tue 24/06/2025

tv

This Is Our Family, Sky Atlantic review - can Emma and Tony live happily ever after?

Adam Sweeting

Sky Atlantic is usually where you go for big-hitting dramas, so this quartet of observational documentaries is an unexpected development. Each film follows a single family over three years, and each family faces particular challenges.

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How to Steal Pigs and Influence People, Channel 4 review - the arcane world of the online vegan influencers

Adam Sweeting

Filmmaker Tom Costello’s opening question in this quixotic but fascinating documentary for Channel 4 deftly skewered the journey he was about to take us on. Was making change or finding fame more important?

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Deadwater Fell, Channel 4 review - dark murder mystery in a Scottish village

Markie Robson-Scott

An idyllic Scottish classroom full of happy children making sponge paintings of flowers with two enthusiastic young teachers – clearly, doom is in the air. Here comes that sense of dread again a little later at a ceilidh in a village hall, with everyone trying a little too hard to look happy.

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White House Farm, ITV review - gripping opener of true crime drama

Veronica Lee

It's the smallest lies that can bring you down. When he is asked by a detective how he got on with his family, who have just been murdered in a mass shooting at their Essex farm, Jeremy Bamber (Freddie Fox) says: “Really well.

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Jonestown: Terror in the Jungle, BBC Four review - meticulous account of a haunting American tragedy

Adam Sweeting

It happened 42 years ago, but the mass suicide of 900 people at the Jonestown settlement in Guyana is still an event that freezes the blood. They were members of the Peoples Temple, the semi-totalitarian cult founded by Jim Jones, who began as a mere egomaniac but morphed into a bullying dictator convinced of his own God-like powers.

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Cornwall: This Fishing Life, BBC Two review - a precarious trade on the ocean wave

Adam Sweeting

Series about fishing have become a durable mini-genre, including the likes of Deadliest Catch and Saltwater Heroes.

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Dracula, BBC One review - horrific, and not in a good way

Adam Sweeting

“Bela Lugosi’s dead,” as Bauhaus sang, in memory of the star of 1931’s Dracula. But of course death has never been an impediment to the career of the enfanged Transylvanian blood-sucker. Filmed and televisualised almost as frequently as Sherlock Holmes, Count Dracula would doubtless join the cockroaches as the only entities to survive a thermonuclear holocaust.

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Dame Edna Rules the Waves / The Graham Norton Show, BBC One review - two ways to run a talk show

Adam Sweeting

Talk shows can go one of two ways. You can create a welcoming space where your guests can kick their shoes off and start telling daringly revealing anecdotes. Alternatively, there’s the Dame Edna formula where the guests are cannon fodder for the host.

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The Trial of Christine Keeler, BBC One review - famous sex scandal makes uneven drama

Adam Sweeting

One good Sixties brouhaha deserves another. After last year’s triumphant revival of the Jeremy Thorpe affair in A Very English Scandal, here comes the sleazy saga of John Profumo, the Conservative Secretary of State for War who was forced to resign from Harold Macmillan’s government in 1963. The cause of his downfall was his brief affair with model and showgirl Christine Keeler, who was 19 when Profumo first met her.

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Best of 2019: TV

theartsdesk

As symbolic moments go, the arrival of Martin Scorsese's new gangster epic The Irishman on Netflix took some beating.

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