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Culture Vulture 6th–12th June 2026

The countdown to the World Cup continues, and football runs through this week’s selections like a thread stitched into the cultural fabric. From 1966: The World Cup Final in Colour and Lionesses: How Football Came Home to Gareth Southgate’s thoughtful exploration of modern masculinity and Kevin Bridges’ search for the soul of the beautiful game, television seems determined to remind us why football remains far more than a sport. It is memory, identity, aspiration and sometimes national therapy.

Away from the pitch, there is plenty to tempt the curious viewer. Ken Loach reflects on a lifetime spent chronicling working-class Britain, Steven Spielberg offers perhaps his most personal film in The Fabelmans, while science fiction enthusiasts are spoiled with everything from Blade Runner 2049 and Ex Machina to documentaries tracing the genre’s history from Mary Shelley to Isaac Asimov. Add in ancient Greece, Constantine the Great, James Dean, Clint Eastwood, Billy Idol and Muhammad Ali, and the result is one of the most varied weeks of the year so far.

As always, Culture Vulture’s aim is not simply to recommend programmes but to encourage exploration. The best television and cinema take us somewhere unexpected. This week, whether that journey leads to a football stadium, a distant galaxy, an Alpine village or the Roman Empire, there are plenty of worthwhile destinations.

Saturday 6th June

The Longest Day (1962) – Film4, 1:10pm

There’s a kind of architectural grace to The Longest Day — a film built not for spectacle but for endurance. Every sequence feels placed with deliberation, every perspective a brick in a vast, collective structure. It doesn’t chase emotion; it constructs it, piece by piece, until the enormity of D‑Day becomes something you can inhabit rather than merely watch.

What’s remarkable is its refusal to narrow the lens. Instead of a single hero’s journey, we get a mosaic of nationalities and motives, each fragment carrying its own rhythm. The film’s scale becomes human precisely because it’s broken into smaller, comprehensible acts — soldiers crossing fields, commanders weighing impossible decisions, civilians caught in the undertow of history.

Shot in stark black and white, it has the clarity of reportage. There’s no glamour in the mud, no romanticism in the chaos. Even the grand set‑pieces feel matter‑of‑fact, as if the camera were recording rather than interpreting. That restraint gives the film its moral weight: it honours the event by refusing to simplify it.

What lingers is the design — the sense that you’re watching not just a film but a reconstruction of memory itself. It may lack the visceral immediacy of modern war cinema, but its precision and quiet authority have aged beautifully. The Longest Day endures because it understands that history, like architecture, is built to last.

Prometheus (2012) – 5Star, 9:00pm

Few films divide opinion quite as consistently as Prometheus, and perhaps that is part of its appeal. It is a work that reaches, sometimes beyond its grasp, but always with an evident seriousness of intent. Ridley Scott returns to a universe he helped define, yet seems determined not to repeat himself.

What emerges is less a horror film than a meditation—albeit an uneasy one—on origins and belief. The questions it raises are large, almost unwieldy: who made us, and why? And more importantly, what does it mean if the answers are not comforting?

Visually, it is often extraordinary. Scott’s control of space, light and texture transforms even the simplest scenes into something imposing. The environments feel simultaneously alien and strangely recognisable, reinforcing the film’s central unease.

Yet the narrative resists coherence at times. Characters behave unpredictably, motivations blur, and the plot occasionally strains under the weight of its ideas. But even these flaws feel oddly consistent with the film’s ambition—it is less interested in tidy storytelling than in provocation.

For all its imperfections, Prometheus remains compelling. It is a film that invites interrogation rather than passive viewing, and that alone makes it worth revisiting.

Bohemian Rhapsody (2018) – Channel 4, 9:00pm

At its core, Bohemian Rhapsody is not a biography in the strict sense, but a celebration—one that occasionally sacrifices nuance for momentum. It moves briskly through familiar milestones, selecting moments that reinforce its central narrative of rise, fall and triumphant return.

Where it falters, it does so through simplification. Complex relationships are streamlined, tensions softened, contradictions smoothed over. But the film seems unconcerned with precision. Its priorities lie elsewhere.

Those priorities become clear in its musical sequences. Here, the film shifts register entirely, allowing performance to take precedence over narrative. The energy becomes infectious, the pacing more assured, the purpose more focused.

The Live Aid reconstruction is the culmination of that approach. Meticulously staged and emotionally calibrated, it is less a re-creation than a kind of cinematic homage. It works not because it is perfect, but because it understands what the moment represents.

In the end, it is a film that succeeds through feeling rather than detail. And while it may not satisfy every expectation, it is difficult to deny its impact.

Vermiglio (2024) – BBC Four, 9:20pm

Vermiglio unfolds with remarkable patience, allowing its world to emerge gradually rather than assert itself. Set within an isolated mountain community, it captures not just a place but a way of life that feels quietly on the verge of transition.

The pacing is deliberate, almost meditative. Moments are allowed to breathe, conversations linger, silences carry weight. There is little sense of urgency, yet a subtle tension runs beneath the surface.

Visually, the film is striking in its restraint. The landscape is not presented as spectacle, but as presence—constant, watchful, shaping the lives within it. Interiors are equally carefully composed, each frame suggesting relationships before they are spoken.

What gives the film its depth is its attention to detail. Small gestures, fleeting glances, everyday routines—these become the building blocks of something much larger. It is observation elevated into storytelling.

By its conclusion, Vermiglio does not so much resolve as settle. It leaves behind an impression rather than a statement, and that impression stays with you.

Blade Runner 2049 (2017) – BBC One, 10:20pm

Sequels often struggle under the weight of expectation, but Blade Runner 2049 approaches its inheritance with unusual confidence. Rather than attempting to replicate the original, it expands upon it—both visually and philosophically.

Villeneuve’s direction is precise, almost measured. Scenes unfold with a calm assurance that allows the ideas to surface naturally. There is no rush to explain, no urgency to conclude. The film trusts its audience.

Visually, it is extraordinary. Every frame feels composed, every environment carefully realised. The scale is vast, yet the focus remains intimate. This balance between spectacle and introspection is rare, and here it is sustained throughout.

Thematically, it deepens the original’s concerns with identity and memory. What does it mean to be human? And perhaps more intriguingly, what does it mean to believe that you are?

There is a quiet melancholy running through the film, a sense of distance that never fully resolves. It gives the narrative its emotional core, even when the plot becomes secondary.

The result is a sequel that feels both respectful and independent—a continuation that justifies its own existence.

BlackBerry (2023) – Channel 4, 11:35pm

BlackBerry approaches its subject with an unexpected lightness of touch. What might have been a straightforward corporate drama instead becomes something more agile—part satire, part character study, part cautionary tale.

The story of rapid ascent is handled with energy. Innovation, ambition and a certain degree of naïveté drive the early stages, creating a sense of inevitability that feels almost exhilarating.

Then, almost imperceptibly, the tone begins to shift. Success becomes pressure, growth becomes instability, and the cracks begin to show. The transition is gradual, which makes it all the more convincing.

Performance plays a central role here. The characters are drawn with enough specificity to feel real, yet broad enough to capture the wider themes. There is humour, but also tension.

What the film ultimately captures is not just the rise and fall of a company, but the fragility of success itself. It is as much about timing as it is about innovation.

Sunday 7th June

Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958) – BBC Two, 1:00pm

Adapted from Tennessee Williams, the film retains much of the play’s theatrical intensity while opening it out just enough for the screen. The result is a chamber piece charged with emotional pressure.

The performances are central. Elizabeth Taylor and Paul Newman bring a volatile chemistry that never quite settles. Their exchanges carry a sense of unfinished business, of things left unsaid.

Beneath the surface lies a network of tensions—family, identity, expectation—that never fully resolve. The film thrives on this instability.

Dialogue does much of the work, but it is supported by careful staging and pacing. Scenes are allowed to unfold without interruption, creating a sense of accumulation.

It is a film that operates as much in what it withholds as in what it reveals.

The Beautiful Game (2024) – Channel 4, 3:35pm

Football provides the framework, but the film’s interests lie elsewhere. It uses the sport as a means of exploring dignity, resilience and the possibility of redemption.

The narrative is straightforward, but effective. Each character brings a different perspective, allowing the themes to emerge organically rather than being imposed.

There is a warmth to the storytelling that carries it through its more predictable moments. It never feels cynical, even when it leans towards sentiment.

Visually, it keeps things grounded. The emphasis remains on people rather than spectacle.

By the end, it is less about victory than about recognition—of self, of worth, of possibility.

Unforgiven (1992) – BBC Two, 10:45pm

Unforgiven dismantles the mythology of the western with quiet precision. It does not reject the genre outright, but it questions its assumptions at every turn.

Eastwood’s performance is central to that process. His character carries the weight of history—both personal and cinematic. Every action feels deliberate, considered.

Violence is presented without glamour. Its consequences are immediate and lasting, stripping away any sense of heroism.

The film’s pacing reflects its themes. It moves slowly, allowing tension to build without release.

What remains is something far more complex than a traditional western. It is a reflection on memory, regret and the stories we tell ourselves.

The Damned United (2009) – BBC One, 11:30pm

At first glance, it looks like a football film — the dugouts, the touchline fury, the familiar choreography of triumph and disaster. But The Damned United is really something narrower and far more revealing: a character study disguised as a sports drama. Brian Clough isn’t presented as a legend in waiting but as a man caught between swagger and self‑doubt, ambition and insecurity. The film is less interested in what he won than in what it cost him to want it so badly.

Michael Sheen captures that contradiction with unnerving precision. His Clough is magnetic one moment and brittle the next, a man who performs confidence because he cannot bear to show how fragile he feels underneath. Sheen plays him as someone who needs the room to love him but fears the moment they stop. It’s a performance built on tension — the kind that flickers behind the eyes rather than erupts in speeches.

The film’s structure helps enormously. By focusing on a single, disastrous chapter of Clough’s career, it avoids the sprawl of the traditional biopic. Instead, it becomes a study in pressure: the Leeds job as crucible, as mirror, as trap. The narrowness gives it clarity. We’re not watching a life; we’re watching a moment that defines one.

There’s humour here — sharp, needling, often at Clough’s expense — but it’s threaded with discomfort. The film refuses to indulge in easy admiration. It understands that charisma can be corrosive, that brilliance can shade into self‑destruction, and that the line between confidence and delusion is thinner than most of us would like to admit.

In the end, The Damned United is as much about failure as success, and that’s what makes it compelling. It’s a portrait of a man who wanted greatness so fiercely that he almost broke himself chasing it — and a reminder that sometimes the most interesting stories are the ones where things fall apart.

Monday 8th June

Bridge of Spies (2015) – Film4, 8:00pm

Spielberg treats the Cold War not as spectacle but as moral geometry — a landscape of lines, boundaries and quiet negotiations. The film moves with deliberate calm, its tension drawn from the spaces between words rather than the explosions that usually define the genre. It’s a story about decency under pressure, and the courage required to remain ordinary when the world demands extremes.

Tom Hanks anchors it with a performance of quiet conviction. His character, James Donovan, is not a man of grand gestures but of steady principles. In a world of paranoia and posturing, his restraint becomes radical. Hanks plays him as someone who believes that fairness is not naïve but necessary — that the law, even when inconvenient, is the last defence against chaos.

Visually, the film is composed like a negotiation itself: muted tones, careful framing, the chill of divided Berlin rendered with painterly precision. Spielberg’s camera doesn’t shout; it listens. Every shot feels weighed, every silence deliberate. The result is a film that trusts its audience to feel the gravity of diplomacy without the need for spectacle.

All of Us Strangers (2023) – Channel 4, 10:00pm

All of Us Strangers moves like a dream you’re not entirely sure you want to wake from — drifting between memory, imagination and lived experience with a kind of emotional weightlessness. It resists the usual scaffolding of narrative, choosing instead to follow the currents of feeling: uncertain, searching, unresolved. The film’s pacing mirrors its themes, as if time itself were hesitating.

The performances carry the film’s emotional charge. There’s a vulnerability here that never feels engineered — a kind of openness that allows the smallest gestures to land with surprising force. Andrew Scott, in particular, plays grief as something porous, a state that leaks into everything without ever announcing itself.

Relationships are drawn with unusual care. Nothing is simplified, nothing forced into neat arcs. Instead, the film allows complexity to emerge gradually, like a photograph developing in slow motion. The connections feel fragile but real, shaped as much by what is unsaid as by what is spoken.

Visually, the film walks a delicate line between realism and abstraction. Interiors glow with a soft, uncanny warmth; exteriors feel slightly out of reach, as though the world were being remembered rather than observed. It’s a film that understands how memory distorts even as it preserves.

All of Us Strangers doesn’t tie its threads together; it lets them drift, trusting that the audience will feel the shape of what can’t quite be articulated.


Tuesday 9th June

The Fabelmans (2022)

Film4, 9:00pm

Spielberg turns the camera on himself — or at least on the emotional terrain of his childhood. The Fabelmans is a film about the birth of an artist, but also about the fractures and loyalties of family life. It’s tender, painful, funny and occasionally startling in its honesty. What makes it so affecting is the way Spielberg balances the mythmaking of cinema with the messiness of real life. The film understands that art can be both an escape and a reckoning.

The performances are uniformly superb. Michelle Williams gives one of her finest turns as a woman torn between duty and desire, while Paul Dano brings quiet, heartbreaking dignity to a father who cannot quite understand the world his son is entering. The film’s emotional centre, though, is Gabriel LaBelle, who plays the young Spielberg with a mixture of vulnerability and fierce creative instinct.

What lingers is the film’s generosity. Even when depicting pain, it refuses to be cruel. It is a work of memory — imperfect, selective, but deeply felt. A late‑career masterpiece.

Muhammad Ali Night

BBC Four, from 10:00pm

A portrait of a man whose influence extended far beyond sport. Ali remains one of the most charismatic figures of the 20th century, and the documentaries capture both his brilliance and his contradictions. The programmes avoid hagiography, instead presenting a man who was equal parts poet, fighter, activist and showman.

Brexit: A Very British Civil War (Part Two)

BBC Two, 11:00pm

The conclusion of a story that continues to shape British public life. The documentary is clear‑eyed without being cynical, tracing the political and cultural fractures that remain unresolved.

Science Fiction in the Atomic Age: Mary Shelley to Isaac Asimov

Sky Arts, 11:00pm

A quietly absorbing journey through the roots of a genre that has always doubled as a cultural pressure gauge. What the programme understands — and articulates beautifully — is that science fiction isn’t really about the future at all. It’s about the present: the fears we can’t name, the hopes we barely admit, the technologies we suspect might outgrow us.

Tracing a line from Frankenstein to Foundation gives the documentary a pleasing sweep. Mary Shelley’s gothic anxiety about creation and responsibility sits surprisingly comfortably beside Asimov’s cool, rational visions of robotics and empire. The programme treats these works not as curiosities but as milestones in our evolving relationship with science — each one a marker of what humanity was afraid of, or yearning for, at a particular moment.

What makes it compelling is its refusal to flatten the genre into a single narrative. Instead, it shows how science fiction has always been a conversation: between writers and readers, between imagination and technology, between dread and possibility. The Atomic Age becomes a kind of crucible, where fear of annihilation and excitement about progress coexist uneasily.

By the end, you’re left with a sense of continuity — that the questions Shelley posed in the 19th century are still with us, simply wearing new clothes. The documentary doesn’t try to answer them. It just reminds us why we keep asking.

Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)

ITV1, 11:00pm

Terminator 2 remains one of those rare sequels that doesn’t just outdo its predecessor — it redefines the terrain entirely. What James Cameron achieves here is a kind of muscular elegance: action cinema engineered with the precision of a machine and the emotional pulse of something unmistakably human. The film moves with propulsive force, yet never feels rushed; every set‑piece is earned, every beat calibrated.

What surprises, even now, is the emotional undercurrent. Beneath the molten steel, the chases, the relentless forward motion, there’s a story about connection — unlikely, fragile, and all the more affecting for it. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s T‑800, once a symbol of implacable threat, becomes a study in programmed compassion, while Linda Hamilton’s Sarah Connor is transformed into something fierce, haunted and utterly compelling.

Visually, the film still feels astonishingly modern. The liquid‑metal T‑1000 remains one of cinema’s great creations, not because of the effects alone but because of the cold, unsettling grace with which it moves. Cameron understands that technology is most frightening when it feels inevitable.

More than three decades on, T2 hasn’t lost its edge. It’s still the benchmark — the film that proved action cinema could be thrilling, intelligent and unexpectedly tender, all at once.

Mean Streets (1973)

Film4, 11:55pm

Mean Streets still feels like a live wire — raw, restless, and vibrating with the energy of a filmmaker discovering his voice in real time. Scorsese’s breakthrough isn’t polished; it isn’t meant to be. It moves with the jittery rhythm of the neighbourhood it depicts, a world where loyalty is currency and guilt is a constant, unpayable debt. You don’t watch it so much as get pulled into its orbit.

Harvey Keitel’s Charlie is the film’s uneasy centre of gravity, a man trying to balance faith, obligation and the gravitational pull of old streets that refuse to let him go. He’s torn between the life he wants and the life he owes — a tension Scorsese renders with a kind of bruised tenderness. Charlie’s moral compass spins, but never quite settles.

Then there’s De Niro’s Johnny Boy, a performance that still feels dangerous. He’s chaos in a leather jacket — charming, reckless, infuriating, and impossible to ignore. The chemistry between Keitel and De Niro is electric, the kind that suggests a lifetime of shared history even when the script leaves it unspoken.

What gives the film its enduring power is its authenticity. Scorsese isn’t mythologising the streets; he’s remembering them — the bars, the debts, the rituals of masculinity, the way violence can erupt from nothing and return to nothing just as quickly. It’s a portrait of a community that traps as much as it sustains.

Half a century on, Mean Streets still crackles. It’s messy, alive, and utterly sincere — a film that understands how hard it is to leave the places that shaped you, even when you know you should.


Wednesday 10th June

Constantine the Great

PBS America, 8:50pm

History on an epic scale as the life of the Roman emperor unfolds. The documentary traces Constantine’s rise with clarity and sweep, showing how one man’s political instincts and religious convictions reshaped the ancient world. It’s a reminder that empires turn on personalities as much as armies.

Riddick (2013)

Sky One, 9:00pm

Riddick is the franchise stripped back to its sinew — no prophecy, no operatic world‑building, just a man, a hostile planet and the stubborn will to outlive whatever wants him dead. It’s a return to the lean, survivalist instincts that made the character compelling in the first place. The film moves with a kind of simplicity, as if clearing its throat after the bloated mythology of Chronicles.

Vin Diesel slips back into the role with the ease of someone putting on a well‑worn jacket. His Riddick is still all gravel and glare, but there’s a sharper edge here — a sense of calculation beneath the brute force. The film gives him room to be cunning rather than merely indestructible, and that shift makes the action feel more grounded, more earned.

The setup is classic pulp: abandoned on a sun‑scorched world, hunted by mercenaries who underestimate him, and stalked by creatures that definitely don’t. But the execution has a pleasing clarity. Director David Twohy knows exactly what kind of film he’s making — a survival thriller with sci‑fi trimmings — and he doesn’t clutter it with unnecessary lore.

What emerges is a story that feels oddly refreshing in its directness. No grand destinies, no cosmic stakes, just a man trying to stay alive long enough to get off the rock he’s been left on. It’s not profound, but it is satisfying — a reminder that sometimes the most effective sequels are the ones that remember what worked in the first place.

Ken Loach Remembers

BBC Four, 10:05pm

A reflective, moving look back at a career spent chronicling working‑class Britain. Loach speaks with the clarity and compassion that have defined his work for decades. There’s a sense of summing up here — not nostalgia, but a quiet reckoning with the stories he felt compelled to tell.

The Old Oak (2023)

BBC Four, 10:20pm

The Old Oak feels like a final note held just a little longer than expected — quiet, steady, and full of the moral clarity that has defined Loach’s career. Set in a former mining town hollowed out by decades of loss, the film watches what happens when a community already on its knees is asked to absorb even more change. There’s no sentimentality here, just the hard, necessary work of people trying to live alongside one another.

Loach treats migration not as a political talking point but as a human encounter: awkward, fraught, hopeful, and often tender in ways that catch you off guard. The pub at the film’s centre becomes a kind of pressure chamber, a place where old grievances and new possibilities collide. It’s a setting Loach understands instinctively — the last communal room in a town that has lost almost everything else.

What gives the film its quiet power is its belief in connection. Not easy connection, not the tidy kind that resolves itself by the credits, but the slow, fragile kind built through shared meals, shared stories, and the recognition of mutual struggle. Loach has always been at his best when he shows solidarity not as a slogan but as a practice, and The Old Oak is steeped in that sensibility.

As a final chapter, it feels right. Not triumphant, not despairing — simply honest. A filmmaker taking one last look at the people he has spent a lifetime championing, and offering them, and us, a measure of hope.

Witches: Truth Behind the Trials

National Geographic, 10:00pm

An examination of fear, power and one of history’s most enduring moral panics. The documentary digs into the social and political forces that fuelled witch trials, showing how hysteria becomes a tool for control.

Up the Junction

BBC Four, 12:25am

Up the Junction still lands with the force of something freshly made — raw, unvarnished, and unwilling to soften its edges for comfort. It’s one of those rare pieces of television that feels like a rupture, a reminder of just how radical British TV once dared to be. The film’s honesty is almost abrasive: no sentimentality, no tidy resolutions, just the lived reality of working‑class women navigating a world that offers them little and judges them for taking even that.

What makes it endure is its refusal to look away. The performances have a documentary immediacy, the kind that makes you forget you’re watching actors at all. The social commentary isn’t delivered as message but as experience — embedded in the rhythms of daily life, the choices constrained by circumstance, the quiet tragedies that accumulate.

Half a century on, its power hasn’t dimmed. If anything, its clarity feels sharper now, a reminder of a time when television didn’t just reflect society but confronted it.


Thursday 11th June

The Making of King Arthur

BBC Four, 8:00pm

A thoughtful exploration of Britain’s most enduring legend — part history, part myth, part national mirror. The programme traces how Arthur has been reinvented across centuries, reflecting the hopes and anxieties of each era.

James Dean: The Emotional Man

Sky Arts, 9:00pmA portrait of a performer who seemed to burn from the inside out. James Dean’s career was brief enough to feel like a flash, yet the emotional afterglow has lasted decades — a mixture of youthful intensity, unresolved longing and that strange, magnetic vulnerability that made him look both invincible and breakable at the same time.

The documentary leans into that duality. It doesn’t try to tidy him into a myth, nor does it pretend the myth isn’t part of the story. Instead, it traces the tension between the boy he was, the man he was becoming, and the icon the world insisted on making him. You feel the fragility beneath the swagger, the ache beneath the cool.

What emerges is a study in contradictions: a performer who seemed to reveal everything while giving almost nothing away; a symbol of rebellion who was, in many ways, searching for connection; a star whose brief life became a template for a certain kind of cinematic longing.

It’s a reminder that some figures endure not because they were fully understood, but because they never quite were. Dean remains one of them.

Constantine the Great (Part Two)

PBS America, 8:35pm

The concluding chapter follows the emperor’s creation of Constantinople and the reshaping of an empire. A sweeping end to a story that still echoes through European history.

Ex Machina (2014)

Film4, 10:45pm

Ex Machina still feels like a shard of ice slipped under the skin — sleek, controlled, and quietly unnerving. Alex Garland builds his story with the precision of a psychological trap, letting tension accumulate in the pauses, the glances, the silences that stretch just a little too long. It’s science fiction pared back to its essentials: intelligence, power, desire, and the dangerous spaces where they overlap.

Oscar Isaac gives the film its swaggering volatility, a tech‑messiah with a god complex and a taste for manipulation. Alicia Vikander, by contrast, is all poise and ambiguity — a performance so finely calibrated you’re never entirely sure where the machine ends and the person begins. Their scenes hum with a kind of electric unease.

Visually, the film is immaculate. Glass, concrete, soft light, and the sense that every surface is observing you. Garland uses the environment like a second script, a place where transparency becomes its own form of menace.

And then there’s the final act — cold, precise, inevitable. It lands not with shock but with the quiet, devastating logic of a conclusion you should have seen coming all along.

Arena: Clint Eastwood – Out of the West

BBC Four, 11:05pm

A portrait of one of Hollywood’s last great auteurs — a filmmaker whose career spans genres, decades and cultural shifts. The documentary is affectionate without being fawning.

Clint Eastwood: American Filmmaker

BBC Four, 12:05am

The second part of an excellent Eastwood double bill, tracing the evolution of a director who has always been more complex than his public image suggests.

Little Richard: I Am Everything (2023)

Channel 4, 1:55am

A blast of colour, noise and unapologetic self‑invention, Little Richard: I Am Everything is as flamboyant and furious as the man himself. The documentary refuses to sand down the contradictions — the joy, the rage, the brilliance, the lifelong tug‑of‑war between identity and expectation. It understands that Little Richard didn’t just help invent rock and roll; he detonated it, reshaping the cultural landscape with a scream, a shimmy and a streak of eyeliner.

What the film captures so well is the emotional voltage behind the performance. The joy is real — ecstatic, liberating — but so is the fury, the sense of someone fighting to claim space in a world determined to shrink him. The archival footage crackles, the interviews deepen the portrait, and the whole thing moves with the rhythm of a man who refused to be quiet.

It’s vibrant, defiant, and impossible to ignore — just like Richard himself.


Friday 12th June

Hunting the Debt Predators

Channel 4, 8:00pm

Investigative journalism at its most urgent. A look at those who profit from financial hardship — and the people fighting back. The programme is angry, clear‑eyed and necessary.

Queer (2024)

BBC Two, 11:00pm

A bold, jagged adaptation of Burroughs that refuses to smooth the edges of the source material. Queer moves with a kind of raw, intimate unease — a film that sits inside longing, self‑loathing and desire without trying to tidy any of it into catharsis. It feels both anchored in its period and strangely unmoored from time, as if the emotional landscape hasn’t changed as much as we’d like to think.

The film leans into the book’s nervy, uncomfortable honesty. Relationships are sketched in quick, piercing strokes; the vulnerability is palpable but never overstated. What emerges is a portrait of a man circling his own loneliness, reaching out and recoiling in the same breath.

Visually, it balances grit with a kind of feverish lyricism — realism shading into hallucination, memory bleeding into the present. It’s a film that trusts atmosphere as much as narrative.

The result is unsettling, intimate, and quietly devastating. It doesn’t seek resolution; it simply sits with the ache.

Queen & Slim (2019)

BBC Two, 1:10am

Queen & Slim unfolds like a modern myth written on the move — a road movie where romance, tragedy and political urgency are braided so tightly they become inseparable. It starts quietly, almost tentatively, then gathers emotional force until it hits with the weight of something inevitable.

What makes it so powerful is the intimacy at its core. The relationship grows in the spaces between danger, in the glances and hesitations, in the way two people learn to trust each other while the world closes in. The film never rushes that connection; it lets it breathe, deepen, complicate.

Visually, it’s striking — bold compositions, saturated colours, a sense of America as both vast and claustrophobic. The landscapes feel mythic, yet the violence and injustice that shape the journey are painfully real.

By the end, the film leaves you with a mixture of ache and awe. It’s a love story, a protest and a lament.


Streaming Choice

Michael Jackson: The Verdict (Netflix)

All three episodes available from Wednesday 3rd June

A forensic, often uncomfortable examination of one of the most scrutinised trials in modern pop‑culture history. The documentary avoids sensationalism, instead laying out the legal, cultural and media forces that shaped the case. It’s sober, detailed and designed to provoke reflection rather than deliver easy answers.

USA 94: Brazil’s Return to Glory (Netflix)

Available from Sunday 7th June

A richly assembled look back at one of the World Cup’s most emotionally charged triumphs. The documentary captures both the tactical evolution of the Brazilian side and the wider cultural moment that surrounded their victory. For football fans, it’s a warm bath of nostalgia; for everyone else, it’s a reminder of how sport can become a national myth.

Daisy Jones & The Six (ITVX)

All 10 episodes available from Sunday 7th June

One of the finest music dramas of recent years. Adapted from Taylor Jenkins Reid’s novel, the series charts the rise and implosion of a fictional 1970s rock band with such conviction that it feels like a recovered piece of music history. The performances are magnetic, the songs are genuinely good, and the emotional fallout is handled with surprising delicacy. It first appeared on Prime, where I watched it, and I loved every episode.

The Score (ITVX)

Both episodes available from Monday 8th June

A taut, stylish two‑parter that blends crime drama with character study. The Score is less interested in the mechanics of wrongdoing than in the people who find themselves pulled into its orbit. Sharp writing and a lean runtime make it an easy, satisfying binge.

The Evil Lawyer (Netflix)

All seven episodes available from Thursday 11th June

A taut, stylish legal thriller with a decidedly dark streak, The Evil Lawyer takes the familiar architecture of courtroom drama and twists it into something sharper and more morally slippery. The series follows a defence attorney whose brilliance is matched only by his capacity for manipulation, and the result is a portrait of power exercised in the shadows — calculated, ruthless, and unsettlingly compelling.

What gives the show its bite is the way it treats the law not as a noble ideal but as a weapon, wielded by someone who understands exactly how to bend systems, people and outcomes to his will. The tension comes less from the cases themselves than from the psychological games surrounding them: alliances formed and broken, truths buried, motives obscured.

Across seven episodes, the series maintains a sleek, propulsive rhythm. It’s glossy without being hollow, cynical without losing its grip on character, and just heightened enough to feel addictive. Beneath the twists, there’s a clear fascination with the cost of ambition — and the ease with which morality can be traded away when winning becomes the only metric that matters.

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The Running Man (2025) and the Language of Class

Edgar Wright’s The Running Man (2025) is less a remake than a re‑translation: it takes Stephen King’s novella’s vocabulary of dispossession and televisual cruelty, keeps the 1987 film’s neon spectacle in its peripheral vision, and tries to speak to a present where algorithms, privatized care, and influencer economies have replaced the blunt machinery of the Cold War. At its center is Ben Richards, played with a coiled, combustible intensity by Glen Powell, a man whose private desperation—medical precarity for his child, blacklisting from steady work—becomes public property the moment he signs the Network’s contract. The film stages class not as an abstract backdrop but as a conversational, moral, and performative field: characters talk about money, dignity, and survival the way other films talk about love or revenge. Those conversations are where the movie’s politics live.


Conversations That Do the Work

Wright’s script foregrounds dialogue as the primary site where class is diagnosed and debated. When Richards encounters Amelia (Emilia Jones), the exchange is not merely plot exposition; it is a microcosm of how propaganda fractures empathy. Amelia, fed a steady diet of Network lies, parrots the show’s narrative—Richards is a killer, his family is broken, his motives base—until Richards forces her to confront the human cost behind the headlines. That scene is crucial because it dramatizes how media narratives manufacture moral distance: the poor are not only exploited, they are taught to despise one another. Amelia’s lines—delivered by Jones with a brittle, defensive edge—show how class resentment can be weaponized by spectacle.

Other conversations map the social terrain more broadly. Colman Domingo’s Bobby Thompson functions as a kind of populist interpreter: he speaks to the crowd and to Richards in the language of performance and grievance, translating systemic injury into a rhetoric that can be broadcast. Michael Cera’s Elton and Lee Pace’s Hunter Evan McCone provide counterpoints—one a small‑time schemer who understands the economy of attention, the other a professionalized instrument of the Network’s violence—so that the film’s debates about class are never abstract but embodied in distinct social roles. Josh Brolin’s Dan Killian, the ruthless producer, rarely argues in moral terms; his conversations are transactional, revealing how the elite’s language of efficiency and ratings masks a calculus of human expendability.

These exchanges are not mere set dressing. They are the film’s method for showing how class consciousness is formed, suppressed, and sometimes reclaimed. When Richards speaks to allies and strangers—when he refuses to accept the Network’s framing of his actions—he is doing political work: he is naming the structural causes of his desperation. The film stages these moments as small victories in a media environment designed to make such naming impossible.


From King’s Bleakness to Wright’s Compromise

Stephen King’s novella is unflinching about the structural causes of poverty: the Games are a symptom of a society that has normalized precarity. The 1987 film translated that anger into a satirical, hyperbolic spectacle—Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Ben Richards becomes an action archetype, and the movie’s politics are filtered through camp and one‑liners. Wright’s 2025 version attempts to reclaim the novella’s moral spine while keeping the cinematic pleasures of spectacle. The result is a hybrid: the film restores conversations about privatized healthcare, blacklisting, and corporate media manipulation, but it also softens the novel’s bleakness with moments of crowd catharsis and a more conventional narrative closure.

This tonal compromise shows up in dialogue. Where King’s text leaves readers with the residue of systemic rot, Wright’s screenplay allows characters to articulate grievances in ways that invite audience identification and, ultimately, a sense of vindication. That shift matters: a conversation that ends in collective outrage is different from one that ends in unresolved despair. Wright wants viewers to feel roused; King wanted them to feel implicated.


Media, Disinformation, and the Language of Control

A central thread in the film’s conversations is the mechanics of modern propaganda. Characters repeatedly name the tools that keep the poor compliant: curated feeds, staged outrage, and the monetization of pity. Daniel Ezra’s YouTube debunker and other secondary figures illustrate how the Network’s narratives are amplified and policed by a constellation of intermediaries—influencers, pundits, and algorithmic platforms. These characters’ exchanges reveal a contemporary truth: class control no longer needs overt censorship when it can shape perception through attention economies.

Richards’ confrontations with on‑air commentators and with viewers in the crowd are instructive. He does not only fight hunters; he fights a language that reduces human need to entertainment. When Richards speaks plainly about his daughter’s illness or about the impossibility of steady work, those lines function as counter‑rhetoric—simple, human, and therefore dangerous to the Network’s business model. The film stages these moments as rhetorical insurgencies: a man’s testimony against a machine that profits from his silence.


Performances as Political Registers

The cast’s performances turn political argument into lived texture. Glen Powell keeps Richards raw and combustible; his anger is not rhetorical flourish but a register of class injury. Emilia Jones gives Amelia a brittle, performative moralism that is easier to consume than to interrogate; her character’s arc—moving from parroting the Network to seeing its lies—models how propaganda can be unlearned. Colman Domingo and Lee Pace provide the film with a moral and aesthetic counterweight: Domingo’s charisma makes solidarity feel possible, while Pace’s Hunter embodies the professionalization of violence under late capitalism. Josh Brolin as Killian is the film’s cold center: he speaks in metrics and margins, and his conversational style—calm, managerial, amused—reveals how the elite rationalize exploitation.

These performances make the film’s class conversations credible. They show how different social positions produce different rhetorical strategies: the producer’s managerial language, the hunter’s procedural detachment, the runner’s blunt testimony, the viewer’s distracted outrage. Wright stages these registers against one another so the audience can hear, in the film’s cadence, how class is argued into being.


Conclusion: Conversation as a Political Act

The Running Man (2025) is, at its best, a film about how we talk about poverty and how those conversations are policed, monetized, and sometimes reclaimed. Wright’s update restores the novella’s concern with structural causes and gives it contemporary specificity—privatized healthcare, algorithmic spectacle, influencer economies—while the cast turns political argument into human exchange. The film’s compromises—its more audience‑friendly ending, its occasional reliance on spectacle—do not erase its achievement: it makes class talk cinematic.

If the film’s final act softens King’s bleak lesson, it nonetheless insists that speech matters. When Richards names his daughter’s illness, when Amelia repeats the Network’s lies and then must answer for them, when Bobby Thompson translates grievance into performance, those are not just plot beats; they are political acts. Wright’s movie asks viewers to listen to those acts, to recognize the language of control, and to imagine solidarity as something that begins in conversation and, if we are lucky, moves beyond it.

By Pat Harrington

Poster credit: By Paramount Pictures – https://www.movieposters.com/products/running-man-mpw-149867, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=80330198

Cover of 'The Angela Suite' by Anthony C. Green featuring a pair of bare feet and a book with a cityscape background, with bold text promoting the book and a 'Buy Now' call to action.

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Culture Vulture 13th to the 19th of September 2025


Selections & commentary by Pat Harrington.

A vulture in mid-flight against a blue sky, with bold text overlay reading 'CULTURE VULTURE'. The design includes a colorful banner at the bottom with 'COUNTER CULTURE' and event dates '13-19 September 2025'.

This week’s selections mix music, politics, and social history — just how we like it. Paul Weller and The Jam dominate Saturday night on Sky Arts, while film lovers can enjoy the Oscar-winning Shape of Water later that evening. Sunday offers a perfect blend of classic romance (Brief Encounter), Hammer horror (The Plague of the Zombies), and Americana (The Horse Whisperer). Midweek, Michael Portillo takes us on a journey through two centuries of rail history, complemented by BBC Four’s strong night of railway-themed programming. Friday closes with Jimi Hendrix in full electric flow, and the weekend wraps up with powerful drama from Selma and the noirish punch of Heat.


📅 Saturday, 13th September

Paul Weller: May Love Travel with You – Sky Arts, 8:00 p.m.

Paul Weller has never been one to stand still. This documentary follows the Modfather on his most recent creative adventures, reflecting on a career that spans The Jam, The Style Council, and decades of solo work. It’s intimate and reflective, showing Weller still restless and searching.

There’s a sense here of an artist looking back without nostalgia — more a man taking stock before setting off on the next road. His reflections on songwriting are particularly thoughtful and give a rare window into his process.

If you’ve followed Weller for years or just know a few hits, this is worth your time. His presence is magnetic, and the music threaded through the programme is superb.

The Jam: Live at Rockpalast – Sky Arts, 10:40 p.m.

A live set from The Jam in their prime — taut, furious, and absolutely in control. The energy is infectious, and it’s a reminder of just how lean and sharp their sound was.

This is the band at full throttle, delivering hit after hit with an intensity that makes you want to pogo in the living room. Paul Weller’s snarling vocals and Bruce Foxton’s basslines are electric.

Essential viewing for anyone who missed them first time round — or who wants to relive those heady days.

The Shape of Water – Film4, 11:15 p.m. (2017)

Guillermo del Toro’s Oscar-winning fable is a genre-defying marvel—part Cold War thriller, part romantic fantasy, and wholly unlike anything else on screen. Set in a shadowy 1960s Baltimore, it follows Elisa (Sally Hawkins), a mute cleaner at a government lab, who forms a secret bond with a captive amphibian creature. What unfolds is a love story that’s tender, transgressive, and defiantly strange.

Del Toro’s world is lush and melancholic—green-tinted corridors, rain-slicked streets, and flooded apartments evoke a dreamscape where loneliness and longing seep into every frame. The Cold War backdrop adds menace, but it’s the emotional intimacy that drives the film. Elisa’s silence is never a void; it’s filled with gesture, music, and fierce compassion. Hawkins delivers a career-best performance, communicating volumes without a single word.

The supporting cast—Octavia Spencer, Richard Jenkins, Michael Shannon—adds texture and tension, but it’s the central romance that lingers. Del Toro invites us to see beauty in the grotesque, love in the margins, and resistance in tenderness. It’s a film that reclaims fairy tales for the outsiders, the voiceless, and the unloved.

Romantic, eerie, and exquisitely crafted, The Shape of Water is a reminder that cinema can still surprise us—and that sometimes, the most human stories come from the most unexpected places.


📅 Sunday, 14th September

Brief Encounter – BBC Two, 3:15 p.m. (1945)

David Lean’s Brief Encounter remains one of the most quietly devastating films ever made—a masterclass in emotional restraint and the aching poetry of missed chances. Adapted from Noël Coward’s one-act play, it tells the story of Laura (Celia Johnson) and Alec (Trevor Howard), two married strangers who meet by chance in a railway station tearoom and fall into a romance that’s as doomed as it is deeply felt.

Lean’s direction is spare but surgical. He turns the banal setting of a suburban train station into a crucible of longing—steam, shadows, and silence doing the emotional heavy lifting. The station isn’t just a backdrop; it’s a metaphor for transience, for lives passing each other in motion, never quite able to stop. Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2 swells and recedes like a tide, underscoring the tension between desire and duty.

Celia Johnson is extraordinary. Her performance is all nuance—glances, hesitations, the tremble in her voice as she narrates her inner turmoil. Trevor Howard matches her with quiet dignity, never overplaying the role. Together, they create a portrait of love that’s all the more powerful for being impossible.

What makes Brief Encounter endure isn’t just its craftsmanship—it’s its emotional truth. It speaks to anyone who’s ever felt the pull of something forbidden, the weight of social expectation, or the heartbreak of doing the right thing when it feels all wrong. In an age of spectacle, it’s a reminder that the most profound dramas often unfold in whispers.

Still achingly relevant, and still capable of breaking your heart with a glance across a crowded platform.

The Plague of the Zombies – Legend, 4:00 p.m. (1966)

Hammer Horror at its most quietly subversive. Before Romero’s flesh-eaters shuffled into the mainstream, this Cornish-set chiller offered a distinctly British take on the zombie myth—steeped in class tension, colonial unease, and gothic dread. Directed by John Gilling and tucked between Hammer’s more famous Dracula and Frankenstein outings, it’s a slow-burning gem that rewards patience with some of the studio’s most haunting imagery.

The plot is deceptively simple: a young doctor and his mentor investigate a series of mysterious deaths in a remote village, only to uncover a sinister ritual that reanimates the dead. But beneath the surface, the film is rich with subtext. The zombies here aren’t ravenous—they’re enslaved, used as labour by a corrupt squire dabbling in Haitian voodoo. It’s a chilling metaphor for exploitation, with echoes of empire and class control that feel eerily prescient.

Visually, it’s classic Hammer: fog-drenched graveyards, crumbling estates, and candlelit corridors. The resurrection scene—hands clawing through soil, eyes blank with undeath—is iconic, and still unnerving in its restraint. André Morell lends gravitas as the elder doctor, while Jacqueline Pearce brings vulnerability and quiet strength to her role as the squire’s tormented daughter.

What makes The Plague of the Zombies endure isn’t just its atmosphere—it’s the way it reframes horror as social critique. The villagers are trapped not just by the undead, but by the structures that created them. It’s horror with a conscience, wrapped in velvet shadows and rural decay.

The Horse Whisperer – Great TV, 4:00 p.m. (1998)

Robert Redford’s adaptation of Nicholas Evans’ bestseller is a slow, sweeping meditation on trauma, trust, and the long road to healing. It opens with a tragedy—a riding accident that leaves a teenage girl (Scarlett Johansson, luminous in an early role) physically and emotionally scarred, and her beloved horse traumatised beyond recognition. What follows is not a conventional recovery arc, but a quiet, patient reckoning with grief, guilt, and the possibility of renewal.

Redford directs with restraint and reverence, letting the Montana landscapes do much of the emotional heavy lifting. Wide skies, rustling grass, and distant mountains become a kind of visual therapy—vast, indifferent, and strangely consoling. The film’s pace is deliberate, almost meditative, allowing space for silence, for glances, for the kind of emotional work that can’t be rushed.

Kristin Scott Thomas plays the mother, a high-powered editor whose urban precision is slowly undone by the rhythms of ranch life and the quiet wisdom of Redford’s titular horse whisperer. Their relationship simmers with unspoken tension, and the film resists easy resolutions. It’s not about fixing people—it’s about learning to live with what’s broken.

Johansson is extraordinary—fragile, fierce, and utterly believable. Her scenes with the horse are among the film’s most affecting, capturing the rawness of adolescent pain and the tentative steps toward trust. The horse itself is never anthropomorphised, but its presence is deeply felt—a mirror, a metaphor, a companion in suffering.


📅 Monday, 15th September

Black and White in Colour: Memory Race 1936–68 – BBC, 10:00 p.m.

This quietly searing documentary offers a vital reckoning with how race was portrayed—and distorted—on British screens across three turbulent decades. From pre-war propaganda to post-colonial dramas, it traces the shifting visual language of race, revealing how film and television both reflected and reinforced the prejudices of their time.

The programme doesn’t flinch. It presents archival clips that are, by today’s standards, deeply uncomfortable—minstrelsy, exoticism, and casual racism woven into mainstream entertainment. But it’s not just a catalogue of offences; it’s a forensic unpacking of how these images shaped public consciousness, often in ways that lingered long after the credits rolled.

What makes this essential viewing is its refusal to isolate the past. The commentary draws clear lines between historical misrepresentation and contemporary media blind spots. Interviews with historians, filmmakers, and cultural critics add depth, while the inclusion of voices from communities affected by these portrayals brings emotional weight and lived context.

The title is apt: this is about memory, yes—but also about visibility, erasure, and the politics of representation. It asks us to look again at what we thought we knew, and to recognise that progress is not just about what’s changed, but about what we’re still willing to confront.

Necessary viewing—not just for film historians, but for anyone invested in building a more honest and inclusive cultural landscape.

Kevin Costner’s The West – Sky History, 9:00 p.m.

Narrated with quiet gravitas by Kevin Costner, this sweeping documentary series offers a panoramic view of the American frontier—its mythologies, its violence, and its contested legacy. It’s not just about how the West was won, but about who paid the price, and how those stories have been shaped, silenced, and retold across generations.

Visually, it’s stunning. The cinematography captures the vastness of the landscape—dust trails, canyon shadows, and endless skies—while archival footage and dramatic reconstructions lend texture to the historical narrative. But it’s the editorial choices that elevate the series: Native American voices are not tokenised, but centred. Their histories, perspectives, and resistance are woven into the fabric of the storytelling, challenging the familiar frontier tropes of rugged individualism and manifest destiny.

The series doesn’t flinch from the brutal realities of colonisation: forced removals, broken treaties, and cultural erasure are presented with clarity and moral weight. Yet it also explores the complexity of settler lives, the ambitions that drove expansion, and the contradictions at the heart of American identity.

Costner’s narration is measured and reflective, never romanticising the past but inviting viewers to reckon with it. This is history that feels alive—urgent, unresolved, and deeply relevant to contemporary debates about land, identity, and justice.

A necessary watch for anyone interested in how national myths are made—and unmade.

Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice – Talking Pictures, 9:05 p.m. (1969)

A time capsule of late-’60s Hollywood, this sharp, stylish comedy pokes at the fault lines of sexual liberation with wit, warmth, and just enough provocation to keep things interesting. Directed by Paul Mazursky, it follows two affluent couples—Natalie Wood and Robert Culp as the newly “enlightened” Bob and Carol, Elliott Gould and Dyan Cannon as the more cautious Ted and Alice—grappling with the fallout of open marriage, group therapy, and shifting moral codes.

What makes the film sing is the chemistry. Wood and Culp are breezy and self-assured, while Gould and Cannon bring a delicious awkwardness to their scenes, especially as the foursome tiptoe toward a climactic bedroom experiment that’s more comic than erotic. The performances are pitch-perfect: Cannon’s slow-burn anxiety, Gould’s neurotic charm, Wood’s radiant confidence—they’re all playing with archetypes, but never flattening them.

Mazursky’s direction is light on its feet, but the film is smarter than it first appears. Beneath the satin sheets and mod interiors lies a genuine curiosity about intimacy, honesty, and the limits of personal freedom. It doesn’t preach or resolve—it observes, with a knowing smile and a raised eyebrow.

Still provocative in its own way, and still relevant in its questions about connection, consent, and the performance of modern relationships

Bones and All – BBC Three, 11:15 p.m. (2022)

Luca Guadagnino’s Bones and All is a genre hybrid that shouldn’t work—but somehow does, with aching beauty and brutal clarity. It’s a road movie, a horror film, and a love story about two young outsiders who share a dark, unspeakable hunger. Timothée Chalamet and Taylor Russell play cannibal drifters, but the film isn’t interested in gore for its own sake. It’s about isolation, inheritance, and the desperate need to be seen—even in your most monstrous form.

Russell is extraordinary as Maren, a teenager abandoned by her father and left to navigate her condition alone. Her performance is quiet, searching, and deeply human. Chalamet’s Lee is all wounded charm and restless energy, a boy who’s learned to survive by staying in motion. Together, they form a fragile bond that feels more like a pact than a romance—though it’s undeniably romantic in its own way.

Guadagnino’s direction is lyrical and unflinching. The violence, when it comes, is shocking but never gratuitous—more existential than exploitative. The American Midwest is rendered as a haunted landscape of diners, motels, and empty fields, where every encounter carries the threat of exposure or connection. Mark Rylance delivers a chilling turn as Sully, a fellow “eater” whose loneliness curdles into menace.

What makes Bones and All so compelling is its emotional honesty. It treats its characters not as monsters, but as young people trying to make sense of a world that has no place for them. It’s a film about appetite—literal and metaphorical—and the cost of intimacy when your very nature puts others at risk.

Moody, unsettling, and unexpectedly tender. A horror film that dares to be vulnerable

Platoon – ITV4, 11:30 p.m. (1986)

Oliver Stone’s Platoon remains one of the most harrowing and morally complex war films ever committed to screen. Drawing directly from Stone’s own experience as a young infantryman in Vietnam, it strips away the romanticism of combat and replaces it with mud, fear, and the slow erosion of idealism.

Charlie Sheen plays Chris Taylor, a fresh-faced volunteer who quickly learns that the real enemy isn’t just out in the jungle—it’s within the ranks. The platoon is split between two father figures: Elias (Willem Dafoe), principled and humane, and Barnes (Tom Berenger), brutal and unrepentant. Their ideological clash becomes a crucible for Taylor’s own moral awakening, and the film’s power lies in its refusal to offer easy answers.

The battle scenes are chaotic and terrifying—bullets don’t just fly, they scream. The jungle is claustrophobic, the violence sudden and disorienting. But Stone never lets spectacle override substance. Every firefight is underscored by psychological toll: the breakdown of camaraderie, the numbing of empathy, the quiet horror of survival.

Dafoe and Berenger are extraordinary, embodying two sides of a fractured conscience. Their performances elevate the film from war drama to moral allegory. The score, anchored by Samuel Barber’s “Adagio for Strings,” adds a layer of elegiac sorrow that lingers long after the final shot.

Platoon isn’t just anti-war—it’s anti-myth. It dismantles the heroic narrative and replaces it with something raw, unresolved, and deeply human. Nearly four decades on, it still demands to be watched—not for its action, but for its truth.


📅 Tuesday, 16th September

Michael Portillo’s 200 Years of the Railways, Part 1 – BBC Two, 8:00 p.m.

Portillo celebrates the birth of the railway age and its transformative impact on Britain. His enthusiasm is infectious.

This first part looks at how trains changed society, commerce, and politics.

A must for railway buffs and anyone curious about industrial history.

Elizabeth – Film4, 9:00 p.m. (1998)

Sheer cinematic alchemy. Shekhar Kapur’s Elizabeth is a bold, stylised retelling of the early reign of Elizabeth I—less dusty biopic, more political thriller in corsets. Cate Blanchett, in the role that catapulted her to international stardom, delivers a performance of astonishing range: vulnerable, calculating, radiant, and terrifying by turns. It’s not just a portrayal—it’s a coronation.

The film opens with England in chaos: religious strife, court conspiracies, and a young woman thrust into power amid whispers of assassination and scandal. Kapur’s direction is kinetic and theatrical, favouring candlelit corridors and looming shadows over stately tableaux. The result is a Tudor court that feels dangerous, seductive, and alive with intrigue.

Blanchett’s Elizabeth is no marble statue. She’s a woman learning to wield power in a world that sees her as pawn or prize. Her transformation—from playful lover to steely monarch—is charted with emotional precision. The final scenes, where she sheds her humanity to become the Virgin Queen, are chilling and triumphant.

The supporting cast is equally sharp: Geoffrey Rush as the loyal Walsingham, Joseph Fiennes as the doomed Dudley, and Richard Attenborough as the scheming Cecil. The costumes and score are sumptuous, but never distract from the drama. This is history as high-stakes theatre, with real emotional weight.

A landmark performance and a film that redefined the historical drama for a new generation. Intimate, grand, and utterly compelling.

The Signalman – BBC Four, 10:00 p.m.

A masterclass in mood and restraint, this 1976 adaptation of Charles Dickens’s ghost story remains one of the most quietly unnerving pieces of television horror ever produced. Directed by Lawrence Gordon Clark for the BBC’s legendary “Ghost Story for Christmas” strand, it’s a tale of dread that unfolds not with jump scares, but with creeping unease and psychological weight.

Set in a remote railway cutting, the story follows a traveller (played with measured curiosity by Bernard Lloyd) who encounters a haunted signalman (Denholm Elliott, superbly cast) tormented by spectral visitations and a growing sense of doom. The setting is key: the signal box, nestled between steep embankments and echoing with the sound of distant trains, becomes a claustrophobic purgatory—cut off from the world, suspended between reason and terror.

Elliott’s performance is extraordinary. His signalman is a man unravelled by solitude and guilt, his voice trembling with the effort of holding reality together. The supernatural elements are handled with restraint—flashes of red light, ghostly gestures, and the uncanny repetition of fate—but their impact is profound. This is horror as atmosphere, not spectacle.

What makes The Signalman endure is its emotional texture. It’s a story about isolation, foreboding, and the limits of rationality in the face of the inexplicable. Dickens’s original tale is honoured in tone and structure, but the adaptation adds a visual poetry that deepens the sense of melancholy and fatalism.

A timeless spine-chiller—perfectly pitched for late-night viewing, and a reminder that the most haunting stories often whisper rather than scream.

Murder on the Victorian Railway – BBC Four, 10:40 p.m.

A chilling slice of true crime from the age of steam, this BBC documentary revisits the first recorded murder on a British train—a case that shocked Victorian society and helped shape modern policing. Combining dramatised scenes with forensic historical analysis, it reconstructs the 1864 killing of Thomas Briggs, a respectable banker found battered and dying in a first-class carriage on the North London Railway.

The programme is gripping not just for the crime itself, but for what it reveals about the anxieties of the era. Rail travel was still a novelty—fast, anonymous, and unsettlingly democratic. The idea that violence could erupt in such a confined, mobile space struck a nerve, and the public response was swift: demands for better security, moral panic in the press, and the eventual introduction of communication cords and corridor connections.

The dramatisations are well-judged—moody, atmospheric, and never overwrought. They evoke the claustrophobia of the railway carriage and the creeping dread of a society grappling with the implications of mobility and modernity. The historical commentary adds depth, exploring not just the investigation but the cultural context: class divisions, forensic limitations, and the birth of the detective figure in public imagination.

Fascinating, macabre, and very watchable. A reminder that the past isn’t just dusty—it’s dangerous, and often disturbingly familiar.

The Joy of Train Sets: The Model Railway Story – BBC Four, 11:40 p.m.

A gentle, quietly absorbing documentary that charts the enduring appeal of model railways—not just as a hobby, but as a deeply personal form of storytelling. The programme explores how these miniature worlds have captured imaginations across generations, blending childhood wonder with adult craftsmanship and, in many cases, obsession.

What begins as a nostalgic look at Hornby sets and attic layouts quickly deepens into something more poignant. Contributors speak with disarming sincerity about the emotional pull of their creations—how building a railway can be an act of memory, escape, or even healing. There’s something profoundly democratic about the model railway: it invites anyone, regardless of age or background, to shape a world on their own terms.

The documentary is beautifully paced, mixing archival footage with present-day interviews and lovingly filmed layouts. It touches on everything from post-war consumer culture to the therapeutic value of tinkering, and it never condescends. Whether it’s a sprawling recreation of a 1950s terminus or a single loop on a kitchen table, each setup is treated with reverence.

Unexpectedly moving, and quietly profound. A celebration not just of trains, but of the human impulse to create, remember, and connect.

Timeshift: The Engine That Powers the World – BBC Four, 12:40 a.m.

A quietly absorbing documentary that traces the steam engine’s transformative impact on the modern world—from the coal-fired dawn of the Industrial Revolution to the golden age of rail and beyond. This Timeshift instalment is more than a technical history; it’s a cultural excavation, revealing how steam power reshaped landscapes, labour, and the very rhythm of daily life.

The programme is packed with historical gems: early footage of soot-streaked locomotives, archival interviews with railway workers, and rare glimpses of preserved engines still puffing away in heritage yards. But it’s the storytelling that elevates it. The steam engine isn’t treated as mere machinery—it’s a symbol of progress, pride, and sometimes peril. The documentary explores how it fuelled empire, accelerated urbanisation, and even influenced literature and art.

There’s a gentle nostalgia threaded throughout, but it never tips into sentimentality. Instead, it invites reflection on how technology shapes identity—how the hiss of steam and the clatter of wheels became part of the national soundscape. For train enthusiasts, it’s a late-night treat; for everyone else, it’s a reminder that history often hides in plain sight, humming beneath the surface of everyday life.

A perfect nightcap: thoughtful, well-paced, and quietly stirring.

Red Eye – BBC One, 10:40 p.m. (2005)

Wes Craven’s Red Eye is a compact, high-altitude thriller that wastes no time getting airborne. Set almost entirely aboard a red-eye flight from Dallas to Miami, it’s a masterclass in tension—claustrophobic, fast-paced, and surprisingly character-driven. Rachel McAdams stars as Lisa, a hotel manager with a poised exterior and a sharp mind, seated next to Jackson Rippner (Cillian Murphy), whose charm curdles into menace with chilling precision.

The setup is simple: Rippner needs Lisa to help facilitate an assassination plot, and he’s holding her father’s life as leverage. What unfolds is a psychological cat-and-mouse game at 30,000 feet, with McAdams delivering a performance that balances vulnerability and grit. Murphy is magnetic—his transformation from flirtatious stranger to cold-eyed manipulator is unnerving, and the confined setting amplifies every glance, gesture, and threat.

Craven, best known for horror classics, directs with restraint here. The scares are psychological, the violence brief but impactful, and the pacing relentless. The film’s strength lies in its economy—no wasted scenes, no extraneous subplots. It’s a thriller that knows exactly what it’s doing and does it with style.

A lean, efficient nail-biter that turns a routine flight into a pressure cooker. Still satisfying, and still a reminder that sometimes the most terrifying villains wear a smile.


📅 Wednesday, 17th September

Good Luck to You, Leo Grande – Film4, 9:00 p.m. (2022)

A quietly radical chamber piece that reclaims intimacy from the margins and places it centre stage. Directed by Sophie Hyde, this two-hander unfolds almost entirely within a hotel room, where Nancy (Emma Thompson), a retired schoolteacher and widow, hires Leo (Daryl McCormack), a young sex worker, to help her explore the physical and emotional terrain she’s long denied herself.

Thompson is magnificent—funny, brittle, and deeply vulnerable. Her performance is a masterclass in emotional layering: Nancy’s awkwardness, shame, and yearning are all laid bare, and Thompson never flinches from the discomfort. McCormack matches her with quiet charisma and warmth, offering not just physical connection but emotional presence. Their chemistry is tender, respectful, and refreshingly devoid of cliché.

The film is frank about sex, but never exploitative. It’s about pleasure, yes—but also about permission, ageing, and the stories we tell ourselves about who we’re allowed to be. The dialogue is sharp and humane, with moments of humour that land precisely because they’re rooted in truth. There’s a generosity to the storytelling that feels rare: no judgement, no moralising, just two people navigating vulnerability with grace.

What makes it quietly revolutionary is its refusal to sensationalise. It treats female desire, especially post-menopause, with dignity and curiosity. It’s also a rare portrait of sex work that foregrounds agency and emotional intelligence, rather than danger or degradation.

Funny, sad, and liberating all at once. A film about self-discovery that feels refreshingly honest—and quietly profound. Emma Thompson is brilliant as a widow who hires a young sex worker to explore her desires.

It’s funny, sad, and liberating all at once.

A film about intimacy and self-discovery that feels refreshingly honest.


📅 Thursday, 18th September

A Time to Kill – Film4, 11:05 p.m. (1996)

Joel Schumacher’s adaptation of John Grisham’s novel is a courtroom drama that doesn’t flinch from the rawest edges of American justice. Set in the racially divided Deep South, it centres on a harrowing case: a Black father (Samuel L. Jackson) who takes the law into his own hands after his young daughter is brutally assaulted, and the white lawyer (Matthew McConaughey) who agrees to defend him.

What unfolds is more than legal theatre—it’s a moral crucible. The film grapples with race, vengeance, and the limits of empathy in a system built on inequality. McConaughey, still in his pre-McConaissance era, delivers a compelling performance as Jake Brigance, a man forced to confront not just the law, but his own conscience. Jackson is electrifying—his Carl Lee Hailey is not a symbol, but a father pushed to the brink, and his courtroom scenes burn with righteous fury.

Sandra Bullock adds sharpness and warmth as a law student drawn into the case, while Kevin Spacey’s slick prosecutor and Donald Sutherland’s weary mentor round out a cast that’s uniformly strong. The courtroom scenes are taut and emotionally charged, but it’s the film’s willingness to sit with discomfort—racial tension, community backlash, moral ambiguity—that gives it staying power.

Nearly 30 years on, A Time to Kill remains a potent reminder that justice is never abstract. It’s personal, painful, and often political. The final monologue—delivered with devastating simplicity—is a gut punch that still resonates.

Gripping, provocative, and unafraid to ask what justice really looks like when the system itself is on trial

Dreamland – Film4, 2:00 a.m. (2019)

A slow-burning, dust-blown romance set against the backdrop of Depression-era Texas, Dreamland is part crime drama, part coming-of-age fable—and all atmosphere. Margot Robbie stars as Allison Wells, a wounded fugitive bank robber who hides out in a barn and upends the life of Eugene (Finn Cole), a restless teenager yearning for escape and meaning.

Robbie is magnetic here—less femme fatale, more fractured myth. Her performance balances seduction with vulnerability, and she never lets the character tip into caricature. Cole, best known for Peaky Blinders, brings a quiet intensity to Eugene, whose moral compass is tested as he falls deeper into Allison’s orbit. Their chemistry is understated but charged, and the film’s emotional pull lies in its ambiguity: is this love, manipulation, or something more elemental?

Visually, it’s a stunner. Director Miles Joris-Peyrafitte leans into the sepia-toned melancholy of the era—wide skies, cracked earth, and sun-bleached towns that feel suspended in time. The cinematography evokes Terrence Malick without imitation, and the score adds a haunting layer of nostalgia and foreboding.

What makes Dreamland linger is its tone: moody, lyrical, and surprisingly tender. It’s a story about longing—for freedom, for connection, for a life beyond the dust—and it never rushes to resolution. The violence, when it comes, is brief but brutal, and the ending leaves just enough space for reflection.

A hidden gem worth staying up late for. Romantic, tragic, and quietly hypnotic.


📅 Friday, 19th September

Jimi Hendrix: Electric Church – BBC Four, 9:00 p.m.

A blistering concert film that captures Jimi Hendrix at the height of his powers—live at the Atlanta Pop Festival in July 1970, just weeks before his death. Electric Church isn’t just a performance archive; it’s a time capsule of countercultural energy, sonic experimentation, and the raw charisma of a musician who seemed to channel electricity itself.

The footage is extraordinary. Hendrix plays to a crowd of over 300,000, and yet the performance feels intimate—his guitar work alternately ferocious and tender, his vocals loose but emotionally precise. Tracks like “Purple Haze,” “Hey Joe,” and “Voodoo Child” crackle with urgency, but it’s the improvisational moments that truly mesmerise. This is Hendrix unfiltered: playful, political, and utterly free.

Interspersed with interviews and archival material, the film offers glimpses into the cultural backdrop—Vietnam, civil rights, and the fading glow of the 1960s idealism. Hendrix’s presence feels both of the moment and beyond it, a reminder of music’s power to disrupt, unite, and transcend.

The production is respectful but not reverent. It lets the music speak, and it doesn’t polish away the grit. Sweat, distortion, and feedback are part of the texture. The crowd shots—faces lit by stage lights and awe—add emotional weight, grounding the spectacle in human response.

Unmissable for music fans, yes—but also essential for anyone interested in the intersection of art, politics, and performance.

Selma – BBC Two, 11:00 p.m. (2014)

Ava DuVernay’s Selma is not a cradle-to-grave biopic—it’s something far more focused and urgent. Centred on the 1965 voting rights marches from Selma to Montgomery, the film distills a pivotal moment in the civil rights movement into a narrative of strategy, sacrifice, and moral clarity. It’s history rendered with immediacy, and it refuses to flatten its characters into icons.

David Oyelowo’s portrayal of Martin Luther King Jr. is extraordinary. He captures not just the rhetorical brilliance, but the emotional weight of leadership—the fatigue, the doubt, the quiet resolve. This is King as tactician and husband, as preacher and protestor, navigating political pressure and personal risk with grace and grit. The performance is deeply human, and all the more powerful for it.

DuVernay’s direction is precise and poetic. The march scenes are choreographed with reverence and rage, and the violence—particularly the infamous “Bloody Sunday” sequence—is presented with unflinching clarity. But the film also finds space for intimacy: quiet conversations, moments of prayer, and the tension between public action and private cost.

The supporting cast is uniformly strong—Carmen Ejogo as Coretta Scott King brings quiet strength, while Tom Wilkinson’s LBJ and Tim Roth’s George Wallace offer contrasting portraits of political calculation. The score, cinematography, and pacing all serve the story, never distracting from its emotional and historical core.

Selma remains essential viewing. It’s not just a film about the past—it’s a film that speaks directly to the present, reminding us that progress is never inevitable, and that courage often looks like persistence.

Heat – Legend, 11:50 p.m. (1995)

Heat – Legend, 11:50 p.m. (1995)

Michael Mann’s crime saga starring Al Pacino and Robert De Niro.

Their diner scene together is rightly legendary.

Cool, stylish, and endlessly rewatchable.


🎬 Streaming Choice

Rebel Royals: An Unlikely Love Story

📅 Netflix, from Tuesday 16th September

A documentary that dares to ask: what happens when a Norwegian princess falls for a Californian shaman? Directed by Rebecca Chaiklin (Tiger King), this is no tabloid puff piece—it’s a layered portrait of Princess Märtha Louise and Shaman Durek Verrett, navigating love, race, royalty, and spiritual identity in the glare of global scrutiny.

The series leans into the surreal: a clairvoyant royal renouncing her title to marry a self-proclaimed healer with celebrity clientele and a flair for the metaphysical. But beneath the headlines, it’s a story of agency and defiance. Märtha Louise’s refusal to conform to dynastic expectations is quietly radical, and Durek’s presence—Black, queer-coded, and unapologetically spiritual—challenges every inherited notion of who belongs in a palace.

The tone is intimate, occasionally chaotic, and often moving. Wedding prep scenes are intercut with media backlash and family reckonings, offering a rare glimpse into the emotional labour of loving outside the lines. It’s not polished, but it’s sincere—and that’s its power.

Worth watching for: its unfiltered honesty and the way it reframes royalty as a site of resistance, not just tradition.

Swiped

📅 Disney+, from Friday 19th September

Swiped is the kind of biopic that could’ve been formulaic—but instead, it pulses with grit and urgency. Lily James plays Whitney Wolfe Herd, the tech disruptor who co-founded Tinder, then launched Bumble after a bruising exit. Directed by Rachel Lee Goldenberg, the film doesn’t just chart Wolfe Herd’s rise—it interrogates the gendered architecture of Silicon Valley itself.

James is compelling: sharp, vulnerable, and quietly furious. The film captures the emotional toll of being the only woman in the room, and the radical simplicity of Bumble’s premise—women make the first move—is treated not as a gimmick, but as a cultural intervention.

There’s a briskness to the pacing, and the supporting cast (Dan Stevens, Myha’la, Jackson White) adds texture without stealing focus. Swiped doesn’t linger on the tech—it’s about power, ownership, and rewriting the rules. It’s also a reminder that innovation isn’t just code—it’s courage.

Worth watching for: its feminist lens and refusal to flatten Wolfe Herd into a startup cliché.

Black Rabbit

📅 Netflix, all eight episodes from Thursday 18th September

This one’s a slow burn with bite. Jude Law and Jason Bateman play estranged brothers—Jake, a restaurateur chasing Michelin dreams, and Vince, a washed-up addict with debts and secrets. When Vince crashes back into Jake’s life, the fallout is operatic: mob threats, moral compromises, and a robbery that unravels everything.

Created by Zach Baylin and Kate Susman, Black Rabbit is part crime thriller, part character study. The New York setting is tactile—grimy, glamorous, and full of ghosts. Law’s Jake is all polish and repression, while Bateman’s Vince is chaos in a vintage tee. Their dynamic is electric: love, resentment, and co-dependence braided into every scene.

The series doesn’t rush. It builds tension through silence, glances, and the slow erosion of trust. Laura Linney directs two standout episodes, adding emotional depth and visual precision. It’s not flashy, but it’s deeply felt—and the final act lands with devastating clarity.

Worth watching for: its emotional realism and the way it turns sibling loyalty into a ticking time bomb.

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Culture Vulture 6th to the 12th of September 2025

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

Selections and commentary by Pat Harrington

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


Saturday 6th September

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Sunday 7th September

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Monday 8th September

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Tuesday 9th September

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Wednesday 10th September

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

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

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

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

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

A reminder that truth is often stranger than fiction.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Thursday 11th September

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Friday 12th September

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

It is brutal, compelling, and unforgettable.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

A cult film that still shocks.

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

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

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

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

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


Streaming Choices

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Culture Vulture 14-20 June 2025


3,474 words, 18 minutes read time.

Pat Harrington presents his weekly guide to the best in TV, film, and streaming from an alternative standpoint. This week’s selections include searing modern dramas, noir classics, and eccentric curiosities, ranging from Powell & Pressburger to Park Chan-wook. Tim Bragg’s music tips you in the right mood—serious, subversive, and soul-sharpening. Three standout choices have been marked as 🌟Highlights: Decision to Leave, 28 Days Later, and Nightmare Alley. They demand attention not just for their artistic power but also for the questions they pose about trust, truth, and transformation. Original music in our video edition is by Tim Bragg.

A graphic featuring the words 'CULTURE VULTURE' in bold letters with an image of a soaring vulture. The background displays a blue sky and mountains, while a colorful 'COUNTER CULTURE' logo is at the bottom.

Saturday 14 June

Carry On Up the Khyber (ITV3, 8:50 AM, 1968)
A classic of British comedy, this riotous entry in the Carry On series takes on the imperial era with a mix of slapstick, saucy humour, and wonderfully exaggerated performances. Set against the backdrop of the British Raj, the film follows the hapless exploits of Sir Sidney Ruff-Diamond (Sid James) as he attempts to maintain control over the local Burpa tribe, led by the scheming Khasi of Kalabar (Kenneth Williams).

Williams, Charles Hawtrey, and Sid James revel in their familiar personas, delivering a cavalcade of cheeky jokes and farcical situations with impeccable timing. Joan Sims is a scene-stealer as Lady Ruff-Diamond, bringing her usual flair for comedy, while Bernard Bresslaw, as the imposing Bungdit Din, makes for a gloriously over-the-top tribal leader.

The film is packed with outrageous misunderstandings, exaggerated colonial pomp, and set-piece gags that still raise a chuckle. The infamous dinner scene—where British officers dine unflinchingly while cannon fire rages around them—is a perfect example of the film’s unshakable stiff-upper-lip absurdity. Carry On Up the Khyber may not concern itself with historical accuracy, but it delights in poking fun at British self-importance with a knowing wink.

Though its humor reflects the era in which it was made, it remains one of the most memorable Carry On outings—full of irreverence, double entendres, and all the usual antics that made the series such a British institution.


The Magnificent Seven (BBC Two, 1:55 PM, 1960)
A Hollywood reimagining of Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai, this Western epic distills the essence of frontier heroism into one of the genre’s most enduring touchstones. Yul Brynner, exuding quiet authority, leads a crew of gunslingers—outsiders and drifters—who come together to defend a vulnerable Mexican village from predatory bandits. Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson, and James Coburn each bring their own rugged charm to the ensemble, their characters defined by skill, personal codes, and the unspoken loneliness that comes with a life of violence.

The Magnificent Seven operates as pure myth-making, reinforcing a vision of American exceptionalism where courage, sacrifice, and a clear moral purpose define the Western hero. Yet, beneath the bravado, the film also wrestles with the costs of violence and the fleeting nature of heroism. For all their skill, the gunmen are transients, drawn to battle by necessity rather than nobility. The villagers seek protection, but their fate is ultimately tied to forces beyond their control—the cyclical nature of power, corruption, and survival.

Socially, the film underscores a world in transition. The gunmen, relics of a vanishing frontier, embody both the virtues and contradictions of a bygone era—living by honour yet condemned to displacement. Politically, it touches on American interventionism, positioning the hired defenders as symbols of external salvation. Though not explicit, there’s a lingering question: do these warriors bring lasting peace or merely a temporary reprieve?

Psychologically, The Magnificent Seven explores the tension between individualism and duty. Each member of the group finds meaning in the mission, yet their motivations vary—some seeking redemption, others chasing the thrill of battle, all aware that glory fades. The film is at its most poignant in its quieter moments, when characters reflect on what comes after the fight, knowing full well that peace is a luxury they may never experience.

Elmer Bernstein’s soaring score amplifies the grandiosity of the narrative, merging adventure with operatic tragedy. The music elevates the film’s themes of sacrifice and fleeting heroism, ensuring that even as the genre evolves, this remains one of its defining works—a film that celebrates the Western legend while quietly questioning the price of wielding a gun in the name of justice.


🌟 Decision to Leave (BBC Two, 12:30 AM, 2022)
Park Chan-wook’s haunting noir is less a thriller than a sensual puzzle, delicately arranged. A detective investigating a climber’s suspicious death becomes enmeshed in the life of the dead man’s widow. The film oscillates between seduction and suspicion, reality and performance, framed with visual elegance that recalls Hitchcock and Wong Kar-wai in equal measure.

Tang Wei is mesmerising—her performance is all surface restraint with emotional undercurrents that pull you under. Park Hae-il matches her with understated despair, portraying a man who has lost his moral anchor in the fog of obsession.

Themes of migration, translation, and alienation pulse beneath the romantic stylings, suggesting that love, like crime, often depends on what you choose to ignore.


Sunday 15 June

Hue and Cry (Film4, 11:00 AM, 1947)
This post-war Ealing comedy kicks off the studio’s golden age. A group of resourceful boys uncover a criminal racket in London and take it upon themselves to foil the gang. A young Harry Fowler leads a cast brimming with spirit, and the film’s energy still feels fresh despite its age.

The rubble-strewn city provides a vivid backdrop—half playground, half battleground—and the film becomes a document of working-class resilience in a broken but rebuilding Britain. Director Charles Crichton captures a rare combination of innocence and urban grit.

Though it’s primarily played for laughs, Hue and Cry contains more than a hint of social realism. It celebrates collective effort, mistrusts authority, and places its faith in the sharp instincts of ordinary people.

Out of Sight (Legend, 9:00 PM, 1998)
Steven Soderbergh’s stylish adaptation of Elmore Leonard’s novel is a dance of wit and chemistry. George Clooney’s bank robber and Jennifer Lopez’s U.S. Marshal find themselves in a prolonged flirtation that stretches across heists, hideouts, and handcuffs.

It’s a film that luxuriates in cool—gliding between timelines, locations, and perspectives with jazzy confidence. But underneath the slick exterior is a melancholy meditation on choices, second chances, and the thin line between criminality and charisma.

Soderbergh plays with genre expectations to give us a noir romance where both lovers know they’re heading for heartbreak. One of the smartest, sexiest films of the ’90s.


🌟 28 Days Later (BBC One, 10:30 PM, (2002)
Over two decades since its release, Danny Boyle’s apocalyptic horror still pulses with urgency, freshly remastered to remind audiences why it remains one of the most unsettling visions of societal collapse in modern cinema. From its haunting opening, where Cillian Murphy’s Jim stumbles out of a hospital into a deserted London, the film grips with an eerie realism—its empty streets and flickering remnants of normal life amplifying the loneliness and confusion of its protagonist.

Shot with a grainy digital immediacy, 28 Days Later strips back the polish of traditional horror, making everything feel raw, unpredictable, and dangerously real. At its core, Boyle crafts a survival nightmare rooted in the fragility of civilisation: the infected—rage-fueled, mindless husks—are terrifying, but the true horror emerges elsewhere. The military, tasked with restoring order, becomes an unchecked force of control, turning the idea of protection into something darker, something more brutal. The theme is clear—crisis does not merely destroy; it warps morality, turns desperation into tyranny, and exposes the thin veneer of human decency.

Naomie Harris’s Selena is a standout, refusing to fall into genre clichés of vulnerability or romance. Her performance radiates toughness, pragmatism, and emotional depth, elevating the film beyond its blood-soaked tension into something deeply human. Brendan Gleeson brings warmth as Frank, a father desperately clinging to hope, making his fate all the more devastating.

Beyond its horror beats, 28 Days Later simmers with political undercurrents. Boyle plays with anxieties about viral outbreaks, government dysfunction, and the ethics of bio-weaponry—ideas that have only gained relevance over time. The film lingers on dehumanisation, not just in the infected but in the people left behind. Survival comes at a cost, and Boyle ensures we feel every moment of its weight.

Elusive, intense, and eerily prophetic, this is more than just a zombie thriller. It’s a warning, a reflection, and a masterpiece of modern horror filmmaking that refuses to age. Essential viewing.


America’s Veterans: The War Within (ITV1, 10:20 PM)
A harrowing exploration of the mental health crisis gripping U.S. military veterans, this documentary shines a stark light on the invisible wounds of war—those carried long after the battlefield is left behind. Through firsthand testimonies and expert analysis, it reveals the devastating impact of PTSD, homelessness, and suicide among those once celebrated as protectors of the nation.

Beyond the raw statistics, the programme examines the broader societal failure to support veterans in their transition back to civilian life. Many face bureaucratic hurdles, financial instability, and inadequate healthcare, compounding their struggles. The documentary confronts difficult questions: Why do so many veterans feel abandoned? What does it say about a country that reveres its soldiers in uniform but neglects them when they are most in need?

The human cost of war is laid bare—not just in combat but in the psychological toll that lingers long after the fighting stops. Interviews with veterans detail the isolation, the difficulty in reconciling wartime experiences with everyday life, and the desperate search for stability in a system that often fails them.

The film also investigates the role of institutions—how government policies, underfunded support programs, and societal misconceptions contribute to a crisis that has been largely ignored. It critiques the gap between rhetoric and reality; while veterans are frequently praised in political speeches, the tangible resources available to them tell a different story.

Through these accounts, America’s Veterans: The War Within serves as both an exposé and a call to action—urging viewers to reconsider the meaning of service, sacrifice, and national responsibility. It is more than a documentary; it is a sobering reminder that heroism does not end when the war does, and that real support must extend beyond the battlefield.


Monday 16 June

The Piano (BBC Two, 11:00 PM, 1993)
Jane Campion’s gothic romance remains emotionally raw and visually spellbinding. Holly Hunter’s mute Ada, arriving in colonial New Zealand with her piano and young daughter in tow, confronts cultural oppression and sexual politics with unflinching determination.

Michael Nyman’s score swells with longing, acting as both Ada’s voice and the film’s emotional map. Hunter and Harvey Keitel offer performances that eschew traditional romantic arcs, and Anna Paquin—aged just 11—gives a frighteningly precocious turn.

Campion’s film explores silence, resistance, and the tension between personal autonomy and societal roles. It’s a strange, powerful experience—sensual and unsettling in equal measure.

The Bush Years: Family, Duty, Power – Ep. 1 of 6 (PBS America, 8:50 PM)
The first chapter in this political dynasty docuseries delves into the formative years of the Bush family, exploring the ambitions and ideological forces that shaped their rise to power. From Prescott Bush’s early ventures in finance and politics to the disciplined upbringing of his son, George H.W. Bush, the episode traces the foundations of a legacy built on loyalty, service, and the careful cultivation of public image.

Slickly produced and well-paced, the documentary unpacks how privilege, networking, and inherited influence played a decisive role in positioning the Bushes as one of America’s most enduring political families. Yet, it also examines the personal dynamics—how family duty was instilled as a guiding principle, often leading to internal rivalries and defining moments of political transformation.

Beyond individual biographies, the episode considers the broader implications of dynasty in American politics. It raises questions about the balance between meritocracy and legacy, the extent to which power is passed down rather than earned, and how media narratives reinforce the image of leadership.

With archival footage, interviews, and expert insights, The Bush Years provides a fascinating glimpse into how political legacies are crafted—not only by policy and governance but by carefully managed optics, deep-rooted connections, and an unwavering commitment to sustaining influence across generations.


Tuesday 17 June

The Guard (Film4, 11:20 PM, 2011)
John Michael McDonagh’s Irish black comedy is an anti-cop film wrapped in the uniform of a buddy cop flick. Brendan Gleeson plays a foul-mouthed, morally ambiguous guard whose strange brand of justice collides with Don Cheadle’s straight-laced FBI agent. The culture clash is played for laughs—but also for pathos.

Gleeson’s character, Sergeant Boyle, is a contradiction: racist yet not malicious, indifferent yet oddly heroic. His deadpan observations slice through the absurdities of rural corruption and global crime. The dialogue is razor-sharp, and the humour pitch-black.

Underneath the gallows wit, The Guard is a melancholy reflection on honour in a dishonourable world. It’s cynical, yes—but never without heart.

The Bush Years – Ep. 2 of 6 (PBS America, 8:50 PM)
This episode delves into George H.W. Bush’s years as Vice President and President, balancing Cold War diplomacy with domestic challenges. The tone is respectful but not sycophantic, offering insight into a transitional era of U.S. conservatism.


Wednesday 18 June

The Lady from Shanghai (Talking Pictures, 3:00 PM, 1947)
Orson Welles’ dreamlike noir is a carnival of shadows, mirrors, and betrayals. Playing an Irish drifter caught in a wealthy couple’s web of deceit, Welles constructs a story that resists logic but compels through mood. Rita Hayworth’s transformation—icy, platinum-blonde femme fatale—is one of cinema’s great image shifts.

The film is fractured, hallucinatory, and often incoherent, but it is precisely this strangeness that gives it staying power. The climactic hall-of-mirrors shootout is a masterclass in visual metaphor and genre subversion.

This is noir as fever dream—dense, disorienting, and intoxicating.

The Bush Years – Ep. 3 of 6: “A Family Triumph” (PBS America, 8:50 PM)
This episode traces George W. Bush’s rise to the Texas governorship, framing it as both political redemption and familial expectation. The tone hovers between myth-making and mild critique.


Thursday 19 June

Night of the Demon (Talking Pictures, 10:10 PM, 1957)

Jacques Tourneur’s eerie adaptation of Casting the Runes remains one of the finest examples of British horror, effortlessly blending supernatural terror with psychological unease. Dana Andrews plays Dr. John Holden, a pragmatic American psychologist intent on debunking occult practices, only to find himself entangled in a sinister plot orchestrated by Julian Karswell—a cult leader whose charm masks something deeply unsettling.

What sets Night of the Demon apart is its commitment to tension over spectacle. The horror simmers beneath the surface—built through unsettling whispers, flickering candlelight, and ominous wind that rattles through the countryside. Tourneur, a master of restraint, ensures that suggestion is more terrifying than revelation. The film plays with shadows and uncertainty, daring the audience to question what they see and what they only suspect.

Karswell’s library is a place of dreadful knowledge, its books promising power yet dripping with menace. The séance scene crackles with unease, while the film’s rural landscapes transform the familiar into something quietly oppressive. Even mundane conversations carry an eerie weight, as though truth itself is a precarious illusion.

The moment of the demon’s appearance remains one of horror cinema’s most debated sequences. Some argue that showing the creature diminishes the carefully built dread, while others see it as a shocking punctuation mark in a film that otherwise thrives on ambiguity. But Tourneur understood that fear is as much about what lurks in the mind as what manifests before the eyes.

Beneath its supernatural elements, Night of the Demon is a philosophical ghost story—a battle between belief and scepticism, power and reason, fate and free will. Holden’s journey is not just about escaping a curse; it’s about confronting the limits of rationality and the unsettling possibility that some forces defy explanation.

Elegant, eerie, and richly atmospheric, this remains a cornerstone of British horror—a film that lingers not just in the mind but in the shadows it so expertly conjures.

🌟 Nightmare Alley (Film4, 10:55 PM, 2021)
Guillermo del Toro’s bleak vision of carnivalesque corruption casts Bradley Cooper as a charming grifter ascending through a world of illusion. With Cate Blanchett, Toni Collette, and Willem Dafoe adding edge and menace, the film gleams like chrome and cuts like glass.

It’s a critique of ambition and self-deception, where even the ‘gifted’ are doomed by their hunger. The production design is meticulous, evoking 1940s noir with art-deco dread, and the pacing lingers just long enough on every moral turning point.

This is del Toro at his darkest: unflinching, unsentimental, and utterly magnetic.

Outrageous (U&Drama, 9:00 PM)

A fascinating look at the lives and legacies of the Mitford sisters, Outrageous explores the contrasting paths of this influential British family, whose members shaped literature, politics, and social movements in ways that continue to spark debate. The programme delves into the sisters’ varied ideologies—from fascism to communism—and the enduring myths surrounding their aristocratic upbringing, rebellious spirits, and sometimes scandalous choices.

With a blend of archival footage, interviews, and dramatized sequences, Outrageous doesn’t shy away from the more divisive aspects of the Mitfords’ lives, yet it also celebrates their intelligence, wit, and impact. Nancy’s literary sharpness, Diana’s political notoriety, Jessica’s radical activism, and Unity’s disturbing admiration for Hitler—all are examined with a keen eye on both personal motivations and historical context.

The documentary raises compelling questions about class, privilege, and how certain figures—no matter their controversies—continue to captivate public imagination. Whether seen as rebels, visionaries, or cautionary figures, the Mitford sisters remain some of Britain’s most discussed and dissected personalities, and Outrageous ensures they are anything but forgotten.

The Bush Years – Ep. 4 of 6 (PBS America, 8:50 PM)
Focuses on the political manoeuvring behind Bush Jr.’s presidential run, offering a fascinating glimpse into the PR-driven mechanics of dynasty.


Friday 20 June

The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (BBC Two, 11:00 PM, 1994)
This Aussie road movie about two drag queens and a trans woman crossing the Outback in a lavender bus remains a dazzling celebration of queerness and resilience. Terence Stamp, Hugo Weaving, and Guy Pearce offer performances full of bite and soul.

Behind the feathers and ABBA lip-syncs lies a story about acceptance and chosen family. It doesn’t flinch from the bigotry the characters face, but it refuses to let them be victims. The scenery is gorgeous, but the emotional topography is even richer.

Priscilla helped pioneer queer visibility in mainstream cinema. It’s joyous, defiant, and unforgettable.

Sheroes (Channel 4, 12:55 AM, 2023)
This pulpy action flick centres on four women rescuing a kidnapped friend in Thailand. A blend of neon visuals and empowerment themes, it’s not subtle—but it’s undeniably entertaining for a late-night watch.

The Bush Years – Ep. 5 of 6: “Sibling Rivalry” (PBS America, 8:50 PM)
Tackles the differences between George W. and Jeb Bush, framing their rivalry as a study in legacy, image, and political fate.


And Streaming

For those looking for thought-provoking viewing, these upcoming streaming releases between June 14–20, 2025, explore social, political, and psychological themes across different platforms:

  • Netflix – State of Control (June 15)
    A tense political drama about mass surveillance and government oversight, where a journalist uncovers a secret program that threatens civil liberties. Sharp writing and gripping performances make this a chilling reflection on modern power dynamics.
  • Amazon Prime – The Mind’s Edge (June 17)
    A neuroscientist develops memory manipulation technology—only to find herself questioning reality as her own past unravels. A stylishly shot psychological thriller exploring trauma, identity, and the consequences of playing with human consciousness.
  • Disney Plus – Echoes of Power (June 19)
    This historical drama traces the rise and fall of a political dynasty, revealing the personal and ideological battles that define leadership. Layered storytelling and rich performances explore ambition, loyalty, and moral compromise.
  • Apple TV+ – Echo Valley (June 13)
    A grieving mother is drawn into a desperate cover-up when her daughter arrives home covered in blood. With intense performances and a gripping narrative, this psychological thriller probes themes of survival, trauma, and moral reckoning.
  • Hulu – A Complete Unknown (June 17)
    A biographical drama chronicling Bob Dylan’s early years, set against the cultural and political upheaval of the 1960s. The film examines artistic identity, rebellion, and the power of music as a force for change.
  • Max – The Brutalist (June 16)
    A historical drama following an architect’s struggle to build a legacy in post-war America, navigating political pressures, artistic integrity, and personal sacrifices. A thought-provoking meditation on creativity, ambition, and resilience.

Our video guide will follow shortly.

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Culture Vulture 7th-13th of June 2025

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

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


Saturday 7 June

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Sunday 8 June

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

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

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

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

Groundhog Day (1993) – Film4, 4:40 PM

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

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

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

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

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

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

The Gold – BBC One, 9:00 PM

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Gateways Grind – BBC Four, 10:50 PM

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

Our Ladies (2019) – Film4, 11:05 PM

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

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

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


Monday 9 June

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

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

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

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

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


Tuesday 10 June

The Gold – BBC One, 9:00 PM

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Wednesday 11 June

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

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

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

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


Thursday 12 June

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Friday 13 June

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

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

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

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

Naked (1993) – Film4, 11:20 PM

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

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

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


Streaming Choices

FUBAR Season 2 – Netflix

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

Deep Cover (1992) – Prime Video

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

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

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

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

Hereafter (2010) – Paramount+

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

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

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

Picture credits

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

471 words, 2 minutes read time.

The 2024 two-part documentary film Hunting Mr Nice: The Cannabis Kingpin offers an intriguing dive into the life of Howard Marks. He was a charismatic yet ultimately doomed drug smuggler. His empire spanned continents. The direction combines sharp wit and poignant drama. The film paints a compelling portrait of a man undone by his own ego. He is also challenged by the forces arrayed against him.

Howard Marks

Marks’ story hinges on his undeniable charm. This quality allowed him to navigate the murky world of international drug trafficking. It also earned him a surprising level of admiration from those tasked with bringing him down. Even the investigators pursuing him were drawn to his easygoing demeanor. They admired his sharp intellect. This combination lent him an air of roguish appeal. The film adeptly captures this dynamic. It shows how Marks’ ability to connect with people was his greatest asset. It was also a fatal flaw. His casual approach to his operations showed overconfidence. He tended to underestimate risks. These traits ultimately sowed the seeds of his downfall.

The film focuses on Marks’ ill-advised decision to cooperate with the writing of High Times. This cooperation is one of its most thought-provoking elements. The book, while a bestseller, became a self-incriminating document that provided authorities with valuable insights into his operations. The film explores how Marks wanted to cement his legacy and share his colourful life story. This desire blinded him to the legal repercussions. It further exposed him to betrayal.

Indeed, betrayal forms a central theme in Hunting Mr Nice. A trusted confidant within Marks’ inner circle hastened his downfall. This person’s duplicity led to his arrest and eventual imprisonment. The narrative delves into the emotional toll of his incarceration. It emphasizes the years he spent behind bars. He was separated from his family and missed pivotal moments in their lives. Yet, the film also highlights Marks’ resilience and ability to adapt. It shows how he emerged from prison to reinvent himself as an author. Marks became a public speaker and captivated audiences with his tales of adventure and misadventure.

Hunting Mr Nice is a fascinating exploration of a complex figure who defied the typical archetype of a criminal mastermind. The film critiques his hubris but acknowledges his humanity. It leaves viewers to grapple with the contradictions of a man. He was both a cunning smuggler and an engaging raconteur. As the film concludes, it underscores the evolving global perspective on cannabis by showing how many U.S. states and countries have since legalized the substance, a striking juxtaposition to Marks’ life of crime. This reflection on legalization prompts broader questions about the societal shifts around cannabis. It also imparts lessons from Marks’ story about ambition, consequence, and the price of living on the edge. For fans of true crime and character-driven narratives, this film offers a compelling and richly textured experience.

By Pat Harrington

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Picture credit: By Дмитрий Александрович Гайдук – “Энциклопедия конопли”, Copyrighted free use, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=8814189

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Culture Vulture (27th of April to 3rd of May, 2024)

2,960 words, 16 minutes read time.

Welcome to Culture Vulture, your guide to the weeks entertainment from an alternative standpoint. Selections and writing are by Pat Harrington and music is by Tim Bragg. Highlights this week include: the eight part Dopesick, about the US Opioid crisis, the 2001 film A.I. Artificial Intelligence and the three parter Miriam: Death Of A Reality Star which proves that reality is really stranger than fiction.

Saturday 27th of April, 2024

Have You Got It Yet? The Story of Syd Narrett And Pink Floyd 9pm Sky Arts

A captivating documentary that delves into the enigmatic life of Syd Barrett, the founding member of Pink Floyd. This feature-length film unravels the mysteries surrounding Barrett’s meteoric rise to pop stardom, his creative brilliance, and the destructive forces that led to his eventual exit from the band. Set against the backdrop of the explosive sixties, the documentary weaves together interviews with Syd’s friends, lovers, family, and fellow bandmates—Roger Waters, David Gilmour, and Nick Mason. Directed by Storm Thorgerson (of Hipgnosis fame) and award-winning director Roddy Bogawa, this film sheds light on the cult icon who forever left an indelible mark on music history.

For those intrigued by the enigma of Syd Barrett and the legendary Pink Floyd, this documentary is a must-watch. It unearths the emotional highs and lows, the creative genius, and the tragic downfall of a rock legend.

Event Horizon (1997) 12.15am C4

“Event Horizon” is a chilling blend of science fiction and horror that takes viewers on a journey to the darkest corners of space. Directed by Paul W.S. Anderson, this 1997 film offers a gripping narrative cantered around a rescue mission to retrieve a lost spaceship, the Event Horizon, which mysteriously reappears after disappearing seven years earlier.

Featuring an ensemble cast including Laurence Fishburne, Sam Neill, and Kathleen Quinlan, the film delves into themes of isolation, madness, and the unknown. As the rescue crew explores the abandoned vessel, they uncover disturbing secrets and encounter unimaginable horrors that challenge their sanity and beliefs.

What sets “Event Horizon” apart is its atmospheric tension and psychological depth. Anderson masterfully crafts a sense of dread, aided by haunting visuals and a haunting score. The film’s depiction of the human psyche unravelling in the face of cosmic terror adds layers of complexity to the standard sci-fi horror formula.

While “Event Horizon” received mixed reviews upon its release, it has since gained a cult following for its ambitious storytelling and visceral scares. Despite its flaws, including some pacing issues and occasional lapses in logic, the film remains a memorable entry in the genre, offering a visceral and unsettling experience for fans of science fiction and horror alike.

The Assistant (2019) 1.55am Film4

“The Assistant” is a hauntingly realistic portrayal of workplace power dynamics and systemic abuse. Directed by Kitty Green, this 2019 drama follows Jane, a young assistant working for a powerful film executive in New York City.

Julia Garner delivers a captivating performance as Jane, whose mundane tasks gradually unveil the toxic environment she navigates. Through subtle yet powerful storytelling, Green shines a light on the insidious ways in which exploitation and harassment can thrive within corporate cultures.

What sets “The Assistant” apart is its restraint. Instead of relying on sensationalism, the film quietly observes Jane’s daily routine, allowing viewers to feel the weight of her experiences. The sparse dialogue and understated visuals underscore the film’s sense of unease, mirroring Jane’s isolation and disillusionment.

While “The Assistant” can be uncomfortable to watch, it serves as an important reminder of the importance of speaking out against abuse and standing up for what is right. In an industry plagued by misconduct scandals, the film offers a sobering reflection on the complicity that enables such behaviour to persist.

Overall, “The Assistant” is a thought-provoking and timely film that resonates long after the credits roll. It’s a testament to the power of cinema to provoke conversation and inspire change.

Sunday 28th of April, 2024

Dopesick (one of eight) BBC2 10pm

“Dopesick”, a gripping series, meticulously chronicles the harrowing origins of the opioid crisis. Led by the incomparable Michael Keaton, the show delves into the dark underbelly of pharmaceutical greed, addiction, and the devastating impact on communities.

The series boasts an ensemble of top-tier actors, including Michael Keaton. Their performances elevate the material, even when the narrative occasionally falters.


Didactic Approach: “Dopesick” doesn’t shy away from educating its audience. It uses its star power to create a charismatic and engaging experience while shedding light on a critical issue.

The show meticulously dissects the start of the opioid crisis, leaving no stone unturned. However, this exhaustive approach can sometimes feel overwhelming.


In the final episode, Billy grapples with his morals, and Finnix confronts the horrors of Oxy, leading the charge at a rehab clinic. The series leaves viewers with a sobering and heart-wrenching impact.

Whether you’re seeking powerful performances or a deeper understanding of this urgent topic, “Dopesick” delivers a thought-provoking experience that lingers long after the credits roll.

A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001) 11.20pm Film4

A.I. Artificial Intelligence” (2001) is a mesmerizing exploration of the intersection between humanity and artificial intelligence. Directed by Steven Spielberg, this film grapples with profound questions while weaving a visually stunning narrative.

The story, initially conceived by Stanley Kubrick, mirrors the tale of Pinocchio—a puppet yearning to become a real boy. In this case, our protagonist is David, an advanced android portrayed by the remarkable Haley Joel Osment. His unblinking eyes and childlike innocence make him both endearing and unsettling. Spielberg masterfully captures David’s longing for love and acceptance, echoing the timeless theme of transformation.

David’s programming centers on love. Activated by his “Mommy” (played by Frances O’Connor), he fixates on her, believing he feels love. Yet, as viewers, we understand that his emotions are mere reflections of code. Spielberg deftly explores our tendency to project human feelings onto non-human entities, blurring the lines between artificial and genuine emotions.

Beyond David’s story lies a deeper theme—the dilemma of AI. A thinking machine cannot truly think; it merely executes programs. The Turing Test, which gauges a computer’s ability to mimic human thought, becomes central. As David embarks on a quest to become “real,” we confront the ethical responsibility humans have toward sentient machines.

The film’s special effects are awe-inspiring, especially in rendering David’s lifelike appearance. Spielberg’s direction, combined with Osment’s performance, creates a character who tugs at our heartstrings. Yet, the film’s emotional investment in an android leaves us pondering: What does it mean to love something that isn’t truly capable of love?

In the end, “A.I. Artificial Intelligence” challenges us to consider the boundaries of empathy, consciousness, and the essence of being human. It’s a haunting and thought-provoking journey—one that lingers long after the credits roll.

Monday 29th of April 2024

The Caine Mutiny (1954) 1.20pm Film4

“The Caine Mutiny” is a gripping naval drama that delves deep into themes of loyalty, morality, and the psychological toll of warfare. Directed by Edward Dmytryk, this 1954 film adaptation of Herman Wouk’s novel features a stellar cast including Humphrey Bogart, José Ferrer, and Van Johnson.

Set during World War II, the story follows the crew of the USS Caine, a minesweeper commanded by the unpredictable and increasingly erratic Captain Queeg, portrayed brilliantly by Bogart. As tensions rise onboard, Ensign Willie Keith, played by Johnson, grapples with questions of duty and honour amidst the chaos.

What makes “The Caine Mutiny” stand out is its exploration of complex characters and moral ambiguity. The film expertly navigates the blurred lines between right and wrong, challenging viewers to question their own perceptions of leadership and justice.

Bogart delivers a powerhouse performance as Captain Queeg, capturing the character’s descent into paranoia with nuance and intensity. Ferrer also shines as the defence attorney tasked with unravelling the truth behind the mutiny, adding depth to the film’s courtroom drama.

While “The Caine Mutiny” unfolds primarily within the confines of a naval vessel, its themes resonate far beyond the confines of the sea. It’s a timeless tale of integrity, sacrifice, and the human condition, reminding audiences of the complexities inherent in the choices we make during times of crisis.

Overall, “The Caine Mutiny” remains a classic example of thought-provoking storytelling, showcasing the best of Hollywood’s golden age. With its stellar performances and thought-provoking narrative, it’s a film that continues to captivate audiences decades after its release.

Miriam: Death Of A Reality Star (one of three) 9pm Channel 4

“Miriam: Death of a Reality Star” is a riveting documentary series that delves into the captivating life and mysterious demise of Miriam Rivera, one of the original reality TV stars and a trans icon. Here’s a glimpse of the first episode:

Set against the sun-kissed backdrop of a luxurious Ibiza villa, six unsuspecting men find themselves vying for the heart of the stunning supermodel, Miriam Rivera. The tension builds as they compete head-to-head, each hoping to win her affection. But it’s not until the final episode that Miriam drops a bombshell: “I was born as a man.”

The revelation sends shockwaves through the villa, challenging societal norms and preconceptions. As viewers, we witness the emotional rollercoaster faced by both Miriam and the contestants. The show deftly navigates themes of identity, love, and acceptance, leaving us pondering the complexities of attraction and the blurred lines between reality and perception.

Whether you’re drawn to the drama, the human story, or the exploration of transgender experiences, “Miriam: Death of a Reality Star” promises an unforgettable journey into the enigma of Miriam Rivera

Tuesday 30th of April 2024

Screenshot: Fashion and Film 11am BBC RADIO 4

Mark Kermode and Ellen E Jones examine the rich history of style and the moving image, and how designers are portrayed in movies like The Devil Wears Prada and Phantom Thread.

Miriam: Death Of A Reality Star (two of three) 9pm Channel 4

In the second episode of “Miriam: Death of a Reality Star”, the spotlight intensifies on the enigmatic Miriam Rivera. As the narrative unfolds, we witness the aftermath of her revelation to the contestants: “I was born as a man.” The global infamy and tabloid frenzy that ensue paint a vivid picture of the challenges she faced. Fifteen years later, tragedy strikes—Miriam is found dead in her mother’s apartment, her passing shrouded in controversy and disputed circumstances. The episode delves into the complexities of identity, love, and acceptance, leaving viewers with lingering questions.

Wednesday 1st of May 2024

Miriam: Death Of A Reality Star (three of three) 9pm Channel 4

In the third episode of “Miriam: Death of a Reality Star”, the intrigue deepens as we delve further into the life of the enigmatic Miriam Rivera.

The Invisible Woman (2013) 10pm BBC4

“The Invisible Woman” offers a poignant and intimate portrayal of a hidden chapter in the life of Charles Dickens, brought to life by director Ralph Fiennes. This 2013 biographical drama tells the story of Nelly Ternan, a young actress who becomes romantically involved with the famed Victorian author.

Felicity Jones delivers a nuanced performance as Nelly, capturing her inner conflict and emotional journey as she grapples with societal expectations and her forbidden love for Dickens, portrayed with depth by Fiennes himself. The film delicately explores the complexities of their relationship against the backdrop of Victorian England’s rigid social norms.

What sets “The Invisible Woman” apart is its focus on Nelly’s perspective, shedding light on the often-overlooked women behind famous historical figures. Through elegant cinematography and a thoughtful screenplay, the film invites viewers into Nelly’s world, revealing the sacrifices she made and the challenges she faced in pursuit of love and independence.

While some may find the pacing of the film slow at times, it ultimately serves to deepen the emotional impact of Nelly’s story. The supporting cast, including Kristin Scott Thomas as Nelly’s mother, adds layers of complexity to the narrative, further enriching the film’s exploration of love, loss, and the passage of time.

“The Invisible Woman” is a beautifully crafted period drama that offers a fresh perspective on a familiar tale. It’s a testament to the enduring power of love and the resilience of the human spirit, making it a captivating watch for fans of historical romance and literary adaptations alike.

Thursday 2nd of May 2024

The History Boys (2006) 10pm BBC4

“The History Boys” is a witty and thought-provoking exploration of education, ambition, and the pursuit of knowledge. Directed by Nicholas Hytner and based on Alan Bennett’s acclaimed play, this 2006 film follows a group of bright and spirited students preparing for the daunting Oxbridge entrance exams in 1980s England.

At the heart of the film is the dynamic between the students and their unorthodox but inspiring teachers, played brilliantly by Richard Griffiths and Frances de la Tour, among others. Their unconventional teaching methods and philosophical debates inject humour and depth into the narrative, challenging both the characters and the audience to reconsider the purpose and value of education.

The ensemble cast, which includes rising talents like James Corden, Dominic Cooper, and Russell Tovey, delivers standout performances, capturing the complexities and vulnerabilities of adolescence with authenticity and charm. Their interactions are laced with humour, camaraderie, and occasional tension, adding layers of depth to the film’s exploration of friendship, identity, and the pursuit of excellence.

What sets “The History Boys” apart is its ability to seamlessly blend humor and drama while tackling weighty themes with intelligence and nuance. The screenplay, also penned by Bennett, crackles with sharp dialogue and poignant observations, inviting viewers to reflect on their own experiences with education and the mentors who shape their lives.

While the film’s setting may be specific to a certain time and place, its themes are universal, resonating with anyone who has grappled with the complexities of adolescence, intellectual curiosity, and the quest for self-discovery. “The History Boys” is a heartfelt and intellectually stimulating cinematic experience that lingers in the mind long after the credits roll, making it a must-watch for fans of compelling storytelling and rich character development.

Friday 3rd of May 2024

Saint Maud (2019) 10.50pm Film4

“Saint Maud” is a chilling and thought-provoking psychological horror film that also delves into the realm of social realism. Directed by Rose Glass and released in 2019, the film follows Maud, a devoutly religious nurse who becomes fixated on saving the soul of her terminally ill patient, Amanda, a former dancer living in isolation in a rundown seaside mansion.

What distinguishes “Saint Maud” is its multifaceted approach, blending elements of horror with a poignant exploration of social issues. Set against the backdrop of a bleak coastal town, the film offers a stark portrayal of societal neglect and economic disparity. The decaying surroundings mirror Maud’s internal struggles and add depth to the film’s narrative, emphasizing the harsh realities faced by marginalized communities.

Morfydd Clark delivers a mesmerizing performance as Maud, portraying her descent into religious fervour and mental instability with haunting authenticity. Jennifer Ehle shines as Amanda, capturing her character’s vulnerability amidst physical and emotional decline.

Glass skillfully uses religious imagery and symbolism to underscore the film’s themes of faith, obsession, and existential dread. The result is a deeply unsettling cinematic experience that resonates long after the credits roll.

“Saint Maud” is not just a horror film; it’s a searing critique of society’s failures and a stark reminder of the consequences of neglecting those in need. It’s a testament to the power of cinema to confront uncomfortable truths and provoke meaningful reflection. Overall, “Saint Maud” stands as a powerful and unforgettable work of art, offering both visceral scares and profound social commentary.

And streaming…

On Netflix from Wednesday May 1st, Heeramandi: The Diamond Bazaar

“Heeramandi: The Diamond Bazaar” is a captivating Netflix series that transports viewers to the opulent world of courtesans, intrigue, and rebellion in British-ruled India. Helmed by visionary director Sanjay Leela Bhansali, this period drama weaves a mesmerizing tapestry of power struggles, passion, and secrets.

The scheming Mallikajaan reigns over an elite house of courtesans in the titular Heeramandi. Her calculated moves and iron grip on power face a formidable challenge when a new rival emerges.

The ensemble cast, led by Manisha Koirala, Sonakshi Sinha, and Aditi Rao Hydari, infuses life into their characters. Each frame drips with exuberance and royalty, transporting us to a bygone era.

Like all of Bhansali’s creations, “Heeramandi” is a work of art. The sets, costumes, and cinematography create a visceral experience. Prepare to be dazzled by the grandeur and attention to detail.

The series delves into themes of identity, desire, and rebellion. As the British Raj tightens its grip, rebellion simmers beneath the glittering surface of Heeramandi.


The talented female cast ensures a wild ride, and their performances promise depth and complexity.

Bhansali’s vision extends beyond borders. With “Heeramandi,” he aims to set a benchmark on the global stage. The anticipation surrounding this series is palpable, and it promises to be an unforgettable journey.

Intrigue, passion, and drama converge in “Heeramandi: The Diamond Bazaar.” Add it to your watchlist—it’s a gem waiting to be discovered!

Picture Credits

Event Horizon (1997)
By Paramount Pictures – impawards, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=10657985
The Assistant (2019)
By Studio and or Graphic Artist – Can be obtained from film’s distributor., Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=62509099
A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001)
Derived from a digital capture (photo/scan) of the Film Poster/ VHS or DVD Cover (creator of this digital version is irrelevant as the copyright in all equivalent images is still held by the same party). Copyright held by the film company or the artist. Claimed as fair use regardless., Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=8420772
The Caine Mutiny (1954)
Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=7088003
The Invisible Woman (2013)
By http://www.bbfc.co.uk, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=40927485
The History Boys (2006)
Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=18569193
Saint Maud (2019)
By IMP Awards, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=62765453
Syd Narrett
By http://www.last.fm/music/Syd+Barrett/+images/166500, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=17518847

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Culture Vulture (13th to 19th April 2024)

4,190 words, 22 minutes read time.

Welcome to Culture Vulture, your guide to the week’s entertainment from an alternative standpoint. Music is by Tim Bragg and selections and writing are by Pat Harrington. Highlights this week include: 1973 film “Papillon” which chronicles the gripping tale of Henri Charrière (played by Steve McQueen), a safecracker unjustly imprisoned for life in French Guiana; “Dark Waters”, the 2019 American legal thriller dramatizing Robert Bilott’s case against the chemical manufacturing corporation DuPont after they contaminated a town with unregulated chemicals; and, Kurt Cobain: Moments That Shook Music, a documentary on BBC2 examining his tragic death.

Saturday 13 April 2024

Sweet Charity (1969) 1.20pm BBC2

“Sweet Charity” (1969) is a vibrant and energetic musical film that captures the essence of 1960s New York City with its catchy songs, lively dance numbers, and charismatic performances. Directed by Bob Fosse and starring Shirley MacLaine in the titular role, the film follows the romantic misadventures of Charity Hope Valentine, a dance hall hostess with a heart of gold. MacLaine shines in her portrayal of Charity, bringing both vulnerability and charm to the character as she navigates the ups and downs of love and life in the big city.

One of the film’s standout features is its memorable musical numbers, choreographed by Bob Fosse himself. From the iconic “Big Spender” to the exuberant “Rich Man’s Frug,” each song and dance sequence is expertly crafted and adds depth to the storytelling. Fosse’s innovative choreography, characterized by its precision and sensuality, is particularly evident in the film’s dance scenes, which are both visually stunning and emotionally resonant.

While “Sweet Charity” received mixed reviews upon its initial release, it has since gained a cult following for its infectious energy, stylish direction, and Shirley MacLaine’s captivating performance. With its blend of humour, romance, and spectacle, “Sweet Charity” remains a timeless classic that continues to entertain audiences with its irresistible charm and toe-tapping music.

Hombre (1967) 3.35pm Talking Pictures

“Hombre” (1967) is a gripping Western film directed by Martin Ritt and starring Paul Newman in the titular role. Set against the backdrop of the Arizona frontier, the film follows John Russell, a white man raised by Apaches, who finds himself caught between two worlds when he inherits a boarding house and is forced to confront the racism and prejudice of the townspeople. Newman delivers a powerful performance as the stoic and morally upright Hombre, whose quiet strength and determination make him a compelling protagonist.

The film’s strength lies in its exploration of complex themes such as identity, justice, and morality. As Hombre grapples with his own sense of belonging and the injustices faced by Native Americans, the audience is forced to confront uncomfortable truths about the darker aspects of American history. The supporting cast, including Fredric March, Diane Cilento, and Richard Boone, delivers strong performances, adding depth and nuance to the narrative.

With its gritty realism, strong character development, and thought-provoking social commentary, “Hombre” stands as a standout example of the Western genre. Martin Ritt’s skilful direction and Paul Newman’s magnetic presence elevate the film beyond its traditional trappings, resulting in a timeless classic that remains relevant in its exploration of race, identity, and the human condition.

Kurt Cobain: Moments That Shook Music 9.25pm BBC2

This documentary commemorates the 30th anniversary of Kurt Cobain’s passing. The program utilizes powerful and unseen archive footage to demystify the tragic moment when the Nirvana frontman took his own life.

When Nirvana Came To Britain 10.10pm BBC2

When Nirvana Came to Britain is a documentary that delves into the special relationship between the iconic rock band Nirvana and the United Kingdom. The documentary sheds light on how, between 1989 and 1994, Nirvana introduced a new and exciting brand of rock music to the UK, significantly impacting the musical landscape of the time and influencing a generation of British youth.

The show features unseen archive footage and interviews with key figures, including Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic. It explores the role Britain played in paving the way for Nirvana’s success and the lasting impact they had on music and culture.

Sunday 14 April 2024

Spartacus (1960) 5.15pm ITV4

“Spartacus” (1960), directed by Stanley Kubrick and starring Kirk Douglas in the titular role, is a sweeping epic that not only tells the story of a slave rebellion in ancient Rome but also serves as a powerful allegory for the social and political struggles of its own time. Set against the backdrop of the Roman Republic, the film explores themes of oppression, freedom, and the inherent dignity of every individual. Through its depiction of the slave uprising led by Spartacus, the film highlights the inherent injustice of systems that dehumanize and exploit certain segments of society for the benefit of the few.

One of the most striking aspects of “Spartacus” is its resonance with the political climate of the 1950s, particularly the era of McCarthyism and the Red Scare. The film’s portrayal of Spartacus as a charismatic leader fighting against a tyrannical regime draws clear parallels to the struggle against authoritarianism and the fight for civil rights and individual freedoms. Kirk Douglas, who also produced the film, was known for his progressive views and his willingness to challenge the status quo, making “Spartacus” not just a historical epic but also a statement against the oppressive forces of its time.

In many ways, “Spartacus” can be seen as a defiant response to the McCarthy era, with its themes of resistance and solidarity resonating deeply with audiences who were grappling with the repercussions of political repression and censorship. The film’s climactic battle scenes and Spartacus’s famous declaration, “I am Spartacus!” became emblematic of the struggle for freedom and justice, inspiring generations of activists and revolutionaries. Despite facing censorship and controversy during its production, “Spartacus” ultimately triumphed as a timeless masterpiece that continues to captivate audiences with its powerful message of hope and defiance in the face of oppression.

The Killers (1964) 12.40am Legend

“The Killers” (1964), directed by Don Siegel and based on the short story by Ernest Hemingway, is a gritty and suspenseful crime thriller that delves into the dark underbelly of society, exploring ethical and social themes with a sharp and unflinching gaze. The film follows Johnny North, a former race car driver turned hitman, whose past catches up with him when a contract is put out on his life by a mysterious employer. As two professional killers close in on him, Johnny’s life unravels, revealing the moral ambiguity and violence that lurk beneath the surface of everyday existence.

At its core, “The Killers” is a meditation on the consequences of violence and the choices we make in the pursuit of power and ambition. Johnny’s descent into a world of crime and corruption exposes the emptiness of a life lived without moral principles, as he confronts the ghosts of his past and grapples with the consequences of his actions. The film’s portrayal of the criminal underworld is both chilling and compelling, offering a stark reminder of the human capacity for cruelty and betrayal.

In addition to its exploration of moral ambiguity, “The Killers” also touches on broader social themes, including the disillusionment and alienation of post-war America. Set against the backdrop of a bleak and desolate landscape, the film reflects the anxieties and uncertainties of a society grappling with the aftermath of war and the erosion of traditional values. Through its portrayal of characters trapped in a cycle of violence and despair, “The Killers” serves as a powerful commentary on the darker aspects of the American dream, exposing the harsh realities that lie beneath the veneer of prosperity and success.

Monday 15 April 2024

Papillion (1973) 9pm 5Action

“Papillon” (1973), directed by Franklin J. Schaffner and based on the autobiographical novel by Henri Charrière, is a riveting and harrowing tale of resilience, friendship, and survival in the face of injustice. Set in the brutal penal colonies of French Guiana, the film follows Henri “Papillon” Charrière, a wrongly convicted petty criminal, as he endures the horrors of imprisonment and embarks on a daring quest for freedom. Through Papillon’s journey, the film explores profound social and political themes, shedding light on the cruelty and corruption inherent in the penal system and the human spirit’s indomitable will to resist oppression.

At its heart, “Papillon” is a searing indictment of institutionalized injustice and the abuse of power by those in authority. The film lays bare the dehumanizing conditions endured by prisoners in the penal colonies, where brutality and exploitation are the norm, and survival often depends on one’s ability to endure suffering and maintain hope. Papillon’s defiance in the face of relentless oppression serves as a potent symbol of resistance against tyranny and a reminder of the enduring power of the human spirit to overcome adversity.

In addition to its exploration of the individual’s struggle against oppression, “Papillon” also touches on broader political themes, including the injustices of colonialism and the plight of marginalized communities. Through its portrayal of the harsh realities faced by prisoners in French Guiana, the film highlights the systemic inequalities and abuses of power that persist in society, prompting viewers to confront uncomfortable truths about the nature of authority and the need for justice and compassion in the face of adversity.

A picture of Birmingham by Benjamin Zephiniah 11pm BBC4

“A Picture of Birmingham” is a compelling documentary where poet Benjamin Zephaniah embarks on a poignant journey back to his birthplace, Birmingham. His mission: to compose a new poem that he will later recite on the streets of the city. During this introspective exploration, Zephaniah revisits significant places, including the approved school he attended as a child. The program offers a glimpse into the vibrant world of this renowned poet and captures the essence of Birmingham through his eyes.

Nowhere Special (2020) 11.15pm BBC2

“Nowhere Special” (2020), directed by Uberto Pasolini, is a tender and emotionally resonant drama that explores themes of love, loss, and the bonds of family. The film follows John, a devoted single father played with heart-wrenching sincerity by James Norton, as he grapples with a terminal illness and prepares his young son, Michael, for life after his passing. With its understated storytelling and poignant performances, “Nowhere Special” offers a moving meditation on the power of parental love and the resilience of the human spirit in the face of adversity.

One of the film’s greatest strengths lies in its intimate portrayal of the father-son relationship at its heart, which serves as the emotional anchor of the story. As John and Michael navigate their final days together, their bond deepens as they confront the inevitability of John’s impending death and cherish the precious moments they have left. Norton delivers a powerhouse performance, capturing the quiet dignity and unwavering devotion of a father determined to provide for his son even in the face of his own mortality.

At its core, “Nowhere Special” is a poignant reminder of the fleeting nature of life and the importance of cherishing the time we have with loved ones. Through its heartfelt storytelling and authentic characters, the film celebrates the profound impact of parental love and the enduring legacy of those we hold dear. “Nowhere Special” is a deeply moving and emotionally resonant film that will leave audiences reflecting on the power of love and the preciousness of every moment shared with those we hold dear.

Tuesday 16 April 2024

Collateral (2004) 10.50pm Film4

“Collateral” (2004), directed by Michael Mann, is a gripping and intense thriller that unfolds over the course of one fateful night in Los Angeles. The film stars Tom Cruise as Vincent, a professional hitman, and Jamie Foxx as Max, a taxi driver unwittingly drawn into Vincent’s deadly mission. As Vincent forces Max to drive him to various targets throughout the city, a tense game of cat and mouse ensues, culminating in a thrilling showdown that tests the limits of morality and survival.

One of the film’s strengths lies in its dynamic performances, with Cruise delivering a chilling portrayal of a cold and calculating killer, while Foxx brings depth and vulnerability to his role as the reluctant hero. The chemistry between the two leads is electric, driving the narrative forward with palpable tension and suspense. Mann’s stylish direction and atmospheric cinematography further heighten the film’s sense of urgency, immersing viewers in the neon-lit streets of night-time L.A.

“Collateral” is more than just a pulse-pounding action thriller; it’s also a thought-provoking exploration of themes such as fate, morality, and the consequences of our choices. As the night wears on and the body count rises, Max is forced to confront his own complicity in Vincent’s crimes, leading to a dramatic reckoning that challenges his sense of right and wrong. With its slick visuals, gripping storytelling, and powerhouse performances, “Collateral” is a standout entry in the genre that keeps audiences on the edge of their seats from start to finish.

Dirty God (2019) 11.15pm BBC2

“Dirty God” (2019), directed by Sacha Polak, is a raw and powerful drama that shines a light on the challenges faced by individuals living with physical disfigurement in contemporary society. The film follows Jade, a young woman scarred by an acid attack, as she struggles to rebuild her life amidst judgment, stigma, and personal turmoil. Through Jade’s journey, “Dirty God” explores important social themes such as beauty standards, self-acceptance, and the impact of trauma on mental health.

One of the film’s strengths lies in its unflinching portrayal of Jade’s experiences, highlighting the pervasive discrimination and objectification faced by individuals with visible differences. As Jade navigates relationships with friends, family, and potential romantic partners, the film sheds light on the complexities of interpersonal dynamics and the ways in which societal attitudes towards physical appearance can shape one’s sense of self-worth. Actress Vicky Knight delivers a poignant and nuanced performance as Jade, capturing the character’s resilience and vulnerability with authenticity and empathy.

“Dirty God” ultimately serves as a poignant reminder of the importance of empathy, compassion, and understanding in our interactions with others. By humanizing Jade’s struggles and celebrating her strength and resilience, the film challenges viewers to confront their own biases and preconceptions about beauty and disability. With its powerful performances and sensitive handling of difficult subject matter, “Dirty God” is a compelling and thought-provoking exploration of identity, acceptance, and the universal desire for connection and belonging.

Wednesday 17 April 2024

Glory (1989) 9pm Film4

“Glory” (1989), directed by Edward Zwick, is a stirring and poignant historical drama that tells the true story of the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, one of the first all-Black regiments to fight for the Union Army during the American Civil War. The film follows the experiences of Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, played by Matthew Broderick, as he leads the regiment into battle against the Confederacy, facing prejudice, discrimination, and adversity along the way. With its powerful performances, gripping battle scenes, and resonant themes of courage, sacrifice, and the fight for equality, “Glory” is a cinematic triumph that leaves a lasting impact on its audience.

One of the film’s greatest strengths is its portrayal of the bonds of brotherhood forged among the soldiers of the 54th, who overcome immense obstacles to prove their valor and bravery on the battlefield. Led by Denzel Washington in an Oscar-winning performance as Private Trip, the soldiers of the 54th defy stereotypes and expectations, demonstrating their patriotism and dedication to the cause of freedom despite facing systemic racism and injustice. The film’s depiction of their struggles and triumphs serves as a powerful testament to the resilience and resilience of the human spirit.

“Glory” is not only a stirring war epic but also a poignant exploration of the ongoing struggle for civil rights and racial equality in America. Through its portrayal of the 54th Massachusetts and their contributions to the Union cause, the film highlights the often-overlooked role of African American soldiers in shaping the course of history and fighting for the principles of freedom and justice. With its timeless message of hope, dignity, and the power of solidarity, “Glory” remains a cinematic masterpiece that continues to inspire and educate audiences around the world.

Shoulder to Shoulder Rembered 10pm BBC4

“Shoulder to Shoulder” is a British television drama series that aired in 1974. It consists of six episodes, each lasting around an hour, and was produced by Verity Lambert for the BBC. The series dramatizes the history of the women’s suffrage movement in Britain, focusing on the lives and struggles of key figures involved in the fight for women’s rights.

The title “Shoulder to Shoulder” is derived from a line in the suffragette anthem “The March of the Women” by Ethel Smyth. The series explores the challenges faced by suffragettes as they campaigned for the right to vote, including social ostracism, police brutality, and imprisonment. It also delves into the internal conflicts within the movement, such as the divide between the militant suffragettes, who advocated for direct action, and the more moderate suffragists, who favored peaceful protest and lobbying.

The cast of “Shoulder to Shoulder” includes notable British actresses such as Sian Phillips, Patricia Quinn, and Angela Down, who portray real-life suffragettes like Emmeline Pankhurst, Christabel Pankhurst, and Emily Davison, respectively. The series received critical acclaim for its accurate portrayal of historical events and its exploration of the personal sacrifices made by women in the pursuit of equality. “Shoulder to Shoulder” remains a landmark production in the representation of women’s history on television, shedding light on a pivotal moment in the struggle for gender equality.

Here Sian Phillips, Waris Hussein and Moira Armstrong look back at the program. It’s followed by several episodes.

Monos (2019) 1.5am C4

“Monos” (2019), directed by Alejandro Landes, is a visually stunning and emotionally intense film that plunges viewers into the heart of the Colombian wilderness, where a group of teenage guerrilla soldiers struggles to maintain order and control in the midst of chaos. The film explores themes of power, identity, and the brutality of war as the young soldiers grapple with their conflicting desires for autonomy and belonging. With its breathtaking cinematography, immersive sound design, and powerful performances, “Monos” is a haunting and thought-provoking cinematic experience that lingers in the mind long after the credits roll.

One of the film’s greatest strengths lies in its ability to create a sense of claustrophobia and tension as the characters navigate the treacherous terrain of both the physical landscape and their own psyches. The remote mountaintop setting serves as a metaphor for the isolation and alienation experienced by the soldiers, who are cut off from the outside world and forced to confront their own inner demons. As the group descends into violence and madness, “Monos” becomes a harrowing meditation on the destructive power of unchecked authority and the human capacity for cruelty.

At its core, “Monos” is a visceral and unflinching exploration of the human condition, revealing the complexities of human nature and the moral ambiguity of war. Through its depiction of the young soldiers’ struggles for power and control, the film raises important questions about the nature of violence, loyalty, and the search for meaning in a world ravaged by conflict. With its arresting imagery and haunting atmosphere, “Monos” is a cinematic tour de force that demands to be seen and savoured.

Thursday 18 April 2024

The Gorgon (1964) 11.30pm Legend

“The Gorgon” (1964), directed by Terence Fisher, is a classic Hammer Horror film that brings Greek mythology to life in a chilling tale of mystery and terror. Set in a small European village plagued by a series of gruesome murders, the film follows a determined doctor and a sceptical investigator as they unravel the sinister secrets behind the killings. With its gothic atmosphere, eerie cinematography, and iconic creature design, “The Gorgon” delivers plenty of thrills and scares for fans of classic horror cinema.

One of the film’s standout features is its imaginative reimagining of the ancient myth of the Gorgon, a monstrous creature with the power to turn its victims to stone. By transporting this legendary figure to a gothic setting reminiscent of 19th-century Europe, “The Gorgon” creates a sense of dread and unease that permeates every frame. The film’s slow-building tension and suspenseful pacing keep viewers on the edge of their seats, while its shocking twists and turns keep them guessing until the very end.

In addition to its supernatural elements, “The Gorgon” also explores deeper themes of guilt, redemption, and the consequences of past sins. As the characters confront their own inner demons and grapple with the horrors of the past, the film delves into the darker aspects of human nature and the ways in which the sins of the past can come back to haunt the present. With its atmospheric setting, memorable creature design, and compelling storytelling, “The Gorgon” remains a timeless classic of the horror genre that continues to chill and thrill audiences to this day.

and finally, Friday 19 April 2024

Far From The Madding Crowd (1967) 2.55pm Film4

“Far From The Madding Crowd” (1967), directed by John Schlesinger, is a lush and sweeping adaptation of Thomas Hardy’s classic novel that transports viewers to the picturesque English countryside of the Victorian era. The film follows the independent and headstrong Bathsheba Everdene, played with grace and charisma by Julie Christie, as she navigates the complexities of love and relationships while managing her late uncle’s farm. Against the backdrop of rural life, Bathsheba finds herself torn between three very different suitors: the steadfast shepherd Gabriel Oak, the dashing soldier Sergeant Troy, and the wealthy landowner William Boldwood.

One of the film’s greatest strengths lies in its rich character development and evocative portrayal of rural England, which immerses viewers in the beauty and brutality of country life. From the sweeping vistas of the countryside to the intimate moments shared between characters, “Far From The Madding Crowd” captures the timeless allure of Hardy’s novel with breathtaking cinematography and a stirring musical score. Julie Christie delivers a standout performance as Bathsheba, infusing the character with both strength and vulnerability as she grapples with matters of the heart.

“Far From The Madding Crowd” is a timeless tale of love, desire, and the pursuit of independence in a society bound by tradition and expectation. As Bathsheba navigates the complexities of romance and duty, the film explores themes of gender roles, social class, and the constraints of Victorian society with depth and nuance. With its compelling storytelling, exquisite performances, and sumptuous visuals, “Far From The Madding Crowd” remains a captivating and poignant adaptation that continues to enchant audiences with its timeless tale of passion and perseverance.

Dark Waters (2020) 11.05pm BBC2

“Dark Waters” (2020), directed by Todd Haynes, is a gripping and timely legal thriller that exposes the shocking truth behind corporate greed and environmental pollution. Inspired by true events, the film follows corporate defence attorney Rob Bilott, portrayed with gravitas by Mark Ruffalo, as he uncovers evidence of toxic contamination in a small town’s water supply linked to a powerful chemical corporation. As Bilott delves deeper into the case, he risks everything to hold the company accountable for its crimes and seek justice for the affected community.

One of the film’s greatest strengths is its unflinching portrayal of the human cost of environmental pollution and the devastating impact it has on the lives of ordinary people. Through its compelling narrative and powerful performances, “Dark Waters” sheds light on the systemic failures that allow corporate interests to take precedence over public health and safety. Ruffalo delivers a riveting performance as Bilott, capturing the character’s determination and moral integrity as he confronts powerful adversaries and battles against seemingly insurmountable odds.

“Dark Waters” is a stirring call to action that highlights the importance of holding corporations accountable for their actions and advocating for environmental justice. With its gripping storyline, nuanced character development, and thought-provoking themes, the film serves as a potent reminder of the urgent need to protect our planet and fight against the forces of greed and corruption. “Dark Waters” is not only a compelling legal drama but also a powerful testament to the resilience of the human spirit in the face of adversity.

Picture credits

Sweet Charity
By IMDb, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=28677293
Hombre (1967)
Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=8055850
Spartacus (1960)
By Reynold Brown – MoviePoster, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=25030150
The Killers (1964)
By Universal Pictures – https://vintage45.files.wordpress.com/2013/11/the-killers-1964.jpg, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=97505639
Papillon (1973)
By IMPawards, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=11841885
Nowhere Special (2020)
By https://www.cinematerial.com/movies/nowhere-special-i11286640/info, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=65296426
Collateral (2004)
By May be found at the following website: IngyenMozifilmek.net, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2610432
Dirty God (2019)
By the production company – https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7334342, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=61286365
Glory (1989)
By TriStar Pictures – Impawards, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=13532520
Monos (2019)
By Studio and or Graphic Artist – Can be obtained from film’s distributor., Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=61849730
The Gorgon (1964)
By Columbia Pictures – Britposters.com, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=14322591
Far From The Madding Crowd (1967)
The poster art copyright is believed to belong to StudioCanal, understood to be the filmmakers current copyright holder or the graphic artist – http://www.screenonline.org.uk/tours/marketing/maddingcrowd.html, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=36397062
Dark Waters (2020)
By Studio and or Graphic Artist – Can be obtained from film’s distributor., Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=61813314Nir
Nirvana
By P.B. Rage from USA – More Kurt — too rad, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1314918
Benjamin Zephiniah
By Edwardx – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=74944196

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Lisa Frankenstein (2024): A Promising Blend That Falls Flat

348 words, 2 minutes read time.

“Lisa Frankenstein,” directed by Zelda Williams and written by Diablo Cody, is a film that attempts to blend the nostalgia of 80s teen horror with the quirkiness of a zombie romcom. However, despite its promising premise and a talented cast, the film struggles to find its footing. Critics have noted that the movie falls flat, lacking the boldness in script and direction necessary to make its mark in the genre.

The film’s erratic pacing and inconsistent character development leave viewers craving the depth and magic that its intriguing concept promises. While it aims to pay homage to the 80s, it does so with a heavy hand, resulting in a pastiche that feels more like a missed opportunity than a clever reinvention.

“Lisa Frankenstein” also suffers from unresolved storylines, leaving viewers questioning the backstory and motivations of the protagonist, Lisa Swallows, portrayed by Kathryn Newton. The film introduces intriguing plot points but fails to explore them fully, leaving a sense of incompleteness.

The cast deserved a better script. Lisa, is played well, and “The Creature,” portrayed by Cole Sprouse gives a convincing turn. Liza Soberano delivers a memorable performance as Taffy, Lisa’s stepsister. Her portrayal of a vacant cheerleader brings a touch of humor to the film, providing some much-needed levity. Similarly, Joe Chrest as Dale, Lisa’s father, amuses with his portrayal of a detached parent, almost ghost-like in his presence, which adds an interesting dynamic to the family setting.The performances of Soberano and Chrest offer moments of comedy that shine through the film’s darker themes.

Another plus point is the soundtrack of “Lisa Frankenstein” which captures the essence of the era with a selection of popular hits and original compositions. The music plays a pivotal role in the film, underscoring key moments and adding a layer of emotional depth that the narrative often lacks. Notable songs include “The Promise” by When in Rome (1984) and “Can’t Fight This Feeling” (1987 in the UK) by REO Speedwagon, covered by JoJo, which play during significant scenes, enhancing the storytelling.

Reviewd by Pat Harrington

Picture Credit: By http://www.impawards.com/2024/lisa_frankenstein_ver2.html, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=75064717

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