely, are vibrant, musical, inclusive. Marriage here isn’t romantic ideal, but economic transaction: a bartered future. Emily, the titular bride, is less a ghost than a casualty of patriarchal commerce.

The film grapples with trauma and abandonment, but also with agency. Emily’s final act — to let go — is a subversion of romantic tropes: love doesn’t require possession, and release can be the greatest kindness. This is a fairytale rebelling against its own inheritance.

Moana (2016, BBC One at 3:15 p.m.) Moana deserves more credit than it often receives: as a revisionist myth that centres female autonomy, ecological stewardship, and post-colonial identity without reducing its Polynesian heritage to exotic backdrop. Moana’s journey isn’t one of rebellion against family, but of fulfilling a deeper ancestral calling — a powerful nod to cultural continuity beyond Western individualism.

Politically, the film offers a quiet but firm rejection of extractivist logic. The environmental decay that spreads through Moana’s island is a direct result of plunder — a mythic mirror of real-world colonial resource abuse. Her restoration of Te Fiti is a reclamation not just of balance, but of relational ethics between humans and nature.

Philosophically, the story champions courage not as brute force, but as inner reckoning. Maui’s demigod bravado is itself a mask for insecurity — a clever inversion of masculine heroism. Moana emerges not as warrior princess, but as navigator of memory and possibility. The film’s core insight? The future sails on the wisdom of the past.

Glastonbury: Snow Patrol, St. Vincent, The Prodigy (BBC Four, 7:00–11:15 p.m.) This tranche of Glastonbury coverage is genre chaos in the best way — from Snow Patrol’s introspective anthems to St. Vincent’s arch, postmodern theatricality and The Prodigy’s feral energy. Together, they form a sonic commentary on alienation, rebellion and re-enchantment.

Snow Patrol channel the lonely yearning of post-millennial masculinity, their ballads often circling emotional inarticulacy. St. Vincent weaponises femininity, her persona all sharp edges and performative dissonance — a feminist discourse wrapped in high-concept glam. And The Prodigy? Still bristling with class anger, sonic abrasion and political insolence — rave as riot.

This isn’t just entertainment, but cultural barometer. Each act offers a different emotional literacy: from longing and irony to rage and release. If Snow Patrol console, St. Vincent critiques, and The Prodigy combusts. Three modes of facing the world — and surviving it.

Punk at the BBC (BBC Four, 11:15 p.m.) A broadcast mosaic of attitude, eyeliner and political defiance, Punk at the BBC doesn’t so much archive a movement as amplify it. By curating performances from across decades, the programme exposes punk not as an era but a living ethos — one of refusal, rupture and sometimes renewal.

Socially, punk was always a class scream — a middle finger to both the establishment and the hippie dream it supplanted. Through snippets and sneers, we glimpse punk’s mutations: from spiky disaffection to queer subversion, from urban nihilism to DIY optimism. Each band broadcast here stakes a claim in culture by shouting into the static.

Philosophically, punk is a question: what do you do when the world is indifferent, or worse? The programme offers no answer — only sound, spit and assertion. There’s something cleansing in that chaos.

Bonnie and Clyde (1967, BBC Two at 11:40 p.m.) Arthur Penn’s Bonnie and Clyde exploded into 1967 like a bullet-ridden poem: part gangster flick, part cultural rupture. It told the story of Depression-era criminals through the lens of 1960s counterculture — a daring alchemy that made folk heroes of outlaws and questioned the very fabric of American justice.

The social commentary is searing: during a time of civil upheaval and government mistrust, here are two impoverished souls turned into symbols of sex, rebellion and fatalism. Their crimes are never glamorised, but the system they defy is shown to be uncaring, bureaucratic, and hypocritical. The film raised a middle finger to both Hays Code-era morality and complacent consumerism.

Psychologically, the pair are romantic in the literary sense — doomed by their desires, by society’s refusal to accommodate their hunger. The film asks: what do we do with beauty born of desperation? Its final, bloody sequence is not merely tragic, but operatic — as though myth swallowed them whole.

The Sisters Brothers (2018, BBC Two at 12:00 a.m.) Jacques Audiard’s The Sisters Brothers is a Western by way of existential philosophy — its title characters both assassins and brothers, bound by money, trauma and tenuous affection. Joaquin Phoenix and John C. Reilly bring a rough vulnerability to these violent men, suggesting deep psychological damage beneath the dusty bravado.

Set against the Gold Rush, the film becomes a brutal commentary on economic ambition and moral erosion. The brothers are contracted to kill a chemist who has discovered a revolutionary gold-extraction formula — a sly allegory for capitalism’s hunger to consume not just wealth, but those who find new ways to obtain it.

What elevates the film is its moral unease. No one seems sure why they’re doing what they’re doing — and that ambiguity becomes the point. Is redemption possible for men shaped by violence? Maybe. But only if they stop moving. The film’s philosophical spine rests in that final gesture: trading blood for rest, brutality for domestic grace.

Monday, 30 June 2025

The Swimmer (1968, Film4 at 4:55 p.m.) The Swimmer is a surreal masterpiece — a seemingly simple premise of a man “swimming home” through the suburban pools of Connecticut slowly unfurls into a haunting portrait of self-delusion and moral decay. Burt Lancaster’s Ned Merrill arrives radiant, tanned, and confident, yet each pool — each encounter — strips away another illusion. The psychological descent is masterful: Ned begins the journey with Olympian ease, only to finish shivering and broken.

The film is an indictment of post-war affluence and the rot beneath manicured lawns. As Ned passes through the homes of former lovers, neighbours, and estranged friends, we’re shown the social cost of status: abandonment, resentment, banality. Suburbia becomes an emotional desert, chlorinated and conformist.

Philosophically, it’s about denial — personal, cultural, and even existential. Ned cannot accept that time has moved on, that his family is gone, that he no longer belongs. His journey is less swim than pilgrimage, one man clinging to myth in a world that has already moved past him. By the time he reaches his own empty home, the modern American dream lies puddled and silent.

The Battle of Little Bighorn (PBS America at 5:35 p.m.) This historical documentary examines a pivotal moment in the U.S. conquest of the West — the 1876 defeat of General Custer by a coalition of Native American tribes at Little Bighorn. While often told as a tragic blunder of arrogance, this version leans into deeper historical truths: the betrayal of treaties, the resistance of Indigenous nations, and the myth-making that followed.

Politically, it unpicks American exceptionalism at its roots. Custer’s Last Stand has long been weaponised in national mythology as noble defeat; yet here, the documentary restores balance, foregrounding the Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, and Arapaho perspectives. Their fight wasn’t just territorial — it was about sovereignty, survival and the right to exist beyond colonial terms.

Psychologically, the piece is reflective rather than bombastic. It invites viewers to consider how collective memory is constructed — and for whom. The frontier becomes not a backdrop of expansion but of erasure. As America still contends with its foundational stories, this programme serves as quiet yet forceful revisionism.

Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris (2022, Film4 at 9:00 p.m.) This charming period fantasy may seem frothy on the surface — a widowed cleaning lady travels to Paris to buy a Dior dress — but its undercurrents are more socially resonant. Mrs. Harris is a working-class woman armed with optimism and grit, navigating a world of couture, class boundaries, and institutional snobbery. Her quiet dignity reframes luxury not as entitlement, but as aspiration rooted in worth.

It critiques the gatekeeping of beauty and elegance — and the institutions that hoard it. The House of Dior, mired in post-war conservatism, is initially resistant to Mrs. Harris’ intrusion. Yet her integrity and kindness unravel their haughty facade, suggesting that authenticity can dismantle pretension. In this, fashion becomes both symbolic currency and personal liberation.

Philosophically, it suggests that the good life isn’t about wealth but wonder. Mrs. Harris doesn’t want power — she wants presence. She moves through Paris not as conqueror but as witness, reminding us that kindness is a form of defiance, and joy a legitimate pursuit. Her story becomes a minor act of class revolution stitched in silk.

The Quiet Girl (2022, Film4 at 11:20 p.m.) This Irish-language gem is a masterclass in stillness — a hushed, heartbreaking tale of a neglected child sent to live with distant relatives, where tenderness is doled out like light through a cloudy sky. Nothing about The Quiet Girl is sentimental; instead, it is deeply humane, shaped by restraint and quiet revelation.

It speaks to rural poverty and emotional austerity — where children are often left unseen, where care is conditional, and grief is left to rot in corners. Yet the film resists misery. It presents love not as grand gesture but as simple noticing: a glass of milk left out, a clean dress laid across a bed.

Psychologically, the journey of the girl — Cáit — is one of emergence. She is not saved, but recognised. And in that recognition, there is rebirth. The film ends not with resolution, but with the possibility of connection: the idea that being held is the beginning of healing. A whisper of a film, but one that echoes loudly.

The Whistleblower (2010, Great Movies at 11:35 p.m.) Inspired by true events, The Whistleblower stars Rachel Weisz as Kathryn Bolkovac, a UN peacekeeper in post-war Bosnia who uncovers the complicity of international forces in human trafficking. It’s a chilling political thriller that does more than expose corruption — it interrogates the limits of morality in systems designed to protect power.

Politically and legally, the film lands its critique squarely on the global apparatuses that claim neutrality while enabling exploitation. The UN badge, here, becomes both shield and weapon. Bolkovac’s fight is less about institutional reform and more about survival within a machine that punishes honesty.

Psychologically, it’s about moral loneliness. Bolkovac is surrounded by passive colleagues, threatened by powerful enemies, and haunted by the knowledge that truth doesn’t always lead to justice. Yet she persists. That insistence — on bearing witness, on not averting her gaze — becomes heroic. In a world of negotiated ethics, hers is a rare, unflinching moral clarity.

The Damned United (2009, BBC Two at 12:00 a.m.) Tom Hooper’s The Damned United isn’t just a football film — it’s a brooding character study of ambition, insecurity and self-sabotage. Michael Sheen’s portrayal of Brian Clough, during his infamous 44-day tenure at Leeds United, is electric with contradiction: cocky, wounded, brilliant, broken.

The economic and class context hums beneath every scene. Football management isn’t just about tactics — it’s about class tensions, legacy and loyalty. Clough, the scrappy outsider, constantly bangs up against entrenched club cultures and northern tribalism. His resentment towards Don Revie, Leeds’ former manager, is both professional and existential: a dispute over what winning should mean, and who gets to define it.

Psychologically, Clough is a man caught in his own projection. His public bombast barely masks profound self-doubt and a desperate need for validation. His feud with Leeds is as much a battle with himself as with the club. The tragedy isn’t that he failed — it’s that he was never prepared to succeed on someone else’s terms. In the end, we’re left with a portrait of genius unravelled by ego and unresolved grief.

To Catch a Stalker (BBC Three at 9:00 p.m.) This BBC documentary blends investigative journalism with harrowing victim testimony to dissect a modern crime born of ancient impulses — obsession, control, violation. In its forensic pacing, it unpicks the mechanisms of stalking: not just the acts themselves, but the institutional inertia that often accompanies them. Law, here, is both protector and bystander.

Socially, it raises urgent questions around digital vulnerability — how a society tethered to phones and platforms offers perpetrators endless access, and victims no reprieve. It touches on the cost of justice: restraining orders, police protection, legal recourse all require stamina and funds, often leaving working-class victims especially exposed. It’s a classed crisis wrapped in tech.

Psychologically, the programme doesn’t flinch. It explores the dissonance between fear and shame — and how institutions, when passive, become accomplices. The most damning scenes aren’t necessarily the messages or footage, but the silences: the long pauses between asking for help and receiving it. The title is a promise; the narrative a lament.

Storyville: The Srebrenica Tape (BBC Four at 10:00 p.m.) This forensic addition to the Storyville strand focuses on newly surfaced video evidence surrounding the Srebrenica genocide — the 1995 massacre of more than 8,000 Bosniak men and boys by Bosnian Serb forces. The footage is sparse, chilling, and devastating in its clarity, forcing viewers to contend not only with atrocity but with its documentation.

Politically, the episode is a rebuke: to NATO indecision, to Western posturing, to the long failure of justice. Socially, it asks how states metabolise genocide — whether through denial, delay or distortion. For Bosnia and the wider Balkans, the images are not history, but wound. The tape itself becomes both evidence and scar tissue.

Philosophically, the programme sits with trauma — not to wallow in grief but to understand it. There’s power in the uncut footage: in the realisation that banality and horror are separated only by context. In a media landscape often allergic to sustained discomfort, The Srebrenica Tape insists on it, and by doing so, demands moral clarity.

Storyville: Copa 71 – The Lost Lionesses (BBC Four at 11:30 p.m.) A revelation in the form of reclamation, this Storyville special unearths the buried history of the 1971 Women’s World Cup — an unofficial but wildly popular tournament held in Mexico and effectively erased from football’s institutional memory. The English team, dubbed the “Lost Lionesses,” are brought back into cultural focus with joy, rage and dignity.

It’s a stinging reminder of how gendered exclusion operates. These athletes played before packed stadiums, yet returned home to silence, bans, and bureaucratic indifference. The Football Association’s refusal to sanction or support their efforts speaks volumes — not only about misogyny, but about who gets to write history.

Psychologically, the film is quietly revolutionary. These now-elderly players are not bitter — but they are clear. Their memories restore agency, colour and narrative force to a time when women dared to take up space on the global stage. It’s not just football history — it’s feminist resistance on the half-volley. As the credits roll, it’s hard not to feel both grief and admiration. The game isn’t over. It’s just being restarted — with the whistle finally blown on silence.

Wednesday, 2 July 2025

Public Enemies (2009, Film4 at 9:00 p.m.) Michael Mann’s Public Enemies is ostensibly about John Dillinger, America’s most romanticised bank robber of the Great Depression. But beyond the Tommy guns and trench coats, it’s a brooding meditation on modernity’s encroachment — the moment when individual outlaw myth gives way to bureaucratised surveillance and national policing. Johnny Depp plays Dillinger as both folk hero and anachronism: too reckless for the system, too sentimental for the era consuming him.

The film is sharp in its depiction of collapsing public trust in institutions — not only financial, but judicial. In an age of bailouts, robbing banks seems less an act of criminality than of theatre. Dillinger becomes avatar and mirror, daring audiences to interrogate their own sympathies with system or saboteur.

Psychologically, he’s less a rebel than a man who can’t adapt. His romance with Billie Frechette is all desperate softness — a clinging to a world of feeling in a time of function. Mann’s signature digital aesthetic gives the period story an eerie immediacy, as though the past were always just a breath behind us, ready to resume fire.

7/7: One Day in London (BBC Four at 9:00 p.m.) This unflinching documentary excavates the coordinated bombings in London on 7 July 2005, not for spectacle, but for social clarity. Drawing on survivor testimony and archival footage, it centres not only the horror but the aftermath — how cities, families, and systems metabolise violence. It is, most starkly, an act of witnessing.

Politically, the film handles its volatile subject with admirable equilibrium. It critiques intelligence failures and policy oversights without resorting to hysteria, and it raises urgent questions about how racialised suspicion took hold in the bombings’ wake — how British Muslims bore the brunt not just of grief, but of blame. It interrogates state responsibility and social fracture in tandem.

Philosophically, the programme is concerned with time: how a moment explodes outward, infinitely, into trauma, memory, policy. The date becomes not just a headline, but a wound carried in fragments by ordinary people. There is no resolution, only recording. And perhaps that is enough. Perhaps to remember precisely is to resist being erased.

Frank McGuinness and Julie Nicholson Remember A Song for Jenny (BBC Four at 10:30 p.m.) In this brief but luminous conversation, playwright Frank McGuinness and bereaved mother Julie Nicholson revisit A Song for Jenny — the elegiac drama that told the story of Nicholson’s daughter, Jenny, murdered in the 7/7 bombings. The tone is quiet, meditative, suffused with the ache of history made personal.

Psychologically, the exchange is profound: Nicholson’s grief is not performative, but philosophical — shaped by faith, rage, and love. McGuinness, ever humane, speaks of the ethics of storytelling: how one writes into someone else’s trauma without stealing or distorting it. Together, they model a radical tenderness — where remembering is not only painful, but purposeful.

Socially and spiritually, it’s about reclamation: of narrative, of memory, of grace. The film they discuss (A Song for Jenny, which follows at 10:45 p.m.) is no longer just a drama — it’s communal liturgy. Their dialogue primes us to watch it not with distance, but with presence.

A Song for Jenny (BBC Four at 10:45 p.m.) This dramatised adaptation of Julie Nicholson’s memoir about the death of her daughter in the 7/7 attacks is one of the BBC’s most quietly devastating works. Emily Watson’s performance as Julie is staggeringly controlled — showing not only the shattering of a parent’s world, but the resilience of a woman determined to mourn without hatred.

Philosophically, the film resists easy answers. Julie, a vicar, finds her faith not erased but complicated. The story avoids sanctimony: forgiveness is not demanded, nor granted. Instead, we see grief as choreography — an effort to make meaning through ritual, repetition, the small terrible tasks of informing others, identifying remains, and going on.

Socially, it’s a window into how terrorism fractures private life. The political event becomes an intimate implosion. Yet the film never dehumanises the attackers — it simply refuses them the narrative spotlight. Jenny, and the life she lived, remains central. In that choice, the film becomes an act of resistance — one that speaks not of vengeance, but of irrevocable love.

Thursday, 3 July 2025

Euro 2025: Together Stronger (BBC One at 10:40 p.m.) This emotionally charged documentary tracks the evolution of the Welsh national football team, centring not only the matches but the players, supporters, and stories that defined its recent resurgence. It’s a love letter to underdog grit — a meditation on how sport can stitch a nation together, even in fragments.

Politically, it speaks to Welsh identity as both proud and precarious. The film navigates the tension between devolution and representation, showing how a national team becomes a proxy for a culture still asserting its difference. The language, the songs, the faces in the crowd — all are symbols of rootedness in a world increasingly flattened.

Psychologically, the film centres affective resilience — how defeat shapes camaraderie, and how masculinity, here, is redefined not through dominance, but through vulnerability and teamwork. At a time when football often veers into nationalism or corporate spectacle, Together Stronger reclaims it as civic joy. The title isn’t just slogan — it’s thesis.

The Integrity of Joseph Chambers (2022, Film4 at 11:20 p.m.) This taut, minimalist drama follows a suburban father who sets out into the woods with a rifle, hoping to prove his self-sufficiency in the face of an imagined collapse. What unfolds is less survival story than existential fable — a study in paranoia, performance and the brittle myth of American individualism. Joseph, as played with haunted energy by Clayne Crawford, isn’t heroic — he’s hollowing.

The film critiques prepper culture and the nostalgia for self-reliance as a substitute for community. Joseph’s fantasy isn’t just about danger — it’s about control. In trying to be “the man his family needs,” he becomes alienated from the very people he’s trying to protect. His wilderness isn’t Eden, but ego manifest.

Philosophically, the story drills into the ethics of intent and consequence. When a tragic accident forces Joseph to reckon with what he’s become, the film lingers not on action but aftermath. What does it mean to be good when no one sees you — and when guilt is the only witness? This is a film of long silences, shaky hands, and moral vertigo. The integrity in question isn’t just his — it’s ours.

Riders of Justice (2020, Channel 4 at 1:55 a.m.) On paper, Anders Thomas Jensen’s Riders of Justice is a revenge thriller: a soldier returns home after his wife dies in a train crash, only to discover it may have been the work of a criminal syndicate. But in execution, it’s something altogether stranger and richer — a blend of jet-black comedy, absurdist philosophy and emotional meditation on grief and randomness.

Politically, the film subverts the logic of vengeance. While the setup suggests classic vigilante righteousness, the narrative is constantly interrupted by digressions — on data modelling, on coincidence, on trauma. Its ensemble of broken men, including a trio of misfit statisticians, builds a kind of misfit brotherhood that ridicules traditional conceptions of masculinity.

Psychologically, the film is one long question: how do we make sense of chaos? For lead character Markus, played with volcanic restraint by Mads Mikkelsen, the impulse to kill is less about justice than structure — a desperate need for meaning in the face of loss. The joke, repeated through violence and philosophy alike, is that we’re always building sandcastles on algorithms. And yet, the film’s heart is sincere: maybe kindness, not vengeance, is the more radical act.

Friday, 4 July 2025

Heat (1995, Legend at 9:00 p.m.) Michael Mann’s Heat is operatic in scale and clinical in execution — a heist thriller that dares to slow down, to stare into the eyes of men who’ve built lives on the brink and now teeter under the weight of their choices. Robert De Niro’s Neil McCauley and Al Pacino’s Vincent Hanna are less cop and robber than two solitudes circling meaning. Each is a system: disciplined, damaged, doomed.

Philosophically, the film explores the cost of professionalism — not in earnings, but in human disconnection. Neil’s mantra, “Don’t let yourself get attached to anything you are not willing to walk out on in 30 seconds,” becomes both creed and curse. In contrast, Hanna’s domestic breakdowns reveal the emotional wreckage behind the badge. They are mirrors, reflecting different denials.

The film captures a Los Angeles pulsing with inequality: glittering mansions perched above warehouse grime. The heists are precision art, not desperation — but they are born of the same system. Psychologically, every character is trying to outrun loneliness, as though velocity itself were virtue. And when they finally stop moving — in that iconic final shot — what’s left is touch. Just touch.

Thomas Jefferson (Sky History at 9:00 p.m.) This biographical documentary examines America’s third president in all his Enlightenment complexity and contradiction. Jefferson the philosopher, the architect of liberty, the slaveholder — all are present. What emerges is not a clean narrative, but a palimpsest of ideals, hypocrisies, and legacy-making.

Politically, the film engages deeply with the double helix at America’s founding: liberty entwined with bondage. Jefferson’s authorship of the Declaration of Independence and his ownership of hundreds of enslaved people aren’t set against each other but entangled — a moral dissonance that underpins the republic’s architecture.

Philosophically, Jefferson remains a vexing figure: a man whose mind leapt centuries, yet whose plantation walls never fell. The film avoids hagiography, instead inviting viewers to interrogate the very premise of greatness. Is it innovation or influence that defines legacy? And can either survive unscathed when soaked in contradiction?

Streaming Highlights

Tuesday, 1 July

The Summer Hikaru Died (Netflix) This supernatural anime adaptation, grounded in rural Japanese gothic, explores friendship, grief, and identity through the strange return of Hikaru — a boy who may no longer be human. It’s eerie and tender, a meditation on the uncanny wrapped in school uniforms and mountain mist.

Psychologically, it captures the blurred boundary between memory and projection. Is Hikaru a person, a parasite, or a longing given shape? The narrative refuses easy answers, instead lingering in emotional liminality. The horror is existential: the fear that what we love may not love us back — or worse, may not be real.

Trainwreck: The Cult of American Apparel (Netflix) This fashion-industry exposé delves into the rise and implosion of a brand that sold sex and ethics in the same breath — a post-hipster empire of softcore ads, sweatshop-free slogans, and internal exploitation. The documentary is brisk, damning and weirdly mesmerising.

The film interrogates brand virtue as a mask for corporate vice. Dov Charney’s persona — both guru and golem — encapsulates the dangers of unchecked charisma in a supposedly progressive space. The film asks not just how such cultures form, but why we buy into them. The answer, it suggests, is aesthetic and psychic — we fall for packaging because we’re trained to trust the wrapper.

Frida Kahlo (Marquee TV) This elegant portrait, part performance and part documentary, brings Kahlo’s work and writing into sharp, personal focus — not just as a painter, but as a radical force in politics, gender and self-fashioning. Voiceovers blend with archival footage and bold animations that mimic her brushwork.

Philosophically, Kahlo emerges as her own manifesto: scarred and splendid, simultaneously self-creating and self-consuming. Her pain — physical, romantic, national — is never fetishised but presented as palette. That she became icon was inevitable; this film reclaims her as also invincible.

A Night with Janis Joplin (Marquee TV) A joyously unfiltered stage tribute with muscular vocals and psychedelic swagger, this performance doc fuses biography and concert in a love letter to the raw, haunted soul of Janis Joplin. Her voice tears through the polite veneer of late-60s America.

The show dwells in Janis’s hunger — for love, acceptance, obliteration. Her songs aren’t polished messages, but primal yelps dressed in blues. There’s no mythologising here — just gravel and brilliance.

Wednesday, 2 July

The Old Guard 2 (Netflix) This sequel doubles down on the first film’s premise — a band of immortal warriors doing morally ambivalent good in a world that doesn’t want them — with more mythos, more blood, and a growing sense of alienation. Charlize Theron’s leader remains wearied and wise, shouldering eternity like armour.

Philosophically, it asks what it means to fight for a world that will never remember you. It’s vigilante ethics in the age of surveillance and scepticism. And with each resurrection, the cost of immortality accrues — like grief compounding through the centuries.

Heads of State (Prime Video) A cheeky, high-octane political action flick with enough knowing asides to keep it from tipping into parody. Think Designated Survivor meets Bad Boys, with OTT set pieces and more charisma than credibility.

The film is candy-floss geopolitics — heads of state as avatars, not administrators. But buried beneath the quips is a question about responsibility: who actually runs the world, and what would happen if they were removed from the chessboard?

Thursday, 3 July

The Sandman: Season 2, Volume 1 (Netflix) Neil Gaiman’s dreamscapes return with renewed precision — less exposition, more excavation. Morpheus is no longer just the Lord of Dreams, but the reluctant steward of meaning. These new episodes expand the mythology while zeroing in on what makes people cling to stories — even broken ones.

Psychologically, this is some of the most literate fantasy on screen — about trauma, narrative, memory and need. Gaiman’s universe remains a place where gods bleed and mortals mythologise their own pain. As ever, it’s less about escapism than reckoning.

Friday, 4 July

Hunting My Sextortion Scammer: Untold (Channel 4 Streaming) This investigative documentary follows a young search for justice after being targeted in a sextortion scam — a journey that becomes both thriller and emotional reckoning. It’s one of the rare digital-age documentaries that neither sensationalises nor sanitises.

The documentary shows how shame is weaponised — not just by scammers, but by silence. The doc asks hard questions about legal response, technological accountability, and how we teach young people emotional literacy in an age of performative intimacy.

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Culture Vulture: 21–27 June, 2025

3,571 words, 19 minutes read time.

Welcome to Culture Vulture — an alternative look at the week’s entertainment, curated for you by Pat Harrington. Our video version has been suspended due to staff illness.

Summer stirs, and with it comes a restless appetite for stories that stretch across decades, genres, and the hidden corners of human life. This week’s Culture Vulture is a tapestry of classics, festival anthems, courtroom reckonings and sharp-tongued thrillers — each inviting you to slip away from the ordinary for a while.

From the Isle of Wight’s festival fields to the dusty plains of a western stagecoach, these films and programmes share a common pulse: people thrown together by chance, by ambition, or by the thrill of the unknown. They remind us how secrets fester behind polite facades, how loyalty and betrayal dance hand in hand, and how communities — whether in mosh pits or courtroom galleries — reveal the best and worst in us.

So close the curtains, let dusk settle, and join Culture Vulture for a week where music, mischief, heartbreak and human folly flicker across your screen. There’s plenty here to spark conversation, stir memories, or simply keep you company until the credits roll.


Saturday, 21st June

7:00 p.m. — Isle of Wight Festival (Sky Mix Arts Showcase)
There’s a special energy that comes from gathering thousands of people on an island for music. The Isle of Wight Festival has long been a pilgrimage for fans of big names and new discoveries alike. Each set tonight, from Paul Heaton to Yard Act, taps into that timeless ritual of voices uniting under open skies.
Beyond the guitars and choruses, the festival scene reminds us how gatherings can revive local economies and breathe life into quiet towns. The performers know they are part of something larger than their own setlists; the crowd shapes the memory as much as the artists do.
For a few hours, differences dissolve in the swell of familiar lyrics and cheering. It’s a microcosm of how communal moments can momentarily hush everyday divides and let strangers stand side by side, arms around shoulders, singing the same words.

9:00 p.m. — Saint Omer (BBC4)
Alice Diop’s Saint Omer transforms the courtroom into a space of quiet reckoning. Loosely based on real events, the film resists the conventions of legal drama, opting instead for a meditative stillness that invites deep introspection. It explores motherhood, migration, and the silent burdens women often carry—burdens that neither the law nor society is equipped to weigh fairly.

The power of Saint Omer lies not in what’s said, but in what hangs in the air. Diop lets silences speak, glances linger, and bureaucracy weigh heavily on the characters—particularly the defendant, a woman whose foreignness isolates her in both language and experience. Her story unfolds within an institution that cannot—and will not—bend to accommodate difference. The film deftly captures the alienation of navigating such systems while wrestling with trauma and cultural displacement.

What emerges is not an argument for guilt or innocence, but a challenge to the notion that a single act can ever define a life. Diop offers no easy answers. Instead, she leaves viewers unsettled, asking: Who gets to be understood—and who is left behind in the margins of interpretation?

Saint Omer is quietly radical in its form, devastating in its implications.

10:00 p.m. — Sally (National Geographic)
Sally is an understated but deeply affecting tribute to Sally Ride, the first American woman in space. Yet the documentary’s strength lies not in celebrating milestones, but in gently peeling back the layers of a life lived under scrutiny. It honours Ride’s historic achievements, but never forgets the emotional calculus behind each small step.

The film traces not only her ascent into orbit, but the unseen gravitational forces that shaped her path—expectations of gender, privacy, and propriety in a world eager for heroes but slow to accept complexity. Ride emerges not as a symbol, but as a full human being: brilliant, private, and quietly radical in the way she moved through rigid institutions.

There are no histrionics here—just a series of carefully chosen moments that reveal the personal cost of public progress. The story reminds us that history isn’t just made in launchpads or control rooms, but in hushed decisions, guarded identities, and the quiet courage to defy gravity, alone.

In an age that prizes spectacle, Sally dares to whisper. And in doing so, it leaves an echo.

11:25 p.m. — Shallow Grave (Film4)
Shallow Grave slices into the polished calm of shared domesticity, revealing just how thin the walls are—between rooms, and between civility and something far colder. When unexpected wealth enters the picture, old friendships don’t fray—they disintegrate.

The Edinburgh flat, with its orderly charm, becomes a crucible. Laughter and loyalty curdle into wariness, then into something sharper. Every glance becomes a wager; every silence, a strategy. You don’t need a sermon when the tension itself whispers: “No one’s watching. What would you do?”

By the time the secrets start to seep through the walls, it’s clear: the most dangerous thing in the flat isn’t the money, or even the corpse—it’s the belief that consequences are optional. That’s what makes Shallow Grave linger long after the credits roll. It doesn’t just thrill; it disturbs..

12:00 a.m. — A Bigger Splash (BBC2)
Certainly, Patrick. Here’s a version that weaves in the plot summary while preserving the layered tone you’re after:


A Bigger Splash unfolds like a fever dream on a sun-drenched island off the coast of Italy. Marianne Lane, a rock icon recovering from vocal surgery, retreats with her partner Paul to a secluded villa, hoping for silence and healing. But the quiet is shattered by the arrival of Harry, her exuberant former lover and music producer, dragging along his enigmatic daughter, Penelope.

What begins as a reunion quickly unravels into something more volatile. Harry’s charm is a performance that refuses to end, and Penelope’s presence is a riddle wrapped in sunbaked indifference. As the four circle each other—through shared meals, glances, and provocations—the villa becomes less a sanctuary and more a pressure cooker.

The island’s beauty is deceptive. Beneath the olive trees and volcanic rock, old wounds reopen and new ones form. Desire, memory, and control shift like the tides, until a single night by the pool turns everything irrevocable. What follows is not just a reckoning, but a quiet exposure of how far people will go to preserve the illusion of freedom—even if it means burying the truth beneath the surface.


Sunday, 22nd June

2:00 p.m. — In a Lonely Place (Talking Pictures)
In a Lonely Place lingers like cigarette smoke in a darkened bar—bitter, seductive, and hard to shake. Humphrey Bogart plays Dixon Steele, a screenwriter with sharp wit and sharper moods, who’s as likely to charm as he is to lash out. When he becomes the prime suspect in a young woman’s murder, his fragile romance with neighbour Laurel (Gloria Grahame) begins to fray under the weight of doubt.

Postwar Los Angeles glimmers in the background—not with promise, but with unease. Behind the studio lots and neon lights, egos bruise easily, and trust is a currency few can afford. Dixon and Laurel’s love, once tentative and tender, slowly corrodes—not because of what’s proven, but because of what they’re afraid might be true.

Nicholas Ray strips away Hollywood’s veneer, revealing a world where talent comes with a temper, and affection can’t survive suspicion. What’s haunting is not the crime, but the possibility that the man who writes tragedy might be living one he doesn’t even recognise. The years have only sharpened its edges. This isn’t just noir—it’s a lament for those who reach for connection and find only the echo of their own damage.

9:00 p.m. — This Cultural Life: Sheku Kanneh-Mason (BBC4)
Sheku Kanneh-Mason shares his influences and memories, offering a glimpse behind his graceful performances. His journey reveals how family support and persistence help talent grow beyond early obstacles.
He talks candidly about the weight of expectation and the quiet moments where music still feels fresh. There’s no denying how his playing invites audiences to hear familiar works with new ears.
In a time when arts funding and opportunities feel fragile, his story reminds us why nurturing the next generation of artists matters.

9:30 p.m. — Kanneh-Mason Playlist @ the Proms (BBC4)
This special performance captures the family’s unique chemistry and sheer joy in collaboration. Each sibling brings a spark that lights up the Proms stage.
Viewers get to witness how classical music finds new life in youthful hands, mixing respect for tradition with modern vibrance.
Such moments show how institutions can evolve, staying relevant by celebrating the future alongside the past.

10:45 p.m. — Walk the Line (BBC2)
Walk the Line plays less like a biopic and more like a long confession set to rhythm and heartbreak. Joaquin Phoenix steps into Johnny Cash’s boots not with swagger, but with the ache of someone chasing grace through broken chords. The road is littered with empty bottles, burnt bridges, and songs that sound like apologies nobody ever asked for—but needed.

We follow Cash from cotton fields to country stardom, but the real terrain is internal. Haunted by the death of his brother and a father who never let him forget it, his early success becomes both escape and echo. The fame doesn’t drown out the guilt; it just gives it louder amplifiers. Music is his outlet, but also his torment—each performance a tug-of-war between who he is and who the world needs him to be.

As addiction tightens its grip, his marriage falters. The stage lights get brighter, but the man behind the microphone grows dim. Then comes June, played with quiet fire by Reese Witherspoon. She doesn’t fix him—but she doesn’t leave either. Where others see a spectacle, she sees a man trying not to disappear.

Cash doesn’t find redemption in grand gestures. It creeps in slowly—in a prison performance that feels more like confession than concert, in the moments where the applause fades and something like honesty takes its place. By the end, he’s not cleaned up so much as come clean. The ghosts still linger, but he stops running.

Redemption, when it comes, isn’t triumphant. It’s tired, ragged, and real. And it sings in a voice that knows sorrow but chooses harmony anyway.


Monday, 23rd June

9:00 p.m. — A Quiet Place Part II (Film4)
This sequel expands the haunting world where silence means survival. The Abbott family ventures beyond their ruined farm, testing trust and the thin line between neighbour and threat.
What lingers is the dread of a world that punishes noise — a metaphor that resonates with how society hushes certain voices while others roar freely.
In its sparse dialogue and tense moments, the film reminds us how fragile safety is and how fiercely people cling to it when it’s snatched away.

10:00 p.m. — Glastonbury: 70s Hits (BBC2)
Reliving Glastonbury’s early days feels like watching a young giant take its first steps. These performances capture raw moments before the festival became a global brand.
Crowds in flared trousers and muddy boots swirl together in a haze of rebellion and hope. Each chord strummed echoes back to an era wrestling with upheaval and liberation.
Today’s stages owe much to these pioneers who made music a shared protest and party in equal measure.

10:50 p.m. — Trainspotting (Film4)
Trainspotting doesn’t ask for sympathy—it demands attention. It hits like a punch and lingers like a bruise. Set in the scuffed corners of Edinburgh, it follows Renton and his friends as they blur through days of heroin highs, desperate schemes, and the kind of friendship forged in chaos and shared damage.

There’s a grim poetry to their world: flats that crumble, conversations that spiral, laughter that curdles as quickly as it flares. Heroin dulls not just pain, but expectation. Jobs, rules, futures—none of it matters when numbness offers a cruel sort of peace. But the film refuses to glamorise. For every hit, there’s a withdrawal; for every joke, a punch in the gut.

It’s a portrait of restless men circling the same drain, held together by shared history and undone by their attempts to escape it. Some run, some stay. None truly get clean—not from the drugs, but from the ache of not belonging to anything outside their tight, toxic orbit.

Amid the mayhem, there’s grim clarity: you can’t outrun emptiness just because you sprint harder. Trainspotting makes you look—and then dares you to feel something after


Tuesday, 24th June

10:00 p.m. — Glastonbury: 80s Hits (BBC2)
The 80s brought synths, big hair, and a festival grappling with new commercial realities. This retrospective shows bands experimenting with sound and image while crowds transform into a rainbow sea.
Under the spectacle, there’s a tension between staying true to rebellious roots and welcoming big sponsors.
These sets remind us that every generation wrestles with how much to sell and how much to keep sacred.

11:15 p.m. — T2 Trainspotting (Film4)
Trainspotting hits like a rush—reckless, raw, and impossible to ignore. It plunges into Edinburgh’s underbelly with a band of friends who chase heroin not just for the high, but to outrun the grey drag of working-class life. Renton, Spud, Sick Boy, and Begbie aren’t rebels with a cause—they’re just trying to feel something in a world that offers little worth choosing. The film pulses with black humour and kinetic energy, but beneath the swagger is a quiet desperation. Every laugh is edged with rot. Every escape route leads back to the same cracked pavement.

Then comes T2 Trainspotting, not as a sequel in the traditional sense, but as a reckoning. Twenty years later, the same men drift through a city that’s been polished and priced beyond recognition. Renton returns with a limp and a suitcase full of regrets. Spud clings to the edges of recovery. Sick Boy—now Simon—masks bitterness with bravado. And Begbie, still a storm in human form, wants revenge more than redemption.

Where the first film was about running—toward oblivion, away from responsibility—T2 is about what happens when you stop. The pace slows, the jokes land softer, and the ache is louder. Nostalgia hangs heavy, not as comfort but as a trap. The men try to reconnect, but the past doesn’t offer closure—only reminders of what was lost, stolen, or squandered.

The contrast is stark: Trainspotting is a howl from the margins; T2 is a sigh from the middle distance. One is about choosing life, even if it’s a lie. The other asks what’s left when the lie no longer works.

Together, they form a jagged diptych—youth and aftermath, chaos and consequence. And in Spud’s quiet attempt to write it all down, there’s a flicker of something close to grace: not forgiveness, perhaps, but understanding.


Wednesday, 25th June

4:45 p.m. — The Lavender Hill Mob (Film4)
The Lavender Hill Mob tiptoes through postwar respectability with a crooked grin. Alec Guinness plays a prim bank clerk who, after years of tea breaks and tidy sums, decides that routine is simply too dull to die in. With the help of a quirky accomplice and a batch of Eiffel Tower souvenirs, he hatches a plan to lift a fortune in gold bullion—and vanish into the Parisian breeze.

What follows is less a crime spree than a gleeful unraveling. London’s foggy streets and polite facades offer perfect cover for a scheme so absurd it just might work. The joy isn’t in the theft, but in watching modest men seize a moment of audacity. Even the law, when it catches up, seems half-tempted to applaud.

The film delights in upending the idea that virtue lives in grey suits and good pensions. Its clerks and customs men know their place—but for once, they dare to step out of it. Mischief, it turns out, has a very British sense of humour.

9:00 p.m. — Amol Rajan: Ghosts of the Ganges (BBC1)
Rajan travels the length of India’s sacred river, meeting people whose lives flow with its fortunes and tragedies. The journey is as much about him confronting inherited stories as about those he interviews.
Each stop reveals lives entwined with pollution, politics, and the fight to preserve the river’s soul.
It’s a reminder that what binds us is often messy and complicated — but worth understanding up close.

10:00 p.m. — Glastonbury: 90s Hits (BBC2)
The festival in the 90s exploded with Britpop swagger and electronic beats. This rewind captures an era both rebellious and oddly nostalgic for the simpler dreams of the past.
Artists stomp muddy stages while fans sway, lost in anthems that would become generational soundtracks.
It’s a time capsule of innocence and irony, played loud under leaky tents.

10:00 p.m. — Secrets of the Bunny Ranch (Crime & Investigation)
Behind the velvet curtains of this legal Nevada brothel lies a story more tangled than the neon lights suggest. Secrets of the Bunny Ranch begins as a look inside a place where intimacy is scheduled, negotiated, and exchanged—but it quickly reveals more than marketed fantasy.

Workers appear confident, practiced, and in control. But as the series unfolds, former employees step forward with memories that don’t fit the glossy brochure. Beneath the staged affection are testimonies of pressure, manipulation, and blurred lines between consent and control. The late owner, once hailed as a savvy entrepreneur, is re-examined through a darker lens—accusations of bullying and abuse casting long shadows on a place once framed as empowering.

What emerges isn’t scandal for scandal’s sake—it’s a reckoning with how performance, vulnerability, and power intersect when desire becomes a product. The show challenges the assumption that legality ensures safety, asking viewers to confront who truly benefits, and who pays the biggest price.


Thursday, 26th June

12:00 noon — Stagecoach (5Action)
A gambler with charm to spare, a drunken doctor, a woman the town won’t forgive, and an outlaw with a moral code—Stagecoach tosses them together and points the wheels straight into danger. But this isn’t just a western about gunshots and gallops. It’s about what happens when strangers are forced to share space, secrets, and suspicion under pressure.

As the rattling stage rattles through Apache country, the social scaffolding of class, gender, and “respectability” begins to buckle. The desert exposes more than threat—it reveals grit, grace, and courage in the most unexpected places. John Ford crafts a tale where community isn’t born from common backgrounds, but from the necessity of solidarity.

Not everyone reaches the final stop. But along the way, Stagecoach quietly reminds us that decency often rides in the unlikeliest company—and that sometimes, the best lawman is the one wearing the least shine on his boots.

8:00 p.m. — Dispatches: Will Nigel Farage be Prime Minister? (Channel 4)
This timely episode dissects Farage’s new ambitions and the forces driving them. Interviews and analysis dig into his appeal, his critics, and the public mood he stokes.
Watching it, you can sense the undercurrents shaping voters’ frustrations and loyalties.
It leaves no easy answers but plenty to debate over dinner tables and in pub corners.

10:15 p.m. — Persuasion (BBC4)
Jane Austen’s subtle masterpiece of second chances comes alive in this elegant adaptation. Anne Elliot’s quiet resolve guides her through old regrets and renewed hope.
The polite drawing rooms hide raw longing and the bittersweet thrill of wondering if it’s too late.
Even now, the tale feels fresh — reminding us that the heart’s quiet wishes can shape a life more than society’s loud demands.


Friday, 27th June

12:00 a.m. — Gringo (BBC1)
Corporate smooth-talk meets cartel chaos in Gringo, a darkly comic plunge into the price of loyalty—or lack thereof. When a meek pharmaceutical rep is sent to Mexico on what’s meant to be a routine trip, he stumbles into a web of betrayals, smuggling, and high-stakes spin control.

What starts as a business errand swiftly mutates into survivalist farce. Alongside the action is a sharp critique of how glossy boardrooms paper over morally murky waters. Executives feign outrage while tallying profits, and pawns like Harold—the “gringo” in question—are left to dodge bullets fired on someone else’s behalf.

Yet beneath the absurdity is a bleak observation: sometimes it takes a man with nothing left to lose to expose the rot at the top. Gringo doesn’t offer redemption, but it does let the overlooked fight back—messily, and just maybe, on their own terms.

8:00 p.m. — Glastonbury (BBC2)
The week closes with live coverage from the festival grounds, a sprawling celebration of sound and revelry. Crowds stretch for miles, flags wave, and generations gather shoulder to shoulder.
Each performance is a thread in a tapestry that’s constantly rewoven with fresh voices and old legends.
It’s a fitting reminder that, for all its flaws, music still has the power to pull us together under the same sky.

And Streaming

  • Easy Money: The Charles Ponzi Story (Apple TV) — From Monday, 23rd June: This deep dive into the original con artist sets the stage for countless scams that followed. His promises of quick riches speak to a longing that still tempts many today.
  • Nosferatu (Prime Video) — From Friday, 27th June: A new telling of the timeless vampire tale, reimagined for audiences who crave their horror old-school and dripping with dread.
  • Grenfell: Uncovered (Netflix) — From Friday, 20th June: A sobering investigation into the fire’s aftermath, probing the layers of neglect, mismanagement, and community resilience that emerged from tragedy.

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Culture Vulture TV and Film Picks, 17–23 May 2025


Selections and commentary by Pat Harrington
Original music on our video edition by Tim Bragg

3,524 words, 19 minutes read time.

This week’s picks illuminate power, protest, and identity with remarkable clarity. At the heart of the television schedule lies a commitment to confronting injustice and re-examining history: from new angles on the Titanic and the Lockerbie bombing to George Floyd’s global legacy and the silencing of working-class voices in British schools. Films offer the same sharpness: we move from Spike Lee’s masterful biopic of Malcolm X to British Gothic horror and Almodóvar’s meditations on memory and motherhood. Whether it’s courtroom showdowns or polar expeditions, every story this week echoes into the present.


📅 Saturday, 17 May

Doctor Who: The Interstellar Song Contest (BBC One, 7:10 PM)
This glitter-bomb of an episode drops the Doctor and Ruby into an intergalactic Eurovision-style contest. Underneath the dazzle lies a critique of soft-power politics and propaganda by entertainment. Ncuti Gatwa is magnetic, balancing comic timing with a growing emotional range, while the satire never lets up. There are monsters, metaphors, and musical mayhem in abundance.

Titanic: Our Secret History (Channel 4, 8:00 PM)
Not another retelling of the iceberg tragedy, but a deep dive into the ship’s under-explored backstories. This absorbing documentary reframes the Titanic as a floating symbol of class division and industrial overreach. Drawing on fresh sources and survivor testimonies, it paints a vivid, poignant picture of lives shaped by hubris and inequality.

The Untouchables (1987) (BBC Two, 10:00 PM) ★★★★
Brian De Palma’s stylised gangster saga pits Eliot Ness (Kevin Costner) against Al Capone (Robert De Niro) with operatic flair. The screenplay, written by David Mamet, crafts a battle between virtue and corruption with theatrical weight. Sean Connery provides the grit and gravitas, winning an Oscar for his supporting role as Malone.

The direction is bold, with De Palma’s signature set-pieces — especially the slow-motion shootout on the train station steps — creating a heightened world of mythic justice. The score by Ennio Morricone lifts scenes into epic territory without ever losing tension.

This is a film that revels in cinematic bravado while remaining morally unambiguous. It doesn’t flinch from sentimentality, but it earns its emotion with sheer style and craftsmanship.

Parallel Mothers (2021) (BBC Two, 12:50 AM) ★★★★ 🌟
Pedro Almodóvar entwines personal drama with political memory in this story of two women whose lives intersect in unexpected ways. Penélope Cruz is extraordinary in a performance that is both maternal and haunted. She plays Janis, a photographer whose decision to investigate her family’s past leads to unsettling revelations.

Almodóvar delicately balances melodrama with meditative reflection. The domestic storyline never overshadows the deeper commentary on Spain’s reckoning with its Civil War-era crimes, creating a powerful blend of private and collective history.

Visually rich and emotionally generous, Parallel Mothers is a late-career triumph that shows Almodóvar still capable of reinventing his thematic concerns with elegance and depth.

Dead of Night (1945) (Film4, 1:50 AM) ★★★★★
This British horror anthology remains one of the most inventive and disturbing films of its era. A series of eerie tales, linked by a framing device of a man haunted by a recurring nightmare, it taps into postwar anxieties with uncanny precision.

Each segment offers something unique, but it’s the ventriloquist dummy story, starring Michael Redgrave, that sears itself into the mind. The psychological terror here is deeper and more existential than simple ghost stories.

Blending surrealism with social unease, Dead of Night influenced everything from The Twilight Zone to modern horror. It’s a masterclass in atmosphere and dread.


📅 Sunday, 18 May

The Bombing of Pan Am 103 (1 of 6) 🌟
This docuseries embarks on a harrowing and deeply personal investigation into the Lockerbie disaster, peeling back layers of history to expose the political and intelligence failures that shaped the response. Drawing on newly declassified files and firsthand testimonies, it does more than recount the events of December 21, 1988—it interrogates the mechanisms of power that dictated how justice was pursued, or in some cases, obstructed.

Rather than adopting a conventional true-crime format, the series takes a profoundly human approach, placing the families of the victims at the heart of the narrative. Their decades-long struggle for answers is not framed as a subplot but as the driving force behind the investigation. The programme refuses to tiptoe around the uncomfortable truths of state accountability—questions are asked boldly, not whispered in the margins.

The political dimensions of Lockerbie are unavoidable. From the moment Pan Am Flight 103 exploded over Scotland, killing 270 people, the tragedy became entangled in international diplomacy, intelligence operations, and geopolitical maneuvering. The official conviction of Libyan intelligence officer Abdelbaset al-Megrahi remains one of the most contested rulings in modern history, with some arguing that Libya was scapegoated for political expediency while the real perpetrators—potentially linked to Iran or Syrian-backed groups—escaped scrutiny. The series does not shy away from these controversies, instead confronting them head-on, examining how shifting alliances and covert intelligence dealings may have influenced the investigation.

Beyond the question of who was responsible, the series also scrutinizes how governments handle acts of terror. The response to Lockerbie set precedents that would later shape policies on counterterrorism and victim support, influencing how authorities reacted to tragedies such as 9/11. The failures in communication, the lack of transparency, and the reluctance to acknowledge prior warnings about the attack all raise unsettling questions about the balance between national security and public accountability.

Expect this series to reignite old wounds and provoke urgent discussions about how nations reckon with terror, truth, and memory. It is not merely a retelling of history—it is an indictment of the systems that dictate whose grief is acknowledged, whose voices are heard, and whose version of events is allowed to stand unchallenged.

The Wicked Lady (1945) (Talking Pictures, 6:00 PM) ★★★★
Margaret Lockwood stars in this florid melodrama about a bored aristocrat who becomes a highway robber. A Technicolor romp with lace, daggers, and stolen kisses, it shocked censors on release and delights in its heroine’s moral ambiguity.

Gainsborough Pictures excelled at this kind of heightened costume drama, and The Wicked Lady is among the most brazen examples. Lockwood’s performance is charged with charisma and cheek.

A valuable watch not just for its camp appeal, but as a rare early British portrait of female rebellion.


📅 Monday, 19 May

Inside Our Minds (BBC Two, 9:00 PM)
Inside Our Minds is a compelling documentary series that shines a light on neurodivergence, offering a deeply personal and insightful look into how different minds work. Hosted by Chris Packham, the show helps individuals with conditions such as ADHD and dyslexia create films that express their experiences in a way that words often cannot.

The upcoming episode continues this journey, providing a platform for neurodivergent individuals to share their stories and perspectives. If previous episodes are anything to go by, viewers can expect a mix of emotional revelations, scientific insights, and beautifully crafted storytelling that challenges misconceptions and fosters understanding.

For those interested in exploring the complexities of the human brain and the lived experiences of neurodivergent individuals, this episode promises to be both enlightening and moving.

Nixon in the Den (PBS America, 9.55pm)
Nixon in the Den is a gripping and meticulously crafted documentary that peels back the layers of Richard Nixon’s presidency, offering a psychological portrait of a man whose ambition and paranoia shaped American history. Rather than resorting to caricature or simplistic villainy, the film presents Nixon as a deeply complex figure—an astute political strategist whose insecurities and distrust of others ultimately led to his downfall.

Through rarely seen archival footage and insightful interviews, the documentary reconstructs Nixon’s rise from a modest, often loveless upbringing to the heights of global power. It explores how his relentless drive to escape his past fueled his political success, yet also bred the paranoia that would consume him. The film does not shy away from the darker aspects of his presidency, particularly the Watergate scandal, but it reframes these events with fresh perspective, examining how Nixon’s psychological makeup influenced his decisions.

Beyond the scandals, Nixon in the Den delves into his foreign policy achievements, including his groundbreaking visit to China and his complex relationship with the Soviet Union. It acknowledges his diplomatic prowess while simultaneously exposing the ruthless tactics he employed behind the scenes. The documentary paints a portrait of a leader who was both brilliant and deeply flawed—a man whose legacy remains one of the most debated in American history.

This is not just a retelling of well-known events; it is an excavation of Nixon’s mind, revealing the contradictions that defined him. Expect a tense, thought-provoking exploration of power, paranoia, and the fragile nature of political legacy.

Little Women (2019) (Film4, 6:20 PM) ★★★★
Greta Gerwig’s adaptation of Louisa May Alcott’s novel plays with time and structure, refreshing the story while honouring its spirit. Saoirse Ronan leads a luminous cast, capturing Jo March’s restlessness with grace.

The visual palette, inspired by impressionist paintings, gives each scene a lived-in warmth. Florence Pugh’s Amy is especially well-drawn, turning a traditionally maligned character into a figure of surprising clarity and ambition.

Gerwig frames this as a tale of authorship and economic survival, enriching its relevance for modern viewers.

Malcolm X (1992) (BBC Two, 11:00 PM) ★★★★★ 🌟
Spike Lee’s biopic of Malcolm X remains a towering cinematic achievement. Charting his transformation from petty criminal to political icon, it never loses sight of the man behind the myth.

Denzel Washington’s performance is magnificent: disciplined, impassioned, and spiritually searching. He captures Malcolm’s shifts in tone, from firebrand to philosopher, with heartbreaking nuance.

The film is long, but its scope feels earned. It is a film of ideas, anger, and dignity — and one that should be required viewing.

he film is long, but its scope feels earned. It is a film of ideas, anger, and dignity — and one that should be required viewing.


📅 Tuesday, 20 May

The Admirable Crichton (1957) (Film 4, 4.35pm) ★★★★

The Admirable Crichton (1957), directed by Lewis Gilbert and based on J.M. Barrie’s play, is a fascinating exploration of class structure and social hierarchy, wrapped in the guise of a comedic adventure. The film challenges the rigid British class system by placing aristocrats and their servant on a deserted island, where survival necessitates a dramatic role reversal.

At the heart of the film is the question of capability versus status. In Edwardian Britain, nobility is synonymous with leadership, but when the pampered upper class is stripped of its comforts, it is Crichton, the butler, who proves himself most resourceful. This reversal of roles underscores the arbitrary nature of social rank, suggesting that competence, rather than birthright, should dictate leadership. The dynamic between Crichton and the stranded aristocrats becomes a microcosm of meritocracy, subverting the established norms of the British class system.

Additionally, the film exposes the fragility of aristocratic entitlement. The members of the ruling class are reduced to helpless figures, unable to fend for themselves without Crichton’s guidance. The irony here is sharp—these are the people who, by birth, rule nations, yet they cannot boil water or build shelter. This critique of social structure implies that the traditional class divisions may be outdated and impractical.

Although lighthearted, the film reflects post-war Britain’s shifting perspectives on class and social mobility. Released during an era when Britain was undergoing profound social change, The Admirable Crichton subtly comments on the growing sentiment that leadership should be earned rather than inherited. The character of Crichton represents a democratic ideal, in which individuals are judged by ability rather than status.

Yet, the film does not fully embrace revolution. When the characters return to England, the established order is reinstated, demonstrating the persistent grip of tradition. Crichton, despite proving himself a capable leader, willingly steps back into his servant role, hinting at an internalized acceptance of the societal framework. The film suggests that while class structures may be flawed, breaking free from their constraints is not simple, nor always desired by those within them.

The Admirable Crichton is both a satire and a thought-provoking social commentary, asking audiences to reconsider entrenched notions of class and leadership. While it offers moments of humour and romance, its deeper message remains relevant: Who truly deserves power, and why do we accept the structures that govern us? It is a film that entertains while inviting reflection on timeless societal and political debates.


📅 Wednesday, 21 May

The Backlash: The Murder of George Floyd (BBC Two, 9:00 PM) 🌟
The Backlash: The Murder of George Floyd is a powerful and unflinching documentary that examines the seismic impact of George Floyd’s death—not just in the United States, but across the world. More than a retelling of the events surrounding Derek Chauvin’s trial, this film takes a broader view, exploring how societies react to protest, how institutions respond to demands for justice, and how the fight against racial inequality continues to evolve.

Through a combination of unseen archival footage and deeply personal interviews, the documentary captures the raw emotion of the protests that erupted in the wake of Floyd’s murder. It follows the young activists who took to the streets, defying police orders and pandemic restrictions to demand change. Their voices, alongside those of Floyd’s family, legal experts, and cultural figures, form the backbone of the film, ensuring that the narrative remains grounded in lived experience rather than detached analysis.

The documentary also examines the political and institutional responses to the Black Lives Matter movement. In the US, Floyd’s death led to widespread calls for police reform, corporate pledges to address systemic racism, and a reckoning within the media and entertainment industries. But as statues were toppled and protests grew more confrontational, a counter-movement emerged, seeking to discredit and dismantle the momentum of racial justice activism. The film does not shy away from this backlash, exploring how political figures, media outlets, and social movements have sought to reshape the conversation, sometimes in ways that obscure the original demands for accountability.

In the UK, Floyd’s murder resonated deeply, sparking protests that highlighted Britain’s own struggles with racial injustice. The documentary weaves together the American and British narratives, showing how Floyd’s death became a moment of reckoning on both sides of the Atlantic. It revisits key moments, from John Boyega’s impassioned speech in London to the removal of statues linked to colonialism, and examines how these events shaped public discourse on race and history.

At a time when diversity initiatives are being rolled back in the US and debates over racial justice remain deeply polarizing, The Backlash: The Murder of George Floyd asks urgent questions,

Wild Rose (2018) (Film4, 11:25 PM) ★★★★
Jessie Buckley plays a Scottish single mum fresh out of prison who dreams of Nashville stardom. It could be clichéd, but the script and performance resist easy sentiment.

The film balances grit and hope, showing how creativity and aspiration battle poverty and stigma. It features one of Buckley’s finest performances to date.

With its tender mother-daughter dynamic and stirring music, Wild Rose is soulful without being saccharine.

📅 Thursday, 22 May


The Secret Life of Bees (1 of 2) (Channel 5, 9:00 PM)
The Secret Life of Bees (Channel 5, 9:00 PM)

This fascinating documentary, hosted by British naturalist Steve Backshall, takes viewers deep into the world of bees, revealing their intricate societies and vital role in the ecosystem. The first episode explores the 270 different bee species in Britain, showcasing their behaviors, historical significance, and the cutting-edge research being conducted to understand them better.

Backshall, who is learning to be a beekeeper for the first time, brings a personal touch to the series, immersing himself in the challenges and rewards of apiculture. The documentary emphasizes the importance of pollinators in maintaining food security and biodiversity, making a compelling case for why we should all care about these remarkable insects.

With stunning visuals and insightful commentary, The Secret Life of Bees is both educational and engaging, offering a fresh perspective on creatures we often take for granted. Whether you’re a nature enthusiast or simply curious about the hidden lives of bees, this documentary is well worth watching.

Classic Movies: The Story of Scott of the Antarctic (Sky Arts, 8:00 PM)
This engaging retrospective looks at the making and legacy of the 1948 film Scott of the Antarctic, revealing how it helped shape British perceptions of heroism, exploration, and sacrifice. A treat for cinephiles and history buffs alike.

Out of the Furnace (2013) (Legend, 9:00 PM) ★★★
Christian Bale and Casey Affleck star in this moody, downbeat drama set in the rust belt of America. It’s a tale of brothers and broken dreams, heavy on grit and grey skies.

The plot leans into noir territory, with violence and retribution at its core. Woody Harrelson’s turn as a sadistic villain steals every scene.

Bleak but beautifully shot, it speaks volumes about the costs of economic collapse.

A Few Good Men (1992) (Film4, 9:00 PM) ★★★★
Aaron Sorkin’s courtroom drama remains gripping and smart, anchored by powerhouse performances. Tom Cruise, Demi Moore, and Jack Nicholson circle each other with increasing tension.

At its heart, it’s a morality play about duty and the abuse of power. The climactic courtroom exchange has entered pop culture, but the surrounding story is equally compelling.

It’s a satisfyingly old-school thriller with genuine thematic weight.

📅 Friday, 23 May


Draining Pompeii: Secrets Beneath the Ash (Channel 5, 9:00 PM)
Using advanced scanning and excavation techniques, this documentary uncovers new insights into the lives of ordinary Pompeiians buried under ash. It’s a poignant exploration of vulnerability, daily life, and the forgotten victims of catastrophe.

Brass (Rewind TV, 7:00 PM)
A satire of British class, industry, and soap opera tropes, Brass skewers Thatcherite Britain with absurdist flair. The northern accents are thick, the stakes are ridiculous, and the politics are gleefully unsubtle.

Judy (2019) (BBC Two, 11:00 PM) ★★★★
Renée Zellweger disappears into the tragic glamour of Judy Garland’s final act. We find her broke, addicted, and still trying to sing, haunted by a life in the spotlight.

Zellweger’s physical transformation is matched by emotional truth. She captures Garland’s humour, vulnerability, and desperation.

Far from a showbiz hagiography, the film honours Judy by showing her at her most human.

Booksmart (2019) (BBC One, 11:40 PM) ★★★★
Two bookish girls decide to cram all of high school’s missed fun into one wild night. Olivia Wilde’s directorial debut is fast, fresh, and surprisingly moving.

Kaitlyn Dever and Beanie Feldstein share chemistry that grounds even the zaniest moments. It’s a film that balances sharp jokes with a big heart.

Modern, inclusive, and genuinely funny, it holds its own against the great teen comedies of any era.


📺 And finally, streaming choices

Rematch (Disney+, all six episodes available from Wednesday 21 May)
Rematch is an intense six-part series that dives into one of the most famous chess matches in history—the 1997 battle between Garry Kasparov and IBM’s Deep Blue supercomputer. The show isn’t just about chess, though—it’s about the tension between human intelligence and machine power, and it keeps you hooked from start to finish.

Christian Cooke plays Kasparov, bringing out all his passion, frustration, and determination as he faces off against a machine designed to defeat him. The supporting cast, including Sarah Bolger and Aidan Quinn, add depth to the story, making the stakes feel personal as well as historical.

Visually, the series pulls you in with its sharp cinematography, making every move on the board feel like a high-stakes moment. Whether you’re a chess fan or just love a gripping story, Rematch delivers drama, strategy, and a fascinating look at a turning point in history

Tucci in Italy (Disney+, all five episodes available from Monday 19 May)
Stanley Tucci’s culinary journey through Italy returns with warmth, elegance, and charm. He moves through regions both familiar and overlooked, meeting cooks, farmers, and winemakers. More than a travelogue, it’s a celebration of resilience, tradition, and the sensual pleasure of eating well.


Picture credits

Doctor Who: The Interstellar Song Contest
Titanic: Our Secret History By Francis Godolphin Osbourne Stuart –
The Untouchables Fair use.
Parallel Mothers Fair use,.
Dead of Night Fair use.
The Bombing of Pan Am 103 By Air Accident Investigation Branch – Air Accident Investigation BranchReport No: 2/1990
The Wicked Lady Fair use.
Inside Our Minds By Garry Knight from London, England – People’s Walk for Wildlife 2018 – 04, CC BY 2.0,
Nixon in the Den By James Anthony Wills – archive copy at the Wayback Machine, Public Domain,
Little Women
Malcolm X

The Admirable Crichton By Columbia Pictures – Fair use,
The Backlash: The Murder of George Floyd: By Darnella Frazier Facebook post., Fair use.
Wild Rose By Studio and or Graphic Artist – Can be obtained from the film’s distributor., Fair use.
The Secret Life of Bees By Impawards, Fair use.
Classic Movies: The Story of Scott of the Antarctic
Out of the Furnace IMP Awards, Fair use.
A Few Good Men
Draining Pompeii: Secrets Beneath the Ash By ElfQrin – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0,
Brass
Judy
Booksmart By Trent Farr, Fair use.
Rematch By James the photographer
Tucci in Italy By Raph_PH – ConclaveBFILFF101024 (9 of 44), CC BY 2.0,

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Culture Vulture 26 April – 2 May 2025

Welcome to this week’s Culture Vulture, your weekly entertainment guide written from an alternative standpoint.

Selections and commentary are by Pat Harrington, with original music for our video version provided by Tim Bragg. Our normal video version will be available later due to technical difficulties.

This week’s highlights include Titanic, a sweeping portrait of love and class in a world poised for disaster; The Last of Us, a gripping post-apocalyptic journey that explores what survival really costs; and Priest, a fearless drama about conscience, secrecy, and the loneliness of truth.

We hope you find something here to challenge, inspire, and entertain you.

Saturday, 26 April

West Side Story (1961)
1:50 PM, BBC Two

West Side Story remains one of the most potent portraits of urban alienation ever captured in a musical. Set against the backdrop of a crumbling, overcrowded New York, the film reframes Romeo and Juliet as a turf war between two dispossessed groups, each clinging to what little territory and pride they have left. The city they fight over barely notices them, a cold giant of concrete and decay that mirrors their shrinking chances for dignity.

The young characters are caught in a trap not entirely of their making, inheriting rivalries and resentments that the adults around them either exploit or ignore. Education, opportunity, and security — all the things that might lift them out — are tantalisingly close but always just out of reach. When dreams do appear, they’re swiftly crushed under the reality that belonging often demands loyalty to violence.

Despite its sweeping music and kinetic choreography, there’s no real escape offered here. Love can bloom in alleyways and abandoned lots, but survival depends on hard choices and luck more than any sense of justice. The film’s heartbreak is less in the tragedy itself and more in how inevitable it all feels, even from the opening frames.


Doctor Who (Episode 3 of 8: “The Well”)
7:20 PM, BBC One

As Doctor Who continues its new season, “The Well” plunges into questions about legacy, tradition, and the hidden costs of memory. Beneath the science fiction trappings, the story hints at how societies bury uncomfortable truths in rituals and myths, covering over wounds they are unwilling to heal properly. The Doctor, as always, holds up a mirror to human habits and asks whether we are brave enough to confront the monsters we’ve hidden away.

The idea that history is a battleground — fought not just by soldiers but by storytellers — runs throughout the episode. Every ancient site, every relic unearthed, holds competing versions of the past depending on who tells the story. Some of these narratives empower, others entrench fear or division. The Well becomes a symbol not only of physical depth but of how deep societies must dig to find honesty.

What keeps the Doctor fascinating, even after decades, is the refusal to give easy answers. Instead of offering salvation through technology or sheer willpower, the Doctor suggests that true healing demands discomfort, humility, and courage. “The Well” invites viewers to consider that growth often comes not by building new monuments, but by breaking old spells.


Gone Baby Gone (2007)
9:00 PM, Great Movies

In Gone Baby Gone, Ben Affleck peels back the layers of a working-class Boston community to reveal how desperation warps even the simplest notions of right and wrong. The film’s murky streets are filled with people doing their best in systems that have long since failed them, and where the only choices left are bad ones. Institutions meant to protect the vulnerable seem sluggish, corrupt, or simply overwhelmed.

As the case of a missing child unfolds, every character must wrestle with impossible decisions that blur the line between justice and vigilantism. Loyalty to community, family, or the law rarely align neatly, and Affleck refuses to let viewers sit comfortably on moral high ground. Instead, he presents a tangle of compromised motives and gut-wrenching dilemmas, asking whether idealism survives where poverty and addiction are everyday realities.

The film’s final scenes haunt because they refuse neat closure. There is no reward for doing the “right thing” when the very idea of righteousness feels hollow against the weight of suffering. Gone Baby Gone challenges audiences to question what safety means, and whether it can truly exist without confronting the deeper rot beneath surface order.


Benedetta (2021)
11:15 PM, Film4

Benedetta unsettles because it understands power not as something seized violently, but as something often disguised as divine blessing. Set within the restrictive walls of a 17th-century convent, the film shows how structures designed to protect spirituality are vulnerable to ambition, manipulation, and very human desires. Every prayer uttered, every vision proclaimed, becomes a weapon or shield depending on who wields it.

The characters navigate a closed system where survival depends less on piety than on navigating political alliances cloaked in religious robes. Benedetta herself walks a razor-thin line between sincerity and strategy; the film never fully declares whether her miracles are genuine, only that belief itself is a form of currency. For those locked in poverty or servitude, even false salvation is better than none at all.

What lingers most after the final scenes is how little separates faith from fear, liberation from captivity. Institutions meant to offer grace become machines of exploitation, and miracles — real or not — change little when earthly hierarchies are at stake. Benedetta forces us to look beyond scandal and ask who really profits when the divine becomes a matter of paperwork and spectacle.


Carlito’s Way (1993)
11:20 PM, Channel 4

Carlito Brigante’s struggle to go straight after prison feels less like a personal failing and more like an indictment of a society built on broken promises. In Carlito’s Way, dreams of redemption clash against the relentless pull of old loyalties and street codes, showing how hard it is to escape a life when the outside world sees you only through the lens of your past mistakes.

The film bathes New York in a heavy, almost funereal atmosphere where hope is fleeting and paranoia is a survival skill. Carlito’s attempts to build something honest — a small nightclub, a quiet life with a woman he loves — seem almost laughably naïve against the grinding machinery of crime and betrayal that surrounds him. The system may offer a theoretical second chance, but it rarely delivers it without exacting a brutal toll.

By the time the credits roll, we’re left asking whether ambition itself is a trap. In a world where systemic barriers loom larger than personal ambition, where the past is never forgiven, and where loyalty can be a death sentence, Carlito’s tragedy feels less personal and more universal. In the end, it isn’t just bullets that kill him — it’s the silent judgment of a world that never truly offered him a way out.


AngelHeaded Hipster: The Songs of Marc Bolan & T. Rex
11:35 PM, Sky Arts

AngelHeaded Hipster is more than a tribute concert; it’s a reminder that pop music often says what politics cannot. Bolan’s songs, bursting with playful rebellion and emotional rawness, created a world where glitter, fantasy, and subversion could live side by side. In revisiting them, a new generation of musicians finds both celebration and subtle mourning.

Each interpretation in the film reveals something about Bolan’s legacy: the tension between sincerity and spectacle, between cultural escapism and buried pain. Glam rock offered an escape hatch from the conformity and grayness of Britain, yet it also hinted at deeper yearnings — for belonging, for transformation, for dignity denied elsewhere.

The tribute gently suggests that art remains one of the few spaces where outcasts can reshape their realities. Bolan sang about unicorns and dandelions, but also about survival. Even now, when the guitars fade, the hunger behind those lyrics remains.

Sunday, 27 April

Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957)
6:25 PM, Great Action

At first glance, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral seems like a straightforward retelling of frontier justice, but underneath the pistol smoke and dusty streets lies a story about fractured loyalty and the precarious nature of authority. Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday operate in a world where law is as much about reputation and grudges as it is about written rules. Every man at the Corral believes he has right on his side; what separates the heroes from the villains is often little more than who wins the final standoff.

The film paints the American West not as a land of opportunity but as a battleground where power has to be constantly asserted with violence or cunning. Formal institutions are weak or absent, and communities survive through uneasy pacts and silent understandings rather than justice. It’s a reminder that stability often depends less on laws and more on those willing — or desperate enough — to enforce them.

Beneath the surface, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral wrestles with the cost of that enforcement. The characters cling to honour, friendship, and personal codes, but the blood spilled at the end shows how fragile and hollow those codes can become. Victory might bring order, but it rarely brings peace — not even for the victors..


Louis Theroux: The Settlers
9:00 PM, BBC Two

Louis Theroux has made a career out of exploring the spaces where ideology and lived experience collide, and The Settlers is no exception. Set among Israeli settlers in the West Bank, the documentary uncovers a community whose beliefs in destiny and survival are challenged daily by the stark realities of the land and its history. These settlers live with a defiant sense of purpose, but Theroux quietly reveals the fractures and contradictions within that certainty.

Each conversation hints at the uneasy compromises that shape life in contested territory. Economic hardship, cultural memory, and personal fears all blend into justifications for a status quo that feels increasingly unsustainable. Theroux rarely editorialises, yet the faces and silences he captures speak volumes about the psychological toll of endless conflict. Here, certainty can be a shield, but it can also become a prison.

What makes The Settlers so unsettling is not its portrayal of extremism, but its portrait of ordinariness. These are people living, raising families, building homes, even dreaming — yet doing so in a place where every cruel act carries political weight. Theroux shows how human lives, when woven tightly into ideological fabrics, can make even everyday gestures a battleground for meaning and control.

Monday, 28 April

Titanic (1997)
7:00 PM, Film4

Titanic sweeps viewers back to 1912 aboard the world’s grandest ship, a floating palace on its maiden — and final — voyage. It pairs breathtaking spectacle with an intimate love story between Rose, an aristocrat yearning for freedom, and Jack, a penniless artist. Every grand staircase and glittering ballroom speaks to an age intoxicated with its own progress, even as the cold inevitability of disaster closes in. Beneath the romance, there’s a creeping sense that this voyage was always doomed, that hubris and faith in technology would never be enough to command the sea.

What gives the film its lasting power is the way it captures an invisible but ever-present divide. Above deck, the wealthy dance and dine; below, the workers and immigrants sleep cheek by jowl. The story shows how security and luxury are bought with the sweat and sacrifice of those who remain unseen until tragedy strikes. Jack and Rose’s love story offers a glimpse of possibility — that these walls might be breached — but the ocean proves merciless, erasing fine suits and ragged clothes alike when the ship finally sinks.

Rewatching Titanic now, it’s striking how much it says about dreams built on fragile foundations. In Rose’s survival there’s not just sorrow but a kind of warning: that those who are supposed to be protected may in the end be left clinging to wreckage, while the architects of disaster escape consequence. The film’s final images, beautiful yet deeply sad, remind us that for all our ambitions, nature — and fate — remain indifferent.


Panorama: The Truth About Baby Food Pouches
8:00 PM, BBC One

Tonight’s Panorama turns its gaze onto something that many parents reach for without a second thought: baby food pouches. Brightly coloured, convenient, and marketed as a healthy choice, they’ve become a booming part of family life. But what lurks behind the cheerful packaging? The investigation reveals that many of these products are packed with sugar and stripped of essential nutrients, offering an easy sale at the cost of children’s long-term health.

It’s a story about more than nutrition. In a world where time is short and pressures are high, companies offer solutions that slip into the gaps left by modern life. Panorama captures how trust is sold in glossy advertising while quietly undermined in supermarket aisles. It’s a system that relies on parents doing their best in difficult circumstances — and rarely rewards them with the full truth. The promises on the pouch are simple; the reality inside is not.

At its heart, the episode invites viewers to see who benefits when nutrition becomes a product rather than a principle. Government warnings gather dust, industry profits climb, and another generation is quietly nudged down an unhealthy path. Without preaching, Panorama makes clear that the real costs of convenience are often carried not by those who sell, but by those too small to choose for themselves.


The Last of Us
9:00 PM, Sky Atlantic

The Last of Us offers a vision of the future that feels uncomfortably close to the present. After a fungal infection tears through the world, civilisation collapses into isolated, suspicious enclaves. In this battered landscape, Joel and Ellie — a weary survivor and a teenage girl who may hold humanity’s hope — journey through crumbling cities and overgrown highways. The real threat isn’t just the infected, but what people are willing to become when the old rules are swept away.

Across broken towns and desolate plains, the show paints a portrait of a world trying to rebuild itself out of ash and fear. Some communities cling to old structures of governance, others fall into anarchy or cultish devotion. Everywhere, survival demands hard choices and harder hearts. Yet among the ruins there are flashes of generosity, loyalty, even love — stubborn lights against the long dark. These moments matter all the more because they are rare and hard-won.

What makes The Last of Us compelling isn’t its monsters, but its compassion. It reminds us that survival alone is never enough; what matters is the kind of people we become when survival is all we have left. In Joel and Ellie’s fragile bond — filled with mistrust, tenderness, sacrifice — lies a simple but profound truth: the future, if it has any hope at all, depends on who we choose to protect, not just on who we manage to defeat.


Yield to the Night (1956)
11:05 PM, Talking Pictures

In Yield to the Night, Diana Dors strips away glamour to deliver a performance full of raw defiance and sorrow. As Mary Hilton, a woman condemned to death, she waits out her final days in a prison cell while flashbacks slowly reveal how she came to kill. The walls around her feel not just physical, but deeply symbolic: a world that offers little mercy, even when mercy might be deserved. Time stretches and twists in these bare surroundings, each tick of the clock a reminder that forgiveness, once denied, cannot be bargained back.

What makes the film endure is its refusal to flatten Mary into a simple figure of guilt or innocence. Her life is laid bare: moments of humiliation, heartbreak, loneliness all stack atop one another until the final act seems less a snap decision than the inevitable breaking of a spirit. The people around her — kind guards, distant officials, pitying visitors — seem powerless to change a system that demands retribution, not understanding. There’s no melodrama here, just the slow grinding of a machine that consumes even those who run it.

Watching Yield to the Night today feels like looking into a mirror we’ve not fully put down. It invites uncomfortable questions about what society asks in the name of justice, and whether any punishment can truly balance out despair. Mary’s story may be personal, but its implications are anything but: a warning about the kind of cold righteousness that turns punishment into ritual, and people into statistics.

Tuesday, 29 April

The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)
5:45 PM, Film4

The Bridge on the River Kwai stands as one of the great studies of pride, loyalty, and delusion. In the blistering heat of a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp, British officers are ordered to build a railway bridge, a project meant to serve their captors. Colonel Nicholson, played with unforgettable precision by Alec Guinness, decides that cooperation — carried out with the highest standards of British engineering — is a way to maintain dignity. What follows is a quiet tragedy, as the very qualities that make Nicholson a great leader also blind him to the fact that he is aiding the enemy.

The film is full of uneasy ironies. Nicholson’s determination to uphold discipline and tradition offers his men a measure of order amid brutal captivity, but it also morphs into a kind of madness. Meanwhile, the captured soldiers toil to complete a symbol of their own subjugation, their labour becoming both a point of pride and a grim joke. Watching the bridge rise, immaculate against the tropical landscape, one feels the deep tension between personal honour and the larger currents of war, ambition, and survival.

As the story hurtles toward its explosive conclusion, the audience is left to ponder the terrible ambiguity of service and sacrifice. What does it mean to be right when the world itself has turned upside down? The Bridge on the River Kwai refuses easy judgments. It shows how human ideals — loyalty, professionalism, courage — can become disastrous when stripped from their deeper purpose, and how even the best of intentions can pave the road to ruin.


Matthew Bourne’s Edward Scissorhands: Dance Adaptations
9:00 PM, Sky Arts

Matthew Bourne’s Edward Scissorhands reimagines Tim Burton’s beloved outsider tale in a stunning new language: dance. Without dialogue, Bourne draws out the aching tenderness and silent yearning that always lay beneath Edward’s clumsy charm. The production transforms the suburban world Edward stumbles into, turning every picket fence and pastel kitchen into a choreography of conformity, where fitting in demands a brutal smoothing of every sharp edge.

Edward himself — sweet, bewildered, yearning for love — becomes a figure of pure vulnerability. In his every gesture, the longing for acceptance is palpable, yet his difference makes true belonging impossible. The cheerful surface of the town around him only barely masks a viciousness beneath: a hunger for spectacle, a fear of the strange, and a ready cruelty toward those who fail to blend in. Bourne’s dance captures the rhythm of this society beautifully: smiling, uniform, and ultimately suffocating.

Without ever hammering the point, the production makes it clear that Edward’s tragedy is not his scissorhands, but the world’s refusal to accept anything it cannot easily explain. The silent grace of dance allows Bourne to show, rather than tell, how dreams of community can warp into exclusion, and how tenderness, if misunderstood, can be punished. It’s a story about innocence in a world too quick to destroy what it doesn’t understand — told with aching beauty and wordless sorrow.


Secret Battle for the Ho Chi Minh Trail: The Misty Experiment
9:35 PM, PBS America

The Misty Experiment tells a story few outside military history circles have heard: a covert U.S. Air Force operation during the Vietnam War, aiming to disrupt the vital Ho Chi Minh Trail. In lush jungles and perilous skies, young pilots embarked on dangerous, often improvised missions, tasked with slowing an invisible enemy’s supply lines. But the documentary quickly makes clear that this was a battle fought as much against nature, uncertainty, and moral unease as against any human foe.

Through archival footage and veteran testimony, the film reveals a campaign marked by both courage and deep contradiction. The “Misty” pilots were selected for their daring and skill, yet the mission itself seemed to slip increasingly out of control — a strategic necessity in theory, an endless escalation in practice. For every truck destroyed, more seemed to appear; for every risk taken, little visible progress was achieved. Pilots found themselves caught between duty and growing doubt, a tension that simmers through every recollection.

Rather than glorifying the conflict, The Misty Experiment lingers on the human cost of fighting a war from the sky — a war where victory was measured in wreckage and estimates. It leaves viewers with a picture not of heroism in the traditional sense, but of perseverance within an ever-shifting fog of uncertainty. There’s no grand victory offered, only the quiet acknowledgment of those who risked everything for missions whose success was measured in whispers and shadows.

Wednesday, 30 April

Groomed: A National Scandal
9:00 PM, Channel 4

Groomed: A National Scandal confronts a part of British life that has too often been pushed aside or politely ignored. Through survivors’ testimonies and forensic journalism, it lays bare how vulnerable young people were failed not just by individual predators, but by the very institutions designed to protect them. Local councils, police forces, and social services emerge less as villains than as examples of a quiet, everyday abandonment — a willingness to look away when protecting reputations or avoiding difficult truths felt more urgent than doing what was right.

The documentary makes clear that the horror wasn’t just in the acts committed, but in the silence that followed. Again and again, warning signs were dismissed, victims were disbelieved, and community tensions were prioritised over justice. The viewer is left with the sickening realisation that inaction often causes more lasting harm than any single crime. It asks, without melodrama, what it says about a society that prefers uncomfortable truths to remain buried, even when children are the ones paying the price.

Ultimately, Groomed refuses to offer the comfort of closure. There are apologies, investigations, reviews — but for those who lived through it, the damage is irreparable. The programme captures a country grappling not only with what happened, but with what it says about the easy compromises and everyday cowardice that allowed it to happen at all. It reminds us that no system is better than the will of those who run it, and that neglect often wears a mask of polite professionalism.


Jimmy McGovern Remembers Priest
10:00 PM, BBC Four

In this intimate reflection, Jimmy McGovern Remembers Priest offers not just a recollection of a controversial film, but a meditation on the cost of telling hard truths. McGovern speaks frankly about the struggles he faced bringing Priest to life — the backlash from religious institutions, the outrage from censors, and the personal toll of stepping into the minefield of faith and sexuality at a time when such conversations were barely whispered in public.

McGovern’s memory of the project is tinged with pride but also melancholy. The film opened wounds in a Britain still struggling to reconcile its traditions with its realities. McGovern doesn’t gloat about the battles won; instead, he reflects on how fragile and fleeting even small cultural victories can be. Viewers sense that Priest was not simply a “statement,” but a personal risk, undertaken at a moment when the wrong word, the wrong scene, could derail a career or bring down a storm of condemnation.

What lingers after McGovern speaks isn’t the controversy, but the loneliness of those who try to hold a mirror up to the world and say: look harder. His recollections remind us that progress often comes with bruises, and that those who demand honesty from society often find themselves standing apart from it, paying a quiet price long after the headlines fade.


Priest (1994)
10:15 PM, BBC Four

Priest remains a raw, deeply unsettling portrait of a man caught between two irreconcilable parts of himself. Father Greg, played with aching vulnerability by Linus Roache, enters the church full of hope and conviction, only to find that the institution he reveres is riddled with hypocrisy and fear. His struggle is not just with his own sexuality, but with the crushing realisation that those around him — his mentors, his congregation, his Church — have little interest in redemption when appearance and authority are at stake.

The film paints an unforgiving world where vulnerability is punished and silence is rewarded. The confessional, meant to be a place of honesty and healing, becomes instead a battleground of impossible secrets. Father Greg’s attempts to live truthfully bring him into direct conflict with the very institution that should nurture compassion. In this setting, forgiveness is conditional, compassion is selective, and human suffering becomes just another embarrassment to be managed.

Watching Priest today, it feels no less urgent. It captures the isolation that comes from standing at the fault lines of personal integrity and institutional cowardice. McGovern’s film does not offer easy villains or tidy resolutions. Instead, it forces viewers to sit with discomfort, to feel the slow corrosion that occurs when loyalty is demanded at the expense of conscience. In the end, it is less about faith lost than about faith betrayed.


Cold War and Cinema
11:30 PM, Sky Arts

Cold War and Cinema examines a time when fear and imagination collided on the silver screen. The documentary traces how Hollywood and European filmmakers alike processed the looming dread of nuclear annihilation, espionage, and ideological battle. Through slick thrillers, surreal science fiction, and bleak dramas, the anxieties of a divided world were distilled into stories that offered both escape and confrontation — sometimes at the same time.

The most fascinating moments reveal how cinema became both a weapon and a refuge. Propaganda seeped into everyday entertainment, while artists found ways to smuggle subversive ideas past censors under the guise of genre. The threat of global destruction left its mark on everything from shadowy noir films to shiny space operas, each story echoing the tensions of a world forever two minutes to midnight. Even the most fantastical tales often carried the heavy weight of very real dread.

Yet Cold War and Cinema isn’t simply a history lesson. It captures how artists, consciously or unconsciously, translated fear into shared myths — about identity, betrayal, survival. It reminds viewers that culture often absorbs what politics tries to suppress. In the flicker of film reels, the Cold War raged as fiercely as it did in any courtroom or battlefield.


A Most Wanted Man (2014)
11:15 PM, Film4

In A Most Wanted Man, Philip Seymour Hoffman delivers one of his most haunting performances, embodying a German intelligence officer wearied by years spent chasing shadows. Set in the murky aftermath of 9/11, the film follows a half-legal operation to intercept a suspected terrorist in Hamburg. But nothing is clear, and every character — every loyalty — seems weighed down by compromises made too quickly and regrets borne too late.

There’s little glamour in this world of espionage. Instead, the film shows grey offices, fraught meetings, whispered deals made over cheap coffee. Intelligence work here is less about daring feats than about long games played by exhausted men and women, sacrificing ideals for pragmatism one careful step at a time. Hoffman’s character aches with the knowledge that in a climate of fear, even small victories carry hidden costs, and today’s ally might be tomorrow’s scapegoat.

By the end, A Most Wanted Man leaves a taste of quiet betrayal. It is not just individuals who aremanipulated or discarded, but principles themselves. Ideals are worn thin by years of fear and suspicion, until the very systems meant to protect are shown to be driven more by political necessity than by justice. Watching it, you realise that some battles are not lost in spectacular failures, but in a thousand small, exhausted concessions.

Thursday, 1 May

Classic Movies: The Story of The Ipcress File
8:00 PM, Sky Arts

Classic Movies: The Story of The Ipcress File revisits the making of a spy film that broke all the rules. Unlike the polished glamour of James Bond, The Ipcress File gave audiences a hero who was scruffy, insolent, and unmistakably working-class. Harry Palmer, played by Michael Caine, was a man who punched a timecard, worried about paperwork, and navigated a shadow world where bureaucracy was as dangerous as any enemy agent. The documentary traces how this quieter, grittier take on espionage reflected a Britain grappling with declining influence abroad and a deep sense of exhaustion at home.

Through interviews and archival material, the programme shows how the film captured the weary disillusionment of the Cold War. Palmer’s world was not one of dazzling gadgets and exotic locales, but grimy offices, suspicious glances, and the relentless grind of double-dealing. It was a portrait of a society realising that the old imperial dreams were fading, replaced by the grinding necessities of loyalty and compromise. For audiences in the 1960s, it was a jolt of realism — a spy who seemed less like a fantasy figure and more like someone you might see on the bus.

Watching today, it’s clear why The Ipcress File still resonates. It recognises that the real battles are often waged not on battlefields but in boardrooms and back corridors. It reminds us that danger doesn’t always come in the form of explosions or daring chases, but through the quiet erosion of trust, the endless paperwork of conflict, and the numbing realisation that every side believes itself justified. Palmer survives not because he believes in the system, but because he understands how little belief actually matters in the end.


Mad Max 2 (1981)
9:00 PM, ITV4

Mad Max 2, also known as The Road Warrior, takes place in a landscape where civilisation has collapsed into a brutal, scavenging existence. Petrol, the lifeblood of a former world of ambition and movement, has become the last coin of survival. Max, hardened by loss and disillusionment, drifts through this wasteland not as a hero, but as a man who has abandoned almost everything except instinct. The film’s barren deserts and jury-rigged vehicles speak volumes about what remains when order disintegrates: nothing but speed, violence, and the thin thread of memory.

The film’s power lies in its ruthless honesty. Communities form not out of shared ideals, but out of desperation. People barter trust for fuel, protection for obedience. The settlers Max encounters are a ragged mirror of the old world: trying to build, to grow, to believe in something again, even as they are hunted by marauding gangs who have surrendered to chaos. Every alliance is temporary, every mercy a gamble. Survival comes not from strength alone, but from knowing when to fight, when to flee, and when to trade hope for pragmatism.

And yet Mad Max 2 never collapses entirely into nihilism. Amidst the wreckage, it finds moments of sacrifice, flickers of honour, gestures of community struggling to assert themselves even as they are crushed again and again. Max’s reluctant aid to the settlers hints that even in the worst of circumstances, there remains a human urge to protect more than just oneself. It’s a brutal, propulsive story that lingers long after the engines die down — a portrait of a world lost not simply to disaster, but to the choices people make when desperation becomes the only currency.

Friday, 2 May

Far from the Madding Crowd (1967)
11:00 AM, Film4

Far from the Madding Crowd unfolds in the wide, windswept landscapes of Thomas Hardy’s Wessex, a world where the rhythms of rural life hide quiet, enduring tensions. Bathsheba Everdene, played with intelligence and steel by Julie Christie, inherits a farm and attempts to live on her own terms — independent, proud, and unwilling to surrender her fate to any man. Her choices stir the community around her, revealing how deeply expectation and tradition cling to every field and fencepost.

The film captures a society in slow but steady transformation. The old certainties of class, gender, and property are eroding, but not without resistance. Bathsheba’s suitors — steady Gabriel Oak, reckless Sergeant Troy, and the wealthy, brooding Boldwood — represent not just different men, but different ideas about what life and love should look like. Around them, the farming community watches, judges, and sometimes conspires, struggling with its own anxieties about change and stability.

Though filmed with sweeping romanticism, Far from the Madding Crowd ultimately feels like an elegy for a way of life already beginning to disappear. Hardy’s world is rich with beauty but scarred with loneliness, and the film remains clear-eyed about how easily pride can turn to ruin, or passion to regret. In Bathsheba’s journey, we glimpse not just personal growth, but the slow turning of an entire age.


Brian Wilson: Long Promised Road (2021)
9:20 PM, BBC Four

Brian Wilson: Long Promised Road is less a documentary and more a quiet, respectful pilgrimage into the mind of a musical genius battered by time. Riding around Los Angeles with an old friend, Wilson reflects on his youth, his triumphs, his breakdowns — often haltingly, often guarded, as if the act of remembering costs him something. This isn’t a polished mythologising, but a tender, sometimes painful reminder that genius and vulnerability are often intertwined.

Through archive footage and interviews with admirers like Elton John and Bruce Springsteen, the film fills in the spaces that Wilson himself struggles to articulate. The golden harmonies of The Beach Boys, so synonymous with carefree Californian dreams, came from a place of staggering internal pressure and emotional turbulence. His creativity was both a lifeline and a burden, carried through battles with mental illness, toxic relationships, and decades of self-doubt.

Long Promised Road quietly challenges the idea of success as salvation. Wilson’s story isn’t a straight line from darkness to light; it’s a jagged journey, full of setbacks and fragile recoveries. It leaves the viewer with a sense of awe not for the records sold or accolades earned, but for the resilience needed just to keep creating — to keep moving forward in a world that too often mistakes sensitivity for weakness.


Crimes of the Future (2022)
11:00 PM, BBC Two

David Cronenberg’s Crimes of the Future imagines a near-future where pain has vanished, surgery has become an art form, and human bodies are evolving in ways that no longer seem entirely under our control. In darkened warehouses and abandoned operating rooms, performance artists cut and suture themselves in ceremonies that blur the line between beauty, violence, and spectacle. It’s a vision of the future where the body itself becomes both canvas and battleground.

What gives the film its unsettling power is how little separates this imagined world from our own. In Cronenberg’s future, the boundaries between nature and technology, desire and commerce, have almost completely broken down. Authorities and rebels alike seek to regulate, exploit, or transcend the human form. Identity is no longer a matter of spirit or mind alone; it is etched into flesh, stitched into skin, grown anew in hidden places. Watching it unfold, one senses the profound unease about what progress costs, and what it demands we leave behind.

Crimes of the Future is not a film of easy horrors, but of slow, creeping disquiet. It suggests that human beings, even at their most liberated, are trapped in cycles of transformation they barely understand. Beauty, rebellion, profit, and extinction swirl together, indistinguishable by the end. In this strange, vivid world, the old promises of transcendence have curdled — and all that remains is the body, endlessly reshaped, endlessly betrayed.


Jethro Tull: The Lively Arts
11:35 PM, BBC Four

The Lively Arts takes a deep dive into Jethro Tull, a band that never seemed content to fit neatly into any box. Blending rock, folk, blues, and even touches of classical music, they carved out a space where flutes, concept albums, and sardonic wit could exist side by side. Through interviews, performances, and archival glimpses, the documentary paints a picture of a group that thrived on constant reinvention and an almost stubborn refusal to play by the rules.

Ian Anderson, the band’s unmistakable frontman, emerges as a figure both theatrical and deeply self-aware — a ringmaster presiding over a show that was always part satire, part celebration. Their music often poked fun at the very audiences that adored them, weaving critiques of consumerism, religion, and conformity into songs that managed to be both playful and cutting. Beneath the costumes and stage antics, there was always a sharp mind at work, interrogating the world even as he entertained it.

Watching today, The Lively Arts feels like a reminder of a different kind of musical ambition — one less obsessed with branding and more concerned with sheer, restless creativity. Jethro Tull’s legacy isn’t simply in their hits, but in their willingness to stay strange, to remain proudly difficult to categorise. In an age of mass marketing and algorithmic playlists, their ragged, intelligent weirdness feels almost radical.


I’m Your Man (2021)
1:05 AM, Channel 4

I’m Your Man asks what it means to love when the person you love has been programmed to meet your every need. Alma, a brilliant but guarded academic, agrees to live for a time with Tom — a humanoid robot designed to be her perfect partner. What begins as an experiment soon becomes a quietly disorienting journey into loneliness, longing, and the fundamental awkwardness of intimacy itself.

The film is too clever to suggest that love can simply be manufactured or purchased. Instead, it treats Alma’s growing connection with Tom with tenderness but also sharp scepticism. When a relationship is stripped of conflict, unpredictability, even the potential for real pain, what remains? Is it still love, or just the projection of our own needs onto something that cannot truly resist or surprise us? Alma’s doubts — and Tom’s unnerving patience — give the film an aching, bittersweet tension.

I’m Your Man ultimately leaves the viewer with questions rather than answers. It suggests that true connection requires not just fulfilment, but friction; not just agreement, but risk. In its quiet, often wry way, it reflects on what it is to be human — and how easily that might be lost if we ever forget that real relationships are built not on perfection, but on the mess and uncertainty that come with being alive.

And finally, streaming choices

Turning Point: The Vietnam War lands on Netflix from Wednesday, 30 April, with all five episodes available to watch. This new documentary series delves into the complex roots and harrowing consequences of America’s long, grinding conflict in Southeast Asia. Combining archival footage with fresh analysis, it captures a moment when the world’s most powerful nation found itself mired in a war it could neither easily win nor easily end.

Andor arrives on Disney+, with the first three episodes available from Wednesday, 23 April. Set in the early years of rebellion against the Empire, this Star Wars series brings a grittier, more intimate perspective to a galaxy in turmoil. Diego Luna gives a quietly magnetic performance as Cassian Andor, and the series finds space to explore how ordinary lives are drawn — sometimes unwillingly — into the sweep of history.

Suspect: The Shooting of Jean Charles De Menezes is available in full on Disney+ from Wednesday, 30 April. Across four gripping episodes, it reconstructs the events that led to the fatal shooting of an innocent man by London police in the aftermath of the 7/7 bombings. With interviews and real footage, the series forces viewers to confront how fear, error, and blurred responsibilities can turn tragedy into national reckoning.

Thank you for joining us for this week’s Culture Vulture.
We look forward to bringing you more thoughtful selections and independent commentary next time.
Until then, enjoy exploring these stories — and the worlds they reveal.

Longer reviews of some of the films or programmes featured may be available on the Counter Culture website.

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Mr. Burton – A Portrait of Voice, Transformation, and Cost

Rather than a conventional biopic ticking off career milestones, Mr. Burton offers a richly observed and quietly unsettling portrait of Richard Burton. Not the Hollywood star or the tabloid fixture, but the young man forged in hardship, ambition, and fraught personal ties. The film zeroes in on the figures who shaped him—and the price of becoming someone else.

Zac Martin delivers a textured, tightly wound performance as Burton. He captures the charisma that made Burton a household name. He also captures the restlessness beneath it. It’s the sense of a persona hardening into something inescapable. At one point, Martin’s Burton confesses, “I feel like I’m acting even when I’m not.” The line doesn’t land as theatrical flourish; it’s an admission, almost involuntary.

That tension is nowhere more obvious than in his relationship with Philip Burton, the teacher who mentored—and effectively adopted—him. James Frain plays Philip with unsettling intensity, deeply invested in Richard’s success but increasingly possessive of his identity. “He gave me his name—what else was I meant to give him back?” Richard mutters late in the film. The ambiguity of that exchange lingers, unresolved.

The family scenes are among the most moving. Nia Roberts is quietly powerful as Richard’s older sister, assuming a protective, almost maternal role. Rhys Parry Jones plays her husband. He delivers a cutting line when Richard returns home with his newly refined accent. He says, “You sound like you’ve swallowed a grammar book.” Richard snaps back, “Better than coughing up coal dust.” In that brief, bristling exchange, the film highlights the deep discomfort of class mobility. It also underscores the emotional toll of reinvention.

The Question of Voice—Literal and Metaphorical

Burton’s famous oratory style isn’t treated as a mere natural gift but rather as something cultivated, conflicted. One scene lingers on his hesitation while reciting Shakespeare before Oxbridge-educated peers—his polished delivery suddenly halting. “Not bad for a boy from Taibach,” he offers wryly. The silence that follows is weighty, telling.

His father, played with quiet menace by Steffan Rhodri, is introduced without words. A man dragging a sack of coal into the house, slumping at the kitchen table, defeated. The physical toll of his life, the emotional opacity of Richard’s upbringing—it’s all there. No grand outbursts, no sentimental declarations. Just weight, silence, and absence.

Sharon Morgan plays “Ma,” the aunt who raised Burton after his mother’s death. She provides the steadiness that holds their household together. Her presence also anchors Philip, whose single-minded pursuit of Richard’s success otherwise isolates him. The unspoken triangle between Richard, Philip, and Ma is one of the film’s most intriguing, understated dynamics.

A Social Landscape Without Speeches

The film is acutely aware of its social setting but avoids overt exposition. Instead, class tension is rendered through gesture and framing. Burton’s entry into elite spaces—most notably RADA—is observed from a distance. No direct hostility, yet an unspoken gulf in posture, in glances. The cost of acceptance flickers in Richard’s eyes, in the way he holds himself—never fully at ease.

Elinor Moss’s score underscores these tensions beautifully. Instead of swelling at emotional peaks, it threads through the story with subtle motifs. Minor key piano phrases never quite resolve, much like the man at the film’s center.

A Reflection That Doesn’t Seek Resolution

Mr. Burton has been met with critical acclaim. Mark Kermode called it “an unusually intelligent portrait of masculinity.” He also highlighted its ambition. Sight & Sound praised its refusal to tidy up contradictions. Audience responses have been equally thoughtful. One viewer noted, “I didn’t know Richard Burton, but I know someone like him”. This is a testament to the film’s emotional precision.

The closing scene avoids the neat epilogues so common in biographical films. Richard sits alone in a dressing room, staring at his reflection. He quotes his father: “We are what the world makes us, boy. Just try not to let it make you cruel.” Then the screen fades to black. No final text, no statistics. Just that line, and silence.

Mr. Burton does not try to explain everything. It leaves space—for contradiction, discomfort, doubt. And in doing so, it gets much closer to the truth than most.

Reviewed by Pat Harrington

Picture credit: By Icon Film Distribution – https://www.themoviewaffler.com/2025/02/first-trailer-and-poster-for-richard-burton-biopic-mr-burton.html, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=79618548

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