sun 25/05/2025

tv

In the Dark, BBC One review - missing girls mystery promises hidden depths

Mark Sanderson

Detective Inspector Helen Weeks (MyAnna Buring), having finally cornered a skanky drug-dealer/benefit cheat in a blind alley – and stopped an eager PC from Tasering the woman – is punched in the stomach for her pains. How’s that for a hard-hitting start?

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Grandad, Dementia and Me, BBC One review - no easy solutions to terrifying mental condition

Marina Vaizey

The title gave us the true-life plot: this was a grandson’s filmed narrative of something that will touch us all, through acquaintance, friend, family and perhaps ourselves falling victim to some form of dementia. It's a word that covers a myriad of conditions, all of them affecting the mind.

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Broken, BBC One series finale review - Seán Bean's quiet immensity

Jasper Rees

The Catholic Church hasn’t enjoyed a good press on screen lately. Nuns punished Irishwomen for their pregnancies in Philomena. Priests interfered with altar boys in Spotlight. And in The Young Pope a Vatican fixated on conservatism and casuistry elects a pontiff who sees himself as a rock star.

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50 Shades of Gay, Channel 4 review - no better place in the world to be gay?

Mark Sanderson

It’s half a century since homosexuality was partially decriminalised in England and Wales, so who better to cast his gaze over the lie of the land than stately homo Rupert Everett?

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Melvyn Bragg on TV, BBC Two review – too many talking heads, too little action

Adam Sweeting

Presumably it seemed like a good idea at the time.

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Sudan: The Last of the Rhinos, BBC Two review - requiem for disappearing wildlife

Adam Sweeting

“The northern white rhinos are just a symbol of what we do to the natural world,” as one of the contributors to this haunting documentary put it.

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Who Should We Let In? Ian Hislop on the First Great Immigration Row, review – how history repeats itself

Barney Harsent

Immigration…immigration… immigration… that’s what we need! Not the words of record-breaking, tap-dancing trumpeter Roy Castle, rather it’s the gist of a Times leader from 1853 (admittedly, fairly heavily paraphrased).

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Chance, Universal review – Hugh Laurie is reborn as a film-noir shrink

Adam Sweeting

Hugh Laurie, in his new role of forensic neuropsychiatrist Eldon Chance, tells us that he works with those who are “mutilated by life”, and we soon see that Chance himself falls into that category. He’s in the midst of a divorce, he only sees his daughter Nicole at weekends, and his work seems to fill him with a kind of morbid weariness.

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Ripper Street, BBC Two, Series 5 review – apocalypse looms in Victorian Whitechapel

Adam Sweeting

There has always been an air of incipient doom hovering over Ripper Street, since the show is more of a laboratory of lost souls than a mere detective drama.

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Murdered For Being Different, BBC Three review - unbearable but unmissable

Jasper Rees

Heaven alone knows we've pressing anxieties enough to preoccupy us, but if you have the emotional bandwidth to accommodate more, the iPlayer can oblige. Available now on BBC Three is the latest in what now becomes a trilogy of heartrending dramas with Murdered in the title.

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