Posts Tagged TV reviews

Culture Vulture 17–23 January 2026

Image featuring a vulture in flight against a blue sky, with the text 'CULTURE VULTURE' prominently displayed above and a logo for 'COUNTER CULTURE' at the bottom, along with the date '17–23 January 2026'.

This week’s Culture Vulture moves restlessly between power and resistance, private obsession and public mythmaking. Across the schedule, institutions are questioned, reputations dismantled, and history revisited from oblique angles. 🌟 Highlights include Joanna Hogg’s haunted chamber piece The Eternal Daughter, Channel 4’s urgent Palestine Action: The Truth Behind the Ban, and the incendiary political cinema of How to Blow Up a Pipeline. Elsewhere, British independent film, classic Hollywood, prestige documentary, and cult spectacle reward curiosity and late nights. Reviews and selections are by Pat Harrington.

Saturday 17 January 2026

🌟 The Eternal Daughter (2022) BBC Two, 11:00pm

Hogg’s film feels like the moment a long‑shuttered room is finally opened: dust motes rising, air shifting, memory stirring in ways both tender and treacherous. In The Eternal Daughter, she pares her instincts down to their purest form, crafting a chamber piece where the walls themselves seem to listen. Tilda Swinton’s dual performance becomes a kind of living palimpsest—mother and daughter layered atop one another, indistinguishable at times, painfully separate at others. It’s not a gimmick; it’s the thesis.

What begins with the grammar of a ghost story—the creaking corridors, the watchful windows, the sense of a presence just out of frame—slowly reveals itself as something far more disquieting. Hogg isn’t interested in hauntings so much as the emotional residue we inherit, the unspoken debts and unexamined loyalties that shape us long after childhood has ended. The hotel becomes a psychological annex, a place where the daughter’s creative impulse collides with her filial guilt, and where the mother’s silence speaks louder than any apparition.

Hogg’s precision is almost forensic. Every pause feels intentional, every withheld revelation a reminder that the most devastating truths are the ones we circle rather than confront. The film’s quietude is not gentleness but pressure—an atmosphere thick with the weight of what cannot be said. By the time the emotional architecture finally reveals itself, the effect is less like a twist and more like a reckoning.

It’s a small film in scale, but not in consequence. Hogg gives us a story about the stories we construct to make sense of our parents, and the painful liberation that comes when those stories falter. The devastation is not loud; it arrives like a memory you’ve spent years avoiding, suddenly unavoidable, quietly rearranging the room around you.

Fergie and the Fake Sheikh Scandal Channel 5, 9:20pm

A tabloid-age morality tale examining how celebrity, deception, and entrapment culture collided at the turn of the millennium. Less interested in sensationalism than in the machinery behind it, the documentary exposes how reputations were engineered—and destroyed—by a media ecosystem that thrived on humiliation.

Obsession (1949) Talking Pictures, 9:00pm

There’s something almost surgical about Obsession—a film that slices cleanly through the polite veneer of post‑war Britain to expose the rancid underlayer beneath. It’s noir without the American swagger, a chamber drama where the shadows feel damp rather than stylish, and where the real violence is psychological, not ballistic. Edward Dmytryk, working in exile, brings a kind of outsider’s clarity to the material: he sees the brittleness of British respectability and taps it like a cracked teacup.

The result is a thriller that feels startlingly modern. The film’s emotional temperature is cold, its cruelty precise. There’s no romanticism in this portrait of obsession—no smoky seduction, no doomed glamour. Instead, we get a study in class resentment and the corrosive entitlement of a man who believes his status grants him moral exemption. The kidnapping plot becomes a pressure cooker, not because of what might happen, but because of what the characters reveal about themselves when the social scaffolding slips.

What lingers is the bitterness. The film seems to understand, long before British cinema was ready to admit it, that the war hadn’t purified the nation’s soul; it had merely rearranged the furniture. Beneath the clipped accents and tidy rooms lies a rot that feels eerily contemporary. Dmytryk doesn’t shout this; he lets it seep in, frame by frame, until the genteel façade collapses under its own hypocrisy.

It’s a lean, quietly vicious little masterpiece—one that reminds you how much menace can be conjured from a closed door, a polite smile, and a man who believes he’s been wronged.

Sunday 18 January 2026

🌟 How to Blow Up a Pipeline (2022)

Film4, 11:40pm

There’s a flinty directness to this film that feels almost shocking in an era of hedged statements and carefully triangulated messaging. It borrows the propulsive mechanics of a heist thriller—ticking clocks, tight crews, improvised logistics—but repurposes them into something far more volatile: a cinematic argument delivered with the clarity of a manifesto and the tension of a fuse burning down.

What makes it so bracing is its refusal to flatter the viewer. The film doesn’t offer the comfort of moral distance or the easy posture of condemnation. Instead, it forces you into the cramped, anxious spaces where its characters operate—young people who have concluded, with grim logic, that lawful protest has been absorbed, neutralised, and rendered decorative. Their plan is not framed as heroism, nor as nihilism, but as a response to a world in which delay has become its own form of violence.

The structure is deceptively simple: each character’s backstory arrives not as exposition but as justification, a ledger of harms that makes their radicalisation legible without insisting on your approval. The film’s power lies in this tension. It neither sermonises nor sensationalises; it simply refuses to pretend that the climate crisis can be met with polite incrementalism.

Stylistically, it’s stripped to the bone. No indulgent speeches, no swelling strings, no narrative hand‑holding. The urgency is baked into the form—lean, breathless, and morally abrasive. By the end, you’re left with the unsettling sense that the film hasn’t tried to persuade you so much as confront you, asking whether the ethics of waiting are still defensible when the clock is visibly, audibly running out.

It’s a rare thing: a thriller that treats its audience like adults, and a political film that understands the stakes well enough not to blink.

Four Kings – Rise of the Kings (1 of 4) Channel 4, 10:00pm

The first chapter of this landmark documentary doesn’t just revisit an era of British boxing dominance—it reopens a cultural archive the nation has never properly reckoned with. Rise of the Kings introduces the four men who reshaped British sport from the margins outward: Frank Bruno, Lennox Lewis, Nigel Benn, and Chris Eubank. All Black, all prodigiously gifted, all carrying the weight of a country that cheered them in the ring while questioning their belonging outside it.

What emerges is not a simple tale of athletic ascent but a study in how Britain constructs—and constrains—its heroes. The episode traces the early trajectories of these fighters with a forensic calm: the racism they absorbed, the class barriers they smashed through, the uneasy dance between public adoration and private cost. Each man becomes a case study in the contradictions of late‑20th‑century Britain: celebrated yet scrutinised, embraced yet othered, mythologised yet rarely understood.

The filmmaking is admirably unhurried. It lets the archival footage breathe, allowing the swagger, vulnerability, and sheer physical charisma of these boxers to speak for itself. But threaded through the narrative is a sharper argument: that these four athletes didn’t just dominate their divisions—they forced open cultural space for Black British identity at a time when the country preferred its icons uncomplicated.

By the end of the hour, you feel the stakes. This isn’t nostalgia; it’s reclamation. A reminder that the nation’s sporting mythology was built, in part, on the shoulders of men who were fighting more than opponents. They were fighting for recognition, for dignity, and for the right to define themselves.

If the series continues with this level of clarity and emotional intelligence, it won’t just document an era—it will correct the record.

Four Kings – The Battle for Britain (2 of 4) Channel 4, 11:00pm

Episode two plunges straight into the feverish heart of 1990s British boxing—a moment when four Black British fighters weren’t just dominating the sport, they were commanding the nation’s attention with a force that felt seismic. The Battle for Britain captures the week when everything converged: Benn vs Eubank, Lewis vs Bruno, millions watching, and the country briefly rearranging its cultural centre of gravity around the ring.

What the episode reveals, with a clarity that borders on uncomfortable, is how much pressure these men carried. The rivalries weren’t just athletic; they were racialised, politicised, and relentlessly commodified. Benn and Eubank’s animosity becomes a kind of national theatre—two men forced into archetypes they never asked for, their identities flattened into marketable conflict. Meanwhile, Lewis and Bruno shoulder the burden of representing a Britain that still struggled to imagine heavyweight greatness in a Black British body.

The filmmaking is sharp, almost prosecutorial. It lays out the stakes without melodrama: the injuries that threatened to derail the fights, the media circus that demanded spectacle, the promoters who understood exactly how much money could be made from pitting these men—and their public personas—against one another. Yet beneath the noise, the documentary keeps returning to the human cost: the discipline, the fear, the private negotiations with pain and expectation.

What lingers is the sense of a country watching itself through these fighters. Their success became a proxy for national pride, yet their failures were treated as personal betrayals. The episode doesn’t editorialise; it simply lets the archival footage and the testimonies speak, revealing a Britain that was both enthralled by and uneasy with the power of these Black champions.

It’s riveting, but also quietly damning. A portrait of a week when British boxing reached its commercial zenith—and when the men at its centre bore the weight of far more than belts.

Chris McCausland: Seeing Into the Future

BBC Two, 6:15pm

Blending humour with seriousness, McCausland explores disability, perception, and technology without sentimentality. Abstract ideas are grounded in lived experience, resulting in a thoughtful, humane documentary.

The Eyes of Tammy Faye (2021)

Channel 4, 2:15am

There’s a strange, irresistible shimmer to this film—a lacquered surface that initially feels like pure kitsch, only to reveal hairline fractures where something far more human leaks through. The Eyes of Tammy Faye understands that American televangelism was always theatre first and theology second, and it leans into that tension with a kind of fascinated precision. The result is a portrait of a woman who lived her life as both performer and believer, often unable to distinguish where one role ended and the other began.

What anchors the film is the central performance, which refuses to treat Tammy Faye Bakker as either punchline or martyr. Instead, we get a study in contradictions: a woman whose vulnerability was real, whose compassion was often ahead of her time, and whose capacity for self-deception was almost operatic. The film doesn’t excuse her complicity in the empire she helped build, but it does illuminate the emotional machinery that kept her smiling even as the walls buckled.

The glossiness is deliberate. The saturated colours, the immaculate wigs, the relentless cheerfulness—they’re all part of the ecosystem that made Tammy Faye both iconic and impossible to fully grasp. But beneath the glitter lies a more unsettling truth about the American appetite for spectacle, and the way faith can be packaged, monetised, and weaponised when charisma becomes currency.

What lingers is the sense of a woman who believed in love and forgiveness with a sincerity that outpaced her understanding of the system she was feeding. The film captures that duality with a steady hand: the calculation behind the camera-ready grin, and the genuine ache behind the mascara-streaked tears.

Monday 19 January 2026

The Terminator (1984) ITV4, 9:00pm

Cameron’s breakthrough still hits with the force of something forged under pressure—industrial, unadorned, and utterly sure of its purpose. What’s striking, revisiting it now, is how little fat there is on the film. Every scene feels sharpened to a point, every cut driving the story forward with the cold logic of the machine at its centre. It’s action cinema before the bloat set in, built on momentum rather than spectacle.

But beneath the propulsive surface lies a darker, more resonant architecture. The film channels the anxieties of its era—nuclear dread, technological overreach, the sense that humanity was sleepwalking into its own obsolescence—and distils them into a narrative that feels mythic in its simplicity. The Terminator isn’t just a villain; it’s an idea made flesh, the embodiment of a future that refuses to wait its turn. The slasher DNA is unmistakable: the unstoppable force, the final girl, the sense of being hunted by something that cannot be reasoned with. Yet Cameron threads through it a kind of bruised romanticism, a belief that resistance, however fragile, still matters.

What lingers is the film’s discipline. No quips, no narrative detours, no self-conscious winks. Just a relentless pursuit—of Sarah Connor, of survival, of a future that might yet be rewritten. In an age of maximalist blockbusters, The Terminator feels almost ascetic, a reminder that tension and meaning can be engineered with precision rather than excess.

🌟 The Souvenir (2019) BBC Two, 11:00pm

Hogg’s film unfolds with the delicacy of someone turning over a memory they’re not entirely sure they’re ready to revisit. It’s a coming‑of‑age story, yes, but one stripped of the usual narrative scaffolding—no grand revelations, no cathartic speeches, just the slow, painful accumulation of experience. What emerges is a portrait of a young woman learning to see clearly, even as the man she loves is committed to obscuring everything, including himself.

The emotional damage is observed with almost forensic restraint. Hogg refuses melodrama, which paradoxically makes the heartbreak sharper. The relationship at the film’s centre is defined by asymmetry—of class, of confidence, of emotional literacy. Julie’s privilege cushions her but also blinds her; Anthony’s charm masks a rot he cannot or will not confront. Their dynamic becomes a study in how power operates quietly, through tone, through implication, through the stories we allow others to tell about us.

What’s remarkable is how Hogg uses the act of filmmaking itself as both subject and method. Julie’s artistic formation is inseparable from her romantic entanglement; the camera becomes a tool for understanding what she couldn’t articulate in the moment. The film feels like a reconstruction of a wound—precise, atmospheric, and unflinchingly honest about the cost of loving someone who is disappearing in front of you.

The atmosphere is almost tactile: the muted rooms, the half‑finished student films, the sense of a life being assembled piece by tentative piece. Hogg lets class seep in at the edges, never lecturing but always aware of how it shapes who gets forgiven, who gets believed, who gets to make art from their mistakes.

By the time the film reaches its final, quietly astonishing gesture, you realise you’ve been watching not just a love story but the forging of an artist—through pain, through confusion, through the slow, necessary act of learning to trust one’s own vision. It’s devastating in the way real memory is: not loud, but lingering, impossible to shake.

What’s Love Got to Do with It (2022) BBC One, 11:40pm

A culturally alert romantic comedy that examines modern marriage through the lens of tradition and compromise, keeping character at its centre while engaging seriously with social expectation.

🌟 The Souvenir Part II (2021) BBC Two, 12:55am

Hogg’s follow‑up doesn’t behave like a sequel so much as an aftershock—quieter, more deliberate, but carrying a deeper, more resonant force. Where The Souvenir charted the bewilderment of first love and first loss, Part II turns its attention to what comes after the devastation: the long, uneven labour of rebuilding a self that no longer fits the world it once inhabited.

What’s remarkable is how Hogg refuses the easy arc of recovery. Grief here isn’t a narrative obstacle to be cleared; it’s a climate, a weather system Julie must learn to navigate. The film tracks her attempts to make sense of what happened not through confession or catharsis, but through the act of creation itself. The student film she struggles to complete becomes a kind of emotional archaeology—an attempt to excavate the truth from memory, performance, and the stories she once accepted without question.

The atmosphere is richer, more expansive than in Part I, yet the emotional precision remains razor‑sharp. Hogg lets the contradictions breathe: the way Julie’s privilege both cushions and distorts her experience; the way art can clarify and obscure in the same gesture; the way grief can sharpen ambition even as it hollows out certainty. The film becomes a meditation on authorship—of one’s work, one’s past, one’s identity.

Taken together, the two films form an unusually intimate diptych, one of the most quietly radical achievements in recent British cinema. They chart the formation of an artist not through triumph but through vulnerability, confusion, and the slow, necessary work of learning to see clearly. Part II doesn’t resolve the story; it reframes it, revealing that the real souvenir isn’t the relationship lost, but the self that emerges in its wake.

Panorama: Maxed Out – The Credit Card Trap BBC One, 8:00pm

A forensic examination of modern debt culture as interest rates rise and lenders shift risk onto consumers. Quietly furious, the programme exposes how systemic pressure is reframed as personal failure.

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Sky Atlantic, 9:00pm

There’s a welcome shift in scale here—a retreat from the apocalyptic sweep of Game of Thrones toward something more intimate, almost pastoral, without losing the moral turbulence that defines Westeros. Set a century earlier, the story follows Ser Duncan the Tall and his young squire Egg, a pairing that feels deceptively simple until you realise how much of the realm’s future is quietly coiled inside their relationship.

What distinguishes this prequel is its refusal to chase spectacle for its own sake. Instead, it leans into character: the awkward decency of Dunk, a man whose honour is instinctive rather than performative; the sharp, watchful intelligence of Egg, whose identity carries implications neither of them can fully outrun. Their travels take them through a Westeros still recognisable but less ossified—its power structures in flux, its loyalties brittle, its violence more personal than operatic.

The tone is gentler than its predecessor, but no less pointed. The show understands that the moral uncertainty of this world doesn’t always announce itself with dragons or dynastic collapse. Sometimes it’s a question of who gets fed, who gets punished, who gets believed. Dunk and Egg move through these tensions with a kind of earnestness that feels almost radical in a landscape built on cynicism.

What emerges is a story about the small acts of integrity that shape history long before anyone realises history is being made. The stakes may be quieter, but they’re no less consequential. In its best moments, the series feels like a reminder that Westeros was always at its most compelling not when kingdoms fell, but when ordinary people tried—often clumsily, often at great cost—to do the right thing.

Tuesday 20 January 2026

The Fighter (2010) Legend, 9:00pm

A bruising, performance‑driven boxing drama that understands victory as something provisional, never permanent, always paid for in flesh and family. The film’s real contest isn’t in the ring but in the cramped Lowell living rooms where loyalty becomes both a lifeline and a trap. Every punch lands with the weight of obligation, every small triumph shadowed by the cost of carrying those you can’t quite leave behind. It’s a story of survival as much as sport, where the emotional stakes are as punishing—and as compelling—as the physical ones.

🌟 The Crying Game (1992) Film4, 11:30pm

A film that refuses to sit neatly in any genre box, its power drawn from the things it withholds as much as what it reveals. Jordan builds a world of secrecy and emotional dislocation where every gesture feels loaded, every silence edged with threat. The ambiguity isn’t a trick but a texture—an invitation to sit with uncertainty and let the unease accumulate. Decades on, it still has the capacity to unsettle, not through shock but through the quiet, lingering sense that something essential has slipped just out of reach.

🌟 The Piano (1993) BBC Two, 12:00am

ane Campion’s ferociously sensual drama turns silence into its own kind of speech, a language carved out of longing, resistance, and the brutal asymmetries of colonial power. Holly Hunter’s Ada communicates an entire inner world through gesture and breath, her piano becoming both sanctuary and weapon, the only place where desire can be articulated without permission. Campion frames the New Zealand landscape as something vast and indifferent, a terrain that exposes the characters’ vulnerabilities as sharply as it shapes them. What emerges is a story where intimacy is negotiated through touch rather than words, where autonomy is fought for in the smallest, most physical acts. It remains a film of startling emotional force, its quietest moments carrying the weight of a scream.

The Rosenbergs: Atomic Spies PBS America, 8:35pm

A sober reassessment of one of the Cold War’s most polarising cases, examining evidence, ideology, and hysteria with careful restraint.

Wednesday 21 January 2026

Goldfinger (1964) ITV4, 9:00pm

Goldfinger has always sat near the top of my Bond canon, not because it is the most sophisticated or politically comfortable entry, but because it crystallises the series at the exact moment it understood its own power. It’s the film where the franchise stops experimenting and starts declaring itself—stylised, swaggering, and utterly aware of the cultural machinery it’s building. Watching it now, you can feel the template locking into place: the cold open as miniature thriller, the villain as outsized industrialist, the gadgets as both spectacle and satire. It’s Bond becoming Bond in real time, and there’s something irresistible about that confidence.

What draws me back most is the film’s sense of texture—its unapologetic embrace of excess, glamour, and danger as intertwined forces. Goldfinger’s world is one where wealth is both intoxicant and weapon, where the sheen of luxury is always a little too bright, a little too brittle. The film understands that seduction and threat are two sides of the same coin, and it plays them with a theatricality that feels almost operatic. Even the colour palette seems to conspire in this: gold as fetish, gold as corruption, gold as the thing that blinds men to their own downfall. It’s a visual metaphor delivered with a wink and a razor edge.

Then there’s Sean Connery, at the height of his dangerous charm. This is the Bond who moves through rooms as if he owns them, who treats violence as an extension of wit, who understands that the performance of masculinity is half the job. Connery’s Bond is not yet weary or self‑aware; he’s a man who believes in his own myth, and the film lets us see both the allure and the absurdity of that. It’s a performance that feels carved from the era’s anxieties about power, sex, and national identity, even as it pretends to be nothing more than a stylish adventure.

Goldfinger himself remains one of the franchise’s most compelling antagonists precisely because he is not a shadowy ideologue but a businessman with delusions of grandeur. His plan is ludicrous, yes, but it’s rooted in a recognisable logic of accumulation and control. He’s the kind of villain institutions create when they mistake ambition for virtue. And Oddjob—silent, implacable, almost ritualistic in his violence—feels like the embodiment of that logic’s consequences. Together they give the film a weight that offsets its more playful instincts, grounding the spectacle in something darker and more systemic.

Ultimately, Goldfinger endures for me because it captures the Bond franchise at its most self‑assured and least apologetic, a moment when style, menace, and fantasy align with almost mechanical precision. It’s a film that understands the seduction of power while quietly acknowledging its rot, that revels in its own artifice while hinting at the costs beneath the surface. In a series defined by reinvention, Goldfinger remains the touchstone—the one that shows how the myth was built, and why it still holds such sway.

Victoria: A Royal Love Story BBC Four, 9:00pm

A portrait of monarchy that works from the inside out, tracing the contours of power not through ceremony or statecraft but through the fragile, private spaces where affection becomes a political force. The film understands that Victoria’s authority was never exercised in isolation; it was shaped, softened, and sometimes constrained by the emotional dependencies that defined her marriage and her court. What emerges is a study of a woman negotiating the impossible dual role of sovereign and spouse, where vulnerability is not a weakness but a condition of rule.

It’s a story that treats intimacy as a form of governance, showing how personal loyalties and private tensions ripple outward into public consequence. The relationship between Victoria and Albert becomes a kind of constitutional experiment—two people trying to reconcile love with duty, individuality with expectation, all under the relentless scrutiny of an empire hungry for symbols. Their partnership is rendered not as fairy tale but as negotiation, full of tenderness, frustration, and the quiet recalibrations that sustain a shared life.

The film also captures the emotional labour embedded in monarchy, the way a ruler’s inner world becomes a matter of national interest. Victoria’s hesitations, her attachments, her griefs—they all become part of the machinery of power, shaping decisions and public moods in ways that official histories often flatten. By foregrounding this, the film restores a sense of humanity to a figure too often reduced to iconography.

Visually and tonally, it leans into the tension between the intimate and the imperial: candlelit rooms set against vast ceremonial spaces, whispered conversations echoing beneath the weight of inherited authority. It’s a reminder that monarchy is always a performance, but one fuelled by very real emotional stakes.

What lingers is the sense of a woman learning to inhabit her own myth while resisting its erasure of her private self. Victoria: A Royal Love Story suggests that power is never simply bestowed; it is shaped in the crucible of relationship, vulnerability, and the messy, ungovernable terrain of the heart.

Symbols of Evil PBS America, 8:35pm

A documentary that treats iconography not as static imagery but as a living, volatile force—something that can be bent, sharpened, and ultimately weaponised. It traces how symbols migrate from cultural shorthand to instruments of fear, acquiring authority not through inherent meaning but through repetition, spectacle, and the willingness of institutions to invest them with power. What begins as a mark or motif becomes a mechanism of control, shaping behaviour long before a word is spoken.

The film is particularly sharp on the way symbols operate beneath conscious thought. They bypass argument and go straight for the nervous system, embedding themselves in collective memory until they feel inevitable. That inevitability is the danger: once a symbol becomes naturalised, it can be used to justify almost anything. The documentary shows how regimes, movements, and even corporations understand this instinctively, cultivating imagery that can rally, intimidate, or erase with equal efficiency.

There’s also a clear sense of how symbols mutate under pressure. They’re never fixed; they’re contested spaces where meaning is fought over, reclaimed, or corrupted. The film tracks these shifts with a kind of forensic patience, revealing how the same emblem can be a beacon of identity for one group and a threat to another. It’s a reminder that visual language is always political, always in motion, always vulnerable to capture.

Visually, the documentary leans into the starkness of its subject matter—archival footage, close‑ups of artefacts, and the unsettling quiet of objects that have outlived the people who once wielded them. That stillness becomes its own commentary on endurance: symbols often survive the ideologies that created them, lingering as warnings or temptations depending on who encounters them next.

What lingers is the film’s insistence that symbols are never neutral. They shape the emotional climate in which decisions are made, loyalties formed, and violence justified. Symbols of Evil asks viewers to look harder, to question the images that claim authority over them, and to recognise how easily meaning can be twisted when fear becomes the organising principle of public life.

Killer Grannies Crime + Investigation, 9:00pm

A macabre true-crime series examining cases where social expectations collapse. Hosted by June Squibb, it plays on shock while exposing how violence hides behind familiarity.

Thursday 22 January 2026

🌟 Palestine Action: The Truth Behind the Ban Channel 4, 10:00pm

A timely and urgent Dispatches special examining the government’s decision to proscribe Palestine Action. It raises serious questions about civil liberties, proportionality, and the criminalisation of protest.

Strange Journey: The Rocky Horror Picture ShowSky Arts, 11:00pm

Strange Journey: The Rocky Horror Picture Show — Sky Arts, 11:00pm

A documentary that treats Rocky Horror not as a relic of midnight‑movie nostalgia but as a living organism—still mutating, still misbehaving, still refusing to be domesticated by the culture that once tried to smother it. What Sky Arts captures so well is the sheer durability of this strange little phenomenon: a piece of queer, camp, outsider theatre that somehow outpaced censorship, scandal, and decades of moral panic to become a communal ritual. It’s a reminder that subculture doesn’t just survive pressure; it often thrives because of it.

The film digs into the show’s origins with a kind of affectionate forensic curiosity, tracing how Richard O’Brien’s oddball experiment—part glam rock, part B‑movie pastiche, part sexual awakening—found its audience precisely because it didn’t ask for permission. The documentary understands that Rocky Horror’s power lies in its refusal to apologise for its own excess. It’s messy, transgressive, and defiantly unserious, and that unseriousness becomes a kind of liberation. You can feel the joy of a community discovering itself in real time.

There’s a sharp awareness, too, of how the show’s anarchic spirit became a lifeline for people who didn’t see themselves reflected anywhere else. The documentary gives space to the fans who built a culture around participation rather than passive consumption—shouting back, dressing up, claiming the cinema as a place where identity could be tried on, discarded, or embraced. It’s a portrait of fandom as self‑creation, long before the term became a marketing category.

Visually and tonally, the film leans into the tension between the show’s DIY origins and its later cultural ubiquity. Archival footage sits alongside contemporary reflections, creating a sense of continuity rather than nostalgia. The message is clear: Rocky Horror isn’t something that happened; it’s something that keeps happening, sustained by the people who refuse to let it ossify into heritage.

What lingers is the documentary’s insistence that joy can be radical. Strange Journey frames Rocky Horror as a testament to the resilience of the marginal, the playful, and the defiantly strange.

Kindling (2023) — BBC Three, 11:30pm

A quietly devastating drama that treats grief not as a narrative obstacle to be conquered but as a landscape young men are forced to navigate without a map. Kindling is striking for its emotional openness, its willingness to sit with the inarticulate, the awkward, the half‑formed attempts at connection that so often define male friendship. The film understands that masculinity, especially in youth, is a performance stitched together from fear and tenderness, and it refuses to neaten any of that into a comforting arc.

What gives the story its force is the way it captures the rituals of closeness—shared jokes, late‑night confessions, the unspoken agreements that hold a group together even as everything around them fractures. These boys aren’t equipped with the language of grief, so they build their own, piecemeal and imperfect. The film honours that improvisation rather than judging it, showing how love can be expressed through presence, distraction, and the stubborn refusal to let someone drift away alone.

There’s a tactile quality to the filmmaking that mirrors the emotional texture: sunlight on skin, the roughness of grass, the small domestic spaces where illness and friendship collide. These details ground the story in lived experience, reminding us that grief is not abstract—it’s physical, exhausting, and often strangely beautiful in the way it binds people together.

What the film resists, crucially, is catharsis. There’s no grand revelation, no tidy reconciliation, no moment where everything suddenly makes sense. Instead, Kindling offers something truer: the sense that grief reshapes rather than resolves, that the people left behind must learn to carry both memory and absence without instruction.

In the end, it’s that refusal to simplify emotional mess that makes Kindling linger. It’s a film that trusts its audience to sit with discomfort, to recognise the fragility beneath bravado, and to see masculinity not as armour but as something porous, vulnerable, and capable of profound care.

🌟 The Elephant Man (1980) BBC Four, 11:50pm

David Lynch’s most compassionate film works by stripping away the sensationalism that so often clings to stories of physical difference. Instead of leaning into horror, Lynch lets the fear sit with the onlookers, not with John Merrick himself. The result is a drama where dignity slowly eclipses spectacle, where the camera lingers not on deformity but on the quiet, searching humanity beneath it. It’s a film that understands restraint as a moral choice, refusing to exploit what it seeks to honour.

What gives the film its emotional force is the relationship between Merrick and Dr. Treves—a bond built on curiosity, guilt, and a growing recognition of shared vulnerability. Lynch treats their connection with a tenderness that feels almost radical, allowing moments of stillness to carry the weight of entire conversations. In these silences, the film finds its centre: the idea that compassion is not an instinct but a discipline, something learned, faltered in, and returned to. Hopkins and Hurt play this dance with extraordinary delicacy, each gesture revealing the cost of seeing another person fully.

By the time the film reaches its devastating final movement, The Elephant Man has become something far larger than a biographical drama. It’s a meditation on how societies decide who counts as human, and how easily cruelty can masquerade as curiosity. Lynch’s monochrome London—soot‑choked, fog‑bound, oppressive—becomes a moral landscape as much as a physical one. Yet within that darkness, the film insists on the possibility of grace. It’s this insistence, quiet but unshakeable, that makes it one of Lynch’s most enduring works.

Friday 23 January 2026

The G (2023) Film4, 9:00pm

A thriller that trusts atmosphere over adrenaline, The G builds its tension grain by grain, letting unease seep into the frame until it becomes almost tactile. This is menace understood not as spectacle but as accumulation—the way a look lingers too long, a silence stretches just a beat past comfort, a familiar landscape begins to feel subtly misaligned. The film’s power lies in that patience, in its refusal to rush toward confrontation when dread can do the work more effectively.

What emerges is a portrait of threat that feels rooted in lived experience rather than genre mechanics. The characters move through the story with the wary alertness of people who know danger rarely announces itself; it arrives in increments, in the slow tightening of circumstance. The film honours that truth, allowing paranoia to bloom organically, shaped by class, isolation, and the quiet violences that institutions overlook. It’s a thriller that understands fear as something that grows in the gaps—between neighbours, between generations, between what is said and what is meant.

By the time the tension finally crests, the film has earned every pulse of it. The G lingers because it recognises that the most unsettling stories are the ones that don’t explode—they seep, stain, and settle, leaving you with the sense that the real danger was never the event but the atmosphere that made it possible.

Benny’s Back (2018) BBC Three, 11:30pm

A compact, quietly unsettling drama, Benny’s Back understands that the real shock of a return isn’t the event itself but the way it destabilises the emotional architecture people have built in someone’s absence. The film treats Benny’s reappearance not as a plot twist but as a fault line, exposing the compromises, resentments, and half‑healed wounds that families learn to step around. It’s a story that trusts the audience to read the room—to notice the glances that last a beat too long, the pauses that say more than the dialogue ever could.

What makes the film compelling is its refusal to impose a neat emotional logic on the characters. Benny isn’t framed as saviour or saboteur; he’s simply a presence that forces everyone else to confront the versions of themselves they’ve been avoiding. The drama unfolds in the small ruptures—routine unsettled, loyalties tested, old patterns reasserting themselves with unnerving ease. The performances lean into this ambiguity, playing the tension with a kind of lived‑in naturalism that suggests a history too complicated to articulate.

By the end, Benny’s Back hasn’t resolved its tensions so much as illuminated them. The film’s power lies in its restraint, in its understanding that some returns don’t bring closure but clarity—an uncomfortable, necessary recognition of what has changed and what stubbornly hasn’t. It’s a drama that lingers precisely because it leaves space for the unsaid, trusting silence to carry the emotional truth.

Discovering Meryl Streep Sky Documentaries, 4:00pm

A career-spanning portrait of an actor whose intelligence and adaptability reshaped mainstream cinema across five decades.

Streaming Choice

Sandokan — Netflix (from Monday 19 January)

A lush, swashbuckling adventure centred on Sandokan, the Malaysian pirate‑prince who wages a guerrilla war against British colonial power. The series follows his battles across Borneo and the South China Sea, where rebellion, loyalty, and mythmaking collide with his unexpected romance with Lady Marianna, the consul’s daughter drawn into his world. What emerges is a tale of resistance wrapped in spectacle and desire, driven by a hero who refuses to bow to empire.

Drops of Gold – Season 2 — Apple TV+ (episodes 1–2 from Wednesday 21 January)

Season 2 picks up three years after the inheritance battle, sending Camille and Issei on a globe‑spanning quest to uncover the origin of a legendary wine even Alexandre Léger couldn’t identify. Their rivalry deepens into a fraught partnership as they navigate centuries‑old secrets, buried histories, and the emotional fallout of their shared past. The result is a richer, more expansive chapter—part mystery, part family reckoning—rooted in the show’s signature blend of sensory precision and high‑stakes oenological drama.

The Big Fake — Netflix (from Friday 23 January)

A gritty Italian period drama based on the true story of Toni Chichiarelli, a young painter in 1970s Rome whose talent leads him into the world of high‑stakes art forgery. The series follows his slide from idealistic artist to underworld operator, moving through galleries, criminal networks, and the shadowy overlap between culture and corruption. What emerges is a stylish, morally slippery character study about ambition, reinvention, and the dangerous allure of becoming someone other than yourself.

Cosmic Princess Kaguya — Netflix (from Thursday 22 January)

A neon‑bright reimagining of Japan’s oldest folktale, this animated musical follows Iroha, a Tokyo teenager who discovers a mysterious girl from the moon emerging from a glowing telephone pole. Drawn into the virtual world of Tsukuyomi, the two forge a creative partnership—part streaming hustle, part cosmic destiny—as Kaguya becomes an overnight star. The result is a dazzling blend of myth, metaverse, and emotional coming‑of‑age, driven by music, spectacle, and the fragile bond between two girls caught between worlds.

The Beauty — Disney+ (first three episodes from Thursday 22 January)

A glossy, unsettling thriller set in the global fashion world, where a string of supermodel deaths exposes a designer virus that makes its hosts physically flawless while hiding lethal consequences. FBI agents Cooper Madsen and Jordan Bennett are drawn into a chase that spans Paris, Venice, Rome, and New York as they uncover a conspiracy engineered by a tech billionaire using beauty as both lure and weapon. What unfolds is a stylish collision of glamour, body horror, and moral reckoning, tracing how perfection becomes the most dangerous currency of all.

Book cover for 'The Angela Suite' by Anthony C. Green featuring the title, author's name, and an image of feet beside a camera.

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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 23 – 29 August 2025

Selections and commentary by Pat Harrington.

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

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

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

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


Saturday 23rd August

Dark Hearts — BBC Four, 9:00pm

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Sunday 24th August

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Monday 25th August (Bank Holiday)

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Snowpiercer (2013) — ITV4, 9:00pm

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Tuesday 26th August

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Wednesday 27th August

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

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

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

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

Just Mercy (2019) — BBC One, 11:30pm

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

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

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


Thursday 28th August

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Friday 29th August

Atonement (2007) — BBC Two, 11:00pm

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

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

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


Streaming Choices

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

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

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

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

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Culture Vulture: 16–22 August 2025

3,087 words, 16 minutes read time.

Selections and commentary by Pat Harrington
The week ahead offers a mixture of power and subtlety, from war horses and tyrant kings to intimate studies of ageing and creativity. Three standouts deserve mention. Spielberg’s War Horse returns with all the force of its original cinema release, a sweeping epic of friendship and endurance. Sunday brings On the Waterfront, with Brando’s electrifying performance still fresh seventy years on. And Thursday’s Football’s Financial Shame promises to expose the rot beneath the gloss of the modern game. Each shows how film and television can reveal both the nobility and failings of human ambition.


Saturday, 16th of August

War Horse (BBC Two, 2:15 p.m., 2010)

This is a cinematic elegy, stitched from mud, memory, and the quiet dignity of a creature caught in the machinery of war. Adapted from Michael Morpurgo’s novel, Spielberg’s rendering of Joey’s journey is both intimate and operatic: a horse’s-eye view of humanity at its most fractured and most tender.

From the Devonshire fields to the blood-soaked trenches of the Somme, the film moves with lyrical precision, each frame a study in contrast—sunlight dappling hedgerows, then smoke curling over no-man’s-land. Joey is more than a protagonist; he is a vessel for loyalty, innocence, and the unspoken grief of those conscripted into violence. His silent witness becomes a kind of moral compass, guiding us through the chaos with a gaze that neither judges nor flinches.

Spielberg’s direction balances sentiment with scale. The cavalry charge, rendered in painterly slow motion, is as devastating as any human scene. And yet, it’s the quiet moments—a boy’s farewell, a soldier’s kindness, a reunion in the mist—that linger longest. These are the emotional fulcrums on which the film turns, reminding us that war is not just fought in battles, but in the hearts of those who endure it.

War Horse stands out for its sincerity. It is a story of connection—between species, between strangers, between past and present. And in Joey’s journey, we glimpse something elemental: the endurance of hope, even when the world forgets how to name it.

PBS meanwhile brings Henry VIII and the King’s Men, a three-part exploration of the monarch who redefined England. The first part, The Unexpected King (6:35 p.m.), traces his unlikely rise. The second, The Absent King (7:35 p.m.), examines his pursuit of glory abroad and neglect at home. The third, The Tyrant King (8:35 p.m.), dissects the ruthless consolidation of power that left blood on his hands. Together, these instalments show not a caricature of gluttony and wives, but a study of monarchy’s destructive weight.

Later, two sharp contrasts in love and power. Queen & Slim (BBC One, 12 a.m., 2019) is a modern Bonnie and Clyde, but grounded in the politics of race and policing in America. Daniel Kaluuya and Jodie Turner-Smith give performances that fuse vulnerability and rebellion. Then, The Favourite (Channel 4, 12:25 a.m., 2018), Yorgos Lanthimos’ darkly comic take on Queen Anne’s court, offers a brilliant triangle of ambition, intimacy, and cruelty. Olivia Colman’s Oscar-winning turn remains a marvel.


Sunday, 17th of August

On the Waterfront (BBC Two, 11:30 a.m., 1954)

remains a cornerstone of American cinema—a film that doesn’t just depict injustice, but interrogates the cost of silence. Elia Kazan’s dockside drama, set against the cold steel and moral murk of post-war New Jersey, is as much a parable as it is a portrait: of one man’s reckoning, and a community’s slow awakening.

Marlon Brando’s Terry Malloy is a study in internal fracture. A former boxer turned longshoreman, he is caught between loyalty to his corrupt union and the stirrings of conscience ignited by love and loss. Brando’s performance—mumbled, muscular, and heartbreakingly vulnerable—still feels revolutionary. His famous lament, “I coulda been a contender,” is not just a line, but a wound. It echoes through generations of disillusionment.

Leonard Bernstein’s score lends the film a mythic pulse, elevating its realism into something operatic. The cranes, the cargo, the fog—each element is rendered with tactile precision, yet the film never loses sight of its moral compass. It asks, with quiet fury: what happens when good men look away?

In an era of whistleblowers and institutional reckoning, On the Waterfront feels newly urgent. Its message—that complicity corrodes, and courage costs—resonates far beyond the docks. It’s not just a film about corruption; it’s about the fragile architecture of integrity, and the bravery required to rebuild it.

The Italian Job (BBC Two, 6:25 p.m., 1969)

it’s a swaggering snapshot of Britain on the brink. Michael Caine’s Charlie Croker leads his crew with irrepressible charm, orchestrating a gold robbery in Turin that’s as much choreography as crime. The Mini Coopers—red, white, and blue—don’t just zip through sewers and piazzas; they become emblems of a nation trying to outrun its own contradictions.

Beneath the cheeky banter and mod aesthetics lies a deeper tension. The film captures a Britain caught between post-war bravado and economic unease, between empire’s echo and Europe’s allure. Its humour is laced with uncertainty, its optimism tinged with irony. Even Noël Coward’s criminal mastermind feels like a relic—cultured, clipped, and quietly obsolete.

The final scene—three tons of gold teetering on the edge of a cliff, the crew suspended in literal and metaphorical limbo—is one of cinema’s most deliciously unresolved moments. It’s not just a cliffhanger; it’s a question mark over national identity, ambition, and the fine line between triumph and collapse.

In a festival landscape often dominated by introspection and grit, The Italian Job offers levity with bite. It’s a caper, yes—but also a time capsule, capturing a Britain that’s bold, brash, and not quite sure what comes next.

Mean Girls (ITV2, 7 p.m., 2004)

This is more than a teen comedy—it’s a scalpel disguised as a lip gloss. Tina Fey’s script slices through the social architecture of high school with wit and precision, exposing the rituals of exclusion, performance, and survival that shape adolescence. It’s satire, yes—but it’s also sociology in stilettos.

Cady Heron’s descent into the glittering chaos of North Shore High is a journey through identity formation and moral compromise. The Plastics aren’t just a clique—they’re a system. Their power lies not in popularity, but in the unspoken codes they enforce: who sits where, who wears what, who gets to speak. Fey’s genius is in showing how these codes mirror adult hierarchies, with cruelty passed down like a family heirloom.

The film’s enduring appeal lies in its duality. It’s quotable and camp, yet its emotional truths are unflinching. Beneath the pink and petty lies a portrait of insecurity, longing, and the fragile hope of belonging. It understands that adolescence is not just awkward—it’s formative. And that the scars of youth often outlast the prom dresses.

In a cultural moment still reckoning with bullying, performative feminism, and the politics of inclusion, Mean Girls remains startlingly relevant. It’s not just a cult classic—it’s a mirror. And it asks, with a raised brow and a heart full of empathy: who are we when no one’s watching?

Stacey Dooley: Growing Up Gypsy, (BBC Three, at 9 p.m)

This is journalism that listens before it speaks. In a media landscape often prone to caricature, Dooley’s documentary offers something rarer: a portrait of young Romani and Traveller voices navigating the tightrope between tradition and modernity, pride and prejudice.

The programme doesn’t flatten its subjects into tropes. Instead, it foregrounds the lived complexity of identity—how heritage can be both anchor and battleground. We meet teenagers negotiating school, family, and societal expectation, often in the face of discrimination so routine it’s barely acknowledged. Their stories are not framed as problems to be solved, but as perspectives to be understood.

Dooley’s approach is quietly radical. She steps back, allowing her interviewees to speak with candour and contradiction. The result is a documentary that feels less like reportage and more like a conversation—one that challenges viewers to reconsider what they think they know about community, belonging, and the politics of visibility.

In a Britain still reckoning with its own layered inequalities, Growing Up Gypsy is a reminder that identity is not static, and that understanding begins with listening. It’s not just a programme—it’s a gesture of respect.


Monday, 18th of August

The Theory of Everything (BBC Two, 11 p.m., 2014)

Not just a biopic—it’s a love letter to resilience, intellect, and the quiet revolutions that unfold behind closed doors. James Marsh’s film traces the life of Stephen Hawking with grace and gravity, never reducing his genius to spectacle, nor his illness to tragedy. Instead, it offers a portrait of a man—and a marriage—shaped by time, tenderness, and the relentless pursuit of understanding.

Eddie Redmayne’s Oscar-winning performance is astonishing not for its mimicry, but for its emotional clarity. His portrayal of Hawking’s physical decline is precise, yes—but it’s the flicker of humour, the stubborn joy, the refusal to be defined by limitation, that makes it radiant. Felicity Jones, as Jane Hawking, anchors the film with quiet strength. Her devotion is not romanticised—it is rendered with honesty, showing the cost of care, the weight of compromise, and the courage required to love someone through change.

The film’s celebration of science is never abstract. It’s rooted in the human: in chalk dust, in shared glances, in the ache of possibility. It reminds us that discovery is not just about equations—it’s about endurance, about the will to keep asking questions even when the answers are elusive.

Michael Mosley’s Secrets of the Superagers: The Future of Ageing (Channel 4 8 p.m.).

With characteristic curiosity, Mosley examines how diet, exercise, and mindset might extend both lifespan and vitality. This is not science fiction but science at our doorstep, challenging assumptions about what later life can be.


Tuesday, 19th of August

My Best Friend’s Wedding (Film4, 6:55 p.m., 1997)

a romantic comedy that dares to colour outside the lines. Julia Roberts plays Julianne, a food critic who realises—too late—that her best friend is also the love of her life. What follows is not a race to win him back, but a slow, often painful reckoning with timing, ego, and the limits of charm.

Roberts is magnetic, of course—her smile weaponised, her vulnerability just beneath the surface. But it’s Dermot Mulroney’s steady warmth as Michael that gives the film its emotional ballast. He’s not a prize to be won, but a person with his own path, and the film respects that. Cameron Diaz, too, is revelatory—her character, initially framed as an obstacle, becomes a mirror for Julianne’s own contradictions.

What elevates the film is its refusal to conform. There’s no last-minute dash, no rewritten vows. Instead, we get a dance—bittersweet, honest, and strangely liberating. It’s a story about love, yes, but also about friendship, regret, and the grace of letting go.

In a genre often built on wish fulfilment, My Best Friend’s Wedding lingers because it tells the truth: that not all love stories end in romance, and not all heartbreaks are failures. Sometimes, the most radical thing a romcom can do is let its heroine walk away—with dignity, and a better understanding of herself.

Michael Portillo’s Lisbon (Channel 5, 7 p.m.)

This provides something different—a journey through history, architecture, and culture, all with Portillo’s eye for narrative detail. His travelogues blend personal enthusiasm with a historian’s curiosity, and this episode should be no exception.


Wednesday, 20th of August

Tamara Drewe (BBC Two, 11 p.m., 2010)

a pastoral farce with teeth. Adapted from Posy Simmonds’ graphic novel, Stephen Frears’ film trades in the familiar tropes of village life—idyll, gossip, and literary pretension—but uses them to skewer the hypocrisies that often go unspoken. Gemma Arterton’s Tamara returns to her Dorset village transformed: nose job, city polish, and a wardrobe that turns heads and stirs old resentments.

Her arrival sets off a chain reaction of lust, envy, and self-delusion. Writers bicker, teenagers scheme, and marriages unravel—all under the guise of rural civility. The film’s strength lies in its tonal agility: it’s breezy without being shallow, satirical without cruelty. Beneath the flirtations and farcical twists is a quiet meditation on reinvention—who gets to change, and who gets punished for it.

Arterton plays Tamara with a knowing edge, never quite letting us settle into sympathy or scorn. She is both disruptor and mirror, reflecting the village’s insecurities back at itself. The supporting cast—particularly Tamsin Greig and Roger Allam—bring depth to characters who might otherwise be caricatures, revealing the loneliness and longing that often hide behind wit.

In a festival season full of urban grit and existential angst, Tamara Drewe offers a different kind of critique: one that wears floral prints and wields sharp elbows. It’s a comedy of manners, yes—but also a study in the fragile architecture of self-image and the chaos that ensues when it’s disturbed.

The V&A Presents: Alice: Curiouser and Curiouser (BBC Two, 1:45 p.m.)

A dive into the enduring legacy of Carroll’s creation. The exhibition itself was dazzling, and this film captures both its visual richness and its deeper reflections on how Alice has shaped art, politics, and psychology.


Thursday, 21st of August

The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (BBC One, 11:40 p.m., 1994)

a glitter-drenched odyssey through the heart of Australia—and the soul of queer resilience. Terence Stamp, Hugo Weaving, and Guy Pearce star as drag performers on a road trip that’s equal parts cabaret and confrontation, traversing the outback in a lavender bus named Priscilla and leaving sequins in their wake.

But beneath the feather boas and lip-sync bravado lies something far more profound: a story of chosen family, survival, and the audacity to be joyful in the face of prejudice. The film doesn’t flinch from the hostility its characters encounter, nor does it let that hostility define them. Instead, it celebrates their wit, their tenderness, and their refusal to shrink.

Stamp’s Bernadette brings a quiet dignity to the trio, while Weaving and Pearce oscillate between camp and vulnerability with disarming ease. Their performances are not just entertaining—they’re affirming. The film’s humour is laced with pain, its spectacle grounded in truth. And through it all, the desert becomes a kind of stage: vast, indifferent, and strangely liberating.

Priscilla’s influence on queer cinema is immeasurable. It paved the way for stories that centre joy as resistance, and community as sanctuary. In a world still learning how to honour difference, it remains a beacon—fabulous, fierce, and full of heart.

Classic Movies: The Story of Billy Liar (Sky Arts follows 10 p.m)

John Schlesinger’s 1963 portrait of a young man caught between the drudgery of provincial life and the seductive pull of imagined grandeur. Tom Courtenay’s Billy is a dreamer, a fantasist, and a chronic avoider—his lies less malicious than desperate acts of self-preservation in a world that offers him little scope for joy.

The film captures a Britain on the cusp of change: still grey with post-war austerity, yet beginning to stir with the promise of youth culture and social mobility. Billy’s fantasies—of revolution, romance, and escape—aren’t just escapism; they’re protest. Against conformity, against class rigidity, against the slow suffocation of possibility.

This programme doesn’t just dissect the film’s narrative—it situates it within its cultural moment. It explores how Billy Liar anticipated the British New Wave’s fascination with working-class interiority, and how it gave voice to a generation caught between duty and desire. Julie Christie’s Liz, radiant and free, becomes the embodiment of the life Billy might have had—if only he’d dared.

There’s something mythic in Billy’s failure. Like Icarus, he dreams too vividly, and like Hamlet, he hesitates too long. The film’s enduring power lies in its ambiguity: is Billy a coward, or simply a casualty of a system that punishes imagination?


Friday, 22nd of August

The Prestige (BBC Two, 11 p.m., 2006)

a tale of obsession, illusion, and the brutal calculus of ambition. Christian Bale and Hugh Jackman play rival magicians in Victorian London, each consumed by the need to outdo the other—not for applause, but for supremacy. Their rivalry unfolds like a magic trick: misdirection, sacrifice, and a final reveal that leaves you questioning everything.

Christopher Nolan twists the narrative until truth and deception become indistinguishable. The film’s structure mirrors its theme—layered, elusive, and built on secrets. But beneath the sleight of hand lies something darker: a meditation on identity, grief, and the cost of greatness. Bale’s Borden is all precision and secrecy; Jackman’s Angier, all charisma and torment. Their performances are as much about what’s withheld as what’s revealed.

The film asks: what are we willing to destroy in pursuit of legacy? Careers, relationships, even the self—nothing is sacred when ambition becomes obsession. And in the end, the real prestige isn’t the trick—it’s the price paid to perform it.

The Prestige is a philosophical puzzle box, a gothic fable, and a cautionary tale about the hunger to be remembered.

Under the Skin (Film4. 12:15 a.m., 2013).

Scarlett Johansson plays an alien predator roaming Glasgow, luring men into a void that’s as literal as it is existential. But Jonathan Glazer’s direction resists easy categorisation—this is science fiction stripped of spectacle, horror rendered with quiet restraint.

The film’s power lies in its dissonance. Grainy street footage collides with surreal interiors; naturalistic dialogue is punctuated by silence and dread. Johansson’s performance is chillingly blank, yet never robotic—her gaze is curious, almost mournful, as if the predator is learning to feel even as she consumes.

Glazer turns Glasgow into a landscape of alienation: rain-slicked streets, fluorescent takeaways, and anonymous crowds. It’s a city seen through unfamiliar eyes, where humanity is both grotesque and tender. The men she encounters are real locals, filmed with hidden cameras, adding a layer of documentary realism to the film’s eerie fiction.

But beneath the surface horror lies something more profound: a meditation on embodiment, gender, and the ethics of perception. What does it mean to be seen, desired, hunted? And what happens when the hunter begins to empathise?

Under the Skin is haunting, cold, and oddly tender—a film that lingers like a half-remembered dream, unsettling and sublime.

Bob Dylan: The Other Side of the Mirror (Sky Arts 12:05 a.m)

This documentary captures Dylan’s performances at the Newport Folk Festival from 1963 to 1965, charting his journey from acoustic prophet to electric revolutionary. Few films show the transformation of an artist with such immediacy.


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



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

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


Saturday, 9th August

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Sunday, 10th August

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Monday, 11th August

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

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

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


Tuesday, 12th August

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Wednesday, 13th August

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

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

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


Thursday, 14th August

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

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

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

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

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


Friday, 15th August

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Streaming Choices

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Culture Vulture 2-8 August 2025

Selected and reviewed by Pat Harrington

3,564 words, 19 minutes read time.

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


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

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

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

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

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


LA Confidential Legend, 9:00 PM

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Culture Vulture: 26 July – 1 August 2025

Selections and commentary by Pat Harrington

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


Saturday, 26th July

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Sunday, 27th July

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Monday, 28th July

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

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

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

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

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

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

Tuesday, 29th July

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Wednesday, 30th July

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Thursday, 31st July

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

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

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

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

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

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

Friday, 1st August

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

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

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

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

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

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

Streaming Choices

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Culture Vulture 19-25 July 2025

Selected and reviewed by Pat Harrington

This week brings a stirring mix of music legends, political truth-telling, classic cinema, and sharp new drama. Our 🌟 Highlights are Gosford Park, Women Talking, and The Long Good Friday — each one an insight into social structures that define, divide, and sometimes destroy.

There’s plenty more to watch, too: from haunting reconstructions of 20th-century history (Hiroshima, Death of Yugoslavia) to intimate portraits of resistance (Suffragette, Breaking the Silence), as well as rare gems in documentary and music history. Whether you’re tuning in for timeless drama or uncovering the stories behind revolutions in art and politics, this week offers food for thought as well as feeling.


Saturday, 19th July

The Searchers (BBC2, 1:00pm) – 1956
John Ford’s The Searchers (1956) isn’t just a western—it’s a slow-burning reckoning with identity, obsession, and the myths America tells about itself. When Ethan Edwards returns from war to find his family slaughtered and his niece taken by Comanches, his years-long pursuit becomes less a rescue mission than a study in emotional erosion. His journey across the vast Monument Valley—filmed with Ford’s operatic eye—is both visually majestic and psychologically grim.

Wayne’s Ethan is no gallant cowboy. He’s bitter, racist, and profoundly broken—a man whose heroism is stripped down to violent impulse and painful ambiguity. Wayne, usually a symbol of frontier masculinity, delivers a performance that teeters on the edge of villainy, never inviting comfort or certainty. His portrayal unravels the genre’s usual moral simplicity, revealing how vengeance can masquerade as virtue, and how frontier justice often bears the stain of fanaticism.

This is American mythmaking laid bare—filled with sweeping scenery and harsh truths. What looks like nobility becomes compulsion; what should feel like closure ends in quiet devastation. Ford doesn’t just direct the west—he interrogates it. And in doing so, The Searchers continues to haunt the genre it helped define.

War for the Planet of the Apes (ITV2, 6:15pm) – 2017
In War for the Planet of the Apes (2017), director Matt Reeves closes the trilogy not with bombast, but with grief, reflection, and the kind of moral weight that most blockbusters dodge. This is epic science fiction with soul—less a war movie than a pilgrimage through pain, where Andy Serkis’ Caesar must grapple not only with the brutality of humanity but the growing shadow of his own rage.

Caesar, once a visionary leader, is now haunted by vengeance after a devastating loss. His journey feels biblical—crossing snowy wastelands and moral thresholds—testing the limits of compassion in a world increasingly ruled by fear and tribalism. Serkis’ motion-capture performance is extraordinary: expressive, bruised, commanding. You feel the depth of every silence, every glance, every choice that costs him his hope.

What sets the film apart is its refusal to simplify. The humans aren’t cartoon villains; they’re terrified survivors. Caesar isn’t a clean-cut hero; he’s in danger of becoming the very enemy he mourns. It’s a story of ethical reckoning, where peace must be chosen over instinct—again and again. And when the final frame arrives, it’s not triumphant but tender. A legacy laid in snow, pain, and quiet grace.

Titanic (Channel 4, 6:30pm) – 1997
James Cameron’s Titanic (1997) may be remembered as the love story that launched a thousand teenage heartaches, but it still holds emotional heft beneath the spectacle. It’s a film of immense ambition—and intimate devastation. At its heart are Jack and Rose, two young dreamers divided by class but united by defiance, dancing on the edge of tragedy before history quite literally swallows them whole. Their romance is sweeping, yes, but also strikingly political. Cameron doesn’t just sketch star-crossed lovers—he gives us a floating microcosm of inequality, vanity, and doomed certainty.

Technically, Titanic remains astonishing: from the real-time terror of its final hour to the intricacies of set design that mimic Edwardian excess with unsettling precision. But it’s the quieter beats that endure. Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet bring tenderness and urgency to characters who might have, in lesser hands, felt schematic. Even now, Jack’s sketches and Rose’s whisper of “I’ll never let go” cut deeper than expected—not because they’re sentimental, but because they cling to meaning in a world collapsing.

This is blockbuster storytelling with emotional intelligence—where spectacle doesn’t drown out subtlety. It’s no coincidence that the lifeboats carry the rich while the underdeck hums with music and dance, nor that survival hinges more on choice than privilege. Cameron’s romance is tragic, yes, but it’s also indicting. Titanic asks how we remember—not just those we loved, but those we overlooked

The Commitments (BBC2, 10:00pm) – 1991
There’s a scruffy brilliance to The Commitments (1991) that still hits like a bassline in a church hall—it’s noisy, chaotic, and profoundly alive. Alan Parker’s adaptation of Roddy Doyle’s novel captures the grubby glamour of a Dublin soul band born not of slick commercial ambition, but of kitchen-table schemes and local grit. These aren’t polished performers—they’re misfits, dreamers, and egos waiting to combust. And that’s the magic. The film doesn’t romanticise the working-class struggle—it makes you hear it, in every howl, squabble, and blistering cover of Otis Redding.

At the centre is Jimmy Rabbitte, a self-appointed manager with a taste for Motown and a gift for corralling dysfunction. Around him swirls a cast of wannabes—horn players, backup singers, a messianic frontman named Deco whose talent is matched only by his intolerability. The band’s rise is electric, its implosion inevitable. But the joy is in the noise they make on the way up. The music is phenomenal—raw, rousing, and captured with such immediacy you can almost smell the sweat and stale beer.

Yet beneath the humour and ego clashes lies something more poignant: a longing for transcendence through sound, for recognition in a city that rarely hands it out. The Commitments doesn’t end with a big gig or major label deal. It ends where it began—in backstreets and missed chances—but leaves behind a legacy of soul, resistance, and the aching beauty of voices raised in unity, if only briefly.

🌟 Gosford Park (BBC1, 10:30pm) – 2001
Robert Altman’s Gosford Park (2001) may wear the polish of a stately country house mystery, but beneath the gleaming silverware and stifled pleasantries lies a biting dissection of British social hierarchy. It’s not the murder that drives the drama—it’s the simmering tension between upstairs grandeur and downstairs servitude, where power often masquerades as civility and rebellion brews beneath starched collars.

Altman orchestrates his ensemble with surgical precision: aristocrats posture over pheasant while their servants trade sharp glances and sharper gossip, each scene folding class commentary into the rhythm of clinking cutlery. Kristin Scott Thomas is all brittle disdain as Lady Sylvia, while Helen Mirren and Emily Watson craft quieter, more devastating portraits of resilience below stairs. The script, co-written by Julian Fellowes, rarely misses a beat—drawing comedy and cruelty from the same dinner napkin.

Yet for all its period elegance, the film feels thrillingly modern. The camera floats through rooms like an eavesdropper, refusing to let anyone—be they lord or footman—retain their illusions of control. By the time the murder is solved, the point isn’t justice, but exposure: a system laid bare, its hypocrisies not abolished but illuminated.

🌟 The Long Good Friday (Film4, 11:40pm) – 1980
Bob Hoskins doesn’t just lead The Long Good Friday—he detonates it. His performance as Harold Shand, a bullish East End kingpin with dreams of legitimacy, is one of British cinema’s great unravellings. Shand is all swagger and ambition, striding through docklands and boardrooms with visions of turning London into a hub of global capital. But beneath the bravado is fear—of change, of irrelevance, of enemies who won’t play by his rules. Director John Mackenzie captures a city in flux, where the old codes of crime are being overwritten by something colder, leaner, and more international.

The tension simmers then erupts. Harold’s empire begins to crumble—not from cops or rivals he understands, but from shadowy forces he can’t predict. The IRA, the shifting loyalties of his own crew, and a changing political climate all conspire against him. And in that final scene, where Hoskins says everything without a word—his eyes flickering between fury, disbelief, and despair—it’s not just the end of a gangster, it’s the end of an era.

The Long Good Friday isn’t nostalgia. It’s prophecy. Thatcher’s Britain is already visible in the margins: property deals, power consolidation, violence dressed up as enterprise. Mackenzie doesn’t romanticise Harold—he holds him up as a mirror to a nation bracing for upheaval.

Mud (BBC2, 11:50pm) – 2012
Jeff Nichols’ Mud (2012) is soaked in Southern gothic melancholy—the kind where the air feels thick with secrets and the landscape hums with old wounds. Matthew McConaughey plays Mud, a fugitive who takes shelter in an abandoned boat lodged in a tree, watched over by two teenage boys who are drawn to his stories, his charm, and his unraveling sense of purpose. It’s a coming-of-age tale tangled with betrayal, loyalty, and the mythology of men trying to outrun themselves.

McConaughey—deep in his mid-career renaissance—delivers something raw and restrained: Mud is both romantic hero and cautionary ghost, speaking in riddles and living half in fantasy, half in fear. Tye Sheridan and Jacob Lofland, as the boys, ground the film in curiosity and heartache; through their eyes, we see the cracks in Mud’s legend and the unforgiving truths of adulthood. Nichols directs with a quiet lyricism—riverbanks and motels become sites of revelation, not spectacle.

There’s violence in the margins, and heartbreak at the centre. But Mud never shouts. It lets its emotions settle like silt at the bottom of a river, gradually stirred by love, disillusionment, and the ache of growing up.

Down the Tracks: The Music That Influenced Bob Dylan (Sky Arts, 11:30pm)
Down the Tracks: The Music That Influenced Bob Dylan is less a documentary and more a rich cartography of sonic lineage—tracing the threads that wove Dylan into the tapestry of American song. From the front porches of folk revivalists to the smoky backrooms of Delta blues, Sky Arts rolls out the landscapes where Dylan found not just rhythm, but philosophy. The film doesn’t just namecheck genres—it introduces them as voices that shaped his own: gospel, country, protest, and poetry.

There’s depth here beyond admiration. We hear how Dylan devoured Woody Guthrie and Lead Belly, borrowed from Hank Williams and Odetta, and filtered them through his own cryptic lens. Interviews with musicians, critics, and cultural historians unpack the echoes—some subtle, some unmistakable. It’s a documentary that doesn’t flatter so much as reveal: Dylan didn’t invent a sound, he reimagined it, constantly—sometimes controversially—reshuffling tradition into something electric, elliptical, and enduring.

For longtime fans, it’s a chance to revisit the roots with new ears. For curious newcomers, it’s an education in musical inheritance—not just who Dylan listened to, but why those sounds mattered then and resonate still.


Sunday, 20th July

Jimi Hendrix at Woodstock (Sky Arts, 8:55pm)
Jimi Hendrix’s set at Woodstock wasn’t just a performance—it was a seismic cultural moment, and Jimi Hendrix at Woodstock (Sky Arts, 8:55pm) captures it in all its raw, electrifying glory. Filmed in the early hours of August 18th, 1969, Hendrix took the stage with his ad hoc band Gypsy Suns and Rainbows, long after most of the crowd had dispersed. What remained was a sea of mud, fatigue, and reverence—and Hendrix, ever the iconoclast, delivered a set that felt like both requiem and revolution.

His rendition of “The Star-Spangled Banner” remains one of the most haunting acts of musical protest ever committed to tape. Discordant, distorted, and deeply intentional, it transformed the national anthem into a sonic battlefield—echoing bombs, screams, and sirens through feedback and fury. It wasn’t just a cover; it was a confrontation. Hendrix didn’t speak—he didn’t need to. The guitar said everything about Vietnam, about America, about the cost of silence.

But the documentary doesn’t stop at that one moment. It threads together performances of “Purple Haze,” “Voodoo Chile,” and “Hear My Train A Comin’,” revealing Hendrix as both technician and mystic. His fingers blur, his body bends, and the music feels summoned rather than played. For fans, it’s a pilgrimage. For newcomers, it’s a revelation

Breaking the Silence: Kate’s Story (ITV1, 10:20pm)
Breaking the Silence: Kate’s Story (ITV1, 10:20pm) invites viewers into a deeply intimate act of resistance—the kind that demands not applause, but attention. Kate’s testimony isn’t presented as spectacle; it’s framed with care and courage, foregrounding her agency as she unpacks years of pain, secrecy, and survival. What emerges isn’t just a personal account of abuse, but a broader indictment of the systems—familial, institutional, cultural—that too often reward silence and punish truth.

The documentary balances delicacy with directness. It listens as much as it informs, bringing in voices that extend the narrative beyond Kate: the supporters who stood beside her, the professionals who challenged power, and the institutions still reckoning with their failures. There’s a quiet insistence throughout—that naming harm is itself an act of change, and that storytelling, when handled ethically, can become both catharsis and catalyst.

Visually and tonally, Breaking the Silence resists sensationalism. It offers something rarer: dignity. By letting Kate lead, it honours complexity—her grief, her strength, her ongoing process. This isn’t closure packaged for primetime. It’s a reminder that survival isn’t neat, and truth, when spoken aloud, reshapes the room it enters

The Wolf of Wall Street (BBC2, 10:00pm) – 2013
Martin Scorsese’s The Wolf of Wall Street (2013) isn’t just a critique of greed—it’s a full-body plunge into its most seductive, corrosive depths. Based on the memoir of stockbroker Jordan Belfort, the film unfolds like a carnival ride through capitalism’s id, where morality is optional and dopamine rules. Leonardo DiCaprio, at the height of his bravado, turns Belfort into both ringmaster and casualty—a man who sells lies so convincingly, he believes them himself.

Scorsese directs with kinetic madness: money rains, limbs flail, Quaaludes flow like communion wine. There’s satire, yes, but it’s played as seduction. We’re invited to laugh, recoil, then question our complicity. Belfort’s schemes—penny stocks, boiler rooms, fake IPOs—aren’t exotic. They’re grotesque variations of real-world fraud, made palatable by charisma and speed. It’s capitalism not as structure, but as delirium.

And yet, the most haunting moment may be the ending. Belfort, disgraced, no longer sells stocks—he sells himself at motivational seminars. The final shot isn’t jail or ruin, but an audience waiting to learn how to hustle. Scorsese doesn’t judge—he documents. And the result is less a morality tale than an indictment dressed as entertainment.

Shakespeare in Love (BBC1, 10:30pm–12:30am) – 1998
Shakespeare in Love (1998) is a film that dances—between genres, genders, and history itself. On its surface, it’s a frothy romantic comedy imagining how a struggling playwright named Will finds his muse in Viola, a noblewoman with a passion for the stage and a taste for disguise. But behind the flirtation and fated verse lies a clever interrogation of performance—in love, in class, and in identity. As Viola dons breeches to chase her theatrical dreams, the film winks at Elizabethan convention while quietly revealing the risks women took to be seen and heard.

Tom Stoppard’s co-written script is nimble and knowing, laced with in-jokes for the Bard crowd and bold critiques for the rest. Judi Dench’s Queen Elizabeth looms large despite minimal screen time, her presence underlining how power shapes both art and affection. Gwyneth Paltrow and Joseph Fiennes play their romance with urgency and ache, but it’s the ensemble—stagehands, writers, courtiers—that builds a world where love and labour are entwined. We’re reminded that theatre, like romance, is always a negotiation between illusion and truth.

And yet, the film never feels laboured. Its playfulness is its strength, its poetry deliberate and delightful

The Vanishing (Channel 4, 12:05am) – 2018
The Vanishing* (2018) drapes the infamous Flannan Isles disappearance in thick layers of dread and claustrophobia, turning historical enigma into slow-burn tragedy. Gerard Butler, Peter Mullan, and Connor Swindells form a brittle triangle of lighthouse keepers whose remote posting collapses into violence after the discovery of a washed-up chest of gold. What follows is a disintegration—not just of morality, but of sanity.

The film trades in fog and silence more than jump scares. Director Kristoffer Nyholm mines tension from the isolation: vast seas and empty horizons become psychological mirrors, reflecting paranoia, greed, and the weight of guilt. Mullan anchors the drama with grim authority, while Butler peels back layers of bravado to reveal a man crumbling under circumstance. The lighthouse, usually a symbol of clarity and rescue, becomes a tomb—lit by flickering oil, drowning in shadow.

This isn’t a thriller in the traditional sense. It’s a meditation on what loneliness does to loyalty, what greed does to conscience. The Vanishing resists neat resolutions, offering instead a portrait of men undone by a moment and marooned by their choices.


Monday, 21st July

Suffragette (Film4, 6:50pm) – 2015
Sarah Gavron’s Suffragette (2015) burns slow and bright—a film fuelled by frustration, solidarity, and sacrifice. Anchored by Carey Mulligan’s quietly combustible Maud, a fictional composite drawn from working-class women who dared defy their place in Edwardian society, the film traces the personal cost of political rebellion. Mulligan is superb: tentative at first, then irreversibly galvanised as she’s pulled from laundry shifts into hunger strikes and shattered shop windows. Helena Bonham Carter, as Edith Ellyn, lends fierceness and conviction drawn from real-life activists like Edith Garrud and Sylvia Pankhurst.

This isn’t a portrait of perfect heroism. Suffragette is steeped in grime and consequence. The movement fractures along lines of race, class, and strategy—even as it pushes forward. Gavron’s direction holds close to the street level, following Maud’s heartbreak and resolve as she loses her job, her child, and her safety. The violence she and her peers endure is harrowing—police batons, prison brutality, and social shunning—but the film avoids martyrdom, choosing instead to foreground community, endurance, and the messy rhythms of change.

It’s no accident that the film culminates in the death of Emily Davison under the King’s horse—a moment both tragic and catalytic. And it’s no coincidence that its closing titles list the dates when women across the world won the right to vote. This is a historical drama sharpened into a political lens, asking not just what was fought for, but how much remains unresolved.

Hiroshima (BBC Four, 10:00pm)
Hiroshima (BBC Four, 10:00pm) isn’t just a reconstruction—it’s a reckoning. This quietly devastating documentary retraces the hours leading up to and following the atomic bombing of August 6th, 1945, with a precision that’s as forensic as it is humane. It threads together military records, historical footage, and survivor testimony, allowing the event to speak for itself—through silence, through detail, through lives forever altered.

What sets it apart is its refusal to flatten the story into politics or abstraction. The testimonies of hibakusha (survivors) are delivered with quiet intensity—memories of shadows burned into walls, of aching thirst, of a sky that turned white and changed everything. These voices don’t ask for pity; they ask for remembrance. The film’s reenactments are restrained but chilling, and the narration holds a steady, respectful tone as it maps the countdown in the air and the fallout on the ground.

This is history as lived experience, not textbook chronology. Hiroshima invites viewers not just to understand what happened, but to feel the weight of what it meant—and still means


Tuesday, 22nd July

MS: A Revolution in Print (Sky Documentaries, 9:00pm)
MS: A Revolution in Print (Sky Documentaries, 9:00pm) unearths the riotous creativity and unapologetic politics of a magazine that wasn’t just responding to the moment—it was making it. Launched in the 1970s by Gloria Steinem and Dorothy Pitman Hughes, Ms. wasn’t just a publication—it was a declaration. A feminist force in glossy print, it broke the silence around domestic labour, reproductive rights, sexual violence, and social equity, turning living-room debates into public discourse with wit, rage, and typographic flair.

The documentary moves briskly but respectfully through the magazine’s radical beginnings, spotlighting its refusal to conform to commercial expectations or politeness politics. Interviews with founding editors, artists, and activists reveal how Ms. carved out space for intersectional feminism long before the term became common, championing voices too often excluded from mainstream media. Archival covers and layouts aren’t just shown—they’re celebrated, critiqued, and contextualised as aesthetic weapons in a larger movement for change.

But this is also a story of tension: between activism and professionalism, between storytelling and advertising, between power and voice. The visual language of protest merges with editorial precision, showing how print can be both political battleground and cultural sanctuary

The Death of Yugoslavia: Dealing with the Dayton Peace Talks in Ohio (BBC Four, 10:20pm)
This captures diplomacy at its most fraught—where the stakes are nation-sized and the table is splintering beneath competing agendas. Cantered on the 1995 talks that sought to halt years of bloodshed in the Balkans, the documentary strips away idealism to reveal realpolitik in all its messy, compromised gravity.

Through archival footage and insider interviews, we witness not a smooth negotiation but a grudging choreography of pressure, ego, and brinkmanship. Presidents Milosevic, Tudjman, and Izetbegović are cast less as statesmen than as survivors—each representing fractured nations, personal trauma, and international scrutiny. The setting—a converted airbase in snowy Ohio—only heightens the surreal tension: peace being brokered far from the war’s scars, in sterile rooms where translators juggle vitriol and exhausted hope.

The film doesn’t glamorise the accord. It reveals the toll—what was conceded, what was ignored, and what would echo long after the signatures dried. Dayton didn’t fix the Balkans. But it stopped the bleeding, at a cost still felt in Bosnia’s divided landscapes and contested narratives.

🌟 Women Talking (BBC2, 11:00pm) – 2022
Women Talking (BBC2, 11:00pm) is a film that doesn’t just raise questions—it gathers them in a hayloft and lets them ferment, braid, and bleed. In this spare but searing drama, adapted by Sarah Polley from Miriam Toews’ novel, a group of Mennonite women convene to confront the aftermath of repeated, systematised violence. What unfolds isn’t courtroom drama or revenge fantasy—it’s deliberation as liberation. The barn becomes a crucible: where faith is examined, memory is mourned, and a future is mapped with the blunt tools of hope and heartbreak.

Polley’s screenplay is a marvel of tonal balance—by turns poetic, piercing, and fiercely practical. Each character, from Rooney Mara’s contemplative Ona to Claire Foy’s incandescent Salome, embodies a different pathway through trauma. Yet the film resists easy binaries: staying versus leaving, forgiveness versus fury, silence versus action. Even Ben Whishaw’s August, the sole male ally in the group, is framed with tender ambivalence—present but peripheral, welcome yet never central.

What makes Women Talking so striking is its refusal to dramatise the abuse itself. The film honours the survivors not by revisiting horror, but by centring autonomy—fraught, fragile, and newly forged. The women’s conversation is both intimate and radical, laced with theological reckoning and moral insistence. Visually, Polley drapes the scenes in muted tones and soft light, evoking not idyll but elegy. These aren’t cinematic speeches—they’re survival songs, half-sung, half-scrawled on barn walls and passed between generations.

It’s storytelling as consensus-building. A chorus of dissent. A film that listens harder than it speaks.

The Burnt Orange Heresy (Film4, 11:30pm) – 2019
An elegantly venomous thriller that paints its philosophical questions in high-gloss oil and shadow. Set on the sun-drenched shores of Lake Como, the film follows Claes Bang’s charismatic art critic, James Figueras, as he’s drawn into a tangled web spun by an enigmatic dealer (Mick Jagger, sly and serpentine) and a reclusive artist (Donald Sutherland, wistful and elusive). The plot glides like a gondola—seductive, gently sinister—until its ripples become waves, and truth becomes something to barter or bury.

Director Giuseppe Capotondi explores not just the art world’s appetite for mystique, but the moral decay at its heart. Behind the villas and curated brilliance lies manipulation so refined it masquerades as charm. Bang plays James with sleek ambition, always calculating, yet teetering on self-destruction as desire and deception coalesce around his muse, Elizabeth

The Night of the 12th (Channel 4, 1:55am) – 2022
The Night of the 12th is a procedural stripped of closure, a mystery that knows the real horror isn’t just in whodunit—but in why it keeps happening. Inspired by true events, Dominik Moll’s 2022 film follows a team of detectives as they investigate the murder of Clara, a young woman whose life ended in fire on a quiet street in Grenoble. But this isn’t a case solved with clever twists or last-minute revelations. It’s a slow, stubborn descent into ambiguity, one that implicates culture, masculinity, and the invisible architecture of misogyny.

Bastien Bouillon delivers a quietly haunted turn as Yohan, the lead investigator—a man whose methodical approach masks a growing inner unrest. As suspects emerge (each plausible, none definitive), Yohan’s certainty begins to fray. The deeper he digs, the more he realises that Clara’s death is less an anomaly than a symptom, and that the justice system—like society—is often ill-equipped to face violence that’s gendered, intimate, and unrelenting.

Moll directs with icy restraint: nocturnal landscapes, sterile offices, and long silences evoke a world in which answers are evasive, and grief calcifies into quiet obsession. Yet what truly lingers is the film’s moral clarity. It refuses the comfort of resolution, instead letting the case remain open—both literally and metaphorically. In doing so, The Night of the 12th becomes less a thriller than a lament. Not for one victim, but for all those dismissed, doubted, and disappeared.


Wednesday, 23rd July

Omen (Film4, 1:50am) – 2023
Omen isn’t your standard late-night horror—it’s a fever dream of exile, superstition, and the aching need to belong. Directed by Belgian-Congolese rapper-turned-filmmaker Baloji, this debut feature trades jump scares for something far more unsettling: the quiet violence of cultural rejection. At its heart is Koffi, a man returning to Congo with his pregnant fiancée, only to be met with suspicion and ritual punishment for a birthmark long branded as devilish. What unfolds is less a narrative than a tapestry—woven from four interlinked lives, each frayed by inherited fear and the weight of tradition.

Baloji’s storytelling is elliptical, even elusive, but the emotional clarity is piercing. The film drifts between realism and magical surrealism, conjuring witches in the woods, pink-clad street gangs, and rituals that blur healing with harm. It’s visually intoxicating—smoke, sand, and saturated colour swirl around characters who are both grounded and ghostly. Marc Zinga’s Koffi is all quiet dignity, while Yves-Marina Gnahoua, as his mother, delivers a performance so stern it could curdle milk, yet later reveals a grief that reshapes everything.

What makes Omen so compelling is its refusal to judge. Baloji doesn’t mock belief systems—he interrogates how they fracture families and forge identities. The film’s structure, split into chapters, allows each character their own reckoning, though some threads (like Paco’s) feel more symbolic than fully integrated. Still, the atmosphere lingers. This is cinema that hums with ancestral tension, where even a nosebleed can trigger exile, and reconciliation is both necessary and nearly impossible.

It’s a haunting, humane piece—one that asks how we carry the past, and whether we can ever truly put it down.

Thursday, 24th July

Franco: The Last Inquisitor, Part 1 (PBS America, 7:20pm)
Franco: The Last Inquisitor, Part 1 (PBS America, 7:20pm) steps beyond the familiar archive montage to deliver something starker and more unsettling—a portrait of dictatorship as both spectacle and silence. Through clipped interviews, grainy footage, and restrained narration, the documentary traces Francisco Franco’s decades-long grip on Spain, not just through tanks and torture, but through a carefully curated national memory where dissent was erased and history rewritten.

The programme avoids sensationalism, opting instead for measured precision. We hear from historians who dissect Franco’s post-war strategy: how censorship became civic duty, how Catholicism was entwined with nationalism, and how monuments, education, and state media shaped generations to forget—or forgive. There’s a chilling brilliance to how control operated not just in prisons but in language, calendars, and ritual.

Yet what lingers most is the emotional residue. Families torn apart by exile or execution are spoken of in hushed tones, their grief folded into public stoicism. Franco’s Spain was a place where fear lived in every wall, but the documentary finds strength in quiet resistance—whispers of poetry, clandestine gatherings, and a growing hunger for truth.

For late-evening viewing, it’s less history lesson than reckoning—with a regime that understood power not just as dominance, but as the ability to shape what would—and wouldn’t—be remembered.

Helen Mirren Remembers Gosford Park (BBC Four, 9:00pm)
Helen Mirren Remembers Gosford Park (BBC Four, 9:00pm) offers a quiet masterclass in reflection, as Mirren revisits the intricate latticework of class, repression, and revelation that made Gosford Park (2001) such an enduring piece of ensemble cinema. Her reminiscences feel more like carefully folded letters than interviews—each one offering insight into Altman’s improvisational method, the bruising beauty of Julian Fellowes’ script, and the particular tension of embodying a character whose power lies in what she chooses not to say.

Mirren’s Mrs Wilson was the emotional fulcrum of the servants’ hall: steely, watchful, and endlessly burdened. Here, she speaks with restrained warmth about Altman’s ability to capture social choreography without ever resorting to caricature. The documentary clips float between set memories and broader questions about British identity—how deference, dignity, and despair often shared the same drawing room.

There’s particular poignancy in how Mirren describes the film’s textures: the rustle of linen, the echo of dinner bells, the glances passed like contraband between maids and footmen. It’s clear this wasn’t just another period piece—it was a meditation on constraint.

Something Like an Autobiography (Channel 4, 2:00am)
Something Like an Autobiography lingers in the threshold between truth and interpretation, offering a meditative glimpse into the act of self-representation. Loosely structured and luminously shot, the documentary doesn’t simply recount a life—it interrogates the frames through which lives are told, remembered, and refracted across time. We follow the filmmaker not as hero or narrator, but as a presence in flux—moving through old footage, half-forgotten locations, and conversations that ache with the possibility of redefinition.

The tone is hushed but resonant. Archival clips stutter alongside dreamlike re-enactments; voiceovers drift from diary-like confession to scholarly reflection, all underscored by music that seems to swell from memory itself. It’s not about chronology—it’s about emotional cartography, the inner terrain of being both observer and subject. Each edit feels like a breath held, each pause an invitation to reconsider what we mean by “truth” when telling our own tale.

There’s subtle brilliance in the way the documentary resists closure. Instead of building toward revelation, it invites uncertainty. Childhood, creativity, identity—all are revisited as fragments, sketches in a scrapbook of longing and self-discovery. For viewers prepared to drift rather than dissect, it’s quietly enthralling.


Friday, 25th July

Franco: The Last Inquisitor, Part 2: The Manipulator (PBS America, 7:15pm)
Franco: The Last Inquisitor, Part 2 – The Manipulator (PBS America, 7:15pm) peels back the velvet curtain of post-war Spain to expose a regime not just obsessed with control, but with longevity—how to survive the man’s death without losing his myth. If Part 1 traced Franco’s iron-fisted grip on the populace, Part 2 turns its lens on how that grip was immortalised: through film reels, schoolbooks, commemorative ceremonies, and broadcast silence.

The documentary is bracing in its clarity. It doesn’t just show how propaganda operated—it lets us hear the echoes of a state that carefully curated public memory, framing Franco not as dictator but as saviour, patriarch, and architect of “stability.” We see how the press was tamed, how journalists were vetted for loyalty, and how even after 1975, efforts to preserve a sanitised legacy persisted in institutions and monuments. Footage from official tributes mingles uneasily with interviews from those silenced or erased, forming a portrait not just of manipulation, but of memory warfare.

What’s particularly effective is the film’s refusal to sensationalise. Its revelations are calmly devastating: the subtle ways authoritarianism cloaked itself in tradition, religion, and routine. Scholars and survivors speak with measured urgency, illuminating how Franco’s reach extended beyond his lifetime, shaping political narratives and cultural taboos that endure to this day.

The Secret Life of Trees, Part 1 of 3 (Channel 5, 9:00pm)
The Secret Life of Trees, welcomes viewers into the forest—not as passive scenery, but as a living, breathing society of astonishing nuance. Drawing on cutting-edge botany and quiet observation, the episode explores how trees talk, nurture, and even warn one another through an underground network of roots and fungi often dubbed the “Wood Wide Web.” It’s a revelatory reframe: not timber, but kinship.

The pacing is gentle and grounded, perfect for late evening reflection. Narration balances poetic curiosity with scientific clarity, guiding us through the mutualism of beech groves, the maternal instincts of ancient pines, and the quiet intelligence of mycorrhizal fungi ferrying chemical messages beneath the soil. The cinematography is patient—sun-dappled bark, slow pans through misty glades, and lingering shots that suggest conversation more than composition.

But perhaps its greatest achievement lies in tone. The documentary resists romanticising nature as mere idyll. Instead, it suggests something more radical: trees as collaborators in survival, responding to climate, threat, and each other with strategies that evoke community more than competition. It’s ecology as empathy.

Blade Runner 2049 (BBC1, 11:25pm) – 2017
Blade Runner 2049 (BBC1, 11:25pm) lingers like a dream half-remembered—part noir, part elegy, all atmosphere. Denis Villeneuve’s sequel doesn’t just revisit the existential terrain of Ridley Scott’s original; it deepens it, expanding the philosophical architecture with icy precision and aching beauty. Set decades later, the film follows K (Ryan Gosling), a replicant detective unraveling a buried secret that could redefine identity, agency, and rebellion itself. His journey is quiet, mournful, and saturated in visual splendour—courtesy of Roger Deakins’ Oscar-winning cinematography, which renders cityscapes as dystopian cathedrals and deserts as haunted canvases.

Gosling’s performance is a masterclass in restrained pathos, his character haunted by implanted memories and the hunger to believe they might be real. Harrison Ford’s return as Deckard is grizzled and tender—more ghost than gunslinger. Their scenes together hum with generational melancholy, as time itself feels fractured by longing and consequence.

Villeneuve balances silence and spectacle with rare finesse. The sound design reverberates with menace and mystery, while Hans Zimmer’s score trembles with industrial sorrow. But beyond the technical brilliance lies a beating heart—the question of whether created beings can truly feel, choose, and endure love. In its starkest moments, Blade Runner 2049 suggests that humanity may not lie in origin, but in yearning.

My Friend Dahmer (Film4, 11:40pm) – 2017
My Friend Dahmer is a high-school autopsy—quietly dissecting the loneliness, alienation, and unchecked warning signs that shaped a future killer. Based on the graphic novel by John “Derf” Backderf, who knew Dahmer as a teenager, the film doesn’t sensationalise the violence to come. Instead, it sits chillingly close to the edge of it, lingering in the unease that surrounded Dahmer long before his crimes were known.

Ross Lynch delivers a disturbingly subdued performance as Jeff, a boy steeped in awkwardness and anguish. He staggers through halls, mimics seizures to get attention, and dissolves dead animals in acid behind his house—not yet monstrous, but clearly adrift. Director Marc Meyers refuses to offer neat diagnoses, framing Dahmer not with pity, but with uneasy proximity. The camera observes more than it explains, placing viewers inside a world where cruelty is passed off as curiosity, and where the mechanisms of care—parent, school, peer—slowly fail.

There’s a peculiar horror in how ordinary it all feels. The suburban setting, the casual homophobia, the adolescence marked by performative antics—none of it excuses what Dahmer became, but all of it indicts a culture ill-equipped to intervene. The film’s power lies in restraint: it never shows the crimes, yet you feel their possibility pressing in from every corner. It’s a portrait of disconnection more than pathology, and that’s precisely what makes it so haunting.

And Streaming

Washington Black (Disney+, all episodes from Wednesday 23 July) Adapted from Esi Edugyan’s acclaimed novel, Washington Black is a sweeping period drama that trades plantation tropes for something far more imaginative and emotionally resonant. At its heart is Wash, a young boy whose escape from slavery launches him into a globe-spanning odyssey of science, love, and self-definition. The series reframes history through Wash’s prodigious curiosity and the unlikely mentorship of Titch Wilde, a gentleman inventor with his own ghosts to outrun.

Visually, it’s sumptuous: Barbadian sugar fields give way to icy Nova Scotia, pirate ships, and Victorian aquariums, each location echoing Wash’s shifting sense of identity. Ernest Kingsley Jr. brings quiet intensity to the role, while Sterling K. Brown’s Medwin offers a counterpoint of grounded wisdom. What makes the series sing is its refusal to flatten trauma into spectacle. Instead, it foregrounds autonomy, imagination, and the radical act of dreaming beyond one’s prescribed place in the world. It’s historical fiction with a beating heart—and a reminder that freedom is not just escape, but invention.

Krays: London’s Gangsters (Prime Video, both episodes from Saturday 19 July) This new documentary revisits the well-worn legend of Ronnie and Reggie Kray, East End twins whose notoriety has long outpaced their actual criminal innovation. While the series dutifully charts their rise—from boxing gyms to Soho clubs—it struggles to move beyond the tabloid mythology that has long romanticised their violence. The celebrity cameos, the sharp suits, the “gentleman gangster” veneer—it’s all here, and still feels curiously hollow.

More compelling, though largely sidelined, is the shadow cast by the Richardson Gang, their South London rivals. Where the Krays cultivated fame, the Richardsons ran a brutal, industrial empire—scrap yards, investments in African mining, and a business model that treated violence as corporate policy. Their story, rich with contradictions and far less sanitised, offers a darker, more complex portrait of post-war London’s underworld. If anything, this documentary reminds us how nostalgia can distort legacy—and how the Krays, for all their swagger, were perhaps more spectacle than substance.

Shiny Happy People: A Teenage Holy War (Prime Video, season 2 from Wednesday 23 July) The second season of Shiny Happy People shifts its lens from the Duggar family to the evangelical youth movement Teen Mania, and the result is both surreal and sobering. Through archival footage and survivor testimony, the series unpacks how stadium-sized rallies, purity pledges, and militarised boot camps shaped a generation of American teens. It’s a portrait of faith weaponised—where spiritual fervour curdled into psychological control, and obedience was mistaken for virtue.

What’s striking is the emotional clarity of those who speak out. Former participants describe being blindfolded, sleep-deprived, and pushed to physical collapse—all in the name of spiritual growth. The series doesn’t mock belief; it interrogates how belief can be manipulated, especially when fused with nationalism and charismatic leadership. It’s a cautionary tale, but also a reckoning—with the cost of silence, the power of testimony, and the long shadow of youth movements that promised salvation but delivered trauma.

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Culture Vulture 12-18 July 2025

5,330 words, 28 minutes read time.

Welcome to this week’s edition of Culture Vulture, your guide to the very best in TV, film, and streaming from an alternative viewpoint. Selections are by Pat Harrington. As always, we’ve curated a list of must-see content to keep you entertained, informed, and inspired.

This week brings a fascinating blend of real-world intrigue, timeless classics, and provocative dramas. For those looking for a deep dive into digital deception, Hunting My Sextortion Scammer: Untold on Channel 4 Streaming is a gripping watch. If you’re in the mood for something visually thought-provoking, How I Look: A History of Body Modification on History Hit explores the fascinating evolution of self-expression through body art. And for fans of suspense, The Institute on MGM+ Drama introduces a psychological thriller full of secrets, mystery, and tension.

As always, we highlight a variety of films and shows to suit all tastes. So, whether you’re in the mood for a heart-pounding documentary or a light-hearted classic, Culture Vulture has you covered.

PBS America The Dictator’s Playbook

The Dictator’s Playbook is a six-part documentary series on PBS America that delves into how some of the twentieth century’s most ruthless leaders engineered their rise to power and maintained control. Through a blend of archival footage, expert interviews and dramatic re-enactments, each instalment unpacks a different dictator’s toolbox—propaganda, violence, patronage and personal charisma—while tracing the cracks that eventually brought their regimes down.

6.10 pm PBS America marks the start of the Manuel Noriega episode. It charts his trajectory from a Panamanian National Guard officer to de facto ruler, backed by Cold War politics and covert ties to the CIA. We witness how Noriega’s drug-trafficking empire and secret police operations silenced opposition, drove rampant corruption and ultimately provoked the 1989 U.S. invasion that ended his grip on Panama.

7.20 pm PBS America brings you the Francisco Franco instalment, revisiting the general’s triumph in the Spanish Civil War and the nearly forty-year dictatorship he imposed. The episode highlights the brutal tactics he perfected—mass arrests, torture and relentless propaganda—and examines the conservative vision that outlived his death in 1975, shaping Spain’s social and political landscape long after.

8.30 pm PBS America closes the night with the story of Idi Amin. Viewers follow his rapid ascent from colonial army officer to Uganda’s self-styled “King of Scotland,” propelled by a potent mix of populist rhetoric and systematic terror. From the 1972 expulsion of the Asian community to the economic collapse that undermined his rule, the episode shows how Amin’s extravagant personality cult and violent purges sowed the seeds of his 1979 overthrow.

Channel 5 , 7 pm: 1977: When Virginia Wade Won Wimbledon

Wade’s strategic play, the roar of a partisan crowd and the Queen handing over the trophy—are intercut with personal anecdotes that capture both her nerves and steely determination. Short biographical flashbacks deepen our understanding of the woman behind the racket without lingering too long on technical detail.

Though the hour-long format limits exploration of her rivals and the wider women’s tour in 1977, the film succeeds as a heartfelt tribute. It perfectly balances nostalgia, sport and national pride, making it an engaging watch for tennis fans and casual viewers alike.

Channel 4, 9 pm: A Man Called Otto (2022)
From the first moments on screen, you see Otto’s gruff exterior—arms crossed, lips pursed—as if he’s daring the world to get close. Yet behind that scowl lies a man whose heart still beats for the wife he lost, and Tom Hanks lets every flicker of regret and longing shine through. As Otto stomps through his daily routines—plowing snow, grumbling at unwelcome chatter—Hanks layers in tiny pauses and sideways glances that speak volumes. You feel the ache of his loneliness, but you also catch glimpses of the kindness he can’t quite hide. When he begrudgingly shares coffee with his new neighbor or tucks a stray cat into his coat, those small acts become profound gestures of someone slowly opening up again.

Grief and salvation are woven together in the film’s gentle storytelling. Through flashbacks, we see Otto and his wife planning a life full of simple joys—a garden bench here, a tandem bike ride there—and it makes his present-day isolation all the more heartbreaking. But it’s in his relationships with the Marquez family next door that Otto’s transformation truly takes shape. Their persistence—whether it’s dragging him into a spontaneous barbecue or calling on him to babysit—breaks through his hardened shell. Hanks captures each moment of frustration, each reluctant smile, until you realize Otto’s finding a new reason to get out of bed.

Yes, the film moves at a thoughtful pace, giving you time to sit with Otto’s doubts and victories. And while there are stretches that feel almost meditative, they let the humour and warmth land just right: Otto’s deadpan commentary on neighbourhood chaos, his exasperated sigh as he untangles Christmas lights, the soft look he gives when someone finally sees the man beneath the grump. By the end, redemption doesn’t come with grand gestures but with an honest reckoning—accepting help, sharing laughter again, forgiving himself for the past. A Man Called Otto lives in those everyday moments, making it a quietly powerful, bittersweet story that leaves you both teary and uplifted.

Great! Action, 12:15 pm: Cat Ballou (1965)
When I was younger, I had a big crush on Jane Fonda, but beyond that, I always admired her as an incredibly versatile actress. She could tackle so many different genres, and comedy – arguably the toughest genre for any actor – was one of her standout strengths. Cat Ballou really highlights that talent. This quirky Western comedy, starring Jane Fonda and Lee Marvin, is a true classic from the 1960s. Fonda plays Cat Ballou, a determined woman seeking revenge for her father’s wrongful death. Marvin gives a brilliant performance, playing both the drunken, bumbling Kid Shelleen and the more sinister version of his character.

What makes Cat Ballou so special is how it blends slapstick humor with the traditional Western formula. It’s a fun ride, full of sharp satire and offbeat characters, and the score only adds to its charm. The music, featuring memorable songs by Nat King Cole and Stubby Kaye, perfectly complements the film’s tone and brings an extra layer of warmth to the story. The film is also packed with cameos from musicians like Cole, whose involvement gives the movie a unique vibe. It balances its comedic moments with a solid plot, making it not only one of the most entertaining Westerns out there but also one that has stood the test of time.

Film4, 4:35 pm: A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood (2019)
This film offers a remarkable portrayal of the life of Fred Rogers, played by Tom Hanks, whose public persona as Mister Rogers influenced generations. Through the lens of a cynical journalist, we are given a deep dive into the man behind the television show, showing how his kindness, empathy, and unwavering moral compass helped heal a troubled reporter. The performance by Hanks is nothing short of mesmerizing, bringing warmth and authenticity to the role. The film doesn’t just celebrate Rogers’ public persona but also delves into the personal sacrifices he made to maintain his mission of kindness.

The narrative structure, focusing on the relationship between Rogers and the journalist, helps frame the film’s message: the power of compassion and its ability to change lives. The film subtly critiques modern cynicism and reminds us of the importance of staying true to our values in a world often defined by conflict. If you’re looking for a story about love, forgiveness, and personal growth, this film offers a gentle but powerful message that lingers long after the credits roll.

Channel 4, 3 pm: Little Women (2019)
Greta Gerwig’s adaptation of Little Women breathes new life into Louisa May Alcott’s classic novel, giving it a modern sensibility while remaining faithful to its themes of sisterhood, love, and ambition. The ensemble cast, led by Saoirse Ronan, Emma Watson, Florence Pugh, and Eliza Scanlen, brings a refreshing energy to the timeless story of the March sisters as they navigate the challenges of growing up during the Civil War era. Gerwig’s direction is sharp, allowing each character to shine while creating a vibrant, dynamic narrative.

What sets this adaptation apart is its nonlinear storytelling, which gives the story a contemporary feel while deepening the emotional stakes of each character’s journey. The film beautifully captures the tension between personal desire and familial duty, making it resonate with audiences of all ages. With strong performances and a forward-thinking approach to a beloved classic, Little Women proves that this story still holds immense relevance in today’s world.

Film4, 11:35 pm: The Innocents (1961)
Jack Clayton’s The Innocents is a masterful psychological horror film that builds suspense without resorting to overt scares. Based on Henry James’ novella The Turn of the Screw, the film explores themes of innocence, corruption, and the unsettling ambiguity of what is real. Deborah Kerr delivers a haunting performance as the governess tasked with caring for two children who may be possessed or simply deeply disturbed. The film thrives in its atmosphere, with moody cinematography and a creeping sense of dread that envelops the viewer.

The beauty of The Innocents lies in its ability to make the audience question everything they see. Are the children truly evil, or is the governess simply imagining it? The ambiguity surrounding the events creates a lasting impact, making the film an unsettling yet thought-provoking experience. Its restrained use of horror elements, coupled with its deep psychological complexity, cements The Innocents as one of the greatest classic horror films.

Film4, 1:40 am: The Duke of Burgundy (2014)
The Duke of Burgundy is a visually stunning and emotionally complex film that explores themes of desire, power dynamics, and intimacy within the confines of a lesbian relationship. Directed by Peter Strickland, the film takes place in an unnamed European country, where two women engage in a BDSM relationship that shifts between dominance and submission. The film’s rich aesthetic, with its meticulously designed sets and costumes, creates an otherworldly atmosphere that mirrors the emotional entanglements of the central characters.

While The Duke of Burgundy is not a conventional narrative, its exploration of psychological depth and emotional vulnerability is striking. The performances are exceptional, particularly by Sidse Babett Knudsen and Chiara D’Anna, who bring complexity and nuance to their roles. The film’s hypnotic pace allows the viewer to become immersed in its world, making it an unforgettable and thought-provoking exploration of human desire and the complexities of relationships.

Film4, 11 am: Howards End (1992)
Merchant Ivory’s Howards End is a splendid period drama that immerses the viewer in early 20th-century England. Based on E.M. Forster’s novel, the film explores class tensions, social change, and the battle for inheritance, all wrapped in a narrative about love and relationships. The story revolves around the complex relationships between three families: the Schlegels, the Wilcoxes, and the Basts. The film boasts standout performances from Emma Thompson, Anthony Hopkins, and Helena Bonham Carter, each delivering a rich portrayal of their characters’ internal struggles and desires.

What elevates Howards End is its ability to tackle profound social themes through personal, intimate stories. The film reflects on the moral and social divide between the classes while exploring the shifting roles of women in society. With meticulous direction and a sharp script, Howards End is both an engrossing period piece and a timeless commentary on societal transformation.

ITV1, 12:35 pm: Tomorrow Never Dies (1997)
Pierce Brosnan’s second outing as James Bond, Tomorrow Never Dies, offers a blend of action, intrigue, and high-stakes drama that the franchise is known for. The film pits Bond against a media mogul bent on manipulating global events to his advantage, presenting a timely critique of the power of the media. Brosnan effortlessly steps back into the role, delivering the charisma and sharp wit Bond fans have come to expect. The fast-paced action sequences and stunning locales keep the momentum high throughout.

While the plot feels slightly dated in its portrayal of media manipulation, Tomorrow Never Dies stands out with its innovative gadgets, compelling villain (played by Jonathan Pryce), and strong performances. It may not be the most groundbreaking Bond film, but it provides a solidly entertaining ride that remains a memorable part of the 1990s Bond era.

BBC2, 1:50 pm: Passport to Pimlico (1949)
Passport to Pimlico is a delightful British comedy that blends satire with charm, set against the backdrop of post-war London. The film tells the story of the residents of Pimlico, who discover that their neighborhood has been declared a part of France following the discovery of an old medieval document. The residents’ efforts to claim their newfound independence from the British government create a series of comedic misadventures that highlight the absurdities of bureaucracy and nationalism.

At its heart, Passport to Pimlico offers a sharp social commentary on post-war Britain, touching on the challenges of rebuilding a nation still reeling from the effects of World War II. The film’s central premise – that a small district can declare itself independent and avoid the constraints of national laws and taxes – provides a humorous but pointed critique of both the authority of the British government and the rigidity of national borders. The satire cleverly reflects the tension between the desire for autonomy and the practical realities of a world defined by political and social systems.

The humor shines through its colorful characters and witty dialogue, but beneath the laughs, the film is also deeply concerned with issues of class and identity. The residents of Pimlico, many of whom are working-class, use their newfound “French” status to bypass rationing and taxes, challenging the authority of the state in a way that resonates with the growing desire for social change in post-war Britain. The film subtly critiques the hierarchical structures of British society, offering a more inclusive and egalitarian vision through its depiction of the working class taking charge of their destiny.

Though its premise may seem far-fetched, Passport to Pimlico cleverly uses this unlikely scenario to comment on the post-war social landscape in a way that remains relevant today. In a world where national identity is increasingly fluid, and questions of immigration, autonomy, and cultural belonging continue to shape political discourse, the film’s exploration of what it means to belong to a nation feels both timeless and timely. It’s a film that not only entertains but also encourages the viewer to think about the complexities of national identity and belonging.

BBC2, 3:10 pm: Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969)
This classic Western, starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford, is as much about friendship as it is about the thrill of the chase. The film follows two outlaws, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, as they flee across the American West in an attempt to escape the law. The chemistry between Newman and Redford is electric, adding a layer of depth to the action-packed story.

While Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid is undoubtedly a Western, it defies many of the genre’s conventions. It blends humour, pathos, and action in a way that makes it accessible to a broader audience. The iconic bike scene and the song “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ on My Head” are just a few of the memorable moments that have cemented this film as one of the genre’s most beloved.

Film4, 9 pm: Bohemian Rhapsody (2018)
Bohemian Rhapsody is a biographical film that captures the rise of the iconic rock band Queen, with a focus on the life and career of their lead singer, Freddie Mercury. Rami Malek’s portrayal of Mercury is a tour de force, capturing the flamboyance, vulnerability, and genius of the singer. The film’s musical sequences are exhilarating, particularly the recreation of Queen’s legendary 1985 Live Aid performance.

However, the film’s treatment of Mercury’s personal life has been the subject of some criticism for glossing over certain aspects of his identity and struggles. Despite this, Bohemian Rhapsody delivers a rousing tribute to Queen’s musical legacy, and Malek’s performance makes it an unforgettable cinematic experience.

ITV, 10:45 pm: Jaws (1975)
Steven Spielberg’s Jaws is the quintessential summer blockbuster, blending horror, suspense, and adventure in a way that still holds up more than four decades later. The film’s simple yet effective premise—a massive great white shark terrorizing a small beach town—is elevated by its intense pacing and memorable characters, particularly Roy Scheider’s Chief Brody and Richard Dreyfuss’s marine biologist Hooper.

What makes Jaws so enduring is its ability to build tension without relying on excessive gore. Spielberg’s direction, coupled with John Williams’ iconic score, creates an atmosphere of dread that stays with the audience long after the film ends. Jaws remains a masterclass in suspense and is still one of the most influential films in the thriller genre.

Film4, 11:45 pm: My Beautiful Laundrette (1985)

My Beautiful Laundrette is a groundbreaking film that explores themes of race, class, and sexuality in 1980s London. Directed by Stephen Frears and written by Hanif Kureishi, the film follows the relationship between a young Pakistani man, Omar, and a former skinhead, Johnny, set against the backdrop of racial and economic tensions that were palpable during the Thatcher era. The film deftly weaves together a romance and a sharp social critique, painting a vivid portrait of multiculturalism and the complexities of identity in an increasingly divided society.

In post-colonial Britain, the narrative delves into the social and economic struggles faced by immigrant communities. Omar, a second-generation Pakistani, inherits his uncle’s laundrette and, in the process, navigates not only the challenges of running a business in a working-class area but also the inherent racial and economic inequality that defines his existence. The laundrette itself becomes a symbol of both opportunity and oppression, illustrating the delicate balancing act between pursuing economic success and remaining true to one’s cultural and personal identity. It’s a space where dreams clash with harsh reality, mirroring the experience of many immigrants trying to carve out a future in a society that frequently marginalizes them.

At the core of My Beautiful Laundrette is the complex relationship between Omar and Johnny, a former skinhead who is grappling with his own transformation. Their romance, which defies the rigid boundaries of race, class, and sexuality, offers a striking contrast to the world around them, where political unrest and racism are never far from the surface. The film comments on the friction between the old working-class white establishment and the new wave of multicultural, often immigrant, communities—tensions that were fueled further by the era’s economic struggles, as unemployment and poverty were rampant. Johnny’s own internal conflict mirrors the broader societal shift towards an increasingly conservative, divisive politics, while Omar represents a more fluid identity, one that negotiates cultural heritage with the need for personal autonomy and upward mobility.

The performances, particularly from Daniel Day-Lewis and Gordon Warnecke, are superb, capturing the nuanced emotions of two individuals who refuse to fit into the prescribed molds of their respective social classes and backgrounds. Day-Lewis’s portrayal of Johnny, a disillusioned former skinhead trying to reinvent himself, is filled with complexity—his attraction to Omar is not just romantic but symbolic of a deeper desire for change and escape from his violent past. Warnecke’s Omar, on the other hand, walks the fine line between family obligations and personal ambition, his story reflecting the struggles of many young people of immigrant descent who are forced to navigate multiple identities.

The film’s exploration of the intersection between personal and political struggles remains as relevant today as it did upon its release. In a world where issues of race, immigration, and identity continue to dominate the political discourse, My Beautiful Laundrette offers a poignant and provocative meditation on societal change, the complexities of modern Britain, and the ongoing tensions between assimilation and cultural preservation. The way it handles the intersection of economic hardship and identity politics makes it a timeless piece of British cinema—a thought-provoking exploration that challenges the viewer to rethink the way we approach diversity, inequality, and love.

Channel 4 , 8 pm: 1977: Michael Mosley: Secrets of the Superagers (one of six)

The series kicks off with a lively deep dive into the brains of those who seem to cheat the ageing process. From the hushed corridors of the Shaolin Temple to high-tech neuroscience labs, Mosley weaves personal curiosity with solid science. His visits to meditation masters reveal how simple practices can reshape neural pathways, while interviews with centenarian scholars show that keeping the mind sharp often comes down to lifelong curiosity and community.

Pacy without ever feeling rushed, this first hour balances illuminating visuals—think brain scans in technicolour—with Mosley’s easy-going wit. He refuses to trumpet miracle cures, instead offering practical takeaways you can try tonight: mental puzzles, mindful breathing and simple social rituals. It’s an engaging opener that promises each subsequent episode will unpack another piece of the ageing puzzle, leaving you both inspired and armed with real tips for a longer, healthier life.

Talking Pictures 10.50 pm: Cast Away (2000)
Robert Zemeckis’ Cast Away is a gripping tale of survival and introspection. Tom Hanks delivers a masterful performance as Chuck Noland, a FedEx systems analyst stranded on a deserted island after a plane crash. The film’s strength lies in its minimalist storytelling, focusing on Noland’s physical and emotional journey as he adapts to his new reality. The absence of dialogue for extended periods allows Hanks to showcase his range, making his eventual reunion with civilization all the more poignant. Cast Away is a profound exploration of human resilience and the quest for meaning in isolation.

C4, 2.40 am: Bhagwan Bharose (2023)
Bhagwan Bharose, directed by Shiladitya Bora, is a sensitive exploration of faith and innocence in a rapidly changing socio-political landscape. Set in a traditional Indian village, the film follows two young boys whose beliefs are challenged as they encounter the complexities of the adult world. The narrative delves into themes of communal tension and the loss of childhood innocence, offering a poignant commentary on societal shifts. With performances that capture the essence of youthful curiosity and confusion, Bhagwan Bharose is both heartwarming and thought-provoking.

PBS America, 8.20 pm: Chernobyl: The New Evidence

This documentary picks up where dramatized accounts left off, wading into newly declassified footage and fresh eyewitness testimony to revisit the world’s worst nuclear disaster. Viewers are led through haunting shots of the abandoned exclusion zone—empty villages, rusting tractors, crumbling apartment blocks—while survivors and former officials speak on camera for the first time. It’s a compelling blend of investigative journalism and human story, charting how Soviet secrecy delayed the world’s response and magnified the tragedy.

The film’s greatest strength lies in its access to primary sources: brittle KGB reports, never-before-seen plant records and grainy videos shot by local cameramen in the hours after the explosion. Experts piece together how design flaws and poor decision-making combined to turn a routine safety test into a full-blown meltdown. But it never loses sight of the people caught in the fallout—firefighters, engineers and families who watched their homes evaporate under a cloud of radiation.

At just over an hour, the pace is brisk, yet it allows moments of quiet reflection among the horror. Modern radiation mapping and interviews with today’s villagers highlight how the disaster’s legacy still lingers in the soil and the human body. While fans of HBO’s Chernobyl might spot overlaps, this special stands on its own, offering fresh insight rather than re-treading old ground. It’s an urgent reminder of what happens when technology outpaces oversight—and how easily truth can be buried.

BBC Three, 9:00 pm: Ben Is Back (2018)
Peter Hedges’ Ben Is Back is an intense drama that delves into the complexities of addiction and family dynamics. Lucas Hedges portrays Ben, a young man returning home for Christmas after a stint in rehab, much to the concern of his mother, played by Julia Roberts. The film captures the raw emotions of a family grappling with trust, love, and the challenges of recovery. Both Hedges and Roberts deliver compelling performances, bringing depth to a narrative that is as heart-wrenching as it is hopeful.

Sky Arts, 9:00 pm: Stories from Tate Britain
Stories from Tate Britain offers an insightful journey through the rich tapestry of British art history. The documentary series delves into the lives and works of artists whose creations have shaped the cultural landscape of the UK. Through expert commentary and visual storytelling, the series brings to light the stories behind iconic artworks and the societal contexts in which they were created. Whether you’re an art enthusiast or a casual viewer, Stories from Tate Britain provides a captivating glimpse into the evolution of British art.

Legend, 12:55am: The Box (2009)
Richard Kelly’s The Box is a psychological thriller that explores the moral implications of desire and consequence. Cameron Diaz stars as Norma, a woman who receives a mysterious box with a button that, when pressed, will grant her a large sum of money but result in the death of someone she doesn’t know. The film delves into themes of temptation, ethics, and the unknown, keeping viewers on edge with its suspenseful narrative. While some critics found the film’s pacing slow, others appreciated its thought-provoking premise and the moral dilemmas it presents

BBC Four, 8:00pm: Shark: Beneath the Surface
In this captivating documentary, Shark: Beneath the Surface offers a rare and intimate glimpse into the world of one of the ocean’s most misunderstood predators. With stunning underwater footage, the film explores the lives of various species of sharks, focusing on their behavior, their environment, and the challenges they face due to human impact. Experts weigh in on conservation efforts and the critical role sharks play in the ecosystem.

What sets this documentary apart is its delicate balance of awe-inspiring visuals and thought-provoking commentary. It not only celebrates the majesty of sharks but also calls attention to the urgent need for their preservation. If you’re fascinated by the natural world or passionate about conservation, Shark: Beneath the Surface is a must-watch.

BBC1, 10.50pm: King of Thieves (2018)
King of Thieves brings to life the true story of the infamous Hatton Garden heist, in which a group of elderly thieves infiltrated one of the UK’s most secure vaults. The film stars Michael Caine, Jim Broadbent, and Tom Courtenay as part of the aging criminal gang who pulled off the daring robbery. With a mix of drama and dark humor, King of Thieves gives a fresh perspective on the criminal underworld while also addressing the aging process and the idea of redemption.

The film balances suspense with moments of levity, using its stellar cast to highlight the complexities of crime and the bonds that form between unlikely accomplices. While the plot is straightforward, the performances, particularly from Caine and Broadbent, bring depth and authenticity to the story, making it an engaging watch for those interested in true crime dramas.

Film4 11am: The Winslow Boy (1999)
The Winslow Boy is a compelling courtroom drama based on the true story of a young boy wrongfully accused of theft in Edwardian England. Directed by David Mamet, the film follows the legal battle fought by the boy’s father, played by Nigel Hawthorne, who takes on the establishment in a fight for justice. The film is well-paced and intelligent, focusing not only on the case but also on the social and moral questions it raises.

The performances from Hawthorne, Jeremy Northam, and Rebecca Pidgeon add layers of complexity to the characters, and the courtroom scenes are tense and thought-provoking. The Winslow Boy is a subtle yet powerful commentary on the importance of integrity and justice in the face of social and political pressure.

PBS America 8.55pm: Women of WWII: The Untold Stories

This hour-long special shatters the silent ceiling of history, bringing to light the women whose grit and ingenuity helped tip the scales of World War II. Through a series of newly unearthed interviews, we meet the “Fly Girls” who delivered bombers to the front, the codebreakers who cracked Axis secrets, and the Rosie-the-Riveters whose rivet guns kept Allied machinery running. Rare archival footage of training camps, factory floors and clandestine operations pieces these personal accounts into a vivid tapestry of sacrifice and triumph.

What makes this film resonate is its refusal to treat these stories as footnotes. Instead, it lets each woman’s voice rise, from the Japanese-American nurses interned behind barbed wire to the all-female postal battalions battling Jim Crow as they routed vital supplies. At times the sheer breadth of experiences feels breathless, but that urgency mirrors the urgency those women felt in real time. By the final moments—when descendants join in moving tributes—you’re left not just informed, but profoundly moved. It’s a stirring reminder that history’s true heroes often laboured far from the headlines.

Film 4 9.30pm: Babylon (2022)
Babylon, directed by Damien Chazelle, is a dazzling and chaotic exploration of Hollywood’s early days, full of excess, ambition, and the quest for immortality in the film industry. Starring Brad Pitt and Margot Robbie, the film weaves together the stories of several characters during the transition from silent films to talkies. The opulence and decadence of the era are brilliantly captured, as the characters navigate love, betrayal, and the changing tides of an industry on the brink of transformation.

While Babylon is filled with wild energy and spectacle, it also critiques the dark side of fame, and the personal sacrifices involved in pursuing stardom. With its lavish sets and performances that blur the lines between fact and fiction, the film offers an electrifying, albeit overwhelming, look at the golden age of Hollywood.

BBC2, 11pm: Deliverance (1972)
Deliverance is a gripping and unnerving thriller that has become a classic of American cinema. Directed by John Boorman, the film follows four men who embark on a canoe trip through a remote and dangerous part of the Georgia wilderness. What starts as an innocent adventure quickly turns into a fight for survival when they encounter violent locals. The film is known for its intense atmosphere and its exploration of human vulnerability in the face of extreme circumstances.

The performances, especially from Burt Reynolds and Jon Voight, are raw and powerful, capturing the emotional and physical toll of the men’s ordeal. Deliverance is a haunting commentary on the primal instincts that emerge when faced with life-threatening danger. Its chilling tone and unforgettable moments, including the iconic “squeal like a pig” scene, make it a film that stays with viewers long after the credits roll.

Channel 4 Streaming: Hunting My Sextortion Scammer: Untold – Available from Wednesday, 16th of July
This gripping documentary follows one woman’s pursuit of the criminal who exploited her through sextortion. As the story unfolds, we see her determination to track down the scammer and expose the far-reaching impact of online deception. The series delves into the emotional and financial toll of these crimes while highlighting the dangers of the internet.


History Hit: How I Look: A History of Body Modification – Available from Thursday, 17th of July
This thought-provoking documentary explores the history of body modification, from ancient traditions to modern-day practices. Featuring experts and cultural insights, it examines how tattoos, piercings, implants, and other modifications have been used to express identity, status, and cultural significance across different societies and eras.


MGM+ Drama: The Institute – First two episodes available from Sunday, 13th of July
Set in a mysterious institution, The Institute is a psychological thriller that blends horror and mystery. The first episodes introduce the sinister environment and dark secrets of the institute, as characters grapple with reality and perception. The show builds tension, leaving viewers questioning what is real and what is part of a dangerous mind game.

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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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