fri 23/05/2025

tv

Shutdown: The Virus That Changed Our World, Sky Documentaries review - a chaotic response and an uncertain future

Adam Sweeting

It’s too early for a definitive account of the Covid-19 pandemic, and this was very much a Sky News version of what we’ve been through so far. Although it seems the virus has peaked and we’re entering a tentative stage of partial de-lockdown, the message was relentlessly grim.

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Philharmonia, Channel 4 review - death on the podium

Adam Sweeting

Great idea to use a symphony orchestra as the basis for a TV drama, because all of human life is there.

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Space Force, Netflix review - fails to launch

Veronica Lee

Since Donald Trump's election as US President in 2016, I imagine satirists have slowly lost the will to live – as nothing they can write can outdo his buffoonery.

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Unprecedented, BBC Four review - perspectives on the pandemic

Adam Sweeting

This short series of new dramas (on BBC Four) by a group of leading playwrights was commissioned by Headlong and Century Films, a week before the virus lockdown was announced on 23 March, and represents an artistic first...

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A House Through Time, Series 3, BBC Two review - Bristol under the microscope

Adam Sweeting

David Olusoga’s A House Through Time concept (BBC Two) has proved a popular hit, using a specific property as a keyhole through which to observe historical and social changes. After previously picking sites in Liverpool and Newcastle, this time he’s chosen Bristol, the city where he has lived for over 20 years.

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Defending Jacob, Apple TV+ review - does murder run in the family?

Adam Sweeting

Since it debuted in November last year, Apple TV+ has barely made a dent in a market largely shaped by Netflix, but this eight-part adaptation of William Landay’s bestselling novel is a decisive step in the right direction.

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A Very British Hotel Chain: Inside Best Western, Channel 4 review - requiem for the hospitality industry?

Adam Sweeting

Do TV companies get some sort of financial incentive to use the phrase “A Very British…” in their programme titles? This now-meaningless descriptor has been applied to airlines, brothels, political coups, the Renaissance, Margaret Thatcher, sex scandals, Brexit and lord knows what else. When you can’t think of an original title, you know what to do.

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Harry's Heroes: Euro Having a Laugh, ITV review - jokey documentary delivers painful emotional truths

Adam Sweeting

Former Liverpool manager Bill Shankly famously commented that football is far more serious than a matter of life and death.

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Arena: The Changin' Times of Ike White, BBC Four review - musical mystery becomes personal

India Lewis

The most obvious comparison for The Changin’ Times of Ike White (BBC Four) is 2012’s Searching for Sugar Man, with its story of a potential star having vanished into thin air at the brink of fame and fortune.

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Hollywood, Netflix review - rosy escapism serving good causes

David Nice

If you're catering for wish fulfilment, you might as well go the whole hog. Some say that Ryan Murphy and Ian Brennan, in their latest peachy extravaganza, aim no higher than the cheesier fantasies of the late 1940s Hollywood they take into neverland.

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