Bully Boy, St James Theatre

Sandi Toksvig's play about combat stress opens a new London theatre

The St James Theatre has risen, phoenix-like, almost literally from the ashes of the Westminster Theatre, which was first a chapel, then a cinema and latterly a drama theatre that played host to productions of Oscar Wilde and Harley Granville Barker plays, among many others, and where Tyrone Guthrie once directed. In the 1950s and 1960s it was home to a production company run by producer Tony Furness and actor Alan Badel.

Our War: Into the Hornet's Nest, BBC Three

OUR WAR: INTO THE HORNET'S NEST Moving, memorable documentary follows the Arnhem Company as they pick a fight against the Taliban

Moving, memorable documentary follows the Arnhem Company as they pick a fight against the Taliban

It is a Hollywood truism that any film that begins with amateur footage of happy, smiling people ends in tears. Our War was no exception: fit young men messed about in the sun and somersaulted into the Med. However, their R&R was soon over and our boys were back in Afghanistan. As one member of Arnhem Company, 2nd battalion Duke of Lancaster’s Regiment, so articulately put it: “I wouldn’t come here on fucking holiday.”

Person of Interest, Channel 5

PERSON OF INTEREST, CHANNEL 5 Big Brother is watching you, but maybe in a good way

Big Brother is watching you, but maybe in a good way

Created by Jonathan Nolan (brother of film director Christopher) and exec-produced by the workaholic JJ Abrams, Person of Interest seeks to accomplish the counter-intuitive feat of finding something to celebrate in our surveillance culture. We're accustomed to feeling fear and paranoia at the idea that all our tweets, emails and phone calls are being routinely monitored by sundry mysterious agencies, but Person of... wonders whether there's a silver lining in the menacing info-cloud hanging over us.

Homeland, Channel 4

Is rescued US Marine Nick Brody a national hero or an agent of Al Qaeda?

While Homeland is hardly unique in being a TV series born in the shadow of 9/11, it may prove to be one of the most resonant and troubling responses to that ghastly event and its aftermath. Sergeant Nick Brody, who went missing with a fellow Marine sniper in Iraq in 2003, is found alive by a Special Forces team raiding a safe house used by notorious terrorist Abu Nazir.

Channel 4 has high hopes for Homeland

Award-winning series probes the underbelly of the War on Terror

If you don't fancy any more masters-and-servants dramas on a Sunday evening, you can thank Channel 4 for bringing the excellent Homeland to its Sunday roster. Kicking off tonight, it arrives in the UK basking in Golden Globe glory, having picked up accolades for Best Drama Series and Best Actress in a Drama Series in last month's ceremony.

Spooks, Series 10 Finale, BBC One

SPOOKS FINALE: Thrilling climax for long-running spy saga, but a triumph for the quietest performance of all

Thrilling climax for long-running spy saga, but a triumph for the quietest performance of all

And now we faced the final curtain. Spooks responded with an inspired burst of hyperactivity and plots-within-plots, and even a micro-cameo from Matthew Macfadyen as Tom Quinn, the original head of Section D. Up to now this hadn't been the finest of seasons, partly because the death of Richard Armitage's Lucas North at the end of Series 9 left a void which was never successfully filled.