Living with Brucie, Channel 4
The other side of Bruce Forsyth revealed. But will he regret it?
So was it nice to see him (to see him nice)? Actually nice is probably the wrong word for Bruce Forsyth on the evidence of the opening documentary in a new series of Cutting Edge – tetchy, obsessive in his habits and (as we shall see) sometimes downright unpleasant, may be nearer the mark, as director David Nath gains access to Forsyth’s two palatial homes (both on the edge of golf courses, it almost goes without saying) in Wentworth, Surrey, and Puerto Rico.
Concorde’s Last Flight, Channel 4
How so many of us fell in love with arguably the greatest engineering feat of the 20th century
As an 11-year-old boy, I was awestruck from the first moment I saw Concorde on our three-channel black-and-white television, seemingly rearing up from its runway like a cyborg swan. At that age - and during that era - fact and fiction became vertiginously blurred when it concerned the fast-forward march of science and technology. While Factual-man was taking one slow-motion giant leap for mankind, Fictional-man was going where no man had gone before. And even if the US Enterprise did have warp-drive, our very own Concorde didn’t seem that far behind, as it hurtled through the blue at the proverbial speed of a bullet.
Storyville: Leaving the Cult, BBC Four
A subtle, powerful documentary that has implications far beyond its direct subject matter
Joe, Sam and Bruce may be three callow teenagers from southern Utah but they’re still smart enough to realise that the only world they have ever known is wrong, deeply wrong. So wrong, in fact, that they make the hardest decision of their lives by leaving their family, friends and community behind forever, as this is the only way to escape the madness.
Forever Young, BBC Four
A bunch of old rockers ruminate on why they just keep rolling along
The Untold Battle of Trafalgar, Channel 4
And the story of foreign sailors in Nelson's navy remains untold in a disappointing documentary
If you happen to be in Trafalgar Square in London any time soon, you should take a close look at the friezes that adorn the ground portion of Nelson’s Column. For there you will find, most unexpectedly, that one of the sailors depicted is a black man, one of 1,400 non-British seamen among the 18,000 who took part in the Battle of Trafalgar on 21 October, 1805.
Peckham Finishing School For Girls, BBC Three
The class war is on a reality roll: Peckham and Home Counties' lasses eyeball each other out
We know the format: take a bunch of posh, privileged types - held up as examples of cluelessness when it comes to how “ordinary” people live by privileged, overpaid TV executives - and plonk them down in the middle of some dodgy council estate. Remove their credit cards and give them £6.50 to last a week. Watch as they baulk at the amount of cash their new, jobless neighbour manages to spend on fags, kebabs and the occasional drug habit.
True Stories: We Live in Public, More4
A troubling film that says as much about us as it does the dot-com pioneer, Josh Harris
Who Do You Think You Are? - Sarah Jessica Parker, BBC One
BBC staple travels stateside with Sarah Jessica Parker
American television's desire to upgrade the BBC’s Who do You Think You Are? into a prime piece of emotional real estate was never likely to meet any serious resistance.