mon 21/05/2012

TV reviews, news & interviews

The Bridge: Series Finale, BBC Four

Kieron Tyler

It ended where it began, between Copenhagen and Malmö along the Öresund bridge. The journey back to square one took in issues of homelessness, mental health, immigration and child labour. Drug abuse, national identity, family break-up and the power of the media cropped up too. But none of these are what The Bridge hinged on. Without its main characters and measured pace, The Bridge could have been little more than a bleak trudge through society’s ills.The final episode was typically...

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Tales of Television Centre, BBC Four

Fiona Sturges

“It’s like Big Ben. It’s like the Houses of Parliament. It’s like St Paul’s,” observed Susan Hampshire, reflecting on the iconic properties of Television Centre, the BBC’s 52-year-old nerve centre. Steady on, Susan, you thought, let’s not overdo it. But that was before we’d seen some of its most long-serving and frankly terrifying employees, Paxman, Attenborough and Bakewell among them, getting all misty-eyed over this unprepossessing lump of concrete and glass, and mourning its imminent demise...

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Felicity Kendal's Indian Shakespeare Quest,...

Veronica Lee

It's a truism of modern television that a programme rarely gets made without a celebrity being attached, but in this case there was a very good...

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Silk, Series Two, BBC One

Adam Sweeting

How delightful to welcome the return of Peter Moffat's skilful legal series. Yes alright, sceptics may contend that the law firm drama has already...

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56 Up, ITV1

Jasper Rees

For most of us, life is what happens to you when you’re looking the other way. For the participants in 7 Up it’s what happens in seven-year segments...

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Episodes, Series 2, BBC Two

Graeme Thomson

Matt LeBlanc, Stephen Mangan and Tamsin Greig return in Golden Globe winning culture-swap comedy

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Street of Dreams, Manchester Arena

Philip Radcliffe

Well-intentioned celebration of Coronation Street is strictly for devotees

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Prisoners of War, Sky Arts 1

Adam Sweeting

You've seen Homeland, now here's the Israeli series that spawned it

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Sporting Heroes: After the Final Whistle, BBC One

Jasper Rees

Michael Vaughan asks where the validation comes from when no one's watching any more

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Cardinal Burns, E4

Veronica Lee

Sketch duo make a very strong debut with their parodies with a dark twist

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Homeland, Series Finale, Channel 4

Emma Dibdin

The paranoid drama's first season wraps up with a compelling tragic end-stop

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Maestro at the Opera, BBC Two

Philip Radcliffe

Opera deserves better than untrained celebs conducting arias at Covent Garden

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Awake, Sky Atlantic

Emma Dibdin

Inception-lite US drama packs a compelling emotional punch

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Shakespeare in Italy, BBC Two

Fiona Sturges

The thinking woman's Krystle Carrington lays claim to the Bard as an honorary Italian

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Braquo, FX

Kieron Tyler

Second series of gritty French cop drama is even more full-on than the first

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theASHtray: Walliams on Dahl, Gill vs. Beard, and a new (old) play by Eugene O'Neill

ASH Smyth

Yeah butt, no butt: our columnist sifts through the fag-ends of the cultural week

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Interview: Braquo and A Prophet screenwriter Abdel Raouf Dafri

Kieron Tyler

The acclaimed film and TV writer discusses his work on the uncompromising French police drama

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Footnote: a brief history of British TV

You could almost chart the history of British TV by following the career of ITV's Coronation Street, as it has ridden 50 years of social change, seen off would-be rivals, survived accusations of racism and learned to live alongside the BBC's EastEnders. But no single programme, or even strand of programmes, can encompass the astonishing diversity and creativity of TV-UK since BBC TV was officially born in 1932.

Nostalgists lament the demise of single plays like Ken Loach's Cathy Come Home or Mike Leigh's Abigail's Party, but drama series like The Jewel in the Crown, Edge of Darkness, Our Friends in the North, State of Play, the original Upstairs Downstairs or Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy will surely loom larger in history's rear-view mirror, while perhaps Julian Fellowes' surprise hit, Downton Abbey, heralds a new wave of the classic British costume drama. For that matter, indestructible comic creations like George Cole's Arthur Daley in Minder, Nigel Hawthorne's Sir Humphrey in Yes Minister, the Steptoes, Arthur Lowe and co in Dad's Army, John Cleese's Fawlty Towers or Only Fools and Horses insinuate themselves between the cracks of British life far more persuasively than the most earnest television documentary (at which Britain has become world-renowned).

British sci-fi will never out-gloss Hollywood monoliths like Battlestar Galactica, but Nigel Kneale's Quatermass stories are still influential 60 years later, and the reborn Doctor Who has been a creative coup for the BBC. British series from the Sixties like The Avengers, Patrick McGoohan's bizarre brainchild The Prisoner or The Saint (with the young Roger Moore) have bounced back as major influences on today's Hollywood, and re-echo through the BBC's enduringly successful Spooks.

Meanwhile, though British comedy depends more on maverick inspiration than the sleek industrialisation deployed by US television, that didn't stop Monty Python from becoming a global legend, or prevent Ricky Gervais being adopted as an American mascot. True, you might blame British TV (and Simon Cowell) for such monstrosities as The X Factor or Britain's Got Talent, but the entire planet has lapped them up. And we can console ourselves that Britain also gave the world Jacob Bronowski's The Ascent of Man, David Attenborough's epic nature series Life on Earth and The Blue Planet, as well as Kenneth Clark's Civilisation. The Arts Desk brings you overnight reviews and news of the best (and worst) of TV in Britain. Our writers include Adam Sweeting, Jasper Rees, Veronica Lee, Alexandra Coghlan, Fisun Güner, Josh Spero and Gerard Gilbert.

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