The Last Kingdom - 'one of the very best things on television'

★★★★★ THE LAST KINGDOM, BBC TWO One of the very best things on television

Karma comes to Kjartan the Cruel in the BBC Two blockbuster

The first series of The Last Kingdom in 2015 kicked off with a blockbuster episode which managed to encompass savage violence, dynastic rivalry and a speedy tour of the state of Britain in the ninth century, while allowing the central protagonist, Uhtred, to grow from boy to man. It was a virtuoso feat, and one which the opener of series two couldn’t quite repeat.

Puerto Rico: Island of Enchantment – Natural World, BBC Two

Caribbean conservationists fight back against man-made mayhem

The soothing voice of David Attenborough narrated this cautionary tale, which is improbably heading not for a happy ending but a happy new beginning. Puerto Rico, the so-called island of enchantment, overwhelmed early western visitors with its charms: its beaches, its rainforest, its animals, its beauty. But nature was unprepared for the greatest threat, human predation, and the general mayhem wreaked by homo sapiens on other species.

Meet the Lords, BBC Two

Was it really wise to let TV cameras loose inside 'the other place'?

To Westminster and Meet the Lords, a series which Radio Times assures me follows “the larger-than-life characters” in one of our “most idiosyncratic and important institutions”. Obviously it was shot well before the current Brexit deliberations in the Lords, and this first of three films was largely concerned with the passage of the government’s housing bill last year.

Andrew Marr: 'I don’t want to look like I'm in pain'

ANDREW MARR: 'I DON'T WANT TO LOOK LIKE I'M IN PAIN' Filmmaker Liz Allen explains how she persuaded a wary political journalist to let down his guard

Filmmaker Liz Allen explains how she persuaded a wary political journalist to let down his guard

Television audiences love seeing familiar faces in different contexts – whether it’s actors exploring their ancestry in Who Do You Think You Are? or politicians awkwardly busting their moves on Strictly. But there’s always a risk that the camera will reveal more than you’d like. For a political journalist like Andrew Marr, famous for hard-hitting interviews on his Sunday show, allowing director Liz Allen to make a film about his quest to recover fully from the stroke that almost killed him in 2013, required careful consideration.

Hospital, BBC Two

HOSPITAL Unmissable insight into the inner workings of the biggest, sickest patient of them all

Unmissable insight into the inner workings of the biggest, sickest patient of them all

It’s the ghastly scenario of a grim morality play. A man called Simon comes into hospital for the removal of a tumour in his oesophagus and the construction of a new food pipe. But there are not enough berths in the intensive therapy unit to ensure he can have post-operative care. Why? Because elsewhere in the country Janice has ruptured her aorta in a car accident. She is on her way to the London hospital which specialises in such cases.

David Bowie: The Last Five Years, BBC Two

DAVID BOWIE: THE LAST FIVE YEARS From Reality to finality: a searching look at his late renaissance

From Reality to finality: Bowie's 70th birthday is celebrated with a searching look at his late renaissance

It’s been 12 months since the news guy wept and told us: David Bowie, ever out in front, became the first to depart in the year of musical mortality 2016. After the initial lamentations, the memorial tributes have been a mixed bag. Best was the life story stitched together for Radio 4 from a vast back catalogue of audio interviews. Less impactfully there was also the well-meaning misfire at the Proms, plus a messy Dadaist meta-biog rushed out by Paul Morley.

The World's Most Extraordinary Homes, BBC Two

THE WORLD'S MOST EXTRAORDINARY HOMES Amazing architecture at the ends of the earth

Intrepid presenters seek out amazing architecture at the ends of the earth

This was the first of four programmes looking at houses made of extraordinary materials in various environments, some extreme. We began with "Mountain", and further explorations are promised to "Coast", "Forest" and "Underground". The presenters were a contrasting pair: the rake-thin and wiry architect Piers Taylor, and actress and property developer Caroline Quentin, both at ease conversationally to the camera and with each other. 

Judi Dench: All the World's Her Stage, BBC Two

Stellar guest list turns out to heap praises on much-loved Dame

The hyperbole began as soon as the voiceover did: “For most of us Judi Dench is M…” So much for Bernard Lee. The implication was that if you can remember him, then Judi Dench: All the World’s Her Stage was not for you. After all, she played James Bond’s boss for 17 years – until, at Daniel Craig’s suggestion, the sky fell in on her in Skyfall.

Lenny Henry: A Life on Screen, BBC Two

★★★★ LENNY HENRY: A LIFE ON SCREEN, BBC TWO The long march from the West Midlands to the West End

The long march from the West Midlands to the West End

You couldn’t make him up – a big man in every sense, outspoken, spiky, adored, coming from a black working-class family to move from the proverbial nothing to become so much more than something. How to make a documentary tribute without it being sycophantic or a hagiography? By putting the man centre stage. Arise, Sir Lenny, the subject of a BAFTA tribute.