Blu-ray: The Saphead

★★★ BLU-RAY: THE SAPHEAD Buster Keaton's intermittently entertaining feature debut

Buster Keaton's intermittently entertaining feature debut, with enticing extras

Buster Keaton made his name in a series of two-reel shorts made from 1917 onwards; The Saphead, from 1920, was his first starring role in a feature film.

Man vs Bee, Netflix review - or should it be Bee vs Bean?

★★★ MAN VS BEE, NETFLIX Rowan Atkinson's new comic character is no Blackadder

Rowan Atkinson's new comic character is no Blackadder

Rowan Atkinson’s strange little comedy (written by Will Davies) is the story of Trevor Bingley, a rather pitiable late-middle-aged man who finds a new job as a house-sitter for a disdainful and ridiculously wealthy couple, Nina and Christian Kolstad-Bergenbatten (Jing Lusi and Julian Rhind-Tutt, pictured below). They live in a high-tech superhome in countless acres of lush green countryside.

Hacks, Prime Video review - what's so funny about a career in comedy?

★★★★ HACKS, PRIME VIDEO What's so funny about a career in comedy?

Jean Smart sizzles in caustic Sin City drama

Acidic showbiz drama Hacks premiered on HBO Max in the States a year ago, and subsequently won a hatful of awards including three Emmys. Now, here it is on Prime Video, so we can get to see what all the fuss is about.

Project Dictator, New Diorama Theatre review - anarchic satire

★★ PROJECT DICTATOR, NEW DIORAMA THEATRE Anarchic satire

Loud madcap comedy morphs into mime and flops when it should fly

When Rhum + Clay conceived this show, the idea of a comic becoming a political leader might have prompted thoughts of Boris Johnson's carefully cultivated buffoonery on "Have I Got News For You" and elsewhere. Since then, a certain Volodymyr Zelenskyy has given politician-comedians a rather better name. Comedy, as is so often the case, is in thrall to timing.

theartsdesk Q&A: writer and comedian Tom Davis

THE ARTSDESK Q&A: WRITER AND COMEDIAN TOM DAVIS From singing Disney songs in drag to 'Murder in Successville' and BBC One's 'King Gary'

From singing Disney songs in drag to 'Murder in Successville' and BBC One's 'King Gary'

After leaving school at 14, Tom Davis spent 10 years working as a scaffolder on building sites, while always harbouring what he thought was the impossible dream of getting into comedy. Hailing from Sutton in south London, he had a go at standup and for a time found himself in drag, singing Disney songs. His luck changed when his childhood friend James De Frond got a job on Leigh Francis’s sketch show Bo’ Selecta.

Best of 2020: TV

BEST OF 2020: TV A terrible year for many, but a priceless opportunity for television

A terrible year for many, but a priceless opportunity for television

Okay, so some people taught themselves the violin or wrote a novel, but under this year’s circumstances, it was inevitable that television (terrestrial, cable, online or otherwise) was going to clean up. With large chunks of the population forced to stay home, what could be more natural than to reach for the remote controller to magic up another bingeable boxset or Walter's latest noir thriller?

Taskmaster, Channel 4 review - comedy show makes seamless transfer

★★★★ TASKMASTER, CHANNEL 4 Comedy show makes seamless transfer

Still utterly daft and joyous

After nine successful series, a Bafta and an Emmy nomination, Taskmaster has moved from Dave to Channel 4 – amusingly, the broadcaster that its creator Alex Horne first took it to but which turned it down. It has made the transition seamlessly – ie, without changing a thing – and is still utterly daft and a joy to watch. But then, when you have a great concept that's well executed, why muck around with it?