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Culture Vulture 7–13 February 2026

A soaring vulture against a blue sky, with bold text 'CULTURE VULTURE' above. Logo for 'Counter Culture' at the bottom and event dates '7-13 February 2026'.

This week’s Culture Vulture is shaped by ambition and aftermath. Ancient civilisations are rediscovered not as ruins but as living systems; technological dreams soar faster than politics can follow; and contemporary Britain is examined with uncomfortable honesty. Across film and television, there’s a recurring sense of limits — moral, social, environmental — and what happens when they’re tested. Selections and reviews are by Pat Harrington.

🌟 Highlights include Alice Roberts’ vivid return to Ancient Rome, a thoughtful two-part account of Concorde’s rise and restraint, and a late-night run of cinema that ranges from the hushed intimacy of Past Lives to the fevered excess of Babylon.

Saturday, 7 February

Lifeboat Film4, 11.00am

Hitchcock’s wartime chamber piece remains one of his most controlled exercises in tension. Stranded in the open Atlantic after a U‑boat attack, a handful of survivors are forced into a proximity that strips away every social comfort they arrived with. The boat becomes a floating tribunal: class, ideology, and personal grievance all jostling for space in a vessel barely big enough to hold them.

What unfolds isn’t simply a survival story but a study in moral drift. Hitchcock watches, almost clinically, as fear and necessity blur the lines between pragmatism and complicity. The film’s economy — a single location, no escape, nowhere to hide — sharpens every exchange. Power shifts by the inch. Trust becomes a rationed commodity. And the question of who counts as “enemy” becomes harder to answer the longer the boat stays afloat.

Eighty years on, its unease hasn’t softened. The film’s argument — that crisis exposes character more reliably than comfort — lands with the same cold clarity it did in 1944. Lean, tense, and still disquietingly current.

The Personal History of David Copperfield Film4, 4.30pm

Armando Iannucci approaches Dickens with a lightness that never tips into frivolity. His adaptation trims and reshapes the novel without losing its emotional through-line, treating Copperfield’s life not as a sequence of set pieces but as a continuous negotiation of identity, class, and belonging. The result is brisk, generous, and unusually clear-eyed about the chaos of growing up.

Dev Patel anchors the film with a kind of open-hearted intelligence — a David who observes as much as he endures. Around him, the ensemble leans into character without lapsing into costume-drama excess. Tilda Swinton, Hugh Laurie, Rosalind Eleazar, and Peter Capaldi all find the human pulse beneath the eccentricities, giving the film a lived-in texture that keeps its playfulness from floating away.

Visually, it’s a production that delights in invention: shifts in perspective, theatrical flourishes, and sudden intrusions of memory that feel true to the way a life story is actually pieced together. But beneath the wit sits a steady compassion for people trying to make sense of their circumstances — a quality that makes the film feel less like a reinterpretation and more like a conversation with Dickens across time.

Flash Gordon ITV4, 6.45pm

A technicolour blast of pulp bravado, still wearing its comic‑strip origins with total conviction. The plot is essentially an excuse for set‑pieces, matte paintings, and Queen’s operatic thunder, but the film’s real pleasure lies in how unabashedly it leans into its own excess.

Princess Aura — played by the very hot Ornella Muti — embodies the film’s flirtatious streak. Her scenes with Flash are pitched somewhere between seduction and power play, all heightened glances and deliberate provocation. It’s part of the film’s broader aesthetic: sexuality rendered as camp spectacle rather than realism, folded into the same register as the costumes, the colour palette, and the melodramatic line readings.

Nothing here is subtle, and that’s the point. The film operates on pure sensation: colour, sound, and a kind of theatrical earnestness that makes its silliness feel strangely coherent. Seriousness isn’t just absent; it’s actively banished, leaving behind a work that’s both self-aware and entirely committed to its own feverish universe.

A delirious, affectionate throwback — and still one of the most entertaining slices of sci‑fi excess ever put on screen.

Ancient Rome by Train with Alice Roberts Channel 4, 8.30pm 🌟

Episode 1 of 6: Pompeii – A City Alive

The series opens with a welcome shift in perspective. Instead of treating Pompeii as a static tableau of disaster, Alice Roberts insists on restoring its movement — the rhythms of work, trade, and domestic life that defined the city long before the ash fell. Using Rome’s transport networks as her spine, she traces how goods, people, and ideas circulated through the region, giving Pompeii a sense of lived continuity rather than archaeological stillness.

Roberts is a calm, precise guide: curious without theatrics, authoritative without overstatement. The production follows her lead, favouring clear explanation over spectacle. Streets, workshops, and homes are presented not as relics but as functioning spaces, each revealing something about how the city organised itself and how its inhabitants understood their place in the wider Roman world.

It’s history delivered with confidence and restraint — the kind of programme that trusts viewers to appreciate detail, context, and the quiet satisfaction of seeing a familiar site reframed with intelligence.

The Lighthouse Film4, 1.30am

Robert Eggers’ storm-lashed two-hander remains one of the most singular films of the past decade: a black‑and‑white fever dream where isolation, labour, and myth grind two men down to their rawest selves. Shot in a boxy aspect ratio that feels almost claustrophobic, the film traps Willem Dafoe and Robert Pattinson in a world of creaking timber, relentless weather, and rituals that seem older than either of them can articulate.

Dafoe leans into the role of the veteran keeper with a sea‑dog’s theatricality — part tyrant, part storyteller, part ghost. Pattinson matches him with a performance that flickers between resentment, yearning, and something more feral. Their exchanges have the rhythm of a curse being spoken and respoken, each encounter tightening the psychological noose.

Eggers threads folklore, maritime superstition, and half‑remembered nightmares through the film’s fabric, letting reality slip just enough to keep the audience unsteady. The result is hypnotic and punishing in equal measure: a descent that feels both meticulously constructed and instinctively unsettling.

Demanding, yes — but once seen, it’s difficult to shake.

Sunday, 8 February

Betrayal ITV1, 9.00pm Episode 1 of 4

The opener sets its terms quietly, favouring tension that seeps rather than strikes. Instead of the usual parade of tradecraft and gadgetry, the episode settles into the unease of people who no longer know where their loyalties sit — or who might be watching them recalibrate.

Relationships are the real battleground here. Marriages, friendships, and professional alliances all carry a faint charge, as if every conversation might be doing two jobs at once. The political backdrop is present but never overplayed; the danger feels as much emotional as geopolitical, rooted in the small betrayals that accumulate long before anyone crosses a line on paper.

It’s a restrained start, but the control is deliberate. If the series can maintain this level of psychological pressure — the sense that everyone is slightly out of step with themselves — it could build into something quietly gripping.

Emily BBC Two, 10.00pm

This reimagining of Emily Brontë sidesteps the usual period‑drama comforts in favour of something far more volatile. Frances O’Connor’s film treats Brontë not as a literary monument but as a young woman wrestling with desire, grief, and the sheer force of her own imagination. The moors aren’t scenic backdrops; they’re emotional weather, shifting with her inner life.

Emma Mackey gives the film its pulse. Her Emily is restless, sharp, and difficult in ways that feel entirely earned — a portrait of creativity as something closer to compulsion than accomplishment. The film leans into that intensity, allowing moments of tenderness, strangeness, and outright wildness to coexist without smoothing the edges.

Visually, it’s windswept and tactile, but the modernity comes through in its confidence: the refusal to tidy up the contradictions that shaped both the writer and the work she would eventually produce. It’s a film that understands the cost of making art, and the solitude that often comes with it.

Moody, immersive, and defiantly alive.

Past Lives BBC Two, 12.00am 🌟

Celine Song’s debut is built on the smallest of gestures: a pause held a beat too long, a glance that carries years of unspoken history, the quiet ache of paths not taken. What begins as a childhood connection stretches across continents and decades, reshaped by migration, ambition, and the slow realisation that intimacy doesn’t always resolve into romance.

Greta Lee and Teo Yoo give performances of remarkable stillness, letting the film’s emotional weight gather in the spaces between their words. John Magaro completes the triangle with a gentleness that refuses easy antagonism; everyone here is trying to do right by the life they’ve chosen, even as they feel the pull of the one they didn’t.

Song directs with exquisite restraint. Scenes unfold with the clarity of memory rather than melodrama, allowing the film’s questions — about identity, fate, and the stories we tell ourselves to keep moving forward — to surface naturally. Nothing is overstated, yet everything lands.

Quietly devastating, and all the more powerful for its refusal to force the moment.

Monday, 9 February

Knife Crime: What Happened to Our Boys? BBC One, 8.00pm

The programme takes a deliberately steady approach to a subject that’s too often reduced to headlines and panic. Instead of chasing shock value, it traces the long chain of decisions and omissions that shape young people’s lives: youth services stripped back to the bone, schools stretched beyond capacity, families left without support, and communities absorbing the consequences.

Interviews are handled with care. Parents, frontline workers, and young people themselves speak with a clarity that cuts through political noise, and the film gives them the space to articulate what’s been lost — not just lives, but trust, opportunity, and any sense of a safety net. The police presence is contextual rather than dominant; the emphasis is on prevention, not punishment.

What emerges is a portrait of systemic neglect rather than individual failure. The documentary doesn’t pretend there are easy answers, but it’s unflinching about the cost of looking away. Difficult viewing, but necessary if the conversation is ever going to move beyond rhetoric.

Concorde: The Race for Supersonic Channel 4, 10.30pm 🌟 Episode 1 of 2

The story of Concorde is often remembered as a sleek icon of national pride, but this opening episode digs into the far messier reality behind the silhouette. The Cold War sets the tempo: Britain and France pushing for a civilian aircraft that could outrun sound itself, while the United States and the Soviet Union pursued their own visions of the future. What emerges is less a straightforward technological triumph than a geopolitical gamble — a project driven as much by prestige and rivalry as by engineering ambition.

The programme captures the sheer audacity of the undertaking: the materials that barely existed when the plans were drawn, the political brinkmanship required to keep the partnership alive, and the constant sense that the whole enterprise might collapse under its own weight. Concorde becomes a symbol twice over — a marvel of design, and a reminder of how national identity can be welded to a machine.

Clear, confident documentary-making, and a strong start to a story that still feels astonishing in scale.

Concorde: The Race for Supersonic Channel 4, 11.30pm🌟 Episode 2 of 2

The second half of the story opens with Concorde triumphant: a machine that proved the sceptics wrong and briefly made the future feel airborne. But the victory is short‑lived. Environmental protests, sonic‑boom anxieties, and a patchwork of overland bans steadily shrink the aircraft’s usefulness, turning a technological breakthrough into a route map defined by political caution.

The documentary traces this narrowing horizon with a quiet, accumulating sadness. What began as a symbol of national ambition becomes a luxury service for the few, its engineering brilliance undermined by the world it was built to outrun. The tone shifts from exhilaration to something more elegiac, acknowledging both the achievement and the limits that ultimately grounded it.

A thoughtful conclusion — clear‑eyed about the compromises, and honest about the melancholy that clings to Concorde’s final years.

Tuesday, 10 February

The Secret Science of Sewage BBC Four, 10.00pm

A subject that rarely gets airtime is treated here with the seriousness it deserves. Sewage systems — usually invisible unless something goes wrong — emerge as one of the great, uncelebrated feats of modern civilisation. The programme traces how these networks protect public health, manage environmental pressure, and quietly absorb the consequences of population growth and climate volatility.

What could have been dry becomes unexpectedly absorbing. Engineers, microbiologists, and frontline workers explain the sheer complexity of keeping waste moving, treating it safely, and returning water to the environment in a condition that won’t cause further harm. The film is careful to show both the ingenuity and the fragility of the system: the innovations that keep it functioning, and the points where decades of underinvestment begin to show.

It’s a reminder that infrastructure is only “boring” until it fails — and that the pipes beneath our feet tell a story about priorities, resilience, and the hidden labour that keeps cities alive.

Deliverance BBC Two, 11.50pm

Boorman’s survival thriller still carries a charge that hasn’t dulled with time. What begins as a weekend adventure for four suburban men quickly unravels into something far darker, exposing the brittleness of the confidence they bring with them. The river becomes a kind of reckoning: beautiful, treacherous, and utterly indifferent to their attempts to master it.

The film’s most notorious moments tend to dominate its reputation, but the real unease lies elsewhere — in the way masculinity curdles under pressure, in the shifting power dynamics within the group, and in the dawning recognition that civilisation is a thin veneer when the landscape refuses to play along. Jon Voight and Burt Reynolds give performances that understand this fragility, charting the slow collapse of bravado into fear and improvisation.

Boorman shoots the wilderness with a clarity that feels almost accusatory. The forest is not malevolent, just unmoved by human drama, and that indifference is what makes the film so unsettling. Deliverance remains a study in control slipping away — from the environment, from each other, and from themselves.

A classic, and still a deeply disquieting one.

Wednesday, 11 February

3:10 to Yuma Film4 11.10pm

James Mangold’s remake pares the Western back to its essentials: two men, a journey, and a deadline that tightens with every mile. Christian Bale plays the rancher desperate enough — and principled enough — to escort a notorious outlaw to the waiting train, while Russell Crowe gives that outlaw a charisma that’s as dangerous as any weapon he carries.

What follows is less a chase than a moral negotiation. The film keeps circling questions of duty, temptation, and the price of doing the right thing when the world offers easier exits. Bale’s quiet resolve and Crowe’s seductive intelligence create a dynamic where every conversation feels like a test of integrity, and every pause hints at the possibility of betrayal.

Mangold shoots the landscape with clarity rather than romance, letting the dust, distance, and violence sit without embellishment. The tension builds not from spectacle but from the slow erosion of certainty — who these men are, what they owe, and how far they’re willing to go to hold their ground.

A lean, gripping Western that sharpens the genre’s ethical edge rather than polishing its myths.

Hunt for the Oldest DNA PBS America, 8.30pm

This documentary treats genetics not as a technical curiosity but as a frontier of human understanding. Researchers push the limits of what ancient material can reveal, extracting fragments of DNA from environments once thought too degraded to yield anything meaningful. The work is painstaking, often speculative at the outset, but the breakthroughs are startling: glimpses of ecosystems, species, and climates that predate human memory.

The programme balances the lab work with a sense of intellectual adventure. Field sites in permafrost and sediment cores become time capsules, each sample a chance to push the genetic record further back. Explanations are clear without being simplified, and the scientists’ excitement is grounded in the scale of what’s at stake — a deeper, more precise map of Earth’s past.

Absorbing, lucid, and quietly awe‑inspiring.

Thursday, 12 February

Becoming Victoria Wood You & Gold, 9.00pm

Rather than leaning on the familiar warmth of Victoria Wood’s greatest hits, this portrait looks at the machinery behind them: the discipline, structure, and sheer graft that shaped her voice long before fame arrived. The programme traces how she built her comic world from close observation and meticulous rewriting, turning everyday detail into something both precise and generous.

Colleagues and collaborators speak to the rigour beneath the charm — the way she shaped a line, tightened a rhythm, or reworked a sketch until it landed exactly as intended. The result is a portrait that honours her humour without flattening her into a national treasure, showing instead the ambition and intelligence that powered her work.

A clear‑eyed, quietly moving study of craft, and a reminder that brilliance rarely happens by accident.

Not Welcome: The Battle to Stop the Boats Channel 4, 10.00pm

Channel 4 approaches one of the most charged areas of British politics with a steadiness that cuts through the noise. Rather than amplifying slogans, the programme traces how policy, rhetoric, and electoral calculation collide with the realities faced by people on the move. Ministers, campaigners, and frontline workers all appear, but the emphasis remains on the human consequences of decisions made far from the shoreline.

The documentary is unflinching about the machinery behind the headlines: deterrence strategies that reshape lives, legal frameworks stretched to their limits, and a political climate in which migration becomes a proxy for broader anxieties. It’s a portrait of power under scrutiny, and the film refuses to sand down the contradictions or soften the impact.

Challenging, clear‑eyed, and committed to interrogating the gap between what is promised and what is lived.

Friday, 13 February

Nosferatu the Vampyre Talking Pictures, 10.10pm

Werner Herzog’s reimagining of Murnau’s silent classic is less a remake than a haunted echo — a film that moves with the logic of a fever or a half‑remembered nightmare. Klaus Kinski’s Count Dracula is not a suave predator but a lonely, plague‑ridden figure, his hunger bound up with despair as much as menace. Isabelle Adjani’s Lucy brings a kind of luminous fatalism to the story, her stillness as unsettling as any of the film’s gothic flourishes.

Herzog leans into atmosphere over shock. Landscapes feel abandoned by time, interiors seem drained of warmth, and the encroaching sense of sickness gives the film a slow, suffocating dread. Even the familiar beats of the Dracula story feel newly fragile, as if the characters are trapped inside a myth they can’t quite control.

It’s a work of mood and texture — eerie, mournful, and strangely beautiful — a vampire film that treats horror as a kind of existential condition rather than a genre exercise.

Babylon Film4, 11.45pm

Damien Chazelle’s Hollywood epic opens in chaos and rarely lets the temperature drop. Set in the industry’s transition from silent film to sound, it treats early Hollywood as a battleground of ambition, appetite, and sheer logistical madness. The parties, the sets, the disasters — everything is pitched at a scale that feels both exhilarating and faintly grotesque, a world fuelled by people who believe the future can be willed into existence through force of personality alone.

Margot Robbie and Diego Calva anchor the sprawl with performances that understand the film’s contradictions: the thrill of creation, the brutality of the system, and the way success can curdle into myth almost overnight. Chazelle isn’t interested in tidy nostalgia; he’s after the volatility of an industry reinventing itself in real time, and the casualties left behind when the machinery moves on.

The result is intentionally messy — a sensory overload that veers between brilliance and collapse, mirroring the world it depicts. Exhausting, often electrifying, and never less than confrontational about the cost of spectacle.

Queenpins Channel 4, 12.10am

A brisk, good‑natured crime caper built around a real coupon‑fraud scheme that ballooned far beyond its suburban origins. Kristen Bell and Kirby Howell‑Baptiste make a sharp double act, playing two women who channel boredom, frustration, and a talent for small‑scale hustle into something far more elaborate than they ever intended.

The film keeps its energy up without tipping into chaos. There’s a clear sense of how consumer capitalism — its loopholes, its absurdities, its endless promises of reward — becomes both the backdrop and the fuel for their operation. Paul Walter Hauser and Vince Vaughn, as the investigators circling the case, add a welcome deadpan counterweight.

It’s not trying to reinvent the genre, but it doesn’t need to. The pleasure lies in the pace, the performances, and the sly acknowledgement that ingenuity often flourishes where the system isn’t looking. A lighter, well‑judged note on which to end the week.

STREAMING CHOICES

Here are polished, expanded versions for each of your remaining listings — keeping your established tone, cadence, and editorial clarity. They sit naturally alongside the rest of your guide.


Lead Children

All six episdoes available from Wednesday 11 February 2026 on Netflix

A stark, unsettling documentary that refuses to look away from the long shadow of environmental contamination. Focusing on communities living with the consequences of industrial negligence, it traces how lead exposure shapes childhoods, futures, and entire neighbourhoods. The filmmaking is restrained but quietly furious, grounding its argument in lived experience rather than abstraction. Difficult viewing, but a vital reminder of how policy failures become personal.

Walter Presents: Lolita Lobosco (Series 3)

Series three available from Friday 13 February on Channel 4 streaming

Still one of Walter Presents’ most enjoyable imports, this third series returns to Bari with its trademark blend of sunlit charm and knotty crime. The cases remain sharply constructed, but it’s the offbeat humour, character detail, and sense of place that give the show its warmth. Lobosco herself continues to be a compelling centre — wry, capable, and never in a hurry to fit the mould. Crime drama with personality, and all the better for taking its time.

Speakerine

All six episodes from Thursday 12 February on ITVX

Set behind the scenes of French television’s golden age, Speakerine uses its glamorous surface as a foil for a more incisive story about ambition, gender, and institutional control. The period detail is elegant without tipping into nostalgia, and the drama understands how power operates quietly as well as loudly. Stylish, poised, and sharper than it first appears — a series that knows exactly what it’s saying.

Cross (Season 2)

Episodes 1-3 available from Wednesday 11 February

Season two pushes further into psychological territory, tightening its focus on obsession, trauma, and the cost of relentless pursuit. The series remains slick, but it avoids the trap of empty escalation by grounding its tension in character rather than spectacle. This early run of episodes suggests a show confident enough to deepen its themes rather than simply raise the stakes.

How to Get to Heaven from Belfast

All eight episodes available from Thursday 12 February on Netflix A darkly comic exploration of faith, guilt, and reinvention, blending Northern Irish wit with genuine emotional bite. The humour is sharp but never cruel, and the series knows when to let a joke land and when to step back. Beneath the comedy sits a thoughtful meditation on belief, belonging, and the stories people tell themselves to keep going. A smart, surprising piece of television that earns its shifts in tone.

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Culture Vulture: 8–14 November 2025

Logo for "Culture Vulture" featuring an eagle in flight against a blue sky with mountains in the background, accompanied by the text 'Culture Vulture: 8–14 November 2025' and a 'Counter Culture' graphic at the bottom.

Edited by Patrick Harrington, Culture Vulture operates from an alternative viewpoint — one that refuses to accept that culture is only what the big platforms push at us. We’re interested in work that has something to say, that remembers history, that puts ordinary people back into the story. This week, three titles stand out. 🌟 Lawrence of Arabia (Film4, Monday) remains the supreme statement of big-screen ambition — beautiful, conflicted, and still urgent about empire and identity. 🌟 Richard Burton: Wild Genius (BBC Two, Wednesday) gives us the face, the voice, and the cost of greatness. And on streaming, 🌟 Mrs. Playmen (Netflix, Wednesday) looks at a woman who used print, desire, and sheer bloody-mindedness to shake a conservative society. Around those pillars we have strong documentaries (Breaking Ranks, The Real Hack), classic British craft (Odette, Colonel Blimp), and some high-gloss modern cinema that still remembers to ask moral questions. That, for us, is culture.


Streaming Choice

🌟 Mrs. PlaymenNetflix, all seven episodes available from Wednesday, 12th November
A lush Italian drama inspired by Delina Cattio, the publisher who dared to bring sexuality, fashion, and moral critique into one rebellious magazine in 1970s Italy. On the surface it’s about glamour, but underneath it’s about who is allowed to speak and who is silenced.

The central performance (played as a woman who is both strategist and romantic) shows the cost of radical visibility. She wants to open a space for women’s desire, but she runs into the old enemies — the church, the state, the press, and, worse, the men who love her but don’t want her to be powerful.

Visually, it leans into period detail — lacquered hair, heavy fabrics, proto-feminist interiors — but it also shows the grubby backstage: lawyers, printers, censors. The show understands that every “liberated” image has to be physically produced somewhere, usually by overworked people.

What makes it a Culture Vulture pick is that it treats erotic publishing not as titillation but as politics. Who sets the boundaries? Who gets to define “indecent”? Cattio pushes back.

In the end, Mrs. Playmen is a reminder that cultural change often begins with one awkward, stubborn, brave person putting something in print and refusing to say sorry.

The Flight AttendantITVX, both seasons from Sunday, 9th November
Kaley Cuoco’s Cassie wakes up in the wrong bed, in the wrong country, with the wrong corpse. A darkly funny thriller about bad choices, blackout memory, and the way trauma keeps us running long after the danger has passed. Stylish, modern, and ideal for a November binge.


Saturday, 8th November 2025

Titanic: Secrets of the Shipwreck — Channel 4, 8:00 PM (Part 1 of 2) and 9:00 PM (Part 2 of 2)
Two linked hours on the most famous maritime disaster of all. Using fresh tech and archival testimony, it peels back myth and looks for the human story — class, hubris, survival. Good, serious factual TV for a Saturday night.

The Concord Isle: Crossroads of the Mediterranean — PBS America, 9:05 PM
A quietly absorbing documentary on Sicily’s layered past — a place conquered, traded, and transformed. History people will love this.


La La Land (2016) — BBC Two, 12:40 AM

Los Angeles. Sunlight on car bonnets. A traffic jam becomes a musical. From the first sequence, Damien Chazelle tells you that this is a film about people who refuse to stop dreaming even when the city tells them to get real. La La Land is a romantic musical, yes, but under the song-and-dance is a very adult sadness about timing, compromise, and careers.

Emma Stone’s Mia is one of the best portraits of an artist not-yet-seen: all auditions, embarrassment, and tiny humiliations. Ryan Gosling’s Sebastian is her mirror — a purist, slightly ridiculous, determined to preserve jazz from hotel-lobby death. Together they’re magical, but the film never lies: love doesn’t always survive ambition. That’s what gives it bite.

Visually the film is gorgeous. Rich blues, bright yellows, old-Hollywood spotlighting, tap numbers that nod to Astaire and Kelly without copying them. The camera glides; the city glitters. But Chazelle uses that style to heighten the ache. Every beautiful moment seems to say: enjoy it, it will go.

Thematically, it’s about the price of the dream. You can make the art, or you can keep the person, but sometimes not both. The devastating “what if” coda — that alternate life — is one of the finest endings of modern cinema because it dignifies both love and work.

For us, this is more than a pretty musical. It’s about the working life of artists and performers — the ones we write about all the time. It understands that art is work, rejection is normal, and sometimes the most loving thing is letting someone go so they can become who they are.


Darkest Hour (2017) — BBC Two, 6:00 PM

Set in May 1940, when everything seemed lost, Darkest Hour is less a war movie and more a study of political will. It asks: what does leadership look like when surrender would be easier? Gary Oldman’s Churchill is not the cartoon bulldog of pub tea towels; he’s clever, vain, frightened, and absolutely determined.

Oldman’s performance is the big draw. Buried under prosthetics, he still gives you a mind at work — listening, calculating, occasionally panicking. The supporting turns (Kristin Scott Thomas as Clemmie; Lily James as the secretary drawn into history) humanise him without softening his edges. This Churchill is a man surrounded by doubt — in Parliament, in the War Cabinet, even in the palace.

The style is smoky, enclosed, almost theatrical — corridors, bunkers, House of Commons benches. Director Joe Wright stages politics like a thriller. The famous speech moments (“we shall fight on the beaches…”) are earned, not handed out like greatest hits. The London Underground scene — sentimental to some — is about Churchill looking for legitimacy among ordinary people.

At heart it’s a film about words as weapons. Churchill can’t fight the Nazis himself; all he has is language. The film understands that rhetoric, when used this well, is not decoration but strategy.

From an alternative viewpoint, Darkest Hour is interesting because it shows an elite figure forced to listen downwards — to the people — in order to stand up to other elites who prefer compromise. That’s a dynamic we still see in politics, unions, and media now.


Quiz Show (1994) — Great! TV, 9:00 PM

Robert Redford’s elegant drama goes back to 1950s American television, when quiz shows were the great democratic theatre — until it turned out they were rigged. It’s a true story, but Redford isn’t just telling us what happened; he’s asking what TV does to morality.

The film pivots on two men: John Turturro’s Herbert Stempel, the awkward, working-class Jewish contestant who knows too much, and Ralph Fiennes’s Charles Van Doren, handsome, educated, the kind of man TV execs want America to love. One is pushed out, the other is pushed forward. That class aesthetic is key.

Visually and tonally it’s restrained — mahogany desks, studio lights, Ivy League drawing rooms. Redford shoots corruption like a period costume drama, which makes it more chilling; this is genteel fraud. The performances are beautifully judged, especially Paul Scofield as the disapproving father.

What the film keeps circling is complicity. Everyone is slightly dirty: networks, sponsors, contestants, even Congress. No-one wants to blow it up because the illusion is profitable. When Stempel finally talks, he’s made to look bitter — a pattern that should feel very familiar in 2025.

That’s why the film still matters. It shows how media manufactures “acceptable” intelligence and how people from the right background are always forgiven more. For Culture Vulture, it’s a parable about culture industries: talent isn’t always the thing being rewarded.


T2 Trainspotting (2017) — Channel 4, 11:30 PM

Twenty years on, Renton comes back. Time has passed, bodies have aged, grudges haven’t. Danny Boyle does something brave here: he doesn’t try to remake Trainspotting; he makes a film about what it means to remember Trainspotting. It’s a sequel about memory and masculinity.

Ewan McGregor, Robert Carlyle, Ewen Bremner, and Jonny Lee Miller all slip back into their characters, but now they carry disappointment. Renton is fit but hollow, Begbie is rage with grey hair, Spud is still the tragic heart. The performances are full of history — they play men who know they’ve squandered things.

Stylistically, Boyle keeps the kinetic edits, the bold music cues, the flashes of surrealism — but they’re haunted now. Moments from the first film appear like ghosts. Edinburgh, too, has changed: gentrified waterfronts replacing old haunts. The past is still there but monetised.

Underneath the banter is a serious point about working-class boys who were never meant to grow old. What happens when the hedonism ends? When the state doesn’t need you? When your friends are reminders of who you were? The film says: you make something, or you die. Spud’s writing becomes the answer.

For our purposes, T2 is a cultural artefact about continuity — about how you tell stories over decades and keep them honest. It’s also about loyalty and betrayal, which are union themes too.


The Mercy (2017) — BBC One, 12:15 AM

Donald Crowhurst was an amateur sailor who tried to cheat fate and ended up swallowed by it. The Mercy tells his story not as a tabloid scandal but as a quiet tragedy. Colin Firth plays him as a gentle, optimistic man who makes one bad decision and then can’t get out.

Firth’s performance is inward, delicate. He shows you the shame, the panic, the desperate hope that the lie will somehow become true. Rachel Weisz, as his wife, gives the film its emotional ballast — the scenes at home are as painful as the scenes at sea.

Visually the film moves between the vast, indifferent ocean and the cramped, slightly shabby English domestic world. That contrast tells you everything: a man trying to do something heroic from a life that doesn’t give him the tools.

Thematically it’s about masculine pride, the pressure to succeed, and the way British society can push people into pretending. Crowhurst would rather fake the voyage than admit defeat. That social shame kills him.

From an alternative, working-person’s perspective, The Mercy is a warning about impossible expectations. When you’re locked into a narrative of “success at all costs,” you can start falsifying reality just to survive. We see versions of that in workplaces and politics right now.


Sunday, 9th November 2025

🌟 Trespasses — Channel 4, 9:00 PM (1 of 4)
A Belfast-set thriller with Lola Petticrew, Tom Cullen, and Gillian Anderson. It mixes romance, sectarian tension, and past secrets — very much in the Irish Gothic tradition.

The Real Hack — ITV1, 10:15 PM
A factual follow-up to ITV’s drama The Hack. This looks at the real phone-hacking scandal around Murdoch’s media interests — how it happened, who was hurt, who looked away. Still relevant.


1917 (2019) — BBC Two, 10:50 PM

Sam Mendes’s First World War film is famous for looking like it’s done in one continuous shot, but the technique is never a gimmick — it’s there to trap us in the same unbroken anxiety as the two young soldiers sent across no man’s land. We march when they march. We crawl when they crawl. We don’t get to look away.

George MacKay carries the film with an astonishingly physical performance — tired, scared, stubborn. Dean-Charles Chapman gives him warmth to care about. Around them, famous faces (Firth, Cumberbatch, Strong) appear like gods of war, issuing commands and vanishing. It works: the soldiers’ world is made of brief encounters and long silences.

Visually it’s a bleak kind of beauty. Dead horses, ruined orchards, flares lighting up night skies, abandoned trenches half-full of water. Roger Deakins’ cinematography makes you feel the mud. The score is spare, letting the tension build.

But what gives 1917 lasting power is its humanism. This isn’t a jingoistic war movie; it’s about the small acts — carrying a message, saving one man, singing in a wood — that stand against mechanised slaughter. The film says: within horror, people still choose to be good.

For Culture Vulture, it’s worth watching now because it reminds us what real stakes look like. In an age of drone wars and remote conflict, 1917 pulls us right back to the body, the mud, the cost.


Starship Troopers (1997) — ITV4, 11:15 PM

Paul Verhoeven made a film that many people in 1997 took at face value — a glossy space-war romp about beautiful people shooting bugs. But it was always a satire on fascism, militarism, and media propaganda. Watch it now and it feels prophetic.

The performances are deliberately stiff, almost like recruitment ads — Casper Van Dien, Denise Richards, Dina Meyer — because the point is that the society has bred emotional simplicity. You’re meant to notice the shallowness. Neil Patrick Harris turning up in an SS-style coat is not subtle.

Stylistically it’s bright, plasticky, full of fake newsreel clips (“Would you like to know more?”). The film shows how media turns war into entertainment, how it dehumanises the enemy (here, literal bugs), and how young people are channelled into violence.

The satire lies in what’s not said. No-one questions the war. No-one questions the state. Everyone accepts “service guarantees citizenship.” That’s the horror.

From an alternative viewpoint, Starship Troopers is a useful text. It shows how easy it is to get people to march when you give them an enemy, a uniform, and a screen. Worth revisiting — especially for younger viewers who’ve only seen the memes.


Monday, 10th November 2025

Breaking Ranks: Inside Israel’s War — ITV1, 9:00 PM
A rare, soldier-centred look at the recent Gaza conflict from inside the IDF — conscripts, reservists, and veterans speaking about what they saw and what they were asked to do. Serious, difficult TV.

Verdun: The Battle of the Great War — PBS America, 7:15 PM
Forts of Verdun — PBS America, 9:00 PM
Two linked documentaries on one of the bloodiest battles in history. Industrial war, fortifications, and human endurance.

The Infinite Explorer with Hannah Fry (South Korea) — National Geographic, 8:00 PM
Hannah Fry goes to South Korea to look at the tech and social changes driving a modern nation. Smart, accessible, good for families.


Odette (1950) — BBC Two, 3:20 PM

This is the kind of wartime film British TV should never stop showing. Odette tells the true story of Odette Sansom, the SOE agent captured by the Germans, tortured, and yet unbroken. Made only five years after the war, it still carries the sincerity of people who just lived through it.

Anna Neagle plays Odette with restraint — no melodrama, no shouting, just quiet stubbornness. That’s what makes it moving. She’s not a superhero; she’s an ordinary woman who keeps saying “no.” Trevor Howard and Peter Ustinov add dignity to the cast.

Stylistically, it’s very much in that late-40s/early-50s British mode — straightforward direction, clear storytelling, emotional scenes earned rather than forced. You can see the influence of wartime propaganda films, but this is gentler, more personal.

What’s interesting watching it now is the way it treats female courage. There’s no attempt to masculinise Odette. Her strength is in endurance, loyalty, love of country — all coded feminine, and all absolutely heroic.

For Culture Vulture (with our interest in workplace, union, and resistance stories), Odette is a good reminder that the people who hold the line are often the ones history doesn’t reward loudest. It belongs in this week.


🌟 Lawrence of Arabia (1962) — Film4, 4:40 PM

Here it is — one of cinema’s great mountains. David Lean’s epic about T.E. Lawrence is about deserts, yes, but also about identity, empire, and the seductions of greatness. You don’t watch it; you enter it.

Peter O’Toole’s performance is the key. Tall, blond, almost ethereal, he plays Lawrence as a man both fascinated by and alien to the Arab world. He longs to belong but also needs to be special. That contradiction drives the whole film. Omar Sharif, Alec Guinness, and Anthony Quinn give magnificent counterweight.

Visually, it is breathtaking — the long desert crossings, the mirages, the camel charges, the blinding sun. Lean uses scale to show how small human politics are next to the land, and yet how destructive our ambitions can be. Maurice Jarre’s score lifts it into myth.

But the film is not naive. It shows how the British (and others) used Arab aspirations during the war and then betrayed them. It shows how charisma and violence are linked. It shows how men like Lawrence are created, used, and discarded by empires.

From our alternative viewpoint, that’s the heart of it: Lawrence of Arabia is a film about imperial manipulation and the tragic figure caught between peoples. Watching it in 2025 — after Iraq, Afghanistan, Gaza — it still speaks. That’s why it gets the star.


Public Enemies (2009) — Film4, 10:50 PM

Michael Mann’s take on John Dillinger is cool, meticulous, and more melancholy than you remember. It’s not a guns-blazing gangster romp; it’s about the last days of a certain kind of outlaw.

Johnny Depp plays Dillinger as a man who knows he’s living on borrowed time — charming, yes, but watchful, alert to modern policing closing in. Marion Cotillard gives the love story depth. Christian Bale, as Purvis, is the state’s answer to Dillinger — clinical, ambitious, slightly hollow.

Visually, Mann shoots 1930s America with his usual digital clarity — you can feel the cloth, the metal, the damp prison walls. The gunfights are loud, chaotic, unromantic. This is crime as work, not fantasy.

The film keeps returning to the idea that the world is changing. Dillinger’s bank-robbing style is being replaced by organised crime, by the FBI, by institutions. Individual glamour can’t survive bureaucratic power.


Tuesday, 11th November 2025

In My Own Words: Cornelia Parker — BBC One, 10:40 PM
The celebrated British artist talks us through process and meaning — ideal for viewers who like art explained without being patronised.

James May’s Shedload of Ideas — Quest, 9:00 PM
Vintage May: curiosity, tinkering, half-genius, half-daft. A good counterpoint to the heavier docs this week.

Barbie Uncovered: A Dream House Divided — Sky Documentaries, 11:15 PM
A smart look at the brand behind the doll — reinventions, feminism, backlash, and big money.


In Which We Serve (1942) — BBC Two, 3:00 PM

Made in the middle of the war by Noël Coward and David Lean, this is part tribute, part morale piece, part memory. It tells the story of a British destroyer and the men (and women at home) linked to it. Because it was made during the conflict, there’s no cynicism — just gratitude.

The performances are understated, very British, very 1940s. People do their duty without lengthy speeches. But that restraint makes the sacrifices more affecting. There’s a democratic spirit to it — officers and ratings both matter.

Shot in black and white, it has that sturdy, no-frills realism that Lean later took to epic level. Wartime London, naval action, domestic interiors — all handled with care.

What stands out now is the emphasis on collective effort. Nobody’s the hero alone. The ship is the hero. That’s a useful lesson for our age, which overpraises individuals.

As part of this week’s schedule, it sits nicely alongside Odette and Colonel Blimp later — a triptych of British wartime storytelling, each saying: ordinary people did extraordinary things.


Bohemian Rhapsody (2018) — Film4, 11:25 PM

Yes, it’s a crowd-pleaser and yes, it smooths some edges, but Bohemian Rhapsody works because Rami Malek’s Freddie Mercury is so alive on screen. This is a film about performance as armour — about making yourself bigger than the pain.

Malek captures the voice, the strut, the impishness, but also the loneliness. The band — Gwilym Lee (Brian May), Ben Hardy (Roger Taylor), Joseph Mazzello (John Deacon) — are played as a family who argue, split, and reunite because the music is better when they’re together.

Stylistically, it’s glossy, with fast-cut recording sessions, tour montages, and of course the Live Aid reconstruction, which is unabashedly triumphant. The music carries it — difficult not to be moved when 70,000 people clap back at “Radio Ga Ga.”

Beneath the sheen, it’s about identity — being Parsi, being gay, being an immigrant’s son, being unapologetically yourself in a country that doesn’t always get you. Freddie’s life is shown as a series of rooms he walks into and owns.

From a Culture Vulture angle, it’s worth keeping because it shows how popular music can be the most democratic art form of all — a queer migrant kid becomes the voice of everyone. That’s the kind of story we like to tell.


Wednesday, 12th November 2025

🌟 Richard Burton: Wild GeniusBBC Two, 9:00 PM
A searching and compassionate portrait of the Welsh actor who seemed made of contradictions — brilliance and ruin, intellect and appetite, poetry and drink. The documentary doesn’t smooth those edges; it lets them clash. Drawing on rare letters, interviews, and newly restored footage, it gives us Burton not as legend but as man.

The film opens in Pontrhydyfen, the mining village that shaped him. You feel the grit of it, the sense of a world he carried in his voice long after he left. Then comes Oxford, theatre, and the quick climb to international fame. The contrast between those places — pit and playhouse — defines the life.

His marriage to Elizabeth Taylor is treated neither as gossip nor as glamour but as tragedy: two people too large for ordinary life. The excerpts from Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? still burn — art and life fused, destructive and beautiful.

Stylistically, it’s restrained: archive balanced with slow pans over letters, cigarette smoke curling through old clips. The narration avoids hagiography; it listens, it lets the silences speak.

For Culture Vulture, this is essential because Burton’s story is also the story of post-war British culture — a working-class talent exported, commodified, and finally exhausted by the very system that celebrated him.


Paris: Stories from the CityPBS America, 7:50 PM (1 of 3)
An elegantly shot new series tracing the architectural evolution of Paris — from medieval lanes to Haussmann’s boulevards and today’s glass towers. A love letter to design and civic imagination.


The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943) — BBC Two, 2:35 PM

Powell and Pressburger’s wartime masterpiece follows one British officer from youthful idealism through to late-life obsolescence. It’s witty, humane, and quietly radical — a Technicolor film that questioned patriotism while the war still raged.

Roger Livesey’s Clive Candy begins as blustering Edwardian and ends as bewildered relic. Deborah Kerr, playing three incarnations of the woman he loves, threads time and memory together; Anton Walbrook, as the German friend, provides the moral core.

Visually, it’s sumptuous. The famous duelling scene, the mirrored pool, the transitions through decades — all astonishing for 1943. Yet it’s never just style: the beauty serves irony. Colour is used to mourn the loss of innocence.

Its argument — that decency without flexibility becomes cruelty — was bold for its moment and remains relevant. Candy isn’t mocked; he’s pitied for believing that honour can survive mechanised war.

From our alternative viewpoint, Colonel Blimp stands as an early critique of the British establishment’s self-image. It shows a country clinging to ritual while history changes around it. Every generation has its Blimps; every generation needs to outgrow them.


Green Book (2018) — BBC Two, 11:30 PM

Peter Farrelly’s road movie pairs Mahershala Ali’s refined pianist Don Shirley with Viggo Mortensen’s rough Italian-American driver Tony Vallelonga. On paper it’s odd-couple comedy; in execution it’s a study of prejudice, dignity, and friendship in 1960s America.

Ali plays Shirley with cool precision — a man trapped between worlds, performing for audiences who admire his art but deny his humanity. Mortensen’s Tony is coarse but open-hearted, and the chemistry between them makes the film sing.

The cinematography paints the Deep South in faded postcard tones, the jazz clubs in golds and greens. The soundtrack (real Shirley recordings mixed with new score) reinforces the sense of motion and melancholy.

Critics argued about tone, about whose story it was, but beneath the awards chatter the film’s heart is simple: two men learning each other’s rhythms, finding respect where society offers contempt.

Green Book is about labour and empathy — about how shared journeys, literal or not, change people more effectively than slogans. It’s humane, humorous, and quietly radical in believing that decency can still surprise us.


Thursday, 13th November 2025

Play for Today: Never Too LateBBC One, 9:00 PM
A welcome revival of the classic anthology strand. Anita Dobson is magnificent as Cynthia, a fiercely independent widow resisting life in a care home. Tracy-Ann Oberman plays the daughter caught between worry and respect. Wry, unsentimental, and full of small truths about ageing and agency — a drama that earns its tears.

I’m genuinely delighted to see the revival of Play for Today — a strand that once defined bold, socially engaged British television. Originally broadcast on the BBC from 1970 to 1984, it was a crucible for new writing, giving voice to working-class experience, political dissent, and emotional nuance in a way that still resonates. It launched or nurtured the careers of writers like Mike Leigh, Dennis Potter, and Caryl Churchill, and brought unforgettable dramas to the screen. Standouts include Blue Remembered Hills, Dennis Potter’s haunting tale of childhood performed by adults; The Spongers, Jim Allen’s devastating critique of welfare cuts; and Bar Mitzvah Boy, a tender coming-of-age story by Jack Rosenthal. What made Play for Today so vital was its commitment to new voices and its refusal to flinch from difficult truths. It treated television as a public space for argument, empathy, and imagination — and we need that spirit now more than ever.


The Running Man (1987) — Film4, 10:55 PM

Before reality television made competition into cruelty, Stephen King imagined it. Paul Michael Glaser’s adaptation puts Arnold Schwarzenegger in a dystopia where convicts fight to the death on live TV. Loud, lurid, and weirdly prophetic.

Schwarzenegger gives one of his better performances — the mix of muscle and moral outrage works. Richard Dawson, as the smirking game-show host, steals scenes; he understands he’s playing the future of media.

The production design is garish fun: neon corridors, corporate logos, absurd gladiators. Watching it now, it feels less fantasy than blueprint — the entertainment industry feeding on humiliation.

What’s easy to miss beneath the explosions is the political anger. The film came out in Reagan’s America; deregulation and celebrity culture were merging. The Running Man saw where that led.

From our point of view, it’s an anti-capitalist action movie in disguise — bread and circuses for a distracted population. If you stream or tweet while watching, you’ve proved its point.


Friday, 14th November 2025

Guy Garvey: From the Vaults — Protest SongsSky Arts, 8:00 PM
Elbow’s frontman curates a set of vintage performances where musicians used melody as megaphone. Expect Billy Bragg, Nina Simone, and early Clash. Protest as art, art as protest.

Empire with David OlusogaBBC Two, 9:00 PM (2 of 3)
Olusoga traces how the movement of peoples within the empire still shapes the modern world. Scholarly, eloquent, and necessary.


The Creator (2023) — Film4, 9:00 PM

Gareth Edwards’ The Creator imagines a near future where humans and AI wage total war. Yet it’s less about machines than about empathy. Against vast digital landscapes, a soldier (John David Washington) must decide whether the “enemy” child he protects deserves the same rights as humans.

Washington gives the film its emotional anchor — weary, conflicted, gradually awakening to compassion. Madeleine Yuna Voyles, as the child, brings quiet intensity; she’s the film’s soul.

Visually, it’s astonishing: shot on location with lightweight cameras, blending real terrain and digital wonder so seamlessly you forget what’s CGI. The score by Hans Zimmer and the electronic textures create a feeling of spiritual sci-fi, somewhere between Apocalypse Now and Blade Runner.

Thematically, it asks big questions: what is consciousness, who decides who counts as alive, and why humans repeat their cruelties against anything new. Its sympathy lies with creation itself — the capacity to imagine rather than destroy.

From our alternative lens, The Creator belongs to a lineage of anti-imperial science fiction. It exposes the military-industrial urge to control and the human need to empathise. Not flawless, but bold and heartfelt.


The Hitcher (1986) — Legend, 11:00 PM

Rutger Hauer’s nameless hitchhiker is one of horror cinema’s purest nightmares — evil without motive, charm without mercy. Robert Harmon’s lean thriller turns a stretch of desert highway into purgatory.

C. Thomas Howell plays the young driver who makes the fatal mistake of offering a lift. What follows is cat-and-mouse stripped of explanation: the hitcher kills because he can, because he sees fear as proof of life.

The direction is spare and tense. Daylight rather than darkness, open space rather than confinement — terror in plain view. Hauer’s performance is hypnotic: amused, precise, terrifyingly calm.

Under the surface, the film is about masculinity and guilt. The hero spends the story proving he isn’t weak, even as violence consumes him. It’s Reagan-era paranoia, the fear that innocence itself invites attack.

It’s cult cinema at its best: small budget, big anxiety, executed with craftsmanship. A final reminder this week that sometimes the most revealing mirrors are the ones smeared with dust and blood.


Closing

Across this week’s screens — from the lonely courage of Odette to the moral deserts of Lawrence and The Creator — the question is constant: what do people owe to truth, to each other, to the stories they live inside? Culture Vulture keeps asking because the answers keep changing.


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Culture Vulture 27 September to the 3rd of October 2025

Selections by Pat Harrington

An eagle in flight with a blue sky and mountains in the background, featuring bold text reading 'CULTURE VULTURE' at the top and a colorful banner labeled 'COUNTER CULTURE' at the bottom, indicating a cultural event from September 27 to October 3, 2025.

This week’s Culture Vulture brings together music, memory, and sharp cultural clashes. The standout is the BBC Two and BBC archive series looking at banned songs — with “More Dangerous Songs” and “Britain’s Most Dangerous Songs” reminding us that lyrics can threaten as much as speeches. Alongside that we have searching documentaries, striking dramas, and films that range from the raw power of Raging Bull to the provocation of Joker.


Saturday 27th September

9 Bodies in a Mexican Morgue – BBC One, 9:25 p.m.
The series opens with a stark tableau: nine corpses laid out in a morgue, each one a cipher in a locked-room mystery. It’s a grisly premise, but the storytelling leans into atmosphere rather than spectacle. The camera lingers on details—a scuffed shoe, a half-closed eye—as if inviting us to read the bodies like texts. There’s a quiet horror in the stillness, and a tension that builds not from gore but from the slow unravelling of motive and method.

As the investigation unfolds, the morgue becomes more than a setting—it’s a crucible for character. Detectives, pathologists, and grieving families converge, each bringing their own secrets and suspicions. The series resists easy binaries of good and evil, instead offering a mosaic of flawed humanity. We’re asked to consider not just who committed the crime, but why these particular lives ended here, together, in silence.

Stylistically, the show borrows from Nordic noir and Latin American crime drama, blending procedural grit with emotional depth. The pacing is deliberate, the dialogue sparse but loaded. There’s a sense that every word matters, every glance carries weight. It’s a show that trusts its audience to sit with discomfort and ambiguity—a rare thing in prime-time crime television.

More than a whodunnit, this is a meditation on justice and grief. The morgue, with its sterile lights and cold slabs, becomes a place of reckoning. And as the series progresses, we begin to see that the real mystery isn’t just who killed whom—but what kind of society allows these deaths to happen unnoticed, unclaimed, unresolved.

Banned in the 80s: Moments That Shook Music – BBC Two, 9:25 p.m.
The 1980s were more than synths and shoulder pads—they were a battleground for sound, censorship, and social change. This documentary revisits the decade not through its chart-toppers, but through the moments that rattled the establishment. From punk provocateurs to pop stars who dared to speak politically, the programme traces how music became a lightning rod for moral panic, media outrage, and institutional pushback. It’s not just a retrospective—it’s a reckoning.

Expect archival footage that crackles with tension: grainy news clips, protest marches, and the faces of artists who refused to soften their message. The documentary doesn’t flinch from controversy—it leans into it. Whether it’s Frankie Goes to Hollywood’s “Relax” being pulled from airwaves or the BBC’s uneasy relationship with political lyrics, we’re reminded that rebellion often comes wrapped in melody. These weren’t just songs—they were statements, and sometimes, threats.

What emerges is a portrait of a decade in flux. Thatcherism, AIDS activism, race relations, and youth identity all find their echo in the music of the time. The programme asks not just what was banned, but why—and who got to decide. It’s a study in cultural gatekeeping, where the line between protection and suppression blurs. And it invites us to consider whether today’s music landscape is freer—or simply more covert in its compromises.

For viewers who lived through the era, there’s nostalgia tinged with unease. For younger audiences, it’s a reminder that freedom of expression has always been contested terrain. The documentary doesn’t offer easy answers, but it does offer context—and in doing so, it restores urgency to songs that once shook the system. Drama, colour, and rebellion aren’t just aesthetic choices here—they’re the pulse of a decade that dared to sing what others feared to say.


More Dangerous Songs – BBC Two, 10:20 p.m.
Some songs don’t just chart—they challenge. This documentary revisits the tracks that provoked outrage, earned bans, and were branded “dangerous” by institutions that feared their reach. It’s a study in lyrical subversion, where melody meets menace—not through violence, but through ideas. Whether the subject was sex, race, war, or class, these songs dared to speak plainly in a world that preferred euphemism or silence.

The programme traces the origins of these provocations, spotlighting the artists who wrote them and the contexts that made them incendiary. We hear from musicians, critics, and cultural historians who unpack why certain lyrics triggered such disproportionate response. Often, the fear wasn’t of the song itself—but of the audience it might empower. Music becomes a proxy for deeper anxieties: about youth, dissent, and the shifting boundaries of public morality.

Archival footage and interviews reveal how censorship operated—not just through official bans, but through subtler forms of suppression. Radio blacklists, retail refusals, and moral campaigns shaped what could be heard and by whom. The documentary doesn’t just catalogue controversy—it interrogates it. Who decides what’s “dangerous”? And what does it say about a society when rhythm and rhyme are treated as threats?

Ultimately, this is a portrait of music as resistance. The songs profiled here didn’t just stir fear—they stirred thought. And in doing so, they expanded the cultural conversation. The clash between music and censorship may feel like a relic of the past, but the echoes are unmistakable. In an age of algorithmic gatekeeping and sanitized playlists, the question remains: are we still afraid of what music can say?

Britain’s Most Dangerous Songs – BBC Two, 11:20 p.m.
This quietly subversive documentary doesn’t shout—it listens. It listens to the lyrics that once rattled the BBC, the songs pulled from playlists not for profanity or violence, but for tone, timing, and perceived threat. From wartime melancholy to anti-establishment satire, the programme traces how British broadcasting shaped—and shrank—the cultural conversation. The bans weren’t always ideological. Sometimes they were bureaucratic, sometimes absurd. But they always revealed something about the anxieties of the age.

The ten tracks profiled span decades and genres, from George Formby’s cheeky double entendres to the Sex Pistols’ “God Save the Queen.” Each was deemed too provocative, too political, or simply too sad. Bing Crosby’s “I’ll Be Home for Christmas” was pulled for undermining morale. ABBA’s “Waterloo” vanished during the Gulf War. Even the Munchkins’ chirpy chorus from The Wizard of Oz was silenced. These weren’t just songs—they were emotional flashpoints, censored not for what they said, but for what they might stir.

Commentators like Paul Morley and Stuart Maconie offer insight with wit and restraint. They don’t romanticise rebellion, nor do they mock caution. Instead, they trace the contours of a cultural landscape where music was both mirror and provocation. The BBC’s decisions—often made behind closed doors—tell us as much about institutional fragility as they do about artistic intent. What’s striking is how many of these “dangerous” songs now seem tame. But that’s the point: danger is contextual, and censorship is always a reflection of power.

For viewers attuned to nuance, this is essential viewing. It’s not a parade of shock value—it’s a meditation on control, taste, and the quiet politics of broadcasting. In an age of algorithmic curation and soft suppression, the legacy of these bans feels newly relevant. What we silence, even gently, shapes what we hear. And what we hear shapes who we become.

Evil Does Not Exist (2023) – BBC Four, 10:05 p.m.
Ryūsuke Hamaguchi’s film opens not with dialogue, but with treetops—tracked slowly from below, as if the forest itself were watching. This is Mizubiki, a rural village near Tokyo, where time moves differently and silence is not emptiness but presence. The film follows Takumi, a widowed father and quiet jack-of-all-trades, whose life is shaped by rhythm: chopping wood, collecting water, caring for his daughter. Into this stillness comes disruption—a glamping development pitched by urban outsiders with glossy brochures and septic tanks too small for the land they hope to occupy.

What unfolds is not a battle, but a slow unravelling. Hamaguchi resists the usual tropes of ecological drama. There are no villains in suits, no triumphant protests. Instead, we get a community meeting where concern is voiced with civility and fatigue. The developers—Takahashi and Mayuzumi—are not caricatures but people, themselves disillusioned by the corporate machinery they serve. Their awkward charm and shifting loyalties add texture to a story that refuses easy binaries. The title, Evil Does Not Exist, is not a declaration—it’s a dare. It asks us to look closer, to see how harm can emerge from good intentions, and how complicity often wears a smile.

The film’s power lies in its restraint. Hamaguchi’s camera lingers on gestures, pauses, and the quiet ache of things unsaid. Composer Eiko Ishibashi’s score, sparse and haunting, deepens the sense of unease. There’s a moment where Takumi explains how a wounded deer might attack—not out of malice, but desperation. It’s a metaphor that hangs over the film, echoing through its final, ambiguous act. The forest is not just backdrop—it’s witness, and perhaps judge.

For viewers attuned to narrative subtlety and moral complexity, this is essential viewing. It’s a film that trusts its audience to sit with discomfort, to resist resolution, and to consider what it means to live ethically in a world where motives blur. Hamaguchi doesn’t offer answers—he offers space. And in that space, nature, economy, and morality collide—not with spectacle, but with quiet force.

Joker (2019) – ITV1, 9:00 p.m. 🌟
Todd Phillips’ Joker is not a comic book film—it’s a character study wrapped in grime and grief. Gotham here is no playground for capes and crusaders; it’s a city in decline, where public services collapse, civility erodes, and the vulnerable are left to rot. Joaquin Phoenix’s Arthur Fleck is one such casualty—a failed clown, a failed comic, and a man whose laughter is a medical condition rather than a punchline. His descent is not sudden—it’s slow, painful, and disturbingly plausible.

Phoenix’s performance is the film’s centre of gravity. His body contorts with anguish, his face flickers between hope and horror, and his laughter—piercing, involuntary—becomes a kind of scream. Arthur is not a hero, nor is he simply a villain. He’s a mirror held up to a society that mocks the marginalised and then recoils when they retaliate. The film doesn’t ask us to excuse his violence, but it does ask us to understand the silence that preceded it. That’s a harder ask—and a more troubling one.

Stylistically, Joker borrows heavily from Scorsese’s Taxi Driver and The King of Comedy, and it wears those influences openly. The city is shot in jaundiced tones, the interiors are claustrophobic, and the television studio becomes a stage for both fantasy and reckoning. Robert De Niro’s presence as talk-show host Murray Franklin is no accident—it’s a nod to cinematic lineage, but also a reminder of how fame and cruelty often share a stage. Arthur’s final transformation is theatrical, grotesque, and eerily quiet. The Joker is born not with a bang, but with a bow.

For viewers attuned to social commentary and narrative discomfort, Joker is essential viewing. It doesn’t offer catharsis—it offers confrontation. The film has been accused of courting chaos, but its real provocation lies in its empathy. It asks what happens when the systems meant to protect us fail, and what stories we tell to justify the fallout. In a culture that often prefers spectacle to substance, Joker dares to linger in the shadows—and it’s in those shadows that the real questions live.

Oasis: Supersonic (2016) – Channel 4, 11:35 p.m.
The Gallagher brothers in full swagger and strife. This documentary captures the rise of Britpop’s loudest voices. Nostalgia, bravado, and chaos in equal measure.


Sunday 28th September

Eva Longoria Searching for Spain – BBC Two, 9:00 p.m.
The opening episode explores Barcelona and Catalonia. Food, politics, and identity blend as Longoria journeys through a divided land. A glossy but still probing travelogue.

Oak Tree: Nature’s Greatest Survivor – BBC Four, 8:30 p.m.
An old oak becomes the star. Its resilience tells a bigger story about ecosystems and history. Quiet, meditative, and strangely moving.

The Mary Whitehouse Story, Part One – BBC Four, 10:00 p.m.
This first instalment of the BBC’s two-part documentary doesn’t ask viewers to like Mary Whitehouse—it asks them to look again. Often reduced to a punchline or a footnote in liberal retrospectives, Whitehouse is reintroduced here not as a relic, but as a force: a Midlands housewife turned national campaigner who, armed with a typewriter and conviction, took on the BBC, the sexual revolution, and what she saw as the moral collapse of British public life. The programme doesn’t flatter, but it doesn’t sneer either. It’s a study in influence, contradiction, and the quiet power of persistence.

Drawing on a vast archive housed at the University of Essex, the documentary traces Whitehouse’s rise from schoolteacher to media scourge. Her campaigns against pornography, permissive programming, and what she called “moral pollution” were often mocked, but they landed. She forced debates in Parliament, rattled broadcasters, and shaped the language of decency for decades. Contributors range from cultural commentators to those who opposed her directly—activists, artists, and even a millionaire pornographer. The result is a portrait not of a saint or a villain, but of a woman who made Britain talk about what it was willing to tolerate.

What’s striking is how contemporary the tensions feel. In an age of polarised speech and algorithmic outrage, Whitehouse’s battles over content, consent, and cultural responsibility echo with new urgency. The documentary doesn’t endorse her views—many are deeply out of step with today’s norms—but it does ask whether the questions she raised have ever truly gone away. What is the role of public broadcasting? Who decides what’s harmful? And how do we balance freedom with responsibility in a media landscape that never sleeps?

For viewers attuned to nuance and historical texture, this is essential viewing. It’s not a rehabilitation—it’s a reckoning. Whitehouse remains controversial, often derided, but undeniably influential. And in peeling back the caricature, the documentary invites us to consider what it means to shape culture not through charisma or capital, but through sheer, unrelenting conviction. Whether you agree with her or not, Mary Whitehouse changed the conversation. This first part reminds us how—and why—it still matters.

The Mary Whitehouse Story, Part Two – BBC Four, 11:00 p.m.
If Part One reintroduced Mary Whitehouse as a force of conviction, Part Two explores the ripple effects—intended and otherwise—of her long campaign to reshape British broadcasting. This chapter moves beyond the caricature of the “moral crusader” and into the realm of legacy: how one woman’s relentless pursuit of decency left its mark not just on television schedules, but on the cultural psyche of a nation. Whether you see her as a prophet or a prude, the documentary makes clear—Whitehouse changed the conversation.

The episode traces her later years, when her influence reached the corridors of power. Her relationship with Margaret Thatcher is explored with nuance, revealing how moral conservatism and political pragmatism often found common ground. Whitehouse’s crusade against pornography and “video nasties” gained traction just as home video exploded, and her warnings—once dismissed as alarmist—began to resonate with policymakers. Yet the documentary is careful to show how her victories were often pyrrhic. The media evolved faster than her campaigns could contain it, and the internet would ultimately render her vision obsolete.

What’s most compelling is the study of unintended consequence. Whitehouse’s insistence on moral boundaries arguably helped shape the regulatory frameworks that still govern British broadcasting. But it also galvanised a generation of artists, activists, and broadcasters who saw her as the embodiment of repression. The programme includes voices from both camps—those who admired her courage, and those who felt silenced by her success. The result is not a eulogy, but a reckoning: a portrait of influence that is neither wholly triumphant nor wholly tragic.

Sweet Charity (1969) – BBC Two, 12:00 p.m.
Bob Fosse’s Sweet Charity is a musical that dances on the edge of heartbreak. Adapted from the Broadway show and rooted in Fellini’s Nights of Cabiria, it trades Rome for New York and tragedy for choreography—but the ache remains. Shirley MacLaine plays Charity Hope Valentine, a taxi dancer with a bruised heart and boundless optimism. She sparkles, yes, but it’s the kind of sparkle that flickers against the dark. Her performance is all vulnerability and verve, a woman who keeps getting knocked down and keeps choosing to believe.

The film opens with betrayal—Charity’s boyfriend robs her and pushes her into a fountain—and never quite lets her recover. She moves through the city’s neon haze, from the sleazy Fandango Ballroom to the penthouse of a movie star, always hoping for something better. The musical numbers are iconic: “Big Spender” is all grit and grind, “If My Friends Could See Me Now” is pure fantasy, and “There’s Got to Be Something Better Than This” becomes a rooftop manifesto. Fosse’s choreography is angular, ironic, and deeply expressive. It’s movement as character, and it never lets us forget the tension between performance and pain.

What sets Sweet Charity apart is its refusal to offer resolution. Charity doesn’t find love, doesn’t escape her job, doesn’t get her happy ending. Instead, she walks off into the park, alone but undiminished. It’s a radical choice for a musical—a genre that so often trades in triumph. Fosse’s direction leans into ambiguity, and MacLaine carries it with grace. Her Charity is not naïve—she’s resilient. And that resilience, in a world that keeps telling her she’s disposable, becomes quietly revolutionary.

Close (2022) – BBC Two, 1:20 a.m.
Lukas Dhont’s Close is a film of silences, glances, and the kind of heartbreak that arrives without warning. Set in rural Belgium, it follows Léo and Rémi, two thirteen-year-old boys whose friendship is so intimate, so unguarded, that others begin to question it. What begins as a portrait of joy—shared beds, whispered jokes, afternoons among flowers—slowly fractures under the weight of social scrutiny


Monday 29th September

Blue Lights – BBC One, 9:00 p.m.
Now in its third season, Blue Lights returns with sharpened focus and deeper emotional stakes. Set in post-conflict Belfast, the series follows response officers Grace, Annie, and Tommy—no longer rookies, but not yet hardened. Two years into the job, they’ve learned the rhythms of the city’s streets, but the moral compromises are mounting. This isn’t a show about heroics—it’s about the quiet toll of service, the weight of decisions made under pressure, and the blurred line between duty and damage.

The writing, from former journalists Declan Lawn and Adam Patterson, remains grounded in lived experience. Their research—months spent speaking with PSNI officers—infuses the drama with authenticity. This season shifts its lens toward middle-class complicity: accountants, lawyers, and professionals who facilitate organised crime behind polished doors. The old criminal order has fractured, and a new globalised network is taking root. The danger is no longer just in alleyways—it’s in boardrooms, private clubs, and quiet suburbs. The officers are forced to navigate not just violence, but veneer.

What elevates Blue Lights is its refusal to flatten character. Grace (Siân Brooke) carries trauma with quiet grace; Tommy (Nathan Braniff) remains idealistic but increasingly frayed; Annie (Katherine Devlin) balances grit with vulnerability. Their relationships—professional, personal, and strained—are drawn with care. The show doesn’t indulge in procedural spectacle. Instead, it lingers on aftermath: the paperwork, the sleepless nights, the missed calls. It’s a drama that understands that the real cost of policing isn’t just physical—it’s emotional, psychological, and cumulative.

Secrets of the Brain – BBC Two, 9:00 p.m.
The first of two parts digs into how our minds work. Scientists, patients, and stories that unsettle. A reminder of how fragile and complex the brain is.

The Orson Welles Story – BBC Four, 10:00 p.m.
The boy genius of cinema, restless and brilliant. This documentary pulls together clips and memories to map a career of brilliance and exile. A portrait as grand as the man himself.

Raging Bull (1980) – BBC Two, 11:00 p.m. 🌟
Martin Scorsese’s Raging Bull is not a boxing film—it’s a character study carved in sweat, blood, and silence. Shot in stark black and white, it follows Jake LaMotta, a middleweight champion whose rage fuels his rise in the ring and ruins everything outside it. Robert De Niro’s performance is transformative—not just physically, though he famously gained 60 pounds to portray LaMotta’s decline—but emotionally, spiritually. His Jake is ferocious, paranoid, and heartbreakingly human. The punches land, but it’s the pauses between them that bruise deepest.

The fight scenes are choreographed like rituals—stylised, claustrophobic, and almost surreal. Scorsese’s camera doesn’t just observe; it invades. We see the ring from above, below, inside the fighter’s skull. Sound design layers grunts, screams, and animalistic echoes, turning each bout into a kind of exorcism. But the real violence happens at home. Jake’s jealousy corrodes his marriage to Vickie (Cathy Moriarty), poisons his bond with brother Joey (Joe Pesci), and isolates him from the world he’s trying to conquer. The ring offers rules. Life does not.

What makes Raging Bull endure is its refusal to flatter. LaMotta is not redeemed, not softened, not explained. He’s a man who mistakes punishment for proof, who seeks validation through domination, and who ends up alone—rehearsing lines in a mirror, trying to convince himself he was somebody. The film’s final scenes, quiet and devastating, show a man who has lost everything but his pride. “You never knocked me down, Ray,” he says after a brutal loss. It’s not triumph—it’s survival.

For viewers attuned to emotional complexity and cinematic craft, Raging Bull remains essential. It’s a film about masculinity, self-destruction, and the cost of myth-making. Scorsese doesn’t offer catharsis—he offers confrontation. And in De Niro’s haunted eyes, we see not just a boxer, but a man who mistook pain for purpose. Brutal in the ring, tragic outside it—LaMotta’s story is a cautionary tale, and Raging Bull is its unforgettable telling.


Tuesday 30th September

The Old Man and the Gun (2018) – Film4, 7:30 p.m.
The Old Man and the Gun is essential viewing. It’s a true-crime tale, yes, but one that trades tension for tenderness. Redford doesn’t rage against the dying of the light—he smiles, tips his hat, and walks off with quiet dignity. With his recent passing at 89, that final walk now feels like a farewell not just to a character, but to a cinematic era. Redford will be missed—not only for the roles he inhabited, but for the integrity, restraint, and quiet charisma he brought to each one. This film, announced as his last, now stands as a gentle coda to a career that shaped generations. In a landscape often obsessed with noise, Redford reminded us that grace leaves the deepest impression.


Wednesday 1st November

The Burnt Orange Heresy (2019) – Channel 4, 1:25 a.m.
Giuseppe Capotondi’s The Burnt Orange Heresy is a sleek, sun-drenched thriller that trades bloodshed for manipulation and bullets for brushstrokes. Set against the opulence of Lake Como, it follows James Figueras (Claes Bang), a charismatic but compromised art critic whose hunger for relevance leads him into a web of deceit. He’s hired by the enigmatic Joseph Cassidy (Mick Jagger, all silk and menace) to steal a painting from reclusive artist Jerome Debney (Donald Sutherland). What begins as a professional opportunity quickly curdles into moral collapse.

The film is less concerned with the heist than with the psychology behind it. Figueras is a man who weaponises interpretation—he doesn’t just critique art, he rewrites its meaning to suit his ambitions. Elizabeth Debicki’s Berenice, a tourist with emotional depth and quiet integrity, becomes both witness and casualty to his unraveling. Their relationship is charged but fragile, built on charm and half-truths. Debicki plays her with luminous restraint, a woman drawn to beauty but repelled by its commodification. Her presence anchors the film’s emotional core.

Capotondi directs with cool precision, allowing the tension to simmer beneath polished surfaces. The villa’s marble floors, the curated lighting, the slow pour of wine—all become part of the performance. The dialogue is sharp, often elliptical, and the silences speak louder than the schemes. Jagger’s Cassidy is a standout: a collector who understands that power lies not in possession, but in perception. His scenes crackle with a kind of decadent threat, reminding us that in the art world, charm is often a mask for control.

What makes The Burnt Orange Heresy compelling is its refusal to moralise. It doesn’t ask us to pity Figueras or condemn him—it simply shows the cost of his choices. The theft, when it comes, is almost incidental. The real crime is the erasure of truth, the manipulation of narrative, the betrayal of intimacy. Debney, the artist at the centre of it all, is a ghost of integrity, a man who paints nothing because everything has already been corrupted. His final act—quiet, devastating—reframes the entire film.

For viewers attuned to narrative restraint and cultural critique, this is essential viewing. It’s a film about art, yes, but also about the stories we tell to justify ambition, and the people we sacrifice along the way. Sleek and cynical, it lingers not because of its twists, but because of its textures—emotional, aesthetic, and moral. In a world where meaning is up for sale, The Burnt Orange Heresy asks what’s left when the canvas is blank and the critic has nothing left to spin.


Thursday 2nd November

Lucy Worsley Investigates: The Witch Hunts – BBC Two, 9:00 p.m.
Worsley brings empathy and detail to a dark chapter. Trials and superstition destroyed lives. A reminder of cruelty in the name of belief.

This Cultural Life: Gillian Anderson – BBC Four, 10:30 p.m.
The actor reflects on her career and craft. Anderson’s choices show courage and range. An hour of insight and charm.

Viceroy’s House – BBC Four, 11:00 p.m.
Gurinder Chadha’s Viceroy’s House opens not with revolution, but with ritual. The grand Delhi residence—built to project imperial permanence—becomes the stage for Britain’s final act in India. Lord Mountbatten (Hugh Bonneville), appointed as the last Viceroy, arrives with his wife Edwina (Gillian Anderson) and daughter Pamela, tasked with overseeing the transition to independence. But the film is less about policy than proximity. Upstairs, the colonial elite negotiate the future of a continent; downstairs, the Indian staff navigate their own loyalties, fears, and hopes. The building itself becomes a metaphor—ornate, imposing, and increasingly hollow.

Chadha’s direction balances intimacy with scale. The personal story of Jeet (Manish Dayal), a Hindu valet, and Alia (Huma Qureshi), a Muslim interpreter, threads through the political drama, offering a human counterpoint to the high-stakes diplomacy. Their romance—tentative, forbidden, and ultimately tragic—mirrors the partition itself: a bond torn apart by lines drawn on maps. The film doesn’t shy away from the violence that followed independence, but it frames it through emotional consequence rather than spectacle. The heartbreak is quiet, cumulative, and deeply felt.

What distinguishes Viceroy’s House is its insistence on architecture as witness. The residence, designed by Lutyens to embody imperial grandeur, becomes a mausoleum of fading power. Its corridors echo with decisions made behind closed doors—some noble, some cynical. Chadha, drawing on her own family history, interrogates the myth of benevolent withdrawal. The film suggests that partition was not just a hurried compromise, but a calculated act with devastating consequences. The elegance of the setting only sharpens the tragedy.

For viewers attuned to historical nuance and emotional texture, Viceroy’s House is essential viewing. It’s not a documentary, nor is it pure melodrama—it’s a reckoning. The film asks what legacy means when built on borrowed land, and how memory survives when nations are split. In the end, the house remains, but the people move on—some to freedom, some to exile, all changed. And in that quiet shift, Chadha finds her most powerful image: a building that once ruled, now watching history unfold from the margins.

Till (2022) – BBC Two, 11:00 p.m.
A film retelling the tragic lynching of Emmett Till. Danielle Deadwyler’s performance is searing. Anger and sorrow shaped into cinema.


Friday 3rd November

Borderline – BBC One, 9:00 p.m.
The opening episode of Borderline sets its tone with quiet urgency. A body is found on the beach straddling the Irish border, forcing two detectives—Philip Boyd from the PSNI and Aoife Regan from the Garda Síochána—into an uneasy partnership. Their jurisdictions clash, their methods diverge, and their personal histories simmer beneath the surface. What begins as a procedural quickly deepens into a study of character and compromise. The border isn’t just geographical—it’s emotional, political, and deeply personal.

Written by John Forte and directed by Robert Quinn, the series is taut without being frantic. The dialogue is sharp, often elliptical, and the silences carry weight. Boyd (Eoin Macken) is haunted, methodical, and quietly volatile; Regan (Amy De Bhrún) is incisive, guarded, and unafraid to challenge institutional inertia. Their dynamic is not built on banter but on friction—productive, uncomfortable, and often revealing. The supporting cast, including Ivy Brereton and Paul Reid, adds texture to a world where loyalty is tested and truth is rarely clean.

Visually, Borderline leans into atmosphere. The landscapes of County Louth—windswept, watchful, and eerily still—frame the drama with a sense of unresolved history. The border itself becomes a character: a line drawn by politics, lived through trauma, and now patrolled by people trying to make sense of what justice looks like in a fractured space. The series doesn’t indulge in nostalgia or melodrama. Instead, it asks what it means to collaborate across difference, and what gets lost in the process.

How Are You? It’s Alan Partridge – BBC One, 9:30 p.m.
Alan Partridge returns, not with a bang but with a question—one that’s both sincere and spectacularly misjudged. How Are You? is framed as a six-part documentary on Britain’s mental health crisis, but it quickly becomes a portrait of one man’s flailing attempt to understand his own emotional landscape. After a year in Saudi Arabia (a detail mined for both absurdity and accidental insight), Alan is back in Norwich and feeling… off. The happiness he expected hasn’t arrived. Something’s missing. And so begins his journey—part investigation, part ego trip, part accidental therapy.

Steve Coogan, as ever, plays Partridge with surgical precision. The awkwardness is weaponised, the self-importance dialled to eleven, and the sincerity always just slightly out of sync. Alan’s attempts to “connect” with the nation’s mental health struggles are both cringeworthy and oddly touching. He interviews experts, visits wellness retreats, and offers his own theories—most of which involve dubious metaphors and a fondness for outdated statistics. But beneath the bluster is a man genuinely trying to understand why he feels incomplete. The comedy works because it never loses sight of that kernel of truth.

What elevates this series is its willingness to let the satire breathe. The mental health angle isn’t just a backdrop—it’s the emotional engine. Alan’s discomfort with vulnerability, his need to perform empathy, and his inability to sit with silence all mirror broader societal tensions. We live in a culture that demands wellness but punishes weakness, that promotes openness but recoils from mess. Partridge, in his own misguided way, becomes a mirror—not of how to heal, but of how we often fail to even begin. The show doesn’t mock mental health—it mocks the commodification of it, the branding, the shallow gestures.

How Are You? is a comedy that understands the power of restraint, the absurdity of some self-help culture, and the quiet tragedy of a man who wants to be loved but doesn’t know how. Coogan and the Gibbons brothers have crafted something that’s more than cringe—it’s commentary. And in Alan’s fumbling attempts to ask “How are you?” we hear the echo of a nation still struggling to answer.

Rye Lane (2023) – BBC Two, 9:00 p.m. 🌟
Raine Allen-Miller’s Rye Lane is a rom-com that doesn’t just take place in South London—it pulses with it. From the opening scenes in a gender-neutral toilet at a Brixton art show to the winding paths of Rye Lane Market, the film is rooted in the textures, rhythms, and eccentricities of a city that rarely gets to play itself on screen. For those of us who grew up in South London (in my case Kennington), the sight of Brixton and Peckham rendered with such affection and flair feels like a homecoming. These aren’t backdrops—they’re characters, alive with colour, sound, and memory.

The story follows Yas (Vivian Oparah) and Dom (David Jonsson), two twenty-somethings nursing breakups and stumbling into connection over the course of a single day. Their chemistry is immediate but never forced—built on banter, vulnerability, and a shared willingness to be ridiculous. Whether stealing back a vinyl from an ex’s flat or singing “Shoop” at a karaoke bar, their journey is both surreal and grounded. The writing by Nathan Bryon and Tom Melia is sharp, funny, and emotionally honest, capturing the awkwardness of modern dating without cynicism.

Visually, the film is a joy. Olan Collardy’s cinematography turns everyday spaces into dreamscapes—barbershops, chicken shops, and parks are lit with warmth and wit. The camera moves with purpose, often playful, sometimes poetic. Allen-Miller’s direction is confident and generous, allowing South London to shine without smoothing its edges. There are nods to local culture, inside jokes for those who know the streets, and a sense of pride that never tips into parody. It’s a film that knows where it is and why that matters.

Rye Lane is a rom-com, yes, but also a love letter—to a city, to spontaneity, and to the possibility of joy after heartbreak. Seeing Brixton and Peckham on screen, not as shorthand for grit but as spaces of connection and creativity, is quietly radical. And for those of us who’ve walked those pavements, it’s a reminder that stories worth telling are often just around the corner.

Total Recall (1990) – 5Action, 9:00 p.m.
Paul Verhoeven’s Total Recall is a film that never quite tells you what’s real—and that’s its genius. Based on Philip K. Dick’s short story We Can Remember It for You Wholesale, it follows Douglas Quaid (Arnold Schwarzenegger), a construction worker plagued by dreams of Mars and a woman he’s never met. When he visits Rekall, a company that implants artificial memories, things spiral. Is Quaid a sleeper agent rediscovering his past—or just a man trapped in a fantasy he paid for? The film never confirms either, and that ambiguity is its most enduring provocation.

Schwarzenegger, at the height of his physical dominance, plays Quaid with surprising vulnerability. Yes, there are explosions, mutants, and one-liners, but beneath the bravado is a man questioning his own identity. The violence is stylised, often grotesque, and Verhoeven leans into excess with relish. Mars is rendered as a brutal colony, ruled by corporate tyrant Vilos Cohaagen (Ronny Cox), where oxygen is currency and rebellion simmers beneath irradiated soil. The film’s politics—corporate control, environmental degradation, and the commodification of memory—feel eerily prescient.

Visually, Total Recall is a triumph of practical effects. From the three-breasted prostitute to the grotesque reveal of Kuato, the film revels in body horror and surreal design. Jerry Goldsmith’s score adds operatic weight, and the production—filmed on sprawling sets in Mexico City—feels tactile in a way modern CGI rarely achieves. Sharon Stone, as Quaid’s duplicitous wife Lori, delivers menace with poise, while Rachel Ticotin’s Melina offers grit and emotional ballast. The cast is uniformly strong, but it’s the tone—paranoid, pulpy, and philosophically charged—that makes the film linger.

For viewers attuned to narrative complexity and speculative provocation, Total Recall remains essential viewing. It’s a film that asks what happens when memory becomes merchandise, and whether identity can survive manipulation. Verhoeven doesn’t offer answers—he offers spectacle laced with subtext. And in Schwarzenegger’s confused, defiant gaze, we glimpse something rare: a blockbuster that dares to be uncertain. Big muscles, yes—but even bigger ideas.

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019) – Film4, 11:10 p.m.
Quentin Tarantino’s ninth feature is less a narrative than a mood—an elegy wrapped in sunshine and swagger. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood reimagines 1969 Los Angeles as both playground and graveyard, where the golden age of film is slipping into something darker, stranger, and more fragmented. Leonardo DiCaprio plays Rick Dalton, a fading TV actor clinging to relevance, while Brad Pitt’s Cliff Booth—his stunt double, driver, and emotional ballast—moves through the city with quiet menace and magnetic ease. Their friendship is the film’s emotional core: two men out of time, bound by loyalty and the slow erosion of purpose.

Tarantino’s affection for the era is palpable. Every frame is steeped in detail—radio jingles, neon signage, vintage cars, and the hum of a city on the cusp of cultural rupture. Margot Robbie’s Sharon Tate floats through the film like a symbol of innocence, her scenes rendered with tenderness rather than irony. The spectre of the Manson murders looms, but Tarantino rewrites history with a kind of wishful violence—brutal, cathartic, and deliberately jarring. It’s not realism; it’s revisionism, and it asks what stories we tell to soothe the ache of what was lost.

DiCaprio gives one of his most vulnerable performances—Rick is vain, insecure, and painfully aware of his own decline. A scene in a trailer, where he berates himself for forgetting lines, is both comic and quietly devastating. Pitt, meanwhile, plays Cliff with laconic charm and a hint of danger. He’s a man who’s seen too much and says too little. Their scenes together—driving, drinking, watching TV—are filled with the kind of intimacy that rarely makes it to screen. It’s male friendship without bravado, built on shared failure and unspoken care.

For viewers attuned to narrative texture and cultural reflection, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is essential viewing. It’s a film about endings—of careers, of eras, of illusions—and the strange beauty that lingers in their wake. Tarantino doesn’t just celebrate Hollywood’s past; he mourns it, reshapes it, and asks us to consider what might have been. Nostalgia and menace swirl together in sun-drenched frames, and in the final moments, the fairy tale flickers into something almost tender. It’s a love letter, yes—but one written in fading ink.

Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa (2013) – BBC One, 12:40 a.m.
Alan Partridge’s big-screen debut finds the radio host in unfamiliar territory: a hostage crisis. When North Norfolk Digital is taken over by a media conglomerate and long-time DJ Pat Farrell (Colm Meaney) is sacked, he responds with a shotgun and a siege. Alan, ever the opportunist, is roped in as negotiator—not because he’s qualified, but because he’s available. What follows is a comedy of errors, ego, and accidental heroism, with Steve Coogan delivering a performance that’s both ridiculous and oddly poignant.

The film, directed by Declan Lowney and co-written by Coogan and the Gibbons brothers, balances action and satire with surprising finesse. It never loses sight of Alan’s essential awkwardness—his need to be liked, his fear of irrelevance, and his instinct to self-preserve at all costs. Whether losing his trousers while trying to re-enter the building or hijacking a live broadcast to boost his profile, Alan remains true to form: craven, deluded, and somehow still endearing. The siege becomes less about danger and more about exposure—Alan finally has a national platform, and he’s determined to misuse it.

What makes Alpha Papa work is its refusal to inflate Alan into something he’s not. He doesn’t become a hero, just a man who stumbles through chaos with a microphone and a misplaced sense of importance. The supporting cast—Meaney’s wounded Pat, Tim Key’s Sidekick Simon, and Felicity Montagu’s long-suffering Lynn—ground the farce with emotional texture. There are moments of real tension, but they’re always undercut by Alan’s inability to read the room. The film understands that comedy doesn’t need to sacrifice character—and that action, when filtered through Partridge’s lens, becomes a kind of tragicomedy.


Streaming Choices

Netflix – Genie, Make a Wish (3rd October)

A fantasy rom-com with teeth, this Korean drama pairs Bae Suzy’s emotionally guarded Ka-young with Kim Woo-bin’s devilish genie, Iblis—awakened after a thousand-year slumber and ready to grant three wishes. But Ka-young isn’t interested in magic or miracles, and their dynamic becomes a battle of wills, wit, and buried trauma. The show blends whimsy with darker undercurrents: sibling rivalries, supernatural politics, and a village full of secrets. Writer Kim Eun-sook crafts a world that’s playful but pointed, asking whether wishes reveal character or corrupt it. Expect charm, chaos, and a slow-burn romance that’s more philosophical than saccharine.

Netflix – Steve (3rd October)

Cillian Murphy leads this adaptation of Max Porter’s Shy, now reimagined through the eyes of a reform school headteacher. Set in mid-’90s England, Steve is a pressure-cooker drama about institutional collapse, adolescent rage, and the quiet heroism of under-resourced educators. Murphy’s performance is raw and magnetic, supported by Tracey Ullman and Little Simz in a cast that feels lived-in and urgent. The film doesn’t flinch from systemic failure—school closures, mental health strain, and the emotional toll of care work. It’s a study in compassion under siege, and a rare portrait of masculinity that allows for fragility without sentimentality.

Channel 4 Streaming – Walter Presents: Bardot (3rd October)

This French biopic series dives into the myth and reality of Brigitte Bardot, tracing her rise from ingénue to icon. Expect glamour, scandal, and the uneasy politics of fame. Bardot’s image—sexualised, commodified, and fiercely defended—becomes a lens through which the series explores post-war France, gendered power, and the cost of cultural obsession. The Walter Presents curation ensures high production values and narrative depth, with period detail that’s evocative but never indulgent. For viewers drawn to character studies and media critique, this is more than nostalgia—it’s a reckoning with the machinery of celebrity.

Prime Video – Play Dirty (1st October)

Mark Wahlberg stars as Parker, an old-school thief navigating a brutal heist in Shane Black’s gritty thriller. Based on Donald E. Westlake’s novels, the film trades gadgetry for psychology—Parker doesn’t slide down buildings, he dismantles people. LaKeith Stanfield and Rosa Salazar round out a crew caught between the New York mob, a South American dictator, and a billionaire with secrets. Black’s direction is lean and cynical, with dialogue that crackles and violence that bruises. It’s a caper with conscience, asking what loyalty means when everyone’s playing dirty. Expect noir-inflected tension and a protagonist who solves problems like a plumber—with precision, not pity.

Apple TV+ – The Lost Bus (3rd October)

Paul Greengrass directs this harrowing survival drama based on the 2018 Camp Fire in California. Matthew McConaughey plays a school bus driver thrust into heroism as he and a teacher (America Ferrera) fight to save 22 children from a raging wildfire. The film is visceral, emotionally charged, and grounded in real events. Greengrass’s signature shaky-cam realism captures both the chaos and the quiet courage of ordinary people facing impossible odds. It’s not just a disaster film—it’s a meditation on responsibility, trauma, and the fragile systems we rely on. A white-knuckle ride with a beating heart, and one of Apple’s most affecting originals to date.

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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: 5–11 July 2025

3,310 words, 18 minutes read time.

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

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

Selections and writing by Pat Harrington.

Saturday 5 July

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Sunday 6 July

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Monday 7 July

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

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

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

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

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

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


Tuesday 8 July

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Wednesday 9 July

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

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

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

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

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


Thursday 10 July

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

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

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

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

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

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


Friday 11 July

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


STREAMING CHOICES

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Culture Vulture: 3–9 May 2025


1,829 words, 10 minutes read time


This week’s selections shine a light on visual imagination, artistic legacy, and dramatic storytelling.

You might find yourself escaping into the dream logic of Annihilation. Or you could revisit the enduring sweep of Lawrence of Arabia. There’s a wealth of viewing to challenge, delight, and provoke. Our picks this week range from the speculative future to Britain’s legal past. They prove that television and film remain some of the richest canvases for cultural engagement.

We’re especially drawn to the bold and the beautiful this week. Alex Garland’s Annihilation stuns with psychedelic strangeness, while Tuesday’s immersive Hockney retrospective reminds us that great artists never stop reinventing. Midweek, Mads Mikkelsen faces the elements in Arctic. Jimmy McGovern stars in the searing drama Common and offers his reflections on it.

Whether you’re in the mood for noir, nostalgia, or narrative risk-taking, there’s something here for every discerning viewer. As ever, all selections have been handpicked by Pat Harrington, with original music on our video version from Tim Bragg.


🌟 Highlights this week:

Annihilation brings visual and psychological brilliance to your Saturday night.
Lawrence of Arabia remains an unmatched cinematic epic on Sunday afternoon.
A David Hockney night on Tuesday offers layered artistic insight.


📅 Saturday, 3 May

Annihilation (2018) – Great Movies, 9:00 PM 🌟
Alex Garland’s sci-fi mystery dazzles with strange beauty and creeping dread. Natalie Portman leads a team of scientists into “The Shimmer,” a mysterious zone where the laws of nature seem suspended. What begins as an expedition quickly unravels into a psychological and existential journey.

Garland weaves a hypnotic atmosphere, enriched by eerie visuals and an unnerving score. The film examines grief, transformation, and the unknown, with echoes of Tarkovsky and Cronenberg. It’s a cerebral experience as much as a visceral one.

Though its abstract nature divided audiences, Annihilation remains one of the boldest science fiction films of the past decade. Ideal for viewers who prefer their thrills slow-burning and their questions unresolved.


📅 Sunday, 4 May

Lawrence of Arabia (1962) – Film4, 12:50 PM 🌟
Lawrence of Arabia is one of those rare films. It transcends mere historical drama. It becomes something far more intricate—a meditation on identity, power, and ambition.

It’s visually stunning, of course. The desert cinematography, the sweeping scale, and Maurice Jarre’s haunting score all contribute to its legendary status. But beneath all that grandeur, there’s something deeply unsettling about the man at its center.

Lawrence, played with mesmerizing intensity by Peter O’Toole, is a man caught between worlds. He’s fiercely drawn to Arab culture. He takes up their cause in the struggle against the Ottomans. At the same time, he is undeniably a product of British imperialism. The film doesn’t shy away from showing his shifting loyalties. It reveals how he wrestles with the idea of belonging.

The British establishment ultimately manipulates his idealism. There’s a bitter irony. His passion for Arab unity is undercut by the very forces he’s working for. He’s both a visionary and a pawn—a man who dreams big but is powerless against the machinery of empire.

Then there’s the question of Lawrence’s sexuality. The film doesn’t make explicit statements, but it certainly hints at something beyond traditional masculinity. O’Toole’s striking, almost ethereal appearance makes him stand out among the hardened soldiers around him. He’s not driven by the same bravado. His relationships, whether with the Arab tribes or his British compatriots, have a certain emotional ambiguity.

One of the most unsettling scenes is his capture and torture by the Turks. This scene is often read as containing elements of sexual violence. The film seems keen to explore Lawrence as a man fundamentally out of place. He is out of place not just politically but personally. Whether or not this aligns with historical accounts remains uncertain.

It’s this elusive quality that keeps Lawrence of Arabia so compelling. It’s a film about war. Yes, it’s also a film about one man’s inner battle. He battles with his allegiances, his desires, and his very sense of self. That ambiguity, that refusal to fit neatly into one box, is what makes it endure.

Even after more than sixty years, it remains unmatched in its depth and grandeur.


📅 Monday, 5 May

A Quiet Place (2018) – Great Movies, 9:00 PM
Creatures that hunt by sound overrun the world. In this world, silence becomes survival. John Krasinski directs and stars alongside Emily Blunt in this tense and innovative horror-thriller.

What sets A Quiet Place apart is its economy—both in dialogue and spectacle. Every sound carries weight, every silence amplifies dread. The family dynamic at its core adds emotional stakes that feel earned.

It’s rare to find a genre piece that balances innovation, emotion, and tension so deftly. This one does, and it lingers.


📅 Tuesday, 6 May

David Hockney: A Life in Art – The Interview – BBC Four, 10:00 PM 🌟
The programme is an intimate exchange. It reveals much about one of Britain’s most influential living artists. Hockney reflects on fame, creativity, and the shifting art world with clarity and wit. The programme offers not just biography, but insight into process. Hockney’s reflections are accompanied by a rich visual tour of his work. This makes it an aesthetic treat. It is also an intellectual one. It is a must-see for art lovers. It also appeals to anyone curious about continuing to create with joy and vision into their 80s.

Imagine – David Hockney: A Bigger Picture – BBC Four, 10:25 PM
This companion piece delves into Hockney’s Yorkshire landscapes. Focused on his late-career work, it’s both painterly and philosophical. The film captures how Hockney reinvents himself through colour, light, and technique. It also addresses the changes brought by age and technology. A beautiful meditation on reinvention and legacy.

Hockney: Double Portrait – BBC Four, 11:20 PM
This is a documentary exploring one of Hockney’s most iconic paintings. It delves into the personal relationships behind it. Revealing and sensitive. The portrait becomes a lens through which to examine the intersection of intimacy and creativity. Archival footage and modern interviews bring it to life. Essential for anyone fascinated by the emotional stakes of visual art.

Face to Face with David Hockney – BBC Four, 12:15 AM
A candid one-on-one interview that strips away pretense. Hockney’s humour and insight shine through. The intimacy of this late-night slot suits the tone—quiet, personal, sincere. A quiet gem in a packed night of programming.


📅 Wednesday, 7 May

Arctic (2018) – Great Movies, 11:35 PM
Mads Mikkelsen is the lead in a survival story. He plays a man stranded in a frozen wilderness. With almost no dialogue, it relies on visual storytelling and raw performance. The harsh environment becomes both enemy and backdrop for existential meditation. Every decision matters; every failure is fatal. Sparse but powerful, Arctic is about resilience when hope is almost gone.

Gogglebox: 10 Year Anniversary Special – Channel 4, 10:00 PM
A decade of watching ordinary Brits watching telly has provided more insights than expected. The show has revealed more than we anticipated. It reflects our identity, emotions, and reactions to the world around us.

This special celebrates ten years of laughter, tears, and heated debates from UK living rooms. It blends nostalgia with the wit and charm that have made it a cultural staple. It’s one of my favourite programmes.

Beyond the entertainment, Gogglebox offers something deeper—a quiet but powerful reminder of how much we have in common. No matter our class, ethnicity, or background, we all gather around the TV. We laugh at the same absurdities. We feel the same emotions.

We find connection in the everyday. We feel collective joy over gripping dramas. We share outrage at political scandals. We experience mutual fascination with the bizarre corners of reality television. The programme showcases the threads that unite us.

This anniversary special promises to be warm and funny. It also provides a surprisingly insightful reflection on how we consume culture. Just as importantly, it examines how we consume each other’s perspectives. A decade on, Gogglebox remains a rare gem. It is a programme that entertains. It quietly reinforces the fundamental truth that we’re more alike than we are different.

Dead Man Walking: Dan Walker on Death Row – Channel 5, 9:00 PM
Journalist Dan Walker examines capital punishment. He does this through a series of interviews and case studies. The personal stories are haunting. The documentary avoids easy answers, focusing instead on moral complexity and judicial fallibility. A sobering, necessary watch.

Jimmy McGovern Remembers Common – BBC Four, 10:00 PM
The acclaimed writer looks back on his hard-hitting legal drama. It is about joint enterprise laws. Personal and political, McGovern’s reflection sheds light on the motivations behind his work. A timely revisit in light of ongoing legal reform debates.

Common – BBC Four, 10:15 PM
A young man faces murder charges under the controversial joint enterprise doctrine. Sean Bean co-stars in this tense, issue-driven drama. Common is not just a legal story—it’s a moral indictment. Powerful, affecting, and still deeply relevant.


📅 Thursday, 8 May

Baby Done (2020) – BBC Three, 10:05 PM
A refreshingly honest comedy about a couple struggling with impending parenthood. Stars Rose Matafeo in a standout performance. Funny without being flippant, it captures the ambivalence of growing up. Whip-smart and heartwarming in equal measure.

The Invisible Woman (2013) – BBC Four, 10:10 PM
Ralph Fiennes directs and stars in this tale. It is about Charles Dickens’s secret love affair with actress Nelly Ternan. The film is restrained, elegant, and quietly heartbreaking. Felicity Jones excels as Ternan. A literary biopic with emotional weight and visual grace.

The Real Adolescents: Our Killer Kids – Channel 5, 10:00 PM
A provocative documentary exploring extreme youth violence. Harrowing but responsibly handled. Raises difficult questions about justice, rehabilitation, and society’s role. Not easy viewing—but important.


📅 Friday, 9 May

The Shape of Water (2017) – Film4, 11:35 PM
Guillermo del Toro’s lush, genre-defying romance captivates audiences. A mute cleaner falls in love with a sea creature. This unique story won Best Picture for a reason. Part fairy tale, part political allegory, it’s visually sumptuous and deeply humane. A film that embraces the outsider and dares to dream.

Michael Portillo’s Travel Diaries: In Prague (Ep. 1 of 3) – Channel 5, 9:00 PM
The colourful traveller swaps train for footnotes in this personal tour of Prague. Less formal than his railway shows, this series reveals more of Portillo the man. Gentle, informative, and quietly engaging.


📺 Streaming Choices

Star Wars: Tales of the Underworld – Disney+, all six episodes available from Sunday, 4 May
Criminal syndicates and bounty hunters in a gritty galaxy far, far away.

The Handmaid’s Tale (Season 6) – Prime Video, new episodes weekly from Saturday, 3 May
Resistance continues in Gilead.


Longer reviews and expanded commentary on many of the films and programmes featured this week are available on the Counter Culture website. For example, Tony Green has written in-depth critiques of the first three episodes of the current season of Doctor Who, examining their themes, structure, and resonance in greater detail.


We hope this issue of Culture Vulture has offered not only guidance but inspiration.
Until next week, stay curious.

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Culture Vulture 26 April – 2 May 2025

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

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

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

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

Saturday, 26 April

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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


Benedetta (2021)
11:15 PM, Film4

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

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

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


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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

Sunday, 27 April

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

Monday, 28 April

Titanic (1997)
7:00 PM, Film4

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

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

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


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

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

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

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


The Last of Us
9:00 PM, Sky Atlantic

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

Tuesday, 29 April

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

Wednesday, 30 April

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

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

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

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


Jimmy McGovern Remembers Priest
10:00 PM, BBC Four

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

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

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


Priest (1994)
10:15 PM, BBC Four

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

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

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


Cold War and Cinema
11:30 PM, Sky Arts

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

Thursday, 1 May

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

Friday, 2 May

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

And finally, streaming choices

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

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

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

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

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

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Culture Vulture – Week Beginning Saturday 29th March 2025

Curated by Pat Harrington | Music by Tim Bragg

Welcome to Culture Vulture, your weekly entertainment guide that steps off the beaten path. Here, we celebrate films that challenge, provoke, and offer fresh perspectives on the world we live in. From searing psychological dramas to politically charged thrillers, our picks reflect an alternative, progressive view of culture.


Highlights of the Week

  • Luzzu (2021) – A quiet, powerful reflection on dignity, economic marginalisation, and the moral compromises made under pressure.
  • Smoke Sauna Sisterhood (2023) – An intimate Estonian documentary that champions feminine solidarity and trauma healing through communal ritual.
  • The Guard (2011) – A darkly comic crime drama that satirises authority, critiques colonial hangovers, and confronts ethical decay with razor-sharp wit.

Saturday 29th March 2025

Luzzu (2021)
BBC Two, 00:55
A standout in Maltese cinema, Luzzu follows a traditional fisherman caught between heritage and survival. As his livelihood is threatened by bureaucracy and ecological decay, he’s drawn into the black market. What emerges is a quiet, powerful reflection on dignity, economic marginalisation, and the moral compromises made under pressure.

The Guard (2011) Channel 4, 02:10
John Michael McDonagh’s The Guard is an exceptional piece of cinema that masterfully blends dark comedy with sharp social critique. Released in 2011, this Irish crime drama stars Brendan Gleeson in a career-defining role as Sergeant Gerry Boyle, a maverick cop whose unconventional methods and irreverent humor both confound and delight. The film, which airs on Channel 4 this Saturday at 02:10, is an unmissable gem that showcases McDonagh’s ability to confront complex issues through biting wit and compelling storytelling.

The plot revolves around Boyle’s involvement in a drug trafficking investigation, a case that pairs him with an uptight FBI agent played by Don Cheadle. This unlikely duo forms the backbone of the narrative, offering a fascinating exploration of cultural miscommunication and contrasting moral codes. Boyle’s unfiltered remarks and disregard for political correctness reveal a character whose flaws are as pronounced as his surprising integrity. This interplay drives much of the film’s humor and poignancy, elevating it beyond a standard crime drama.

Through Boyle’s interactions with authority figures, McDonagh critiques the lingering effects of colonialism on Irish society and the ethical decay present in global institutions. Corruption, racism, and exploitation are deftly exposed, making The Guard not just a crime story but a scathing indictment of systemic injustices. Gleeson’s performance captures these nuances, presenting a character who is both a product of his environment and a critique of it.

The film’s humor is one of its most defining features. Gleeson’s dry wit and impeccable timing imbue the narrative with moments of levity that contrast sharply with its darker themes. The writing is razor-sharp, ensuring that every laugh serves a purpose in exposing deeper truths about human nature and societal failings. This balance between comedy and critique is a testament to McDonagh’s skill as a filmmaker.

The rugged beauty of the Irish landscape serves as a backdrop for the gritty realities of the story, creating a striking contrast that underscores the film’s themes. Cinematographer Larry Smith captures both the starkness and the vibrancy of the setting, adding depth to the narrative and enhancing the film’s mood.

The Guard is a brilliant fusion of humour, drama, and social commentary. It challenges viewers to confront uncomfortable truths while providing entertainment through its clever dialogue and engaging performances. If you haven’t seen it yet, make time to catch this remarkable film—it’s a thought-provoking journey.

Sunday 30th March 2025

Company BBC4 8pm

Stephen Sondheim’s Company is a groundbreaking musical that explores themes of relationships, marriage, and self-discovery. The story follows Robert, a single man living in New York City, as he celebrates his 35th birthday surrounded by his married friends. Through a series of vignettes, Robert interacts with these couples and reflects on the complexities of love, commitment, and bachelorhood.

The musical is notable for its lack of a linear plot, instead presenting snapshots of Robert’s life and his encounters with his friends and girlfriends. These moments delve into the joys and challenges of marriage, the fear of loneliness, and the search for meaning in human connections. Songs like “Being Alive” and “The Ladies Who Lunch” highlight the emotional depth and wit of Sondheim’s lyrics, making Company a timeless exploration of vulnerability and relationships.

This particular production, staged at the Donmar Warehouse and directed by Sam Mendes, brought a fresh and bold interpretation to the musical. Mendes updated the material for a 1990s audience, infusing the show with a contemporary edge while preserving its core themes. The production was critically acclaimed, earning recognition for Mendes’ direction and Adrian Lester’s compelling portrayal of Robert.

Filmed live by the BBC in 1996, this version of Company captures the intimacy and intensity of the Donmar Warehouse’s unique setting. The small, 250-seat theatre allowed for an up-close and personal experience, enhancing the emotional resonance of the performances. This filmed production remains a landmark in musical theatre, showcasing the brilliance of Sondheim’s work and Mendes’ visionary direction.

Adding to the experience, the evening’s programming is preceded at 8:30 PM by Adrian Lester discussing his love for this production and his connection to the role of Robert. Lester’s insights into the character, the musical, and the Donmar staging bring an enriching perspective to this landmark work.

Ultimately, Company, especially in this Donmar Warehouse production, stands as a thought-provoking and humorous look at the pros and cons of marriage, offering insights into the human condition through its clever dialogue and memorable music. Don’t miss the chance to immerse yourself in this remarkable theatrical experience and Adrian Lester’s reflections beforehand—it’s an unmissable journey into Sondheim’s genius and Mendes’ artistry.

Children of Men (2006) BBC One, 22:30
Alfonso Cuarón’s dystopian vision remains hauntingly relevant. Set in a future where humanity faces extinction due to infertility, the film interrogates themes of immigration, authoritarianism, and resistance. Through immersive camerawork and an emotionally resonant narrative, Children of Men becomes a rallying cry for hope and human dignity amidst despair.

The Road (2009) Great! Movies, 01:25
Based on Cormac McCarthy’s novel, this bleak yet tender survival story follows a father and son navigating a post-apocalyptic wasteland. The film explores moral resilience, love, and the instinct to protect amidst collapse. Stark visuals and sparse dialogue amplify its emotional weight, offering a meditation on endurance and ethical boundaries.

Monday 31st March 2025

Disclosure: One More Fix BBC1 9pm

An examination of Scotland’s first monitored drug consumption room. Good or bad? Chris Clements speaks to those on all sides of the argument.

Funny Pages (2022) Film 4, 23:40

Funny Pages, the 2022 coming-of-age drama, delves into the chaotic world of a teenage cartoonist striving to rebel against societal norms. Written and directed by Owen Kline, this sharp and sardonic film offers a raw and unvarnished look at the complexities of youth, creativity, and the pursuit of artistic identity. Set against the backdrop of a grim suburban America, the film airs on Film 4 this Saturday at 23:40 and is a must-watch for anyone fascinated by offbeat storytelling

Funny Pages is a character-driven narrative that examines the obsessive drive of its protagonist, Robert, as he navigates the messy journey of self-discovery. Robert’s passion for cartooning propels him into a world far removed from comfort and convention, where he seeks mentorship in the most unlikely of places. Through his experiences, the film explores the sacrifices and disillusionments often tied to creative ambition, presenting a raw and unfiltered portrayal of what it means to follow one’s passion.

A striking aspect of the film is its commentary on class alienation. As Robert ventures into less privileged social strata in pursuit of authenticity, the stark realities of economic disparity become a defining feature of his journey. The grim suburban setting enhances this theme, serving as both a physical and metaphorical representation of the barriers that separate artistic dreams from harsh reality. This examination of class adds depth to the narrative, grounding its eccentricity in a stark social context.

Mentorship, another central theme, is portrayed in a manner that subverts expectations. Robert’s interactions with his unconventional mentor blur the lines between guidance and exploitation, illustrating the complexities of learning and growth. The relationship serves as a microcosm for the struggles young artists face when seeking validation and direction, encapsulating the tension between inspiration and disillusionment.

The film’s lo-fi aesthetic is a key element of its authenticity. Eschewing polish for a raw, handmade quality, the visual style reflects Robert’s own chaotic and unrefined journey. This deliberate choice aligns with the narrative’s thematic focus, reinforcing the idea that creativity often emerges from imperfection and disorder. It’s a visual representation of the film’s central message: that artistry is born not from order, but from the messiness of life.

Humor plays a vital role in Funny Pages, albeit with a deadpan delivery that borders on discomfort. The film’s dark comedic tone underscores the absurdity of its characters’ situations, offering both levity and critique. This balance of humor and pathos is one of its defining strengths, drawing viewers into its world while prompting deeper reflection on its underlying themes.

Funny Pages is a uniquely chaotic yet deeply resonant exploration of artistic passion, class, and individuality. It captures the tumultuous reality of youth with unflinching honesty and a sharp comedic edge, making it a standout entry in the coming-of-age genre. Don’t miss the chance to experience this raw and thought-provoking tale—it’s a journey into creativity and chaos.

Undergods (2020) Film 4, 01:25
A surreal anthology of dystopian tales, Undergods explores fractured societies and moral rot through interlinked stories. Bleak yet stylish, it comments on alienation, inequality, and the cyclical nature of decline. It’s a nightmarish reflection of late-stage capitalism, rendered with dark wit and visual flair.

Tuesday 1st April 2025

Two Way Stretch (1960) Film 4, 11:00
This British caper film offers a light-hearted contrast in our line-up, with prisoners planning a heist while technically still incarcerated. Beneath the laughs lies a gentle critique of authority and a clever subversion of penal tropes. A cultural time capsule with charm and cheek.

Moon (2009) Film 4, 21:00
Duncan Jones’ philosophical sci-fi drama examines isolation and identity aboard a lunar mining station. Sam Rockwell’s dual performance interrogates corporate exploitation and personal autonomy, revealing a layered narrative about what it means to be human. Moon is both cerebral and emotionally grounded.

Wednesday 2nd April 2025

Drive (2011) Great! Movies, 21:00
Nicolas Winding Refn’s stylish neo-noir fuses existential cool with bursts of brutal violence. Ryan Gosling’s unnamed driver navigates a criminal underworld defined by loyalty, silence, and sudden rupture. The film’s moody aesthetic and synth-heavy soundtrack underscore themes of masculinity, control, and moral ambiguity.

Dreamland (2019) Channel 4, 01:00
Set during the Great Depression, this dusty fugitive romance interrogates the American Dream through a poetic lens. With its evocative visuals and meditative pace, Dreamland reveals the desperation underlying idealism, and how hope can be both a sanctuary and a snare.

Thursday 3rd April 2025

Science Fiction In The Atomic Age (one of four) 8pm Sky Arts

The first episode of Science Fiction in the Atomic Age on Sky Arts is a captivating dive into how science fiction mirrored humanity’s hopes and fears during the atomic era. It spans literature, film, and television, celebrating legendary creators like H.G. Wells, Ursula Le Guin, and Arthur C. Clarke.

The episode features a stunning range of classics, from 2001: A Space Odyssey to Doctor Who and The Quatermass Experiment. It also explores the influence of blockbusters like Star Wars and The Matrix, illustrating how the genre evolved alongside societal shifts.

With its stirring score and insightful commentary, the series is a vibrant tribute to the power of science fiction to critique the present and imagine the future.

The Man Who Fell To Earth (1976) 9pm Sky Arts

Nicolas Roeg’s The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976) is a visually stunning and thought-provoking sci-fi drama that explores themes of alienation, greed, and the human condition. David Bowie delivers a mesmerizing performance as Thomas Jerome Newton, an extraterrestrial who arrives on Earth seeking water for his drought-stricken planet, only to be ensnared by human vices and corporate exploitation.

The film’s surreal imagery and haunting score create an otherworldly atmosphere, while its narrative challenges viewers to reflect on humanity’s flaws and the cost of progress. A cult classic, this film remains a landmark in science fiction cinema and a testament to Roeg’s visionary storytelling.

Bowie: The Man Who Changed The World 11.40pm Sky Arts

Bowie: The Man Who Changed the World is a documentary that honors David Bowie’s extraordinary life and his influence on music, fashion, and culture. Through interviews with those who knew him and archival footage, it explores his artistic evolution, from Ziggy Stardust to his later years as an icon.

While the absence of Bowie’s music may surprise some viewers, the film offers an engaging glimpse into the man behind the legend and his transformative impact on the arts. It’s a compelling watch for fans and anyone intrigued by his legacy.

Dark River (2017) Film 4, 00:25
Clio Barnard’s rural drama tackles generational trauma, memory, and female resilience. Returning home after her father’s death, a woman confronts buried abuse and contested inheritance. Stark Yorkshire landscapes frame a powerful story about silence, survival, and reclaiming one’s past.

Smoke Sauna Sisterhood (2023) Film 4, 02:10

Smoke Sauna Sisterhood, a 2023 Estonian documentary, offers a profoundly intimate exploration of vulnerability, resilience, and connection among women. Directed by Anna Hints, this powerful film is set within the sacred confines of a traditional Estonian smoke sauna, where women gather to share deeply personal stories of pain, shame, and healing. The documentary airs on Film 4 this Thursday at 02:10 and promises to be an unforgettable experience of raw honesty and transformative solidarity.

The central setting of the smoke sauna is more than a backdrop; it serves as a sanctuary where women can strip away the layers of societal judgment and embrace their truth. Within its walls, rituals unfold that are both cleansing and cathartic, allowing the participants to confront trauma and release the burdens they carry. The sauna becomes a safe space, a microcosm of female camaraderie and shared strength, symbolizing the collective healing that emerges from mutual understanding and support.

A recurring theme in Smoke Sauna Sisterhood is the reclamation of power through vulnerability. As each woman bares her soul, the act of sharing becomes a quiet revolution against the stigma surrounding pain and shame. The film underscores the idea that strength lies not in suppressing emotions but in embracing and expressing them. This radical honesty fosters an environment where the women’s voices are heard, their experiences validated, and their resilience celebrated.

Class and cultural dynamics also emerge subtly within the narrative. The smoke sauna—a practice rooted in Estonian tradition—offers a lens through which to examine the intersection of heritage and modernity. While the setting emphasizes community and ancestral wisdom, the stories told within it often highlight the struggles faced by women in a world shaped by structural inequalities. This juxtaposition enriches the film’s exploration of identity, connecting the deeply personal to the broadly political.

Visually, the film is as evocative as its narrative. Hints’ direction captures the textures of the sauna, the gentle interplay of light and shadow, and the raw emotions etched on the women’s faces. The intimate cinematography immerses viewers in the space, allowing them to feel the warmth of the sauna and the intensity of the shared moments. Every frame serves to enhance the documentary’s authenticity and emotional impact.

Through its quiet yet profound storytelling, Smoke Sauna Sisterhood celebrates the power of collective healing and female solidarity. It is a testament to the resilience found in shared experiences and the strength that arises from vulnerability. This documentary is not just a film—it is an invitation to reflect on the universal truths of pain, healing, and connection.

Friday 4th April 2025

Ain’t Them Bodies Saints (2013) Great! Action, 22:25
A lyrical crime romance echoing Badlands, this film paints an aching portrait of love, loyalty, and longing in the aftermath of violence. Rooney Mara and Casey Affleck deliver restrained, heartfelt performances in a tale steeped in mood, moral conflict, and Southern Gothic tradition.

Withnail and I (1987) Film 4, 01:50

Withnail and I (1987) stands as one of British cinema’s most beloved cult classics, offering a heady mix of humor and melancholy in its portrayal of two unemployed actors struggling to find their place in the world. Directed by Bruce Robinson, the film is a poignant exploration of friendship, excess, and existential despair, set in the turbulent backdrop of Thatcher’s Britain. Airing on Film 4 this Friday at 01:50, Withnail and I continues to resonate as a cultural touchstone for its sharp critique and timeless relatability.

The story follows Withnail, a flamboyant and self-destructive actor played with magnetic brilliance by Richard E. Grant, and his quieter, introspective companion (Paul McGann), referred to only as “I.” Together, they embark on a disastrous countryside retreat in search of solace and escape from their bleak London existence. What ensues is a deeply comic yet tragic journey that captures the absurdity of privilege, the decline of youthful idealism, and the failure to find meaning in a changing world.

A key theme in Withnail and I is its biting satire of privilege and entitlement. While the characters face personal struggles, their escapades reveal an obliviousness to the hardships endured by others. Withnail’s behavior, particularly his interactions with locals, underscores the social divide prevalent in the era, offering a microcosm of wider societal tensions. Through humor and absurdity, Robinson critiques the excesses and indulgences of the privileged class, contrasting their plight with the broader realities of Thatcherite policies.

The film also serves as an elegy for lost youth, with its characters embodying the fading dreams and disillusionment of a generation grappling with economic uncertainty. The retreat to the countryside, which initially promises renewal, becomes a metaphor for the futility of escapism. The story’s bittersweet conclusion leaves viewers reflecting on the impermanence of youthful ambition and the inevitability of change.

Withnail and I captures the cultural and political climate of Thatcher’s Britain with remarkable nuance. The austerity, social inequities, and growing sense of alienation are subtly interwoven into the narrative, providing a backdrop for the characters’ personal struggles. While the film never overtly preaches, its setting serves as a powerful commentary on the broader societal shifts and anxieties of the time.

Another notable aspect of the film is its exploration of friendship and human connection. Withnail’s chaotic energy contrasts starkly with “I’s” quiet sensitivity, creating a dynamic that is both dysfunctional and deeply affecting. Their relationship highlights the complexities of companionship, particularly the sacrifices and dependencies that come with it. As their bond is tested, the film becomes a meditation on loyalty and the bittersweet nature of human relationships.

Visually, the film is steeped in a rich, atmospheric aesthetic that accentuates its themes. From the squalor of their London flat to the eerie beauty of the countryside, cinematographer Peter Hannan captures the juxtaposition between grim reality and fleeting hope. The striking imagery serves to heighten the film’s emotional resonance and underscores its sense of decay.

Withnail and I is a masterpiece that transcends its tragicomic surface to offer profound reflections on privilege, decline, and the search for meaning. Its razor-sharp dialogue, unforgettable performances, and poignant themes ensure its place as one of the greats of British cinema. If you haven’t experienced this gem, make time for it this Friday—it’s a journey into humor, heartbreak, and social critique that leaves an indelible impression.

And finally, streaming

The Donmar Warehouse’s production of Macbeth, available on Marquee TV from Tuesday, April 1, 2025, is a bold and electrifying interpretation of Shakespeare’s timeless tragedy. Directed by Max Webster, this staging features David Tennant as Macbeth and Cush Jumbo as Lady Macbeth, delivering performances that are both intense and deeply nuanced.

Filmed live at the Donmar Warehouse, the production captures the unsettling intimacy and brutal action that define the play. Tennant’s portrayal of Macbeth is hypnotic, blending ambition and paranoia, while Jumbo’s Lady Macbeth is compellingly ruthless yet hauntingly vulnerable. The innovative sound design and stark visual elements immerse viewers in the fevered minds of the characters, blurring the lines between reality and hallucination.

This adaptation is a thrilling exploration of ambition, power, and madness, making it a must-watch for fans of Shakespeare and contemporary theatre alike.

Season three of Love on the Spectrum, available on Netflix from Wednesday, April 2, 2025, continues to celebrate the journeys of individuals on the autism spectrum as they navigate the complexities of dating and relationships. This heartfelt docuseries offers a mix of new faces and returning favorites, showcasing their unique experiences and perspectives.

The show remains a powerful exploration of love, breaking stereotypes and fostering understanding. With its blend of humor, emotion, and authenticity, season three promises to be as engaging and inspiring as its predecessors


For extended reviews, visit the Counter Culture website.

Picture credits

Luzzu (2021)
By -jkb- – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=10684187
Smoke Sauna Sisterhood (2023)
By https://hiiumaa.ee/event/kultuurinadalavahetus-savvusanna-sosarad-2/, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=74650682
The Guard (2011)
By The poster art can or could be obtained from Element Pictures., Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=32348267
Company (1996 Donmar Warehouse production)
Original Broadway Playbill – By It is believed that the cover art can or could be obtained from the publisher., Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=8146470
Children of Men (2006)
By May be found at the following website: IMP Awards, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=24105930
The Road (2009)
By May be found at the following website: IMP Awards, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=24227798
Funny Pages (2022)
By http://www.impawards.com/2022/posters/funny_pages_xlg.jpg, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=71349562
Two Way Stretch (1960)
By British Lion Films – https://alchetron.com/Two-Way-Stretch, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=64079430
Moon (2009)
By http://www.impawards.com/2009/moon_ver2.html, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=20348255
Drive (2011)
By The poster art can or could be obtained from IMP Awards., Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=32645711
Dreamland (2019)
By https://twitter.com/IndieWire/status/1324414929613500416?s=20, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=65768083
The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976)
By http://www.movieposterdb.com/poster/7cb9cac9, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=11988138
Ain’t Them Bodies Saints (2013)
By http://www.ifcfilms.com/films/aintthembodiessaints, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=39419362
Withnail and I (1987)
By Art by Ralph Steadman screenonline entry for the film, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=15999449

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Culture Vulture 9th – 15th of December 2023

Culture Vulture is a weekly entertainment guide offering a refreshing alternative standpoint, curated by Pat Harrington. Tim Bragg complements the reviews with distinctive music. Culture Vulture isn’t just a guide; it’s a manifesto for those seeking entertainment that inspires and resonates with the alternative spirit. Highlights this week include a night dedicated to Tony Bennett, a lesser known Ealing Studio classic, The Titfield Thunderbolt, and the classic love film, An Affair To Remember.

Saturday 9th of December 2023

Some Like It Hot (1959 film) 3.25pm BBC2

“Some Like It Hot,” directed by Billy Wilder and released in 1959, is a classic screwball comedy that has stood the test of time as one of the greatest films in the genre. Starring Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, and Jack Lemmon, the film is a hilarious romp filled with witty dialogue, impeccable timing, and memorable performances.

The plot follows two musicians, played by Curtis and Lemmon, who witness a mob hit and must go on the run to escape the gangsters. In a desperate attempt to hide, they disguise themselves as women and join an all-female band, where they encounter the sultry and unpredictable Sugar Kane, portrayed by Monroe.

The film is known for its sharp and clever screenplay, written by Billy Wilder and I.A.L. Diamond, which keeps the audience engaged with a perfect blend of humor, romance, and suspense. The comedic timing of Curtis and Lemmon is impeccable, and their chemistry on screen is palpable. Monroe, in her iconic role as Sugar Kane, brings her trademark charm and sensuality to the film, adding an extra layer of glamour to the already delightful mix.

“Some Like It Hot” is not only a comedy masterpiece but also a commentary on gender roles and societal norms of the 1950s. The film challenges traditional notions of masculinity and femininity, exploring the absurdity of gender expectations in a lighthearted and entertaining manner.

The movie’s success can be attributed to Wilder’s expert direction, the stellar performances of the cast, and the timeless humor that transcends generations. The film’s final twist remains one of the most famous and satisfying conclusions in cinematic history.

Prince Albert: A Victorian Hero Revealed 11pm PBS America

“Prince Albert: A Victorian Hero Revealed” is a documentary that explores the life and legacy of Prince Albert, Queen Victoria’s husband. The series is produced by PBS America and hosted by Professor Saul David. The show delves into the private papers and photos of Prince Albert, which are currently housed in the Round Tower at Windsor Castle. The series examines how Prince Albert played a significant role in shaping Victorian Britain, from influencing British culture to government policy and even international relations. The show is a must-watch for anyone interested in the history of the British monarchy and the Victorian era.

Sunday 10th of November 2023

The Titfield Thunderbolt (1953 film) 2.45pm BBC2

“The Titfield Thunderbolt,” directed by Charles Crichton and released in 1953, stands as a delightful testament to the Ealing Studios tradition of portraying ordinary folk rebelling against a faceless and stifling bureaucracy. This British comedy, set against the picturesque backdrop of the countryside, unfolds the tale of a close-knit village grappling with the imminent closure of their beloved railway due to modernization.

The narrative takes flight as a determined and eccentric group of villagers decides to take matters into their own hands. In an attempt to save their railway line, they embark on the audacious mission of operating the antiquated Titfield Thunderbolt locomotive themselves. The film expertly navigates the ensuing challenges and humorous situations that arise, including opposition from bureaucratic authorities and a rival bus service.

One of the film’s notable strengths lies in its endearing characters, each brimming with distinctive personalities and quirks. The ensemble cast, featuring talents like Stanley Holloway and John Gregson, brings these characters to life, infusing the story with the charming eccentricities of village life.

“The Titfield Thunderbolt” not only captures the essence of a community banding together to resist change but also fits seamlessly into the Ealing Studios tradition of portraying such resistance. Against the scenic backdrop of the English countryside, the film blends gentle humor with a nostalgic look at a bygone era, featuring the quaint charm of steam locomotives and picturesque landscapes.

Directed by Charles Crichton, the film strikes a delicate balance between heart and humor, making it a feel-good classic that resonates with audiences who appreciate the Ealing Studios signature of showcasing ordinary people rebelling against bureaucratic odds. Though perhaps not as widely recognized as some other Ealing productions, “The Titfield Thunderbolt” remains a hidden gem, offering a timeless and uplifting cinematic experience.

Monday 11th of December 2023

The Death Of Stalin (2017 film)

These days we often hear of people being dismissed, denounced or criticised as ‘Stalinist’. This has become a term of abuse in the same manner as ‘fascist’ or ‘racist’; a useful cudgel with which the unscrupulous individual can use to beat political opponents about the head.

Armando Iannucci’s new black comedy, The Death of Stalin, offers an insight into the paralysing fear felt by everyone who lived in the Soviet Union under the rule of Josef Stalin and his brutal, sadistic henchman; NKVD spymaster Lavrenti Beria, chillingly played by Simon Russell Beale.

The best example of this gnawing fear is shown by Paddy Considine’s panic stricken Radio Moscow producer who tries to get a recording of a classical concert to Stalin after receiving a phone call from him ‘requesting’ a copy. The problem was that the concert was broadcast live; not recorded.

Stalin, (Adrian McLoughlin) is a vulgar peasant with a penchant for practical jokes and bad cowboy movies. All the other members of the politburo go along with his every whim for fear of ending up on one of Beria’s lists of ‘enemies of the people’. This tension makes for some excruciatingly bleak humour that leaves the viewers on the edge of their seats.

Great characterisations from Steve Buscemi as the calculating schemer, Khrushchev who struggles to stay ahead of Beria and keep himself free and alive; Jeffrey Tambor as Malenkov, the vacillating deputy to Stalin who finds himself in over his head after Stalin’s death and most notably by Jason Isaacs as the brash, no-nonsense war hero, Marshal Georgy Zhukov.

Some critics have questioned the use of humour in depicting this dark time in Russia’s history. Isn’t it in bad taste? Perhaps. Nevertheless it is a work of genius from the master of dark sardonic humour. Iannucci has triumphed again.

Review by David Kerr.

Tuesday 12th of December 2023

An Affair To Remember (1957 film) 12.45pm Film 4

“An Affair to Remember,” directed by Leo McCarey and released in 1957, is a timeless romantic classic that continues to captivate audiences with its poignant storytelling and unforgettable performances. Starring Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr, the film weaves a tale of love, destiny, and the enduring power of connection.

The narrative follows Nickie Ferrante (Grant) and Terry McKay (Kerr), two individuals engaged to others who meet aboard a transatlantic cruise. Despite their existing commitments, they find themselves drawn to each other, and a deep and genuine connection develops. To test the authenticity of their feelings, they decide to part ways and meet again at the top of the Empire State Building six months later.

The film is celebrated for its elegant and sophisticated storytelling, combining romance, drama, and a touch of humor. Leo McCarey’s direction brings out the best in the lead actors, and their chemistry is palpable. Grant and Kerr deliver heartfelt performances that transcend the screen, making the audience emotionally invested in their characters’ journey.

What sets “An Affair to Remember” apart is its ability to evoke genuine emotion. The film explores the complexities of love, sacrifice, and the impact of timing on relationships. The iconic scene at the Empire State Building is etched into cinematic history, symbolizing the enduring hope and resilience of true love.

The cinematography is both visually stunning and emotionally evocative, complemented by a beautiful musical score that enhances the film’s romantic atmosphere. The production values, including the glamorous costumes and luxurious settings, contribute to the film’s timeless and classic feel.

“An Affair to Remember” has left an indelible mark on the romance genre and is often cited as one of the greatest love stories ever told on screen. Its influence can be seen in later films, and the enduring popularity of the movie is a testament to its universal themes of love and destiny.

Less Is More: The Truth About Food Price 9pm Channel 4

“Less Is More: The Truth About Food Prices” is a documentary produced by Channel 4 that investigates the reasons behind the rising food prices in the UK. The show is hosted by Harry Wallop and explores how some products have been secretly reformulated with cheaper ingredients. The documentary also examines the impact of Brexit on food prices and the role of supermarkets in shaping the food industry. The show is a must-watch for anyone interested in the food industry and the economics of food production.

Wednesday 13th of December 2023

John Wayne: America At All Costs 3pm Sky Arts

“John Wayne: America at All Costs” is a documentary produced by Sky Arts that explores the life and career of John Wayne, one of the most prominent American actors of his era. The documentary provides an in-depth look at Wayne’s life, from his early days as a stage assistant to his rise to fame in Hollywood. The show features interviews with Wayne’s biographers, friends, and family members, as well as rare footage of his performances. The documentary also examines Wayne’s political views and his role as a right-wing propagandist during the Cold War.

Morgan (2016 film) 2.50am C4

“Morgan,” a science fiction thriller directed by Luke Scott and released in 2016, attempts to explore the ethical dilemmas surrounding artificial intelligence and human experimentation. While the film boasts a compelling premise and a talented cast, including Kate Mara and Anya Taylor-Joy, it falls short of fully realizing its potential.

The plot centers around a corporate consultant, played by Kate Mara, sent to assess the viability of a highly advanced humanoid named Morgan, portrayed by Anya Taylor-Joy. Created in a secret laboratory, Morgan exhibits both extraordinary intelligence and alarming violent tendencies. As the investigation unfolds, ethical questions about the nature of Morgan’s existence and the consequences of tampering with artificial life come to the forefront.

Despite the film’s intriguing setup, “Morgan” struggles to maintain a consistent tone and build sustained tension. The pacing feels uneven, and the narrative takes predictable turns that diminish the impact of its ethical quandaries. While there are moments of suspense, the film fails to deliver the sustained thrills one might expect from a science fiction thriller.

The performances, particularly by Taylor-Joy in the titular role, are commendable, infusing the character with an eerie mix of innocence and potential danger. The supporting cast, including seasoned actors like Paul Giamatti and Jennifer Jason Leigh, adds depth to the ensemble, but their characters are not fully fleshed out, leaving much untapped potential.

Visually, the film has some striking moments, utilizing a sleek and sterile aesthetic to emphasize the clinical nature of the laboratory setting. However, these visuals alone cannot compensate for the film’s narrative shortcomings.

Thursday 14th of December 2023

Integrating Mississippi’s Schools: The Harvest PBS America 8.35pm

“Integrating Mississippi’s Schools: The Harvest” is explores the integration of public schools in Mississippi. The documentary is hosted by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Douglas A. Blackmon and is part of the American Experience series. The show examines how school integration transformed Leland, Mississippi, and the lives of the students who were part of the first class to attend integrated schools. The documentary features interviews with students, teachers, and parents, as well as rare footage of the integration process.

Playground (2021 film) 1.45am C4

Playground is a 2021 Belgian drama film directed by Laura Wandel. The film was selected to compete in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival, where it won the FIPRESCI Prize in the Un Certain Regard section. The film follows the story of a seven-year-old girl named Nora who witnesses her older brother being bullied. Though he swears her to secrecy, she tells their father and soon finds herself the victim of bullying as well.

Friday 15th of December 2023

Tony Bennett Night BBC4 From 9pm


Tony Bennett, a legendary figure in the music industry, is celebrated for his timeless voice and distinctive style. His smooth, velvety tones and impeccable phrasing have made him a standout performer for over seven decades. Bennett’s ability to convey emotion and tell stories through his singing, coupled with his versatility across genres, contributes to the universal appeal of his music. His enduring popularity and success attest to his artistic prowess and ability to connect with audiences across generations.

One of the key reasons to watch a night dedicated to Tony Bennett’s music is the vast and versatile nature of his repertoire. From jazz and pop to standards and show tunes, Bennett’s adaptability showcases his exceptional talent. His collaborations with iconic musicians such as Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald, as well as more contemporary artists like Lady Gaga, highlight his influence and respect within the music industry.

Tony Bennett’s impact goes beyond musical achievements; he is a cultural icon symbolizing sophistication and enduring talent. His commitment to artistic integrity and consistent high standards in his performances have garnered widespread admiration. Watching a night dedicated to Bennett’s music is not just a musical experience but a journey through the career of an artist whose live shows, classic standards, and contributions to the cultural landscape have left an indelible mark on the world of music.

Mud (2012 film) 11.05pm BBC2

“Mud” is a captivating and evocative coming-of-age drama directed by Jeff Nichols. Set against the mesmerizing backdrop of the Mississippi River, the film weaves a poignant tale of friendship, love, and the complexities of adult relationships.

At its core, “Mud” explores the innocence of youth and the harsh realities of the adult world. The story unfolds through the eyes of two teenage boys, Ellis (Tye Sheridan) and Neckbone (Jacob Lofland), who discover a mysterious fugitive named Mud (Matthew McConaughey) hiding out on a remote island. As the boys befriend Mud and become entangled in his quest for love and redemption, the film skillfully navigates themes of loyalty and the inevitability of growing up.

Matthew McConaughey delivers a standout performance as Mud, bringing depth and vulnerability to his character. The actor’s ability to convey Mud’s charm, desperation, and hope adds layers to the narrative, making it a compelling character study. Tye Sheridan and Jacob Lofland, as the young protagonists, deliver performances well beyond their years, capturing the essence of adolescence and the loss of innocence.

The cinematography by Adam Stone is breathtaking, capturing the Southern landscape with a poetic beauty that enhances the film’s emotional resonance. The slow pace and deliberate storytelling allow the audience to immerse themselves in the atmosphere, creating a sense of time and place that becomes integral to the narrative.

One of the film’s strengths is its exploration of moral ambiguity. As the characters navigate a morally complex world, “Mud” challenges viewers to question traditional notions of right and wrong. This ambiguity adds depth to the characters and elevates the film beyond a simple adventure story.

While “Mud” may not be a fast-paced, action-packed film, its deliberate pacing and nuanced character development contribute to its overall impact. Jeff Nichols crafts a film that lingers in the mind, leaving audiences with a mix of nostalgia, reflection, and a profound appreciation for the delicate nuances of human relationships.

and finally, streaming..

Yu Yu Hakusho on Netflix: This is a live-action adaptation of the legendary battle-action manga series. The series follows Yusuke, a tearaway teenager who dies trying to save a young boy from being hit by a speeding car. As he looks down at his body from the afterlife, Yusuke meets a woman named Botan, who guides him to the spirit world. She tells Yusuke that his death was premature and unexpected, but that no one would’ve ever believed a troubled kid like him could perform such a selfless act — so there’s no place for him in heaven or hell. Yusuke is then given the opportunity to be revived after completing a trial, allowing him to be sent back to the human world to investigate demons as an Underworld Detective. The series is set to premiere on Netflix on December 14th, 2023.

Face to Face with ETA: Conversations with a Terrorist on Netflix: This is a documentary film that features an exhaustive interview with Josu Urrutikoetxea, also known as Josu Ternera, about his involvement in the terrorist group ETA. The film is 1 hour and 42 minutes long and is available to stream on Netflix from December 15th, 2023.

Los Farad are available from Tuesday, 12 December, 2023 on Prime Video. A youngster in Marbella, Spain sees a new future as an arms dealer for the wealthy Farad family.

Picture Credits

Some Like It Hot
Designed by Macario Gómez Quibus. “Copyright 1959 – United Artists Corp.”. – Scan via LiveAbout. Cropped from original image., Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=85794299

The Titfield Thunderbolt
The poster art can or could be obtained from General Film Distributors (UK)Universal (USA)., Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=17379841

The Death Of Stalin
The poster art can or could be obtained from the distributor., Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=54810778

An Affair To Remember
The poster art can or could be obtained from 20th Century Fox., Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3916540

Morgan
By Studio and or Graphic Artist, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=52372087

Playground
The poster art can or could be obtained from the distributor. Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=69613644

Mud
Derived from a digital capture (photo/scan) of the Film Poster/DVD Cover (creator of this digital version is irrelevant as the copyright in all equivalent images is still held by the same party). Copyright held by the film company or the artist. Claimed as fair use regardless., Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=38423796

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