The Outcast, BBC One / Marvel's Agent Carter, Fox

THE OUTCAST, BBC ONE / MARVEL'S AGENT CARTER, FOX Dark days in post-war suburbia, and another hit from the Marvel stable

Dark days in post-war suburbia, and another hit from the Marvel stable

Adapted in two parts by Sadie Jones from her own 2008 novel, The Outcast (**) is a morbid tale of emotional sterility and many kinds of self-harm. Leaving his troubled childhood for an even worse young-adulthood, our "hero", Lewis Aldridge, carves a great gash down his forearm with a cut-throat razor. However, he's only the most extreme case in a whole gallery of weirdos.

We Made It: Stage Technician Tom Robinson

WE MADE IT: STAGE TECHNICIAN TOM ROBINSON Making the unique mirrored box for the Young Vic production of Caryl Churchill's 'A Number'

Peek behind the scenes with the set builder of the Young Vic's amazing mirrored box for Caryl Churchill's A Number

If you’ve read any of the glowing reviews for the current revival of Caryl Churchill’s cloning play A Number, you’ll know all about the extraordinary set. Produced at the Nuffield in Southampton last year and transferred to the Young Vic this week, the intense production places father-and-son performers John and Lex Shrapnel inside a mirrored box where their every move is reflected infinitely. The audience is split into four around its edges, and watches the action through one-way glass. In between scenes, the mirror effect is reversed and the audience sees itself reflected.

DVD: The Yellow Balloon

A 12-year-old loses his way in a threatening Fifties London thriller

Post-Blitz London starts as a playground and ends as a shadowy nightmare for 12-year-old Frankie (Andrew Ray). The Yellow Balloon is both a fine film about children and Britain’s second X certificate release, not really a contradiction as it shrugs off its early disguise as a kids’ adventure yarn to explore how vulnerable a child’s life can be.

A Song for Jenny, BBC One

A SONG FOR JENNY, BBC ONE Frank McGuinness's adaptation of bereaved vicar's memoir says a lot about bereavement and nothing about faith

Frank McGuinness's adaptation of bereaved vicar's memoir says a lot about bereavement and nothing about faith

Rev Julie Nicholson, bereaved by her daughter’s death in the 7/7 bombings, became known as the vicar who can’t forgive. Her 2010 memoir, also entitled A Song for Jenny, detailed the way her pain undermined her vocation, to the point where she gave up preaching the following year. Playwright Frank McGuinness has been working on this adaptation since the book was published, and in human terms, it’s superb.

Humans, Channel 4

HUMANS, CHANNEL 4 Ghost of 'Blade Runner' hovers over promising new sci-fi series

Ghost of 'Blade Runner' hovers over promising new sci-fi series

New sci-fi series aren't exactly a dime a dozen on British TV, awash as it usually is with serial killers, cops and costume dramas, so the fact that Humans not only exists but is also bold and fresh-looking triggers instant brownie points. It doubtless helps that it's a collaboration between Channel 4 and America's AMC, home of Mad Men and The Walking Dead. It pitches us into a contemporary London which looks superficially unchanged, but has been rendered utterly alien by the new boom in synthetic humans, or "synths".

A Country Doctor, Phaedra, Guildhall School of Music and Drama

A COUNTRY DOCTOR, PHAEDRA, GUILDHALL SCHOOL OF MUSIC AND DRAMA Lost in their own worlds: a double-bill of early and late operas by Hans Werner Henze

Lost in their own worlds: a double-bill of early and late operas by Hans Werner Henze

Of the two works by Hans Werner Henze on this curious if ultimately satisfying double-bill, neither quite answers to the name of opera. Henze originally conceived The Country Doctor as a radio opera, that still-rare and unfairly maligned genre, which allowed him to set the whole text as Kafka wrote it, with the doctor a disembodied voice at front and centre, a neutral observer of his own mental disintegration while the imagined events of his long dark night of the soul work their horror around him.

The Met: Policing London, BBC One

THE MET: POLICING LONDON, BBC ONE Is this documentary just telling us what the Bill want us to hear?

Is this documentary just telling us what the Bill want us to hear?

This is supposed to be a major five-part documentary series probing into the innards of the Metropolitan Police, but it felt suspiciously like W1A in uniform. Was it the muted but insistently ominous background music, always trying to tell us that something really significant was happening when we were just watching yet another slab of b-roll footage? Or the dry, earnest voice-over, intoning that "this is a force under pressure"?

10 Questions for Musician Kevin Martin (AKA The Bug)

10 QUESTIONS FOR MUSICIAN KEVIN MARTIN (AKA THE BUG) The electronica titan talks collaboration, fatherhood and the Supersonic Festival

The electronica titan talks collaboration, fatherhood and the Supersonic Festival

Kevin Martin is a musician, record producer and journalist. He is best know for recording and performing as The Bug, however, has been and continues to be involved in a variety of other musical projects including: GOD, Techno Animal, Ice, Curse of the Golden Vampire and King Midas Sound. During 2014, The Bug released both the Angels and Devils album and a collaboration with Dylan Carlson of American drone-metalists Earth, titled The Bug vs Earth – which sees its live debut at the Supersonic Festival in Birmingham on Saturday 13 June.

Jansen, LSO, Harding, Barbican

 

 

Serviceable Mahler, but the violinist's Mendelssohn is sublime

How to respond to Mahler? That was the challenge set by the London Symphony Orchestra to Edward Rushton when they commissioned him to write an opener for this programme. Rushton’s response was to take a story from a biography of Alma and spin it into an orchestral fantasy. The story goes that Alma, listening to Gustav compose the Fifth Symphony, complained about the excessive orchestration, which he then dutifully toned down.