Posts Tagged streaming

Culture Vulture 23rd–29th May 2026

A soaring vulture with outstretched wings against a blue sky, accompanied by bold text reading 'CULTURE VULTURE' and a graphic promoting 'COUNTER CULTURE' event from May 23-29, 2026.

Welcome to Culture Vulture, Counter Culture’s weekly wander through television, cinema and streaming from an alternative standpoint. We’ve picked out the most interesting things on this week’s screens — not the noisiest, just the ones worth your time. Stories stick with us in all sorts of ways — in what we remember, what we value, and what unsettles us.

This week carries a curious emotional rhythm. There is glamour and melancholy in equal measure. Music dominates one end of the schedule, from Queen’s operatic ambition to BBC Four’s superb late-night jazz session, while drama and documentary return repeatedly to questions of reputation, reinvention and the stories built around public lives. Marilyn Monroe, Shirley MacLaine, Cher and John Lennon all appear, each reframed through the lens of memory and myth.

Three highlights stand out. 🌟 My Favourite Cake brings warmth and quiet rebellion to modern Iranian cinema. 🌟 Dear England continues its examination of football and national psychology with rare intelligence. And 🌟 Jazz Night on BBC Four promises a rich late-night celebration of musical brilliance and cultural memory.

Selection and commentary is by Pat Harrington. Longer reviews of selected titles may also be available on the Counter Culture website.

Saturday 23rd May 2026

Funny Face (1957) BBC Two, 10:35am

Some films endure for their influence, others simply because people adore them. Funny Face belongs firmly to the second category. Stanley Donen’s musical is light on its feet and unashamedly romantic, but beneath the elegance sits something rather more interesting than a simple fashion fairytale. Audrey Hepburn’s Jo Stockton begins as an intellectual working in a Greenwich Village bookshop before being swept into the world of Paris fashion by Fred Astaire’s photographer Dick Avery.

The premise is knowingly fanciful. Nobody mistakes Funny Face for realism. Yet part of its pleasure comes from how openly artificial it is. Paris here is less a city than a state of mind. Cafés, boulevards and couture salons exist in a carefully arranged dreamscape where beauty is heightened and coincidence seems entirely reasonable.

Audrey Hepburn remains the film’s gravitational centre. There is always intelligence in her performances, even when the material threatens to reduce her to elegance alone. Jo is not merely decorative. She resists. She questions. She remains slightly amused by the absurd machinery surrounding her. Hepburn understood that charm is most effective when mixed with wit.

Fred Astaire, meanwhile, brings experience and ease. By this stage his dancing possessed a kind of deceptive simplicity. He never appeared to be showing off. He glided. That lightness suits Funny Face perfectly. The partnership between Astaire and Hepburn should not work on paper, yet somehow it does.

The musical numbers retain their power to delight. Bonjour Paris and Think Pink remain deliciously stylised creations, but perhaps the most memorable moments are quieter. Hepburn dancing in a smoky Parisian cellar carries an energy that feels spontaneous rather than choreographed, a brief eruption of freedom amid the orchestrated glamour.

What lingers, though, is the film’s gentle tension between thought and image. Jo is drawn towards philosophy and seriousness while the fashion world insists on surfaces. The film does not entirely resolve that argument. Perhaps that is why it still feels alive. Beneath the satin and photography lies a small debate about authenticity that modern culture, obsessed with presentation and self-curation, has hardly settled.

Queen Night Sky Arts, from 6:00pm

Sky Arts devotes the evening to Queen, beginning with Queen and I at the Opera and continuing through Queen Live at the Rainbow (7:00pm), Queen Greatest Video Hits 1 (8:45pm), Queen Greatest Video Hits 2 (10:00pm) and concluding with Queen: From Rags to Rhapsody (11:40pm). Queen’s journey from ambitious outsiders to global institution remains one of popular music’s great stories — part theatre, part rebellion and entirely their own.

My Favourite Cake (2024) 🌟BBC Four, 9:00pm

Some films arrive carrying noise and expectation. Others enter quietly and ask only for patience. My Favourite Cake belongs to the second category. This Iranian drama follows Mahin, an elderly widow who decides, against social convention and emotional caution alike, to reclaim companionship and pleasure. It is a modest story on the surface, but modesty should never be mistaken for insignificance.

The film understands solitude with unusual precision. Loneliness here is not melodramatic. It exists in routines, silences and rooms that feel slightly too large for one person. Mahin’s life has settled into habit, and habit has become a kind of invisible prison.

What gives the film its power is its refusal to sentimentalise ageing. Cinema often treats older characters as repositories of wisdom or comedy. My Favourite Cake grants Mahin something rarer — desire, contradiction and emotional agency. She is neither saint nor symbol.

The performances carry remarkable delicacy. There is no grandstanding, no theatrical pleading for audience sympathy. Instead, the actors allow emotion to emerge through hesitation and small gestures. A conversation, a glance, a shared meal — these become charged with meaning.

The social atmosphere surrounding the story is impossible to ignore. Without delivering speeches or slogans, the film reveals lives shaped by rules and expectations that limit intimacy and spontaneity. Yet the film resists despair. Its quiet rebellion lies precisely in refusing resignation.

Visually, the directors favour restraint. Domestic interiors and ordinary settings become spaces of emotional revelation rather than decorative backdrops. The camera observes patiently, giving scenes room to breathe.

What remains afterwards is tenderness. Not sentimental tenderness, but something more mature and harder won. My Favourite Cake reminds us that emotional hunger does not retire with age and that companionship remains a human need rather than a youthful luxury. It is a gentle film, though not a weak one.

Cher at the BBC / Cher Meets Rylan BBC Two, from 9:00pm

Cher has always understood reinvention better than most performers. These programmes offer archive celebration and present-day conversation, reminding us that longevity in entertainment rarely comes through caution. Cher survived fashions by refusing to become trapped by them.

Sunday 24th May 2026

Some Like It Hot (1959) BBC Two, 2:15pm

Billy Wilder’s comedy has the dangerous quality shared by truly great entertainments: it looks effortless. Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis play musicians fleeing gangsters by disguising themselves as women and joining an all-female band led by Marilyn Monroe’s Sugar Kane. The premise is absurd, but Wilder treats absurdity with such confidence that disbelief becomes irrelevant.

The film moves with astonishing precision. Wilder and co-writer I.A.L. Diamond constructed dialogue like clockwork. Jokes arrive exactly when needed and never overstay their welcome. Yet timing alone does not explain why the film continues to charm.

Jack Lemmon gives perhaps the most joyous performance of his career. His transformation from reluctant impostor to gleeful participant in the deception carries a comic abandon that still feels fresh. Lemmon’s genius lay in allowing panic and delight to coexist.

Tony Curtis provides an ideal counterbalance, smoother and more calculating, though just as vulnerable beneath the swagger. Together they form one of cinema’s great comic pairings.

And then there is Marilyn Monroe. Too often discussed as symbol before performer, Monroe here reminds us how skilled she was. Sugar Kane is funny, wistful and emotionally exposed. Monroe gives her softness without reducing her to fragility.

The film’s treatment of gender and identity feels surprisingly modern. Wilder never turns disguise into cruelty. Instead, masquerade becomes liberation, however temporary. Characters discover aspects of themselves precisely through performance.

By the time that famous closing line arrives — one of the greatest endings in film history — Some Like It Hot has become more than a gangster comedy. It is a celebration of human absurdity and tolerance wrapped in impeccable comic machinery.

Monday 25th May 2026Bank Holiday Monday

High Noon (1952) 5Action, 1:55pm

Westerns often concern themselves with myth. The frontier, the lone rider, the moral certainty supposedly forged beneath endless skies. High Noon dismantles those assumptions with remarkable economy. Fred Zinnemann’s film unfolds almost in real time as Marshal Will Kane, played with weary authority by Gary Cooper, waits for the arrival of a vengeful outlaw while the town he once protected quietly abandons him.

The film’s structure remains startlingly effective. There is little spectacle and no appetite for romantic distraction. Instead, tension grows through clocks, empty streets and conversations that reveal fear disguised as pragmatism. Kane moves from house to house seeking support and discovers that loyalty evaporates when danger becomes personal.

Gary Cooper’s performance is central to the film’s enduring power. His Kane is no swaggering gunslinger intoxicated by violence. He is ageing, tired and uncertain, yet propelled by an inner obligation he cannot comfortably abandon. Cooper plays him as a man trapped not only by circumstance but by his own conscience.

Much has been written about the film’s political dimension, and rightly so. Screenwriter Carl Foreman was working under the shadow of anti-communist blacklisting, and the atmosphere of cowardice and compromise carries unmistakable contemporary resonance. Communities under pressure, the temptation to stay silent, the fear of standing apart — these concerns extend well beyond the western genre.

The supporting cast deepen that moral landscape. Grace Kelly’s pacifist bride represents one response to violence, while others cloak self-interest in respectable language. Nobody is entirely villainous, which makes their retreat all the more uncomfortable to watch.

Visually, High Noon strips the western of romantic excess. Streets appear exposed rather than heroic. Zinnemann’s direction resists grandeur, grounding the story in dust, heat and social unease. Even the famous ballad, Do Not Forsake Me, Oh My Darlin’, feels less celebratory than mournful.

The result is a western that continues to unsettle because it asks an awkward question that societies rarely enjoy confronting: what happens when principle becomes inconvenient? More than seventy years later, High Noon remains lean, tense and morally provocative.

Groundhog Day (1993) 🌟Film4, 9:00pm

Some comedies make us laugh and fade into affectionate memory. Others linger because they smuggle larger questions into apparently playful premises. Groundhog Day belongs firmly to the latter group. Harold Ramis’s film follows Bill Murray’s cynical weatherman Phil Connors, trapped in an endlessly repeating day in the small town of Punxsutawney.

The brilliance of the premise lies in its deceptive simplicity. What initially appears to be comic inconvenience gradually becomes existential inquiry. Phil wakes each morning to Sonny and Cher’s I Got You Babe, condemned to repetition without explanation or escape.

Bill Murray’s performance is the film’s great balancing act. He had already perfected the sardonic persona by this stage, but Groundhog Day allows him to move beyond irony. Phil begins as arrogant and casually contemptuous, a man protected by superiority and emotional detachment. Murray never softens these traits too quickly, which makes the character’s eventual transformation feel earned rather than sentimental.

The screenplay, by Ramis and Danny Rubin, understands that immortality without purpose becomes torment. Phil experiments with pleasure, manipulation and recklessness before recognising that consequence-free existence offers surprisingly little fulfilment. The film’s comedy emerges not merely from repetition but from spiritual frustration.

There is also a distinctly philosophical dimension beneath the humour. Critics and theologians alike have interpreted the film through religious and ethical traditions — Buddhist cycles, moral rebirth, even secular humanism. Remarkably, the film supports these readings without becoming didactic.

And then there is the town itself. Punxsutawney could easily have become caricature, yet the film treats it with affection. The supposedly dull environment that Phil initially despises gradually reveals unexpected richness. People he dismissed as tedious become individuals worthy of attention.

What makes Groundhog Day endure is its refusal to offer easy revelation. Personal growth here is slow and repetitive, marked by failure as much as insight. That honesty gives the comedy unusual depth. Beneath its fantasy mechanism lies a quietly radical suggestion: happiness may depend less upon escape than upon learning how to inhabit the ordinary with greater generosity.

Starship Troopers (1997) Legend, 9:00pm

Few films have travelled a stranger critical journey than Paul Verhoeven’s Starship Troopers. On release it was frequently dismissed as loud science-fiction spectacle, accused of glorifying precisely the militarism it portrayed. Time, however, has been kind to Verhoeven’s savage sense of irony.

Adapted loosely from Robert Heinlein’s novel, the film follows attractive young recruits fighting an interstellar war against giant alien insects. On the surface, it resembles exuberant pulp entertainment. Battles are chaotic, uniforms immaculate and heroics plentiful.

Yet Verhoeven, who grew up in Nazi-occupied Holland, rarely approached authority without suspicion. The film’s stylised newsreels, patriotic slogans and choreographed certainty deliberately echo propaganda aesthetics. Citizenship, service and sacrifice become commodities sold through spectacle.

The cast contribute to that satire by embracing sincerity rather than parody. Casper Van Dien and Denise Richards inhabit their roles with straight-faced conviction, allowing the absurdity of the surrounding ideology to speak for itself.

Visually, the film remains impressive. Its effects retain energy and scale, while Verhoeven stages combat not as triumphant adventure but as industrial slaughter. Bodies are expendable, rhetoric plentiful.

What unsettles is how familiar some of the film now feels. Its media manipulation and emotional simplifications appear less exaggerated than they once did. Verhoeven understood how societies can package conflict as entertainment.

That combination of excitement and critique explains why Starship Troopers continues to attract reassessment. It is both thrilling and suspicious of thrill itself — a blockbuster with teeth.

M*A*S*H* (1970) Great TV, 9:00pm

Before the long-running television series softened the material into something gentler, Robert Altman’s MASH* arrived carrying sharper edges. Set during the Korean War but unmistakably shaped by the Vietnam era, the film follows military surgeons using irreverence and chaos as defence mechanisms against institutional absurdity and human suffering.

Altman’s direction refuses conventional order. Dialogue overlaps, scenes spill into one another and authority appears permanently destabilised. Rather than heroic wartime drama, the film presents organised confusion.

Donald Sutherland and Elliott Gould lead with sly intelligence, their doctors mocking bureaucracy while remaining grimly competent at their work. Their humour is frequently juvenile and occasionally uncomfortable, yet Altman refuses to tidy their contradictions.

The operating theatre sequences provide a sobering counterpoint. Blood and injury intrude abruptly upon comedy, reminding audiences that humour here functions partly as survival strategy.

The film’s anti-authoritarian spirit resonated powerfully in 1970 and still retains force today. Institutions promising order often appear ridiculous under scrutiny, and MASH* understands that mockery can become a form of resistance.

Not every aspect has aged gracefully. Some gender politics now feel jarring, and viewers may debate whether satire excuses certain excesses. Yet perhaps that friction forms part of the film’s historical honesty.

What remains undeniable is Altman’s influence. MASH* helped redefine American cinema, opening space for looser storytelling and more sceptical visions of power.

Dear England BBC One, 9:00pm – Episode 2 of 4

James Graham’s drama continues its thoughtful exploration of leadership, masculinity and national expectation surrounding England football. Less interested in sporting triumph than psychological burden, Dear England treats football as a stage upon which wider anxieties are performed.

Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret (2023) BBC Two, 10:00pm

Judy Blume adaptations have long been approached with caution, perhaps because her writing occupies a space rarely treated with honesty — the emotional turbulence of adolescence. Kelly Fremon Craig’s adaptation understands that legacy and handles it with admirable sensitivity.

The film follows Margaret, caught between childhood and adolescence while negotiating religion, friendship and bodily change. These experiences are familiar to millions, yet cinema often approaches them with embarrassment or exaggeration.

Abby Ryder Fortson gives a wonderfully natural performance. Margaret feels recognisably awkward and curious rather than manufactured for sentiment. Rachel McAdams, meanwhile, brings warmth and complexity to Margaret’s mother.

What distinguishes the film is its refusal to patronise young experience. Embarrassment, longing and uncertainty are treated seriously without becoming melodramatic.

The religious dimension adds further richness. Margaret’s search for identity extends beyond adolescence into questions of belonging and inherited belief.

Visually and emotionally, the film favours intimacy over spectacle. Domestic spaces feel lived-in and relationships properly complicated.

Gentle without being slight, Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret succeeds because it remembers what adulthood often forgets: growing up feels enormous when you are living through it.

Murder of the Essex Boys: Blood and Betrayal Channel 4, 10:00pm & 11:00pm

Channel 4 revisits one of Britain’s most notorious criminal cases in this two-part documentary examining gangland violence, contested narratives and the enduring fascination surrounding the Essex murders.

Tuesday 26th May 2026

Who Do You Think You Are? BBC One, 9:00pm – featuring Zoe Ball

The genealogy favourite returns as Zoe Ball traces family roots and forgotten histories, continuing a format that connects personal stories with wider social memory.

The Unstoppable Shirley MacLaine Sky Arts, 9:00pm

A portrait of one of Hollywood’s most distinctive performers, whose career embraced musical theatre, drama, comedy and unapologetic individuality.

World War II with Tom Hanks Sky History, 9:00pm

History revisited through testimony, archive and contemporary interpretation.

Prey (2022) Film4, 9:00pm (2022)

Franchises often suffer from exhaustion. The machinery grows louder while imagination grows smaller, until sequels begin to resemble contractual obligations rather than creative ventures. That is partly why Prey arrived as such an agreeable surprise. Instead of attempting to outdo its predecessors through sheer volume, director Dan Trachtenberg stripped the Predator formula back to essentials and rediscovered the tension that made the original memorable.

The film relocates the action to eighteenth-century North America and follows Naru, a young Comanche hunter determined to prove herself within a culture whose expectations do not always accommodate her ambitions. It is a simple premise, but simplicity can be liberating. The film understands that suspense depends less upon complexity than clarity.

Amber Midthunder gives a performance that anchors the entire enterprise. Naru is resourceful without becoming implausibly invincible and vulnerable without being reduced to helplessness. Midthunder plays her with intelligence and controlled determination, avoiding the kind of empty heroics that often flatten contemporary action cinema.

The setting matters enormously. Forests, rivers and open terrain are not decorative backdrops but active elements shaping the drama. The landscape feels inhabited and historically grounded, lending the story texture rarely found in franchise filmmaking. There is genuine pleasure in watching a film that allows environment and atmosphere to carry dramatic weight.

The action sequences are staged with admirable restraint. Trachtenberg avoids frantic editing and allows combat to unfold spatially, making violence legible rather than chaotic. The predator itself remains threatening because the film resists overexposure. Suspense survives when mystery survives.

There is also an intriguing thematic undercurrent surrounding survival and perception. Naru succeeds not through brute force but observation and adaptability. The film quietly questions assumptions about strength and authority without turning character development into a lecture.

What ultimately distinguishes Prey is its confidence in fundamentals. Character, setting and suspense take precedence over mythology and spectacle. For a long-running series, that feels almost radical. Prey may not reinvent science fiction, but it does something increasingly rare — it remembers how to tell a lean, satisfying story.

Reframed: Marilyn Monroe BBC Four, from 10:00pm
Continuing at 10:45pm, 11:25pm and 12:10am.

Marilyn Monroe has spent decades imprisoned inside her own mythology. This multi-part study attempts to look beyond the familiar iconography and reconsider the woman, performer and cultural phenomenon concealed beneath the image.

Wednesday 27th May 2026

Richard Madeley Inside the World’s Mega Prisons Channel 5, 9:00pm

Richard Madeley is granted rare access to one of the world’s largest and most tightly controlled prison complexes, a place built on the premise that overwhelming scale and absolute order can succeed where conventional systems have failed. What he finds is less a “facility” than a sealed world with its own rhythms, rules and tensions—an environment designed to contain the most dangerous offenders under a regime that prizes control above all else.

The programme follows Madeley as he moves through the layers of security and routine that define life inside. His calm, almost conversational style sits against a backdrop of stark conditions: vast cell blocks, relentless surveillance, and a daily existence stripped down to the bare mechanics of containment. The documentary doesn’t sensationalise, but it doesn’t soften anything either. It lets the place speak for itself.

What emerges is a portrait of a system built to be unyielding. Rehabilitation is not the headline here; the focus is on security, deterrence and the political logic that produced a prison on this scale. Madeley asks the obvious questions—about effectiveness, about humanity, about what such an institution says about the society that relies on it—but the answers are rarely straightforward. The result is a quietly unsettling hour of television, not because it shouts, but because it shows you a world most people will never see and leaves you to sit with the implications.

Murder on the Victorian Railway BBC Four, 9:00pm

History and true crime intersect in this reconstruction of one of Victorian Britain’s most notorious railway murders, a reminder that fascination with criminal spectacle is hardly a modern invention.

East Is East (1999) Film4, 9:00pm

There are films that wear their politics loudly and others that smuggle serious ideas through humour and domestic observation. East Is East belongs firmly to the second category. Damien O’Donnell’s adaptation of Ayub Khan-Din’s play examines family life within a British-Pakistani household in Salford during the early 1970s, balancing comedy and conflict with remarkable assurance.

At the centre stands George Khan, played magnificently by Om Puri. George is authoritarian, proud and often infuriating, determined to preserve cultural traditions while raising children increasingly shaped by British society. Lesser films would flatten him into caricature or villainy. East Is East refuses such simplicity.

Om Puri’s performance is extraordinary precisely because it embraces contradiction. George can be frightening and stubborn, yet also vulnerable and painfully human. Puri allows us to see a man struggling against forces he neither fully understands nor knows how to control.

Around him, the younger cast create a vivid sense of sibling life — teasing, quarrelling and forging identities in the uneasy space between parental expectation and personal desire. Their humour feels authentic rather than scripted for effect.

The film’s comedy is one of its great strengths. Domestic arguments, awkward courtship and generational misunderstandings provide genuine laughter. Yet the humour never conceals the emotional stakes. Behind the jokes lie questions about belonging, assimilation and the cost of divided identity.

The early 1970s setting matters too. Britain here appears restless and unsettled, wrestling with immigration, class and social change. The film never delivers political speeches, but politics inhabits the household nonetheless.

What makes East Is East endure is its generosity. Nobody emerges entirely right or entirely wrong. Families rarely operate according to ideological purity. They are messier, more contradictory and more emotionally entangled than public debates allow. Funny, bruising and compassionate, East Is East remains one of British cinema’s most perceptive portraits of cultural negotiation.

Dark Waters (2020) BBC Two, 11:30pm

American cinema has produced a distinguished tradition of investigative dramas exposing corporate and institutional wrongdoing, and Todd Haynes’s Dark Waters belongs honourably within that lineage. Based on true events, it follows lawyer Robert Bilott as he uncovers environmental contamination linked to chemical giant DuPont.

Mark Ruffalo gives a performance built upon persistence rather than charisma. Bilott is not presented as cinematic crusader or rhetorical genius. He appears cautious, often uncomfortable and increasingly burdened by the scale of what he uncovers. Ruffalo wisely avoids glamour.

The film’s strength lies in patience. Modern thrillers frequently confuse urgency with speed, but Dark Waters understands that investigation is usually painstaking work involving paperwork, persistence and frustration. Haynes embraces that procedural reality.

Anne Hathaway and Tim Robbins provide strong support, though the film’s emotional centre remains Bilott’s slow recognition of institutional indifference. The enemy here is not melodramatic evil but bureaucracy insulated by wealth and influence.

Haynes directs with unusual restraint. Offices, meeting rooms and industrial landscapes appear drained of glamour, reflecting a world where environmental catastrophe hides behind routine administration.

There is, inevitably, political resonance. Dark Waters speaks not only about pollution but about systems capable of dispersing responsibility until accountability becomes elusive. That theme feels painfully contemporary.

The result is compelling precisely because it resists sensationalism. Quietly angry and morally serious, Dark Waters reminds us that public health battles are often fought far from headlines and that persistence can sometimes become its own form of courage.

Thursday 28th May 2026

Local Hero (1983) Film4, 4:30pm

Few British films possess the gentle confidence of Bill Forsyth’s Local Hero. On paper, the story sounds almost slight. An American oil executive arrives in a Scottish coastal village intending to purchase the land for industrial development, only to encounter resistance, eccentricity and unexpected attachment. Yet Forsyth transforms this modest premise into something quietly profound.

The film benefits enormously from Peter Riegert’s understated central performance. His Mac is initially efficient and emotionally detached, a corporate emissary accustomed to viewing landscapes in transactional terms. Riegert wisely avoids broad transformation. Change arrives gradually.

Around him, the village becomes one of cinema’s great communities — humorous, eccentric and stubbornly individual without collapsing into caricature. Forsyth observes people with affection rather than sentimentality.

The Scottish landscape exerts its own power. Sweeping coastlines and changing skies are not presented merely as picturesque scenery but as emotional terrain. The land itself acquires value beyond economics.

Mark Knopfler’s score deserves special mention. Melancholy and lyrical, it drifts through the film like memory. Few soundtracks have fused so naturally with atmosphere.

Beneath the humour lies an understated meditation on modernity and belonging. Development promises prosperity, yet the film quietly asks what may be lost when value becomes purely financial.

The ending remains one of British cinema’s most affecting conclusions, marked not by dramatic confrontation but by longing and absence. Local Hero leaves viewers with that rare sensation of having visited somewhere emotionally real.

Classic Movies: The Story of Mulholland Drive Sky Arts, 8:00pm

Episode four of this documentary strand examines the making and afterlife of David Lynch’s modern classic.

A Life in 10 Pictures BBC Two, 9:00pm – Episode 1 of 4

Lives explored through defining photographs and the stories surrounding them.

Mulholland Drive (2001) Sky Arts, 9:00pm

David Lynch has always divided audiences between those eager to solve his work and those willing simply to inhabit it. Mulholland Drive rewards the second approach. What began life as an abandoned television pilot became one of the century’s most mesmerising cinematic puzzles.

Naomi Watts delivers a performance of astonishing elasticity, shifting between innocence, ambition and despair with extraordinary precision. Laura Harring complements her beautifully, her mysterious amnesiac radiating glamour and unease.

Hollywood itself becomes Lynch’s dreamscape. Beneath the palm trees and auditions lies a world shaped by fantasy, compromise and fractured identity. Lynch approaches Los Angeles not realistically but psychologically.

The film’s structure refuses easy explanation. Dreams bleed into reality, identities blur and narrative certainty collapses. Some viewers resist this. Others surrender and discover something hypnotic.

Lynch’s command of mood remains unrivalled. Sound design, lighting and rhythm generate unease long before anything overtly threatening occurs. Few directors understand dread so intuitively.

There are echoes of classic noir throughout — doomed desire, mystery and performance — yet Mulholland Drive transforms those influences into something more elusive and contemporary.

Its lasting fascination lies precisely in ambiguity. Rather than offering tidy meaning, the film invites participation. Like memory itself, it remains unstable, haunting and impossible to entirely pin down.

One to One: John and Yoko Sky Documentaries, 9:00pm

A documentary revisiting the partnership, activism and cultural influence of John Lennon and Yoko Ono during a turbulent period of public and private life.

Friday 29th May 2026

Charade (1963) Film4, 2:50pm

If Funny Face offered Audrey Hepburn wrapped in musical sophistication, Charade presents her in altogether more mischievous territory. Directed by Stanley Donen and co-starring Cary Grant, the film mixes romance, mystery and comic suspense with effortless style.

Hepburn plays Regina Lampert, suddenly entangled in murder, missing money and uncertain loyalties after her husband’s death. Cary Grant circles the narrative with his customary elegance, though part of the pleasure comes from never entirely trusting him.

Donen stages the intrigue with remarkable lightness. Suspense never overwhelms wit and comedy never dissolves tension. The tone remains beautifully balanced.

Paris again provides glamorous backdrop, though here the city carries danger alongside romance. Cafés and streets feel seductive but uncertain.

The chemistry between Hepburn and Grant remains irresistible. Their exchanges sparkle with flirtation and comic timing.

Often described as “the best Hitchcock film Hitchcock never made,” Charade earns the comparison while retaining its own personality — playful, stylish and endlessly watchable.

Erin Brockovich (2000) Film4, 9:00pm

There are films built around extraordinary people and films built around systems. Steven Soderbergh’s Erin Brockovich manages to be both. Based on a true story, it follows an unemployed single mother who stumbles into legal work and gradually uncovers environmental contamination linked to corporate negligence. The material could easily have collapsed into worthy melodrama or courtroom cliché. Instead, the film finds energy in personality and moral persistence.

Julia Roberts gives what remains one of her defining performances. Erin is introduced wearing confidence like armour — outspoken, abrasive and unwilling to perform respectability for those who have already dismissed her. Roberts understands that the character’s strength lies not in saintliness but in refusal. Erin is frequently impatient, sometimes reckless and entirely uninterested in becoming palatable.

The film wisely avoids presenting intelligence in narrow terms. Erin possesses no legal training and lacks institutional authority, yet she notices details others ignore and connects with people usually overlooked by professional structures. Her emotional directness becomes investigative skill rather than weakness.

Soderbergh directs with characteristic clarity. Offices, homes and desert landscapes are observed without glamour, grounding the drama in recognisable social realities. The contamination story matters precisely because it emerges from ordinary lives rather than abstract headlines.

Albert Finney provides superb support as Erin’s reluctant employer, their relationship developing through mutual irritation into hard-earned respect. The supporting cast deepen the sense of community affected by the scandal, reminding viewers that environmental catastrophe is ultimately lived through bodies and families.

The film also speaks to broader questions of class and credibility. Institutions often decide who deserves to be heard according to education, status and appearance. Erin repeatedly encounters condescension rooted in precisely those assumptions.

What makes Erin Brockovich endure is its combination of entertainment and anger. Soderbergh never sacrifices momentum for message, yet the outrage remains unmistakable. This is populist filmmaking in the best sense — accessible, emotionally engaging and morally alert.

Love, Simon (2018) ITV2, 9:05pm

Teen films often struggle with sincerity. Fearful of sentimentality, they retreat into irony or exaggerated cool. Love, Simon chooses a different route. Greg Berlanti’s adaptation of Becky Albertalli’s novel embraces emotional openness without embarrassment, following Simon Spier, a closeted teenager navigating friendship, family and first love.

Nick Robinson gives Simon an appealing mixture of confidence and uncertainty. He is not presented as tragic outsider or heroic symbol but as recognisably ordinary — bright, funny and anxious about what honesty might cost him. That ordinariness matters. Representation is sometimes discussed in abstract political terms, yet films such as Love, Simon demonstrate its emotional significance more quietly.

The supporting cast contribute warmth and texture. Jennifer Garner and Josh Duhamel avoid sitcom parenting stereotypes, creating a family environment marked by affection and imperfection rather than idealisation. Simon’s friendships feel equally lived-in, shaped by loyalty and misunderstanding in believable proportions.

The film’s high-school setting occasionally edges towards polished fantasy, and viewers accustomed to rougher coming-of-age dramas may find its tone almost disarmingly gentle. Yet gentleness should not be mistaken for triviality. Berlanti understands that adolescence can feel emotionally catastrophic even when external stakes appear modest.

There is humour throughout, particularly in Simon’s attempts to protect his secret while maintaining ordinary teenage life. The screenplay allows awkwardness and comedy to coexist with genuine emotional vulnerability.

What elevates Love, Simon beyond formula is its refusal to frame identity solely through suffering. Simon’s journey involves fear and loneliness, certainly, but also desire, excitement and hope. That tonal balance gives the film its generous spirit.

By the conclusion, Love, Simon feels less like cultural milestone than something perhaps more valuable — an affectionate, emotionally intelligent story about growing into honesty.

🌟 Jazz Night – BBC Four, from 9:05pm
Miles Davis: Birth of the Cool (9:05pm)
Alan Yentob Remembers Ella Fitzgerald (11:00pm)
Ella Fitzgerald: The Other Show (11:05pm)
Cleo Laine at the BBC (11:45pm)
Jazz 625 (12:45am)

BBC Four’s themed music nights have become one of British television’s quiet cultural treasures, and this jazz evening looks particularly rich. Beginning with Miles Davis: Birth of the Cool, the schedule moves through tribute, archive and performance to create something closer to a curated late-night session than ordinary broadcasting.

Miles Davis alone would justify attention. Few musicians reshaped their art form with such restless determination. From bebop through modal jazz and electric experimentation, Davis treated reinvention not as career strategy but artistic necessity.

The Ella Fitzgerald programming provides emotional contrast. Fitzgerald’s technical brilliance sometimes obscured the warmth and emotional intelligence of her singing, and Yentob’s tribute alongside The Other Show promises to revisit both performer and person.

Cleo Laine at the BBC reminds viewers that Britain produced jazz voices of remarkable distinction too, while Jazz 625 carries welcome archival pleasure. There is something comforting about encountering jazz at midnight on BBC Four, preserved not as museum artefact but living conversation.

In an era when cultural television is frequently squeezed by economics and ratings anxiety, evenings like this feel quietly defiant. Long may they continue.

Love & Mercy (2014) BBC Two, 11:00pm

Music biopics often follow predictable rhythms. Early promise, excess, collapse and redemption arranged with mechanical inevitability. Bill Pohlad’s Love & Mercy avoids that trap by refusing linear simplicity and approaching Brian Wilson’s life through fractured emotional memory.

The decision to divide Wilson between two actors proves inspired. Paul Dano portrays the young Beach Boys genius during the creation of Pet Sounds, while John Cusack inhabits Wilson later in life, vulnerable and constrained beneath the influence of manipulative therapist Eugene Landy. Rather than competing, the performances illuminate different emotional states.

Paul Dano is extraordinary. He captures not merely Wilson’s fragility but his obsessive musical imagination, conveying the exhilaration and exhaustion of creative brilliance. Studio sessions become psychological landscapes where sound and feeling merge.

John Cusack takes greater risks, resisting imitation in favour of emotional truth. His Wilson appears withdrawn and uncertain, trapped within systems of control disguised as care. Cusack allows pain and gentleness to coexist without sentimentality.

The film’s treatment of music deserves special praise. Rather than using songs simply as nostalgic reward, Pohlad explores composition itself — the painstaking search for sound, harmony and emotional expression. Recording studios become sites of invention and vulnerability.

Paul Giamatti’s Landy is chilling precisely because he avoids theatrical villainy. Control here emerges gradually, rationalised as protection and expertise. The film understands how dependency and exploitation can become entangled.

What remains afterwards is not scandal or tragedy but admiration for artistic persistence. Love & Mercy recognises Brian Wilson as neither saint nor casualty but complicated creator. Among music biopics, it stands as one of the most humane and formally inventive.

Radio Choice

Desert Island Discs Radio 4, Sunday 10:00am – featuring Emily Watson

A digital radio displaying 92.5 FM with various settings buttons, next to a pair of black headphones on a wooden surface.

I’ve loved this programme from the very first bars of its opening music. That familiar theme drops you straight into a different headspace—an invitation to settle in and listen as someone unpacks the story of their life through the records that shaped them. The structure is deceptively simple: eight pieces of music, a book, a luxury item, and the castaway’s journey through memory, influence and experience. But within that framework, people reveal far more than they realise.

What keeps me coming back is how much I learn about others just by listening. Music loosens people; it lets them talk about childhood, ambition, heartbreak, triumph—often without ever naming those things directly. I’m always curious to hear where my tastes overlap with theirs, and just as interested in the moments where they pull me somewhere new. A single track can open a door into a world I’d never have explored on my own.

And then there’s the pleasure of the choices at the end: the book they’d take to the island, the luxury item they can’t live without. Those details are often as revealing as the music—tiny windows into what someone values when everything else is stripped away.

The archive is a treasure in its own right. Decades of voices, eras, sensibilities, and shifting cultural landscapes, all preserved and waiting to be rediscovered. I trawl through it happily, dipping into old episodes, following threads, revisiting favourites. It’s one of the few programmes that rewards curiosity and patience, and it never fails to teach me something—about others, and quietly, about myself.

TikTok: The Working Week in Five Days Radio 4, Monday–Friday, 1:45pm

This timely series explores changing attitudes to labour, productivity and modern working life, asking whether inherited ideas about the working week continue to make sense in an age shaped by technology and shifting social expectations.

Podcast Choice

How Did We Get Here? Israel and the Palestinians BBC Sounds

A microphone on a boom arm next to a laptop displaying audio waveforms, with a notebook and pen, and a cup of coffee.

The BBC turns to one of the world’s most enduring and emotionally charged conflicts in this historical and political podcast examining the Israeli–Palestinian question. Rather than treating events as isolated headlines, the series attempts to trace deeper roots and competing narratives.

Whatever one’s perspective, context matters, and the podcast’s value lies in encouraging precisely that wider view.

My Mate Bought a Toaster

There is something gloriously nosy about the premise behind My Mate Bought a Toaster. Guests discuss their online purchase histories and, through shopping habits and accidental revelations, unexpectedly reveal versions of themselves.

Part comedy and part social anthropology, it appeals to anyone fascinated by the small clues people leave behind.

And if, like me, you occasionally study supermarket baskets and quietly construct biographies from groceries, this one may prove particularly entertaining.

Streaming Choice

BBC iPlayer

The Invisibles — Series 2

A living room scene featuring a person holding a remote control in front of a television displaying 'Top Picks' and 'New Releases'. A radio is visible on a table next to a bowl of popcorn.

The second series of The Invisibles returns to the Devon coast with its familiar blend of seaside melancholy and criminal nostalgia. Anthony Head and Warren Clarke slip back into the roles of retired thieves who can’t quite outrun the shadows they once commanded.
This run leans further into the ache of ageing — men confronting irrelevance, loyalty, and the seductive pull of one last job. The humour remains dry, but the emotional undertow is stronger.
Available from Friday 29 May, it’s a reminder that the past rarely stays buried, especially for those who once lived outside the law.

Living

Oliver Hermanus’s Living (2022) remains one of the most humane British films of the decade. Bill Nighy gives a career‑best performance as a civil servant quietly confronting mortality, in Kazuo Ishiguro’s adaptation of Kurosawa’s Ikiru.
Post‑war London is rendered in soft greys and moral clarity — a world where bureaucracy both shields and suffocates.
Available until Monday, it’s a study in grace, purpose, and the fragile dignity of small acts.


Discovery+

The Many Lives of Benjamin Kyle

This four‑part documentary revisits the baffling real case of a man found unconscious behind a Georgia Burger King in 2004 with no memory of who he was.
Through interviews, forensic work, and years of dead ends, the series follows his long search for identity — a journey that eventually revealed “Benjamin Kyle” to be William Powell.
All four episodes are available from 30 May, a haunting exploration of memory, anonymity, and the precarious architecture of selfhood.


Prime Video

Spider‑Noir

Nicolas Cage returns to voice the trench‑coated vigilante in this animated spin‑off from the Spider‑Verse universe, set in a stylised 1930s New York of chiaroscuro alleys and moral ambiguity.
The eight‑episode run leans into pulp narration, jazz‑era grit, and Cage’s sardonic delivery, which anchors the noir tone beautifully.
Available from Wednesday 27 May, it’s a moody, monochrome antidote to superhero gloss.

The Long Walk

Based on Stephen King’s dystopian novel, The Long Walk imagines a near‑future contest where teenage boys must keep walking until only one survives.
The adaptation preserves the book’s existential dread — a parable of endurance, spectacle, and state cruelty.
Available now, it’s stark, hypnotic viewing that turns motion itself into punishment.


Apple TV+

Star City

Star City is an alternate‑history drama set inside the Soviet Union’s secret cosmonaut training centre outside Moscow, expanding the world established in For All Mankind. The series follows engineers, cosmonauts and the ever‑watchful security services as they navigate the pressures of ideology, secrecy and ambition within the USSR’s side of the space race. It blends Cold War tension with the personal stakes of those working behind closed doors, showing how loyalty, science and survival intersect in a system built on both aspiration and control.
The series balances Cold War paranoia with human ambition, showing how ideology, science, and personal sacrifice collided in the race to orbit.
The first two episodes are available from Friday 29 May, promising a blend of historical precision and cosmic yearning.


Netflix

Nemesis

Nemesis is a taut British thriller about a former intelligence officer pulled back into a web of betrayal after a botched operation.
Its clipped tone and procedural focus give the drama a cold, metallic edge, with moral corrosion seeping through every exchange.
Available now, it’s espionage stripped of glamour — all consequence, no catharsis.

Rob Peace

Adapted from Jeff Hobbs’s biography, Rob Peace tells the true story of a brilliant Yale scholar whose double life in Newark’s drug trade led to tragedy.
Chiwetel Ejiofor directs with empathy, avoiding sensationalism in favour of systemic critique and human complexity.
Available now, it’s a portrait of promise undone by inequality and circumstance.

Maxxine

The third film in Ti West’s X trilogy, Maxxine follows Mia Goth’s survivor into 1980s Los Angeles, chasing fame while haunted by the violence that shaped her.
It’s both slasher and satire — a neon‑drenched study of ambition, exploitation, and the Hollywood dream machine at its most predatory.
Available from 21 May, it closes the trilogy with a mix of horror, irony, and defiant self‑invention.

Love Lies Bleeding

Kristen Stewart stars in Rose Glass’s neo‑noir romance set in the desert world of bodybuilding, obsession, and criminal temptation.
The film’s muscular style and queer intensity recall Bound and Body Heat, all sweat, longing, and danger.
Available until 31 May, it’s a feverish, intoxicating descent into desire and control.


Disney+

The Testament of Ann Lee

This docudrama traces the life of Ann Lee, founder of the Shakers, whose radical vision of equality and celibacy shaped an American religious movement.
Mixing archival material with lyrical reenactment, it captures the tension between spiritual purity, communal discipline, and the cost of conviction.
Available now, it’s a contemplative look at faith as rebellion.

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Culture Vulture: 5–11 July 2025

3,310 words, 18 minutes read time.

Culture Vulture is a weekly entertainment guide from an alternative perspective.

This week, the airwaves belong to the dreamers and the rebels. From the symphonic genius of Jeff Lynne to the savage wit of Hunter S. Thompson, the schedule is rich with iconoclasts who did it their own way — and usually better. The BBC rolls out a full evening for ELO, culminating in a triumphant Hyde Park set that glows with retro-futurist joy. On Sunday, Live Aid at 40 casts fresh light on a cultural moment when rock music briefly believed it could save the world — and, for a day, nearly did.

Selections and writing by Pat Harrington.

Saturday 5 July

ELO at the BBC
8:05 PM, BBC Two
This lovingly curated concert compilation draws from the BBC archives to celebrate Electric Light Orchestra’s decades-spanning fusion of classical ambition and pop wizardry.

Mr Blue Sky: The Story of Jeff Lynne and ELO
9:05 PM, BBC Two
A warm and revealing portrait of Jeff Lynne — producer, songwriter, and sonic visionary — told with affection and rare footage.

Jeff Lynne’s ELO: Radio 2 In Concert
10:05 PM, BBC Two
An intimate live set showcasing the enduring musicality of Lynne’s reassembled ELO. Precision meets pop grandeur.

Jeff Lynne’s ELO at Hyde Park
11:00 PM, BBC Two
Lynne’s triumphant return to live performance in front of a massive Hyde Park crowd. Rich in fan favourites and retro magic.

Extras with David Bowie
10:20 PM, BBC U&Dave
David Bowie brilliantly sends himself up in Ricky Gervais’s meta-sitcom. Equal parts cruel and hilarious — a classic cameo.

The Riddle of the Sands
4:40 PM, Talking Pictures, 1979
This slow-burning Edwardian spy tale has aged into something quietly haunting — part naval adventure, part political forewarning. Two Englishmen, Carruthers and Davies, sail into the Frisian coast and stumble upon evidence of covert German military activity. On the surface it’s espionage, but underneath it’s a meditation on empire and insecurity. The film hints at Britain’s naval pride and its looming irrelevance, with paranoia tucked between fog and sandbank.

Released in 1979, its Cold War context adds another layer — old-world gentility shading into modern unease. The economic anxieties surface in the fixation on coastlines, trade routes, and the subtle mockery of amateurish intelligence efforts. Class friction simmers between the polished civil servant and his gruff companion, both shaped by privilege but shadowed by a sense of waning power. Their mission isn’t just to foil a plan — it’s to reckon with the fading grandeur of a system that trained them to look outward but never inward.

The Secret Garden
6:55 PM, Five Star, 1993
This 1993 take on The Secret Garden quietly blossoms into something more than nostalgia. Beneath its painterly aesthetic — dappled light, tumbling ivy, and Yorkshire mist — lies a story about grief, repression, and emotional rebirth.

Mary Lennox, orphaned and shipped from colonial India to a grey English manor, is not just a lonely girl; she’s a child steeped in imperial detachment and emotional silence. Her transformation, driven by the discovery of a walled garden, is both personal and political. The garden isn’t just a metaphor for healing — it’s rebellion against neglect, against the rigid adult world of locked doors and unspoken rules.

Set against the backdrop of Edwardian wealth and class divide, the film lets nature reclaim order. Frances Hodgson Burnett’s themes of ecological renewal and human connection are tenderly preserved, and Agnieszka Holland’s direction lingers on silence as much as dialogue — the unsaid often being the most powerful.

Perfect for a melancholic summer evening, yes — but also for anyone craving a story that gently confronts emotional barrenness with beauty and growth.

Prey
9:00 PM, Film4, 2022
The Predator franchise gets a sharp and satisfying reboot in this lean, atmospheric thriller set in 18th-century North America. Director Dan Trachtenberg strips away the military bombast of earlier instalments, replacing it with something far more elemental — a fight for survival amid sky-wide plains and thick forests.

Told through the perspective of a young Comanche woman (played with fierce intensity by Amber Midthunder), Prey honours Indigenous storytelling while delivering on creature-feature suspense. The predator itself is more primal, less reliant on tech, which makes the contest feel mythic — nature versus nature.

Visually striking and refreshingly grounded, this is one of the most intelligent franchise entries in recent years. It’s also a reminder that blockbuster cinema can still surprise when it trusts its audience — and its characters — to do more than just shoot first.

Oasis: Supersonic
10:00 PM, Channel 4, 2016
More myth than documentary — but what a myth. A swaggering deep-dive into the rise and ruin of Britain’s most volatile band.

King Richard
10:20 PM, BBC One, 2021
At first glance, this might look like another sports biopic — but King Richard goes deeper, exploring family, ambition, and belief in the face of overwhelming odds. Will Smith gives a layered, deeply human performance as Richard Williams, the father and unorthodox coach of Venus and Serena. He’s protective, stubborn, sometimes difficult — but never anything less than compelling.

The film resists easy triumphalism, focusing instead on the grind, the strategy, and the long hours behind the meteoric rise. Director Reinaldo Marcus Green keeps the tone grounded, while Saniyya Sidney and Demi Singleton deliver radiant performances as the young tennis prodigies.

What emerges is less about sport and more about legacy — how dreams are built, brick by brick, by those rarely celebrated. Smith’s Oscar-winning turn anchors a story about determination, faith, and fatherhood, told with warmth and grit.


Sunday 6 July

Live Aid at 40: When Rock Took on the World (1/3)
9:00 PM, BBC Two
The story of how music mobilised global attention, revisiting 1985’s mega-concert with fresh insights and rare footage.

Live Aid at 40: When Rock Took on the World (2/3)
10:00 PM, BBC Two
Continuing the story with a closer look at the politics, personalities, and aftershocks of the most ambitious charity gig in history.

Elton John: Million Dollar Piano
4:40 PM, Sky Arts
A dazzling performance from Elton’s Las Vegas residency — all sequins, keys, and heartfelt hits.

The Remains of the Day
1:45 PM, Film4, 1993
An exquisite study in repression and regret, The Remains of the Day stands as one of Merchant Ivory’s finest achievements. Anthony Hopkins plays Stevens, a butler so consumed by duty and decorum that he fails to recognise love until it’s far too late. Emma Thompson, quietly radiant, is the housekeeper who might have changed his life — had either of them been brave enough to speak plainly.

Set in the shadow of war and the decline of the English aristocracy, the film explores moral blindness with surgical precision. Stevens’s loyalty to a Nazi-sympathising employer becomes a devastating metaphor for all the things he fails to question — until time runs out.

What lingers most is not what’s said, but what’s left unsaid. Every pause, every glance, carries the weight of lives unlived. Gorgeously shot, perfectly acted, and emotionally shattering, this is a film that stays with you long after the final curtain falls.

Hidden Figures
4:25 PM, Film4, 2016
This uplifting drama tells the too-long-ignored story of the Black women mathematicians who helped launch America into space. Taraji P. Henson, Octavia Spencer, and Janelle Monáe shine as three minds at the centre of NASA’s Mercury programme — battling not just gravity, but racism and sexism embedded in every corridor.

The film moves with energy and warmth, balancing technical detail with personal struggle. Director Theodore Melfi never lets the message become heavy-handed, instead trusting the story’s power to speak for itself. It’s a celebration of intellect, perseverance, and sisterhood in the face of systemic exclusion.

Rousing, moving, and refreshingly straightforward, Hidden Figures is more than a history lesson — it’s a call to re-centre who gets credit, who gets remembered, and who makes history happen.

The Fault in Our Stars
8:00 PM, BBC Three, 2014
Based on John Green’s bestselling novel, this teen romance could have easily veered into sentimentality — but instead delivers a surprisingly grounded and emotionally intelligent story of young love in the shadow of terminal illness. Shailene Woodley and Ansel Elgort bring warmth and wit to roles that could have felt overdrawn, letting humour and humanity shine through.

The film doesn’t shy away from pain, but neither does it wallow. It captures that precarious balance between adolescent intensity and the existential weight of mortality, offering a love story that feels more defiant than doomed. Director Josh Boone allows space for silences, side glances, and the small gestures that make big feelings believable.

What emerges is a film that treats its characters — and its audience — with respect. It’s tender without being fragile, heart-breaking without manipulation. Whether you’re seventeen or seventy, it’s hard not to be moved.


Monday 7 July

True History of the Kelly Gang
11:35 PM, Film4, 2019
This wild, unflinching reimagining of Australia’s most notorious outlaw breaks free from traditional biopic constraints. With a style that’s part fever dream, part punk manifesto, True History of the Kelly Gang drenches the screen in blood, grit, and restless rebellion.

Narrated with a chaotic intensity by George MacKay, the film captures Ned Kelly’s transformation from a hunted youth to folk hero with a rawness that’s as unsettling as it is electrifying. The narrative splinters and soars, evoking a fractured, mythic Australia caught between colonial violence and desperate survival.

Director Justin Kurzel doesn’t offer easy answers — instead, he immerses you in a feverish world where history is as much legend as fact, and legend bleeds into revolution. It’s a messy, brutal, and unforgettable cinematic ride.

Atonement
12:00 AM, BBC One, 2007
Joe Wright’s adaptation of Ian McEwan’s novel unfolds as a haunting meditation on the power of storytelling and the consequences of a single lie. Keira Knightley and James McAvoy deliver nuanced performances in a love story fractured by class, misunderstanding, and the brutal sweep of history.

The film’s elegant narrative structure moves fluidly through time, weaving innocence and guilt with devastating precision. From the manicured English estate to the ravages of World War II, the lush cinematography contrasts sharply with the emotional turmoil beneath.

Atonement is a masterclass in mood and morality — a cinematic poem on regret, forgiveness, and the elusive nature of truth. Its final revelation lingers long after the credits roll, challenging how we perceive both fiction and reality.


Tuesday 8 July

Surviving 9/11
9:00 PM, Sky Documentaries
Survivor testimonies reveal the human toll of the September 11 attacks in this moving and clear-eyed documentary.

Eyewitness to History: Norma Percy and Angus Macqueen on The Death of Yugoslavia
10:00 PM, BBC Four
Behind-the-scenes reflections from the creators of one of British TV’s most acclaimed political documentaries.

The Death of Yugoslavia: Internationalism
10:20 PM, BBC Four
A crucial episode that examines the international community’s role in the Balkan conflicts.

The Death of Yugoslavia: The Road to War
11:05 PM, BBC Four
Charting the tragic path from fragile peace to full-scale war in Europe’s post-Cold War collapse.

Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson
10:15 PM, Sky Arts
A vivid and sometimes anarchic look at America’s greatest outlaw journalist, narrated by Johnny Depp.

The Wicker Man
11:00 PM, BBC Two, 1973
A landmark of British folk horror, The Wicker Man balances eerie atmosphere with an unsettling exploration of faith and sacrifice. Christopher Lee commands the screen as Lord Summerisle, a charismatic yet menacing pagan leader whose island community harbours dark secrets.

Edward Woodward’s police sergeant arrives seeking a missing girl, only to find himself ensnared in a ritualistic nightmare that blends folklore, music, and dread. The film’s haunting soundtrack and pastoral beauty heighten its sense of inevitable doom.

Part mystery, part ritual drama, The Wicker Man remains chilling decades on — a slow-burning descent into a world where belief becomes deadly. It’s cult cinema that still feels dangerously alive.


Wednesday 9 July

Plunderer: The Life and Times of a Nazi Art Thief
7:20 PM, PBS America
The extraordinary story of Bruno Lohse, the man behind the Nazi regime’s massive looting of European art.

Poisoned: Killer in the Post (1/2)
9:00 PM, Channel 4
A gripping real-life thriller following a mysterious case of fatal poisonings linked to letters in the post.

Don’t Look Now
12:00 AM, BBC Two, 1973
Nicolas Roeg’s Don’t Look Now is a haunting, atmospheric meditation on grief, memory, and the uncanny. Set against the labyrinthine canals and decaying beauty of Venice, the film follows a couple (Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie) grappling with the sudden loss of their daughter.

The narrative weaves together erotic tension and supernatural dread, creating a mood both sensual and sinister. Roeg’s fragmented editing and richly symbolic imagery immerse the viewer in a world where reality and premonition blur disturbingly.

This is not a conventional thriller but a deeply emotional exploration of trauma and the unknowable forces that shape our lives — a masterpiece of slow-burning unease.


Thursday 10 July

Touch of Evil
12:00 AM, Rewind TV, 1958
Orson Welles’s Touch of Evil is a masterpiece that reshaped film noir with its dizzying camera moves and morally tangled narrative. Set in a corrupt border town between the US and Mexico, the film thrums with tension, double-crosses, and shadowy figures lurking in every frame.

Welles himself plays a morally ambiguous detective, blurring the line between lawman and criminal with magnetic charisma. The film’s signature long take — a breathtaking three-minute tracking shot — remains one of cinema’s most celebrated technical achievements.

Dark, dirty, and intoxicating, Touch of Evil still feels raw and vibrant, a portrait of a world where justice is elusive and corruption seeps into every corner. Noir at its most electrifying..

The Shape of Water
1:05 PM, Film4, 2017
Guillermo del Toro’s The Shape of Water is a fairy tale drenched in longing and strangeness. At once romantic and unsettling, it tells the story of Elisa, a mute cleaning woman who forms a bond with a mysterious amphibious creature held captive in a secret laboratory.

Del Toro blends lush, vintage aesthetics with a deeply human narrative, exploring themes of otherness, love, and connection beyond language. The film’s fairy tale roots are sharp-edged, reminding us that beauty often coexists with danger.

Equal parts magical and haunting, The Shape of Water invites us to listen carefully — to the creatures, the silences, and the hearts beating beneath the surface.


Friday 11 July

The Massacre That Shook the Empire
7:45 PM, PBS America
This documentary confronts a brutal and often overlooked episode of British colonial violence, shedding light on the massacre that shook the foundations of empire and galvanized resistance. Through survivor testimonies and expert analysis, it uncovers the human cost behind the headlines and history books.

Far from distant history, the film connects these events to ongoing struggles for justice and recognition, showing how past atrocities continue to ripple through present-day societies.

Sobering, essential, and unflinching, this is a timely reminder of empire’s darker legacies — and the movements born from its shadows.

Jaws @ 50: The Definitive Inside Story
8:30 PM, National Geographic
Half a century after its release, Jaws remains the quintessential thriller that redefined summer cinema and set the blueprint for the modern blockbuster. This documentary dives deep into Steven Spielberg’s creation, exploring the technical challenges, behind-the-scenes drama, and cultural impact that turned a story about a great white shark into a global phenomenon.

Featuring interviews with cast, crew, and film historians, it uncovers the genius and grit behind the suspense, from the famously malfunctioning mechanical shark to John Williams’s iconic score.

For cinephiles and casual fans alike, this is an essential journey into the making of a movie that still looms large in the collective imagination — terrifying, thrilling, and utterly unforgettable.

High Noon
2:15 PM, 5 Action, 1952
A masterpiece of moral tension, High Noon distils the Western into a tight, relentless allegory of duty, courage, and isolation. Gary Cooper delivers a quietly powerful performance as a marshal standing alone against a vengeful gang, his every minute ticking down with mounting dread.

The film’s real-time pacing heightens the sense of inevitability — a small town’s failure to support its own lawman becomes a reflection on conscience and cowardice that still resonates today.

Simple yet profound, High Noon remains a taut, emotionally charged classic that questions what it means to stand firm when everyone else walks away.

The Shining
11:00 PM, BBC Two, 1980
Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining remains a towering pillar of psychological horror, where the eerie corridors of the Overlook Hotel become a labyrinth of madness and dread. Jack Nicholson’s iconic descent into insanity is both terrifying and hypnotic, embodying a menace that seeps into every frame.

Kubrick’s meticulous craftsmanship — from the unsettling steadicam shots to the chilling score — crafts an atmosphere that’s as claustrophobic as it is expansive, trapping viewers in a nightmare that feels impossibly real.

More than just a ghost story, The Shining explores isolation, family breakdown, and the unseen horrors lurking beneath the surface. Essential viewing for any night owl seeking a true cinematic chill.


STREAMING CHOICES

Leviathan
Available from Thursday 10 July, Netflix
This eagerly anticipated anime brings Scott Westerfeld’s steampunk trilogy to life with stunning animation and a richly imagined alternate 1914. Following Prince Aleksandar, heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, and Deryn Sharp, a fearless Scottish girl disguised as a boy in the British Air Service, Leviathan combines political intrigue, adventure, and bioengineered airships in a vividly crafted world.

Produced by Qubic Pictures and Studio Orange — renowned for BEASTARS and Trigun Stampede — the series features a score by Nobuko Toda, Kazuma Jinnouchi, and original music by Joe Hisaishi. Westerfeld himself has been closely involved to ensure the anime honours the novels’ spirit while bringing fresh visual and narrative energy.

Whether you’re a fan of the books or new to the story, Leviathan promises a thrilling blend of historical fantasy and cutting-edge animation, perfect for anyone craving epic storytelling with heart and imagination.

History Hit: Gladiator
Available from Thursday 10 July, Netflix
In this gripping documentary series, Dan Snow delves into the brutal world of Roman gladiators, combining expert insight with vivid re-enactments to explore their lives, battles, and the society that both glorified and exploited them.

History Hit: Gladiator brings history to life with a modern lens, connecting ancient spectacles to contemporary themes of power, violence, and survival. Snow’s approachable style and in-depth research make this a compelling watch for history buffs and newcomers alike.

For anyone fascinated by the Roman Empire’s darker, blood-soaked arenas, this series offers a sharp, thought-provoking journey into one of antiquity’s most iconic—and brutal—institutions.

Dexter: Resurrection
First two episodes available from Friday 11 July, Paramount+
The blood-spatter analyst with a dark secret returns once more in this latest revival of the Dexter saga. Picking up where New Blood left off, Dexter: Resurrection dives deeper into the murky waters of morality, identity, and obsession.

Michael C. Hall is back with the familiar mix of charm and chilling detachment, navigating new challenges that blur the lines between justice and vigilantism. The show balances tense thrills with psychological complexity, reminding viewers why Dexter remains a compelling, if controversial, antihero.

Whether you’re a long time fan or curious about the latest chapter, this resurrection promises fresh twists and darker dilemmas in the shadowy world of Miami’s most infamous serial killer.

Walter Presents: Arcadia
All 8 episodes available from Friday 11 July, Channel 4 Streaming
This Belgian dystopian drama imagines a chilling society where citizens are constantly rated for their behaviour, creating a claustrophobic world of surveillance, judgment, and control. Arcadia deftly explores themes of conformity, resistance, and the human cost of living under unrelenting scrutiny.

Beyond its Orwellian trappings, the series is surprisingly emotional, grounded by complex characters whose struggles add depth to the stark, oppressive setting. With tight plotting and atmospheric tension, it keeps viewers hooked while probing timely questions about privacy and social pressure.

For fans of speculative drama that blends political critique with personal stories, Arcadia offers a gripping and thought-provoking binge.

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