The Mill, Channel 4

THE MILL, CHANNEL 4 Historically-based Industrial Revolution drama should have stuck to fiction

Historically-based Industrial Revolution drama should have stuck to fiction

Does it always have to be so flipping grim up north? In Channel 4's new four-parter, the Mill in question is at Quarry Bank in Cheshire. The date: 1833, during the Industrial Revolution. Villains du jour: the Greg family, industrialists and merciless exploiters of child labour.

James Gandolfini 1961-2013

JAMES GANDOLFINI 1961-2013 New Jersey-born actor renowned for portrayal of Mafia boss Tony Soprano

New Jersey-born actor renowned for portrayal of Mafia boss Tony Soprano

Mobster roles have helped define many of America's greatest screen actors, from James Cagney to Marlon Brando, Robert De Niro and Al Pacino. Thanks to his portrayal of Tony Soprano in HBO's TV masterpiece The Sopranos, James Gandolfini has made an unforgettable addition to their ranks.

Dates, Channel 4

DATES, CHANNEL 4 Strong casts and classy scripts distinguish short-form drama series

Strong casts and classy scripts distinguish short-form drama series

The idea of writing nine 30-minute dramas (or more like 26 minutes when you take the ads out) about the thrills and calamities of first-dating might have been asking for trouble, but seems to be working out unexpectedly well so far. The crafty part about the concept (dreamed up by Bryan Skins Elsley) is that instead of having to explain the setup and establish the characters' relationships, you just watch two strangers starting the process from scratch, so they're doing the job for you.

The Fall, Series Finale, BBC Two

THE FALL, SERIES FINALE, BBC TWO Exploitation pays as Belfast thriller draws to a temporary conclusion

Exploitation pays as Belfast thriller draws to a temporary conclusion

In the end, it was always going to come down to the last episode whether The Fall was powerful female-driven drama or, to quote another writer for theartsdesk, “misogynistic torture porn”. That conclusion, however, was as elusive as the ending of Allan Cubitt’s thriller; cunningly set up as if to strongarm BBC Two into a second series before the announcement was made.

The Returned, Channel 4

THE RETURNED, CHANNEL 4 Low-key French thriller plumbs existential depths

Low-key French thriller plumbs existential depths

"Maybe everything that dies someday comes back," Bruce Springsteen posited in "Atlantic City". The residents of the French Alpine village at the centre of The Returned may conclude that he had a point.  

The Village, Series Finale, BBC One/Endeavour, Series Finale, ITV

THE VILLAGE, SERIES FINALE, BBC ONE/ENDEAVOUR, SERIES FINALE, ITV The villagers lick their war wounds, and young Morse displays precocious investigative skills

The villagers lick their war wounds, and young Morse displays precocious investigative skills

Although Peter Moffat's story of a Derbyshire village has been designed to evolve into a 100-year saga, this first series amounted to an extended requiem for the fallen in World War One. The monstrous thunder of the guns has reverberated incessantly throughout these six episodes, as the story has wound its way though a woefully predictable trajectory of patriotism, optimism, disillusionment, despair and bitterness.

The Ice Cream Girls, ITV

THE ICE CREAM GIRLS, ITV A dark secret from the Nineties haunts Poppy and Serena, but do we care?

A dark secret from the Nineties haunts Poppy and Serena, but do we care?

A new drama series at 9pm on a Friday? How often does that happen, eh? Friday is supposed to be reserved for quiz shows, comedies and BBC Four documentaries about disco music.

The Village, BBC One

THE VILLAGE, BBC ONE The first series of Peter Moffat's dynastic drama ends tonight

Peter Moffat's long-form drama has a decent start

Peter Moffat's latest project is a long-form drama reminiscent of Heimat (the Edgar Reitz project that told a German family's story through the 20th century) in which he charts 100 years of life in a Derbyshire village up to the present day. The first series started last night and its six episodes cover 1914-1920; the following series haven't yet been commissioned, but on the evidence of the opening chapter Moffat must be hopeful.

The Lady Vanishes, BBC One

THE LADY VANISHES, BBC ONE The rolling stock is more interesting than the characters in remake of vintage mystery

The rolling stock is more interesting than the characters in remake of vintage mystery

This story is mostly familiar from Alfred Hitchchock's 1938 movie, starring Michael Redgrave and Margaret Lockwood. Among the things it's best remembered for are the comic double act of Basil Radford and Naunton Wayne, playing the cricket-obsessed Charters and Caldicott trying to get home to England from somewhere in pre-war Europe to watch a Test match, and Dame May Whitty as the titular missing person, Miss Froy.

Lightfields, ITV

Spooky cross-generational drama keeps its cards close to its chest

The generational time-bomb is a popular dramatic device - ITV were at it only  a couple of months ago with The Poison Tree - and new five-parter Lightfields boldly sprawls itself across three separate eras (1944, 1975 and 2012). Binding it all together is the titular location, a farmhouse in Suffolk, through which the different generations of characters pass.