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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