Prey, ITV

PREY, ITV Super Simm shines as wronged cop on the run

Super Simm shines as wronged cop on the run

"Policeman wrongly accused of murder" is possibly not history's most original story idea, but in Prey, writer (and TV debutant) Chris Lunt has turned it into a platform for a skilfully-controlled thriller that keeps your brow sweaty and your breath coming in short panicky gasps. It's greatly assisted by having John Simm playing the lead role of Manchester-based DS Marcus Farrow, since there's nobody better when you want a bit of earthy-but-sincere, with added soulfulness.

Vera, Series 4, ITV

VERA, SERIES 4, ITV Can the canny Geordie sleuth join the pantheon of Great British Detectives?

Can the canny Geordie sleuth join the pantheon of Great British Detectives?

She drinks beer, drives a Land Rover and can never remember the names of her sidekick’s wife and daughter: welcome to the offbeat world of Vera Stanhope, deliciously imagined by writer Ann Cleeves and actor Brenda Blethyn. ITV’s Sunday night cop show-by-the sea, Vera, is back with a fourth series which will be welcome news for a loyal few million viewers and for the people who like to sell Northumberland as a tourist attraction.

Line of Duty, Series 2 Finale, BBC Two

LINE OF DUTY, SERIES 2 FINALE, BBC TWO Gruelling police corruption thriller keeps spines tingling to the end

Gruelling police corruption thriller keeps spines tingling to the end

If nothing else, this second series of Jed Mercurio's brutalist police thriller has done wonders for Keeley Hawes. Not that she was in much need of a career pick-me-up, but the way her haunted portrayal of the much-abused DI Lindsay Denton has brooded over the story like a funeral shroud deserves to land her a few gongs and is doubtless already bringing in heaps of job offers. 

The Miners' Strike and Me, ITV

THE MINERS' STRIKE AND ME, ITV After 30 years, the battle lines are still clearly drawn

After 30 years, the battle lines are still clearly drawn

Thirty years ago this month, the National Coal Board announced the closure of 20 pits that were deemed "uneconomic", a decision which would incur the loss of 20,000 jobs. Arthur Scargill, president of the National Union of Mineworkers, responded by calling a strike that would become the longest industrial dispute in British history. It was also probably the most bitter, as the recollections of the former miners and their wives assembled for this documentary painfully demonstrated.

True Detective, Sky Atlantic

TRUE DETECTIVE, SKY ATLANTIC Death on the bayou, with an added philosophical twist

Death on the bayou, with an added philosophical twist

You could boil down the content of this new HBO import to an info-bite that reads "two detectives hunt serial killer in Louisiana", but that wouldn't give you the faintest inkling of the pace, mood or texture of what's shaping up as a remarkable chunk of television. You may find it a little slow, and the Deep South accents sometimes cry out for explanatory surtitles, but you're liable to find it seeping into your consciousness like a troubling dream you can't shake off.

DCI Banks, ITV

Dogged detective works well in print, but why don't the stories catch fire on TV?

Mothers and their sons provided the framework for the latest story involving DCI Alan Banks, the character on whom ITV is pinning its hopes to fill the vacancy of the nation’s favourite detective now that Frost and Morse are no more. Peter Robinson’s series of novels has been enjoyed for more than 25 years, selling millions in the UK and translated into more than 20 languages, but it took until 2010 to reach our television screens with Stephen Tompkinson in the starring role.

Inspector George Gently, Series 6, BBC One

Are Gently and Bacchus the most watchable TV detectives since Morse and Lewis?

“I like it when you’re a bastard,” George Gently growled at his sidekick, halfway into the first episode of this sixth series set in 1960s Northumberland, reassuring us that the partnership is very much back on when all appeared to be lost the last time around. And what a terrific opener it proved to be.

Silent Witness, BBC One

SILENT WITNESS Venerable forensic drama mixes grim realism with detours into the unbelievable

Venerable forensic drama mixes grim realism with detours into the unbelievable

Such is the level of confidence that the Silent Witness producers have in their new ensemble that star turn Emilia Fox barely lifted a scalpel in the latest instalment of the BBC’s long-running crime series. Either that or she needed a night or two off, and who could blame her? It's now in its 17th series, and Fox has stuck it out for more than half of them.

The Great Train Robbery - a Robber's Tale, BBC One

THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY - A ROBBER'S TALE Handsomely mounted, but how much is new?

Handsomely mounted drama, but you may have heard most of it before

We've already been casting a revisionary eye over Lord Lucan, the Cold War, the Kennedy assassination and the Profumo affair. Last year Sheridan Smith portrayed Mrs Ronnie Biggs for ITV, but what took them so long to get around to the Great Train Robbery itself? Just hours too long for the real Ronnie Biggs, as it happened.

Sifting the Evidence: the Great Train Robbery, 50 Years On

SIFTING THE EVIDENCE: THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY, 50 YEARS ON Jim Broadbent stars as DCS Tommy Butler in Chris Chibnall's two-part drama for BBC One

Jim Broadbent stars as DCS Tommy Butler in Chris Chibnall's two-part drama for BBC One

There’s a wonderful moment in Bruce Reynolds’s autobiography when he describes what became of his mate, a fellow train robber who had fled to Canada but was hunted down by the enigmatic Tommy Butler. Four and a half years after the Great Train Robbery in which crooks made off with £2.6million, Detective Chief Superintendent Butler had come to arrest Charlie Wilson and was knocking on his door.