- siyabonga39
The best films and TV shows on BBC iPlayer (17th November 2019)
Staff Reporter
Reading time: 43 mins
We review the best TV shows and films currently available on BBC iPlayer.
For BBC Three recommendations.
Pick of the Week: The War of the Worlds

In a move to dominate Sunday evenings with glossy, gripping sci-fi and fantasy, BBC One is releasing its new The War of the Worlds adaptation back-to-back with His Dark Materials. It’s a handsome companion piece, with Eleanor Tomlinson and Rafe Spall starring as Amy and George, a couple who find themselves amid an alien invasion in Edwardian England. Outcasts from society, they must band together to work out what’s going on as well as how to defeat the invaders. Peter Harness’ script is ambitious enough to try for something new in the way events are presented, and it puts Tomlinson centre-stage. The atmosphere, fear of the unknown and the superior, and the design of the strange creatures is the most important thing, and the lavish production doesn’t disappoint, but Tomlinson doesn’t let herself be consumed by the CGI and colourful production design, and her active steps to stand out and stand up to the blockbusting sci-fi horror give the whole thing a refreshing theme of resourcefulness and defiance. (Warning to parents watching His Dark Materials as a family affair: this one’s darker, scarier and probably not one for under-12s.)
Available on BBC iPlayer from 9pm
Pick of the Week: His Dark Materials

This impressively faithful adaptation of Philip Pullman’s books is a grand but grounded epic.
Available until: June 2020
Pick of the Week: Prince Andrew & the Epstein Scandal

In a Newsnight special, Emily Maitlis interviews the Duke of York as he speaks for the first time about his relationship with convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein. The result is a huge gamble from Prince Andrew as he tries to address the scandal, and it would be hard to say that it paid off. Instead, the hour-long conversation raises more questions than it answers, from his defence of staying at Epstein’s home because he was “too honourable” to his alibi for where he was on certain dates including the fact that he was at a Pizza Express in Woking. And that’s before you get to the mention of his condition that meant until recently he was unable to sweat. Professing no memory of events, and even laughing uncomfortably at times, it’s a car crash interview that’s painfully riveting to witness, as the prince tries to remain polite – he calls Epstein’s conduct as “unbecoming” – and justify his behaviour. The plan was presumably to end discussion of the matter, but you suspect that it will only fan the flames further.
Available until: 12th December 2019
Arena: A British Guide to the End of the World

It says a lot that even in these times of global uncertainty, the words “nuclear bomb” are tossed around with a casual, lightweight tone. This excellent documentary should put pay to that, taking us through the history of Britain and nuclear warfare, from the very first bomb tests to preparations ahead of a possible Cold War attack. There’s an eerie, dated quality to so much of the footage that could almost make it seem like a spoof or satire – think Look Around You – but this is an utterly chilling watch, with one description of a nuclear explosion and its effect on the human body hauntingly detailed.
Available until: 4th December
Recommended Box Set: The Young Offenders: Season 2

This sublime second season is expertly performed, smartly written and very, very funny.
Available until: November 2020
Pick of the Week: RuPaul’s Drag Race UK

RuPaul’s veritable phenomenon gets its first UK incarnation with BBC Three’s delightful, uplifting contest, which sees the best of Britain’s drag scene competing to impress judges that include Andrew Garfield, Alan Carr and Graham Norton. Witty, fabulous, and very, very British.
Available until: September 2020
The Fear of God: 25 Years of The Exorcist

Mark Kermode’s engaging, insightful documentary about The Exorcist manages to be more than just a making-of.
Available until: November 2020
Guilt

Mark Bonnar is on a role. From Catastrophe and Summer of Rockets to Defending the Guilty, Humans and Line of Duty, the actor is everywhere you look, and about time too – his ability to blend comic timing, desperation and pent-up anger is perfectly matched to the tale of Max, who, along with his brother Jake (Jamie Sives) accidentally run over an old man – while stoned and uninsured. And so they try to cover it up – but, of course, things don’t go to plan. Jamie Sives is an ideal foil to Max’s annoyed, guilt-stricken older sibling, with a clumsiness and cluelessness that’s delivered with a deadpan face – even as he winds up getting a little too friendly with the deceased’s family. Darkly funny and grippingly paced, this four-parter promises to be a jet black treat.
Available until: 23rd November 2019
Family recommendation: Seven Worlds, One Planet

Millions of years ago incredible forces ripped apart the Earth’s crust creating seven continents. BBC One’s latest nature series profiles them in jaw-dropping detail, as Sir David Attenborough explores how each distinct environment has shaped the animal life there – from he baking plains of Africa to life at the extremes in Asia. Nowhere is more extreme, though, than the Antarctica, which is where Episode 1 begins, as we witness Weddell seals keeping their breathing holes open by using their teeth to grind away the ice. That universal drive to survive ties together each chapter, but particularly moving is the drive to keep one’s loved ones alive too, particularly when we watch an initially ambivalent albatross eventually recognise its offspring – a sequence that’s guaranteed to tug at your heart strings.
Available until: October 2020
Recommended Box Set: Giri/Haji

In a London apartment, a man lies dead with a sword in his back. In Tokyo, a man sits at a table in a diner, looking at a photo of the crime scene. The two seem like their worlds couldn’t be farther apart. The fact that Giri/Haji, BBC Two’s jaw-dropping thriller, manages to connect the two at all is impressive. The way it does it, though, elevates it from a gripping drama to a truly remarkable piece of television. Tokyo detective Kenzo Mori is sent to London to find the brother he thought was dead, now reappeared and wanted for a vicious killing that threatens to tear both cities apart. One of the year’s most original and unique series, blending animation, cinematic flashbacks and neon visuals, this globe-trotting thriller is a remarkable piece of TV.
Available until: December 2019
Who Are You Calling Fat?

“Nine people who live with obesity, or who choose to call themselves fat” move in together to explore what it means to be larger bodied in Britain today. The result is a compelling, uplifting watch, as the documentary delves into the nuances of language, questions of projection, prejudice and media representation – “Health is a social construct,” says one – and ultimately brings together each person for a thoughtful debate without exploitation. There’s no prescriptive view on what’s right or wrong here, no judgement on dieting or eating what you want, just a reminder that genetic predisposition is a factor in body size and, most of all, that respectful conversation is always a healthy thing.
Available until: October 2020
Dublin Murders

You’ve got to hand it to Sarah Phelps. The BBC’s chief adaptor of Agatha Christie, she’s one of the best TV writers around today, able to weave social tensions and character introspection with moody storytelling, compelling pacing and, of course, intriguing plots. Her adaptation of Tana French’s bestselling novels is as dark and absorbing as you’d expect, as she drops us into the aftermath of a young girl’s murder, involving a strange stone altar, and another body that inevitably appears. The family screaming as they learn of their loss is an unsettling and affecting portrait of raw grief, but there’s also time to really fall in with our lead duo: Cassie (Sarah Greene) and Rob (Killian Scott), two police detectives who are not only good at their jobs, but also get on very well. That kind of supportive, genuine bond, which made ITV’s Unforgotten and BBC One’s Strike adaptations so entertaining, holds this stylish, gloomy, gripping and gruesome crime drama in very good stead.
Available until: January 2020
Motherland: Season 2

This frank, funny sitcom about parenting is flawlessly written and performed, with Anna Maxwell Martin and Diane Morgan on hilarious form, and the whole box set thankfully available all at once yet again.
Available until: December 2019
World on Fire

Peter Bowker pens this epic new BBC drama, which retells the war through an everyday lens. The focus here is on the ordinary people left behind by the troops and the consequences the international conflict has for them – it’s a tableau of human drama, punctuated by cinematic action, and the effect feels more immediate and moving than any school history lesson.
Available until: December 2019
The Name of the Rose

John Turturro is on charismatic form in this glossy remake of the 1986 film. It follows a Franciscan friar, William, who, in the early 1300s, is tasked with investigating the unfortunate death of a monk who has fallen or been pushed from the Abbey’s parapet. The opening episode is impressive enough, with a convincing cast, compelling pace and atmospheric visuals featuring wonderful landscapes.
Available until: December 2019
Last chance: Defending the Guilty

Over two seasons of Flowers and the film The Darkest Universe, Will Sharpe has confirmed himself as a distinctive comedy talent with a uniquely sharp voice. He’s sadly not holding the pen for this new legal comedy, but he gets a deserved chance to shine in front of the camera. He plays Will, a pupil barrister who is stumbling his way through the challenge of getting the next leg up in his career – while being exploited, mocked and occasionally encouraged by his senior, Caroline (Katherine Parkinson). The result is a fairly conventional sitcom, but Cuckoo writer Kieron Quirke hands Parkinson and Sharpe enough acerbic barbs to give the comedy an entertaining edge. Don’t feel guilty if you end up binge-watching the whole thing.
Available until: 21st November 2019
The Cameron Years

If the idea of reading David Cameron’s memoirs fills you with nausea, this documentary is an excellent condensing of the main highlights into a couple of hours. Over the two episodes, it breaks down comprehensively how the Conservative broke down comprehensively, as a result of the pro and anti-Europe tensions that were given oxygen by Cameron’s decision to hold a referendum. The former PM justifying himself and asking for sympathy may not carry much weight with viewers, but watch out for former Lib Dem leader and Deputy PM Nick Clegg spelling out how their brief coalition worked – and how he, like George Osborne, advised Cameron not to go down the referendum route. And, for good measure, there’s the irony of remembering the Tory’s 2015 election campaign threatening “chaos with Ed Miliband”. Who knew it was possible to feel nostalgic for such heady days?
Available until: November 2020
Recommended Box Set: State of the Union

“It sounds like you’re trying. I am. Well, don’t.” Brexit gets a brief mention but it’s another union breaking apart in this delightfully funny, wonderfully heartfelt comedy, which sees one couple’s marriage crumbling – while they attempt to rebuild it at the same time. The premise is inspired, as we drop in on them every week for 10 minutes before their go their marital therapist – a brief chat in the pub that, it soon becomes obvious, covers far more ground than they do in their actual session. Nick Hornby pens the 10-minute bursts with the kind of honesty and wit you’d expect, with each episode delivering a revelation or step forward in their relationship – while also pushing them several feet back. Stephen Frears, meanwhile, brings an agility and brevity to the helm that captures endless telling details in the shortest of time-frames. Chris O’Dowd and Rosamund Pike sink their teeth into the bite-sized morsels with relish, O’Dowd full of immaturity and tragedy, Pike conveying unhappiness and frustration, both of them balancing their regrets, secrets, resentments and fears with a razor-sharp comic timing and – this is the kicker – a huge dose of feeling that ensures we’re always rooting for the happiest outcome, whatever that may be.
Available until: October 2020
The Capture

BBC One’s new surveillance thriller will be compared by many to Bodyguard, but the drama is closer to a companion piece to Channel 4’s equally gripping Chimerica. Where that drama delved into questions of photos, image editing and what can be trusted in this world of modern technology, The Capture raises equally troubling issues around deep fake – the manipulation of videos to make it appear as if someone said or did something they didn’t. Strike’s always charismatic Holliday Grainger is excellent as the person trying to tease apart the gap between real and not, and Callum Turner brings just right level of ambiguity to Shaun, a soldier who claims CCTV footage of him abducting a woman isn’t true. If the pacing stays as sharp as the first episode, you can expect a six-episode ride that’s as unsettling as it is compelling.
Available until: October 2020
Scarborough
BBC One goes all Phoenix Nights – or Car Share – with this new coastal comedy, which drops us beside the seaside for some mild giggles. The laughs aren’t uproarious, but the charm of this unassuming offering from Benidorm’s Derren Litten is that it’s more serial drama than sitcom, and the characters are drawn with a suitable realism. Jason Manford is the closest to broad comedy as arcade manager Mike, who has been caught in an embrace with the local man-eater (Claire Sweeney), but he gets chance to play low-key drama (as well as some surprisingly pleasant karaoke) as we see him attempt to patch things up with hairdresser Karen (Catherine Tyldesley). These decidedly messy, frayed thirtysomethings all descend upon the stereotypical local pub, but there are little gems of observations and laughs buried under the familiar surface, not least in the form of Stephanie Cole’s amusingly sharp-tongued Marion, Catherine’s blunt mother.
Available until: September 2020
Peaky Blinders: Season 5

Cillian Murphy is impeccable as he once again reprises his role as Tommy Shelby, self-made Birmingham gangster and head of the Shelby clan. Now thrust into a new, legitimate light, Season 5 promises fresh threats galore, as the world of politics turns out to be as cutthroat as the criminal world he’s supposedly left behind. All four previous seasons are available as a box set on BBC iPlayer.
Available until: February 2020
How to Break Into the Elite

This extremely timely and worthwhile documentary makes it clear that the maxim of it’s who you know that matters, as Amol Rajan, who became the youngest editor of a UK broadsheet at age 29, investigates the level of privilege required to make it in the UK’s elite professions. Can bright working-class youngsters make it? The answer is yes, but far from the extent it should be, with university degrees not guaranteeing anyone an easy way up a ladder that’s more competitive than ever.
Available until: 2020
Sacred Wonders

This gorgeously shot and earnestly presented documentary series taps into the profound truth that all around the world, great work and effort has been made by distinctly different people to create buildings to bring people closer to God. From Djenne’s Great Mosque to Japan’s Nachi waterfalls in Japan, not to mention the Cathedral of St John the Divine in New York, the result is a portrait not only of edifices but of humans engaging in sacred rituals and practices. Inspiring viewing for those who are so inclined.
Available until: 2020
The Misadventures of Romesh Ranganathan: Season 2

Romesh Ranganathan continues his quest to take over every programme on the BBC with the return of his unlikely travel series. Season 2 kicks off in typically unexpected style with a journey to Zimbabwe, where he gets caught in biblical lightning storms, re-enacts the film Titanic on a Lake Kariba houseboat and tries the home-brewed beer he made in a bathtub in Bulawayo. Along the way, he comes face to face with a cheetah, but also finds time to learn about the impact Mugabe had upon the country and its perception in the eyes of other countries. The result is a deceptively insightful snapshot of a population struggling through turmoil and economic crisis, woven in between stunning waterfalls and gorgeous landscapes, not to mention his signature frank brand of sarcasm. One season down and this remains a likeable showcase for a naturally charming TV presenter, but grows better with every episode as factual filmmaking increasingly equals the travel diary entries.
Available until: January 2020
Mortimer & Whitehouse: Gone Fishing: Season 2

The Trip, but with fishing instead of food. That’s the premise behind this charmingly low-key chat between Paul Whitehouse and Bob Mortimer, who go fishing for little reason other than catch some tench and shoot the breeze. There are some impressions scattered among the chatter, but this is about watching two men lower their barriers and share opinions and feelings about some of life’s biggest – and smallest – questions. After Season 1 saw them bond over health challenges, Season 2 kicks off in Wales, by the River Usk, where Paul reminisces about his father first taking him to fish and Bob chimes in with his own childhood memories. It’s not shockingly revelatory or a gripping gossip fest – and that’s exactly the point.
Available until: December 2019
The Mind of Herbert Clunkerdunk

Returning after its short pilot for four brief episodes of 11 minutes each, Spencer Jones is on dazzlingly silly form in this madcap comedy about Herbert Clunkerdunk, a man who struggles to get through day to day life – not least because of the interruptions of his overactive imagination. Everything from impromptu music videos and talking household objects interfere with his daily routine, not to mention Dom Coleman (Upstart Crow), as his irrepressible, unpredictable neighbour, Jonny Wallop – and all the while, Lucy Pearman (Mister Winner) keeps things grounded and sane as Bobby Kindle, Herbert’s wife, who supports him with patience and tolerance.
Available until: August 2020
Keeping Faith: Season 2

“Just keep going.” Those are the words of Faith Howells (Eve Myles) to herself as she returns for a second round of Keeping Faith. Myles is as brilliant as ever the grippingly complex second season, which picks up the pieces from Season 1 and tries to put them back together, finding more time for every character along the way.
Available until: July 2020
Louis Theroux: Surviving America’s Most Hated Family

Louis Theroux once again ventures into the breach with another visit to America’s Westboro Baptist Church, where the Kansas Christian group have made a name for their picketing of funerals and protests with homophobic, unpleasant placards. In 2014, founder Fred Phelps passed away, and Theroux returns to see if that has changed the group, especially with the winds of Trump’s America blowing in similarly outrageous directions. While it’s hard to decide whether there has been a softening of their stance, or whether that’s Theroux reaching to prove his own theory, the documentary is worth watching just for the chance to listen to Phelps’ granddaughter, Megan, who has defected to become Westboro’s most prominent critic – a reminder that there is still hope even among divisions of hate.
Available until: July 2020
Chasing the Moon

This ambitious Apollo 11 documentary by PBS puts humankind’s epic achievement into breathtaking context, from the social dynamics of the USA in the 1960s to the global political conflict playing out in the background, as well as the scientific breakthroughs and losses that paved the way for Neil Armstrong’s iconic steps on the moon. The result is a multi-episode history lesson that starts long before the moon landing and continues to look past it to how it has inspired generations since – if you’re going to watch one six-hour documentary about Apollo 11, make it this one.
Available until: December 2019
8 Days: To the Moon and Back

TV has gone moon landing crazy in the last week, and with good reason, but one of the gems of the small-screen anniversary celebration is undoubtedly this BBC Two documentary. The feature-length film is built on newly declassified cockpit audio recorded by the astronauts themselves. That’s enough to give us a fresh, immediate perspective on Apollo 11’s astonishing voyage, but director Anthony Philipson goes one step further by seamlessly stitching together archive footage and reconstructions with CG effects to build not just a feast for the ears but an immersive, full-sensory experience that’s as breathtaking as it is gripping.
Available until: June 2020
Dark Money

TV loves a drama about a timely subject, so it was only a matter of time until someone wrote something about abuse within the entertainment industry. That someone has turned out to be Levi David Addai, who penned BBC One’s excellent Damilola, Our Loved Boy. If you’re going to pick someone to pick apart a difficult topic with nuance and human heart, it’s hard to think of someone better. Dark Money tells the fictional story of The Mensahs, an ordinary working-class family from North London. Their youngest son, Isaac (Max Fincham), is a fledgling Hollywood star who’s just landed a major blockbuster role. But when he returns home after filming, he’s quiet, reserved and eventually reveals that he’s been abused by the movie’s producer. What follows is a heart-breaking look at how families can pull together – and fracture apart – under immense trauma and pressure, as well as a thoughtful consideration of how the media industry works and enables such horrible behaviour. Max Fincham is superb as Isaac, supported by the brilliant Babou Ceesay as his tormented father.
Available until: December 2019
Recommended Box Set: Killing Eve: Season 2

Stylish, darkly funny and powered by its complex characters, Season 2 of Killing Eve is as intoxicatingly unpredictable as ever.
Available until: 31st August 2022
The Planets

Professor Brian Cox has a mellifluous voice that prompts a Pavlovian response in any listener that hears it: to open their ears and turn on their brain, even as they slip into a warm, relaxed state. It’s only fitting, then, that his physics-defying larynx should be put to use by the BBC in picking up the very fabric and history of our universe. After exploring those wonders in gorgeous detail, The Planets sees him take on the rocky orbs that float through out solar system, each born at the same time but radically different, as they shifted from Earth-like conditions to become scorched by the son or drift out into the cold. Breathtaking CGI illustrates the journey of each mass, with real grandeur and spectacle, while Cox muses on the way Mars had its precious water taken from it, and how Saturn’s moon, Titan, may one day get its own moment in the Sun. It’s enough to make you appreciate the miraculous odds of life on Earth actually being possible. Dazzling, essential viewing.
Available until: July 2020
Ambulance: Season 5

Hot on the heels of Season 4 comes another bout of the BBC’s heart-stopping, hugely compelling documentary, putting us on the ground with the staff of the North West Ambulance Service in Greater Manchester. From 999 phone calls that may already be too late to rescuing someone from underneath a tram, the non-stop array of accidents and incidents is overwhelming – and not just for us, as the paramedics find themselves only able to get to some people hours after their call, due to a lack of resources. You wouldn’t know it from seeing the staff in action, though, as they comfort and calm, diagnose and treat, and – most important of all – listen and understand to everyone from a collapsing male to a drunken dancer with a warmth and, where appropriate, humour. Christopher Eccleston, as ever, is on hand to narrate events with a frank, heartfelt gravity.
Available until: 29th June (Episode 2)
Recommended Box Set: What We Do in the Shadows

This wonderfully silly, superbly written comedy transforms vampire horror into flatshare sitcom.
Available until: May 2020
Recommend Box Set: Summer of Rockets

Toby Stephens is one of the UK’s most underrated actors, something that Summer of Rockets seems almost tailor-made to correct. Written and directed by Stephen Poliakoff, the period drama introduces us to Britain in 1958, a year when the hydrogen bomb tests were in the air and the Cold War loomed over the nation. The political tensions are balanced with wonderfully personal details, as we follow Samuel Petrukhin (Stephens), a Jewish inventor born in Russia who has migrated to the UK and found success in manufacturing hearing aids. Going on to effectively invent the pager, his technological wizardry attracts interest from darker forces than the wealthy clients he typically caters for, and the drama deftly finds its way through a maze of social, national and familial concerns. There’s as much suspense in seeing his daughter, Hannah (Lily Sacofsky), deal with a broken show on the way to Buckingham Palace, as there is in waiting for his beeping invention to prove itself during a hospital demonstration. Woven into it all is the growing attraction between Samuel and one Kathleen Shaw (the always excellent Keeley Hawes), wife to an important Tory MP, and the couple play the layers of class conflict with carefully observed nuance. All of it is held together by Stephens’ superbly subtle performance, which blends accents together in an attempt to integrate himself with a country that, deep down, doesn’t trust him. The result is brimming with intrigue and filmed with period panache. With the whole box set released on BBC iPlayer, you’ll be hard pressed not to dive into it immediately.
Available until: June 2020
Thatcher: A Very British Revolution

As the UK’s second female Prime Minister prepares to move out of 10 Downing Street, there’s never been a better time for a look back at the first. This BBC documentary doesn’t miss a beat, taking us all the way through Margaret Thatcher’s career in impressive detail, from her choice of clothes and coaching to change her vocal cadences to even the surprise of Ken Clarke at the notion of a woman being elected leader of the party before it happened. There’s real insight here, both into the way the Conservative Party works and the way that Thatcher navigated her path through the least progressive of the UK’s political groups. There are no cries here to identify with her on a human level, or sympathise with how tough her work was, just lots and lots of facts stuffed into a compelling told hour.
Available until: June 2020
Ghosts

“We could always try… haunting?” That’s the sound of BBC One’s comedy, Ghosts, bringing a new perspective to, well, ghosts. Pitched somewhere between The Others and What We Do in the Shadows, it’s a hysterical, witty, irresistibly silly piece of television that gets a laugh out of the darkest of material.
Available until: April 2020
Recommended Box Set: Bodies

Not for the faint-hearted, Jed Mercurio’s medical drama is a gripping now as it was when it first aired.
Available until: May 2020
Earth from Space

The dulcet tones of Chiwetel Ejiofor are enough to make for relaxing TV viewing on their own, but here, they’re accompanied by equally daydreamy images of our planet from above, from elephants in Kenya to kung fu students in China. Humanity may be contributing to the damage done to our planet, but there’s beauty even in our ever-increasing sprawl across its surface. Watch this as a calming chaser to Climate Change: The Facts, or as a prelude to the more zoomed-in statistics.
Available until: May 2020
Recommended Box Set: Pose

Ryan Murphy is one of the best things about modern TV. If you’ve ever doubted that, just look at his latest creation, which is vibrant, gripping, emotional and sassy all at the same time. What makes Murphy’s work often so compelling is the way he so deliberately shines his spotlight not on himself but on other people, from Feud’s plumbing of the depths of the sexist engine powering Hollywood to America Crime Story’s hugely detailed character-driven portraits of real life. Groundbreaking in its largely transgender cast, Pose is bursting at the seams with lives and stories just waiting to be told, diving into the underground world of 1980s ball culture, where all those unwelcome in mainstream society, all those who can’t convert the American Dream into an American Reality, find acceptance, respect, support and one heck of a good night, as they strut their fashion sense and realness for everyone else to appreciate. Black transgender woman Blanca Rodriguez (Mj Rodriguez) works at a nail salon by day and serves as a member of the House of Abundance by night, and she’s our window into this world, as she takes in Damon (Ryan Jamaal Swain), a young dancer, and pushes him to audition for the local school. The resulting scene is just one in an endless pile of standout moments, as Swain veritably explodes off the screen with passion, conviction and physical agility. Its a breathtaking climax to a dizzying first episode – and sends you pirouetting into the box set released all-at-once on BBC iPlayer. Strike a pose, then get ready to hold it for eight hours.
Available until: March 2020
The Yorkshire Ripper Files: A Very British Crime Story

This impeccably put together documentary series is a remarkably detailed retread of one of Britain’s longest ever manhunts, for the serial killer Peter Sutfcliffe, who murderer 13 women brutally and horrifically. A Very British Crime Story takes us back to the 1970s, embedding us in the investigation, but, crucially, doing so with hindsight: this becomes a look not of how Sutcliffe was caught, but how he wasn’t caught for years, because a misogynistic attitude pervasive in the police at the time meant that the questions, answers and conclusions being reached repeatedly looked in the wrong direction. Eyewitnesses were ignored, because they didn’t fit the profile of being a sex worker, while a hoax tape that matched all those presumptions distracted detectives for far too long. An eye-opening and disturbing expose of how justice can be undermined by social bias and attitudes, this is important, chilling viewing, grippingly told.
Available until: March 2020
MotherFatherSon

Last year, Britain’s own Jesse Armstrong headed to America to craft HBO’s Succession, a blistering, funny dissection of a dysfunctional family in charge of a media empire. Now, Hollywood’s own Richard Gere has arrived on the BBC to explore similar territory in MotherFatherSon, a drama about a newspaper tycoon and an heir that makes Succession’s clan look positively healthy. Gere shines as media tycoon Max, outdone only by Helen McCrory as his ex-wife, Kathryn, who between them navigate politics, power and corruption – and their poisonous, toxic son, played by Billy Howle with a seething cruelty.
Available until: March 2020
Fleabag: Season 2

The return of Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s comedy is as brilliant, candid, rude and funny as you’d expect.
Available until: December 2019
Africa with Ade Adepitan

Not another TV travel show, you might think, as Africa with Ade Adepitan arrives on BBC Two. But, while Michael Palin is genial enough to remain a trusted guide through overseas lands, Ade Adepitan marks a blast of fresh air in a genre that has become swamped by British comedians playing the fish-out-of-water role. Like Romesh Ranganathan and Nadiya Hussain, Adepitan brings a needed, important dose of diversity to the lens through which British TV views other cultures – and, crucially, a highly entertaining one to boot. Heading from Cape Verde to Senegal and the Ivory Coast, we see solar power taking one small community far ahead of the Western world, a fishing village where all the fish are being taken by companies far off-shore, some astonishing footballers being taken advantage of by agents, and Nigeria’s answer to Silicon Valley. It’s a wide-reaching journey, and one that marks a homecoming for Ade, as he heads to Nigeria, the country of his birth, and his passion, knowledge, and understanding, of the lives he encounters – plus his ability to charm seemingly any person he crosses paths with – makes for a hugely winning piece of TV that’s by turns eye-opening, informative and funny. There’s serious food for thought in there, too, as we visit a former staging post in the transatlantic slave trade. The result is a travel show that’s a delight to watch. Our presenter tells us that Africa is the most exciting continent on the planet. After only one episode, you’re inclined to believe him.
Available until: February 2020
Mayans MC

Testosterone and gasoline fuel this biker drama, spun off from Sons of Anarchy. And, once again, we’re immersed in the group politics, personal conflicts and violent retributions that bubble under the surface of a petrolhead gang – this time, a Latino gang in Santo Padre, on the US/Mexico border. Created by Kurt Sutter and Elgin James, the series picks up four years after Sons, as young Ezekiel (J.D. Pardo) finds himself drawn into the world of the Mayans Motorcyle Club, driven by the need for revenge against the Galindo cartel. Flashbacks introduce us to his childhood sweetheart, Emily (Sarah Bolger), who is now married to the son of the cartel’s boss. That’s more than enough to hook in fans, even without the presence of Ron Perlman and other stalwarts from the original show – although there are some crossover cameos to watch out for. Throw in a compelling veteran turn from Edward James Olmos as Ezekiel’s father, Felipe, and you’ve got all the promising mechanical components for another muscular drama waiting to be revved up.
Available until: February 2020
Recommended Box Set: Les Miserables

BBC One’s handsome adaptation of Victor Hugo’s novel finds fresh details and renewed grit in its moving depiction of inequality and unrest.
Available until: December 2019.
Better Things

Pamela Adlon’s comedy about a single mother has taken its time to arrive on our screens, and has had a tumultuous time of it even before then – it was initially co-written by Louis C.K., who was rightly and promptly booted from the series (along with his production company) when accusations of sexual misconduct surfaced against him. Its belated premiere on UK TV, courtesy of the Beeb’s deal with FX, nonetheless deserves praise for Adlon’s central performance as Sam, a mother of three who is trying to balance her flailing acting career with raising three daughters. Adlon co-created the programme and sets the tone from the off, with a performance that’s honest in its semi-autobiographical approach and unapologetically prickly – we first meet her in a shop, where she’s ignoring her crying child, who’s in tears because she wants to buy some earrings she doesn’t need. Later, she argues with her eldest in a car. “Hide things from me please!” she cries, as her child tries to solicit her to buy weed. With Adlon working on a third season, both directing and reprising her lead role (and with four new writers on board), this opening run (available as a box set on BBC iPlayer) promises a candid, fresh take on motherhood that’s worth checking out.
Available until: January 2020
Billy Connolly: Made in Scotland

Comedians going back to their home towns for a TV documentary are the familiar younger cousin to that stalwart genre of the comedian travelogue. But Billy Connolly is no ordinary comedian, and the Big Yin’s biography makes that clear from the off. Despite his louder-than-life persona, there’s no trumpeting self-celebration here, just a grounded shaggy dog tale of his childhood stomping ground, as he fondly recalls the down-to-earth, inherently funny nature of Glasgow. The chance to relive clips and see other comics explain just how significant Connolly’s career was in the wider industry is a treat, but it’s the charming sight of seeing the locals react to bumping into Billy in the Glaswegian streets that make this such an endearing watch.
Available until: December 2019
Recommended Box Set: Doctor Who: Season 11

As grounded as its opening episode’s title (The Woman Who Fell to Earth) suggests, Chris Chibnall and Jodie Whittaker arrive in the TARDIS with a winning departure from formula. Read our full reviews of each episode here.
Available until: June 2020 (Episode 1)
Recommended Box Set: Inside No. 9 (Incl. Live: Dead Line)

“Are me and Steve Pemberton on BBC two now?” Inside No. 9 serves up its most post-modern, formally audacious episode yet with this special Halloween event. Reece and Steve appear as themselves at one point during the 30 minutes as part of some pre-recorded footage, in which they admit on The One Show they don’t believe in ghosts. This episode’s risky, bold and surprising gambit, rather, is to play on the biggest fear all performers have: a live broadcast going wrong. And so we’re put immediately on edge, dreading the worst, as we see Steve play a man arriving home, after discovering a phone in a graveyard, and Reese pop round as the local parish priest – only for gremlins to briefly mess things up. Ghosts in the machines? Reese bravely laughs off any technophobia – “You’re thinking of Black Mirror. This is Inside No. 9, more dark jokes and twists.” – but that’s all we need for the nightmare to threaten to come true, and what ensues is a brilliantly nerve-racking ordeal as we witness the cast and crew try to minimise any mistakes, which leaves us unsure what’s intentional, what’s accidental and what might (were one superstitious) be fate doing its best to ruin everything. The editing is remarkable, and the use of archive video to stitch any gaps together is inspired, resulting in a brave piece of TV that has you peeking through your fingers, before staring, in one masterful scene, at a cycle of screens within screens stretching into infinity, creating a broadcasting abyss – a timeless limbo in the middle of an old studio, where memories of all those past productions gone wrong are exorcised by the thrill of modern imagination. The rest of Inside No. 9 is also available as a box set.
Available until: October 2020
Last chance: There She Goes

Raising a child isn’t easy. Raising a child with learning difficulties is even harder. There She Goes is a bravely honest look at the challenges involved in looking after, encouraging and educating a daughter when communication is painfully restricted – a comedy drama that bristles with the huge pain, tiny victories and (more frequently) challenging lows of Simon (David Tennant) and Emily’s (Jessica Hynes) life. Shaun Pye’s script is stuffed with angry one-liners, delivered with relish by the cast. Tennant is wonderfully depressed but in denial (and halfway up a wine bottle) a defeated dad Simon, while Hynes (who recently made her directorial debut with the moving drama The Fight) balances deadpan coming timing with a blank unhappiness that rings powerfully true. They clash with bitterness, or just don’t communicate at all, and the challenge of them reconciling their love for each other and their daughter with the reality of their situation is one that repeatedly delivers heart and humour aplenty. In between them, seven-year-old Rosie is performed wit frustrating, charming and innocent energy by the marvellous Miley Locke.
Available until: 14th November 2019
Recommended Box Set: Luther

“I’m with the police.” “Which police?” “The police.” That’s the sound of Idris Elba remaining as tough, gruff and willing to rough people up as ever over four seasons of Luther. The BBC drama, which co-stars Ruth Wilson and a fantastic coat, dives into grimy police work with a glowering swagger that only adds to the hard-hitting appeal of the concise storytelling, curt dialogue and did we mention Idris Elba? Before Luther returns for Season 5, don’t miss the chance to catch up with show’s gripping back catalogue.
Available until: April 2020
Recommended Box Set: Blue Planet II

David Attenborough once again narrates this majestic, majestically filmed nature documentary, which dives beneath the waves to reveal not only the life beneath, but the way in which that life is being transformed by our existence up above. From the Earth’s frozen poles to coral reefs, it’s an eye-opening, informative and infinitely accessible programme that is almost too much to take in one sitting. Plus who doesn’t like the excuse to drop the word “phytoplankton” into everyday conversation?
Available until: April 2020
Recommended Box Set: Pride and Prejudice

Oh, Mr. Darcy! Any chance to rewatch the BBC’s definitive take on Jane Austen’s novel, starring Colin Firth as you know who, is never to be missed.
Available until: December 2019
Our Girl: Nigeria Tour

Michelle Keegan is back as Georgie, everyone’s favourite plucky army medic who throws herself into her work training Nigerian forces, only to find herself pitched headlong into danger. Fighting against Boko Haram is the new element of tension in her latest tour, but it’s the focus on grief and trauma that marks this new season out, as the BBC military drama doesn’t shy away from exploring the emotional conflict that faces troops away from the frontline. With its soldier banter and occasionally broad characterisations, it would be easy to turn one’s nose up at Our Girl, but with Love Island on our screens, the reminder that women can have professions that have historically been associated with men is something worth celebrating, not least because of Keegan’s superbly charismatic central performance.
Available until: January 2020
Comedy Shorts

This charming collection of comedy shorts balance sharp observations and witty writing with infectious imagination.
Available for over a year
Carnage

“I have written and directed a film about veganism,” says Simon Amstell. “I’m sorry.” If you laughed at that, you’ll love this. Set in 2067, when the human race has apparently converted entirely to veganism – an alternate universe to rival The Man in the High Castle and SS-GB for unnerving chills – Amstell’s mockumentary looks back at the years when people slowly began to realise the horror of consuming meat, eggs and other produce sourced or derived from animals. The film purports to explore the strange, alien idea that humans and animals aren’t equal, aiming to break the taboo surrounding Britain’s carnivorous past. It’s a neat way to tackle an oft-derided concept, by deliberately presenting what’s considered normal as the absurd – but Amstell, crucially, doesn’t lose sight of the ridiculousness of his own concept. The result is simultaneously laugh-out-loud funny and unsettling – and, most of unsettling of all, is the knowledge that, deep down, you may even feel yourself being won over by Amstell’s viewpoint. A thought-provoking, rib-tickling, stomach-churning satire.
Available until: March 2020
My Jihad

As BBC iPlayer’s Original Drama Shorts return for another season, one of 2014’s best, My Jihad, returns as a miniseries of three 15-minute films. The first introduced us to Fahmida (Anjli Mohindra) and Nazir (Hamza Jeetooa), two single Muslims who crossed paths at an unsuccessful speed-dating night. Picking up events one month later, this is a universal exploration of love in modern Britain that packs in twice as much warmth and wit as most 30-minute shows do in a whole season.
Available until: June 2020
Original Drama Shorts

BBC iPlayer continues to prove a platform for new talent with its latest bunch of shorts. From a moving demonstration of isolation and connection in an online age to a darkly funny – and unpredictable – story of female love and family loyalty, this is an impressively versatile collection of stories that are more than worth spending time with.
Available until: June 2020
Movies

Last Chance: 99 Homes
Michael Shannon and Andrew Garfield are on brilliant form in this powerful drama about a family whose home is foreclosed upon – only for the young man of the house to end up working for the guy who evicted them to try and claw back enough money to get their home back.
Available until: 19th November 2019
Last chance: Mister John
This believable British underdog drama is as feel-good as sports movies get.
Available until: 18th November 2019
Last chance: Kinky Boots
British comedy starring Chiwetel Ejiofor. A man inherits his family’s shoe factory. Things look bleak until he meets a cabaret singer who introduces him to a niche market.
Available until: 18th November 2019
Last chance: Taxi Tehran
Banned from making movies in Iran, director Jafar Panahi poses as a taxi driver, driving around Tehran recording the lives of its inhabitants and the difficulties they face.
Available until: 19th November 2019

Leviathan
Director Andrey Zvyagintsev follows the legal battle of a fisherman against the gigantic sea monster of Russian state officials as they try to turn his land into a luxury leisure complex – a never-ending struggle that tackles corruption with satirical bite.
Available until: 25th November 2019
StreetDance
Hop in a helicopter and fly over London sometime around sunset and you won’t believe your eyes. That’s what Streetdance dance: never before has London looked so sexy or stylish. Add in some excellent dance choreography and Streetdance becomes a film worth seeing. The premise, which sees a ballet school and a streetdance crew forced to team up, is full of cliches and obvious romantic notes, but there is chemistry in abundance. Not emotional chemistry, but physical chemistry.
Available until: 30th November 2019
Election
Student Tracy’s ambition angers teacher Jim McAllister, but his petty interference proves disastrous. Reese Witherspoon and Matthew Broderick star in this biting satire.
Available until: 30th November 2019
Half of a Yellow Sun
Drama following twin sisters Olanna and Kainene as their lives take very different courses after they are swept up in the turbulence of civil war in 1960s Nigeria. Thandie Newton and John Boyega star.
Available until: 1st December 2019
King Kong (1933)
Hollywood’s most famous monster movie in which Kong, the giant gorilla, is taken from his prehistoric island home to be exhibited in the music halls of Manhattan.
Available until: 1st December 2019
Silence
Martin Scorsese’s scorchingly personal epic, starring Andrew Garfield and Adam Driver, is a quietly towering study of faith and doubt.
Available until: 3rd December 2019

Testament of Youth
The always-excellent Alicia Vikander stars in this moving film based on the memoir of Vera Brittain, which depicts her fight to carry on living amid a seemingly endless wave of loss, as her brother and friends go off to fight in World War I.
Available until: 9th December 2019
They Shall Not Grow Old
Transforming archive footage more than a century old, Peter Jackson brings to life the people who can best tell the story of World War I: the men who were there.
Available until: 10th December 2019
Jimi: All Is By My Side
“I should be able to take any song and do it in a way you haven’t heard before.” That’s Jimi Hendrix in Jimi: All Is By My Side, a film about the musician that, famously, doesn’t have his music in it. But that bizarre shortcoming turns out to be the movie’s biggest blessing.
Available until: 12th December 2019
It Follows
Imagine someone walking towards you. Not very scary, is it? Wait until you see It Follows. David Robert Mitchell’s horror thriller follows Jay (Maika Monroe), who finds herself on a date gone terrifyingly wrong, when she wakes up post-sex strapped to a chair and is told that something is going to try and kill her. Why? We don’t know. Who? We don’t know that either. What we do know is that this entity will continue following her until it catches her and shuffles her off her mortal coil. It’s clever. It’s unconventional. And it’s very, very creepy.
Available until: January 2020
The Edge of Seventeen
Hailee Steinfeld is superb in this honest, frank drama about the pains of growing up.
Available until: December 2019
Burton and Taylor
Dominic West and Helena Bonham Carter are excellent in this underseen drama telling the story of Hollywood’s most glamorous couple, Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor, who acted together for the last time in Noel Coward’s Private Lives in 1983.
Available until: April 2020
I Walked with a Zombie
A nurse tending a paralysed woman on a Caribbean island discovers that her charge hides a terrifying secret. Jacques Tourneur’s 1943 classic stars Frances Dee and Tom Conway.
Available until: 23rd October 2023
Night of the Living Dead
George A Romero’s 1967 classc, which sees a group of people barricaded in a farmhouse to survive the reawakening of the dead, remains as chillingly relevant as ever.
Available until: 23rd October 2023

Happy New Year, Colin Burstead
Tragicomedy directed by Ben Wheatley about the difficulty of family relations. Middle-aged Colin organises a New Year’s Eve gathering for his extended family.
Available until: February 2020
The Rack Pack
BBC iPlayer’s first scripted original drama follows the rise of snooker in the 1980s, as a young Steve Davis faces a heated rivalry with Alex “Hurricane” Higgins. Snooker may not be the most exciting or mainstream sport, but the film understands that it’s about people as much as potting – and Will Merrick as Davis and Luke Treadaway as Higgins are uncannily good, one hilariously awkward and the other tragically self-destructive. Together with business guru Barry Hearn (a brilliant Kevin Bishop) crafting a new, professional era for the sport, The Rack Pack is a moving tribute to a bygone sporting age and a legend who simply wouldn’t exist today. The result is something everyone should go snooker loopy over, whether they’re fans of the sport or not.
Photo: BBC / Zeppotron / Keiron McCarron
HyperNormalisation
Adam Curtis’ latest documentary is perfectly at home on BBC iPlayer, freed from broadcasting constraints to ramble through the last three decades of global history to try and work out how we got to today’s world of Donald Trump and Brexit. The result is typically simplified and willfully obtuse, but there are thought-provoking flashes of inspiration amid the experimental mash-up of polemic and pop culture. Clocking in at almost three hours, no one else is making documentaries like this, and that’s something to be celebrated.
Available until: October 2021
Fear Itself
BBC iPlayer’s second original feature is the follow-up to teen documentary Beyond Clueless. Young director Charlie Lyne and the Beeb’s streaming platform prove a scarily perfect match, the lack of constraints giving him the chance to fully embrace the experimental nature of his film essay. The documentary stitches together clips from existing horror movies to explore how and why they scare us, but instead of an explanatory voice-over critiquing and giving context, we’re given a whispered narration from an anonymous woman who is working through her own fears. Contrasting cuts and eerie echoes arise during the hypnotic 80-minute montage, quietly raising questions while offering a fresh insight into films that have, in some cases, become all too familiar. As interesting as it is creepy.