Howards End finale, BBC One review - who isn't going to miss the Schlegel sisters?

★★★★★ HOWARDS END FINALE, BBC ONE Who isn't going to miss the Schlegel sisters?

Action-packed sprint to the finish for EM Forster's novel about class and gender

How good was Howards End (BBC One)? Practically flawless. Even if it broke into a bit of an action-packed sprint towards the dénouement, it’s been a triumphant reaffirmation of EM Forster, a canonical favourite back in the 1980s courtesy of Merchant Ivory and David Lean who has since fallen out of favour with dramatists.

Love, Lies & Records, BBC One review - Ashley Jensen too good to be true

★★★ LOVES, LIES & RECORDS, BBC ONE Kay Mellor's city hall drama tries hard to please all parties

Kay Mellor's city hall drama tries hard to please all parties

Love, Lies & Records (BBC One) is one of those bathetic titles that are very Yorkshire. See also Last Tango in Halifax, which didn’t do badly. Sleepless in Settle is surely in development. This is the new drama from Kay Mellor, who set Band of Gold in a sorority of sex workers and Fat Friends among people mustering at Weightwatchers.

Howards End, BBC One review - EM Forster adaptation is finding its footing

★★★ HOWARDS END, BBC ONE Julia Ormond steals the show from Hayley Atwell

The Schlegel sisters are back, but Julia Ormond (so far) steals the show

Can it really be a quarter-century since that finest of all Merchant-Ivory film adaptations, Howards End, was first released? So it is, astonishingly, which surely means the time is ripe for a fresh celluloid take on EM Forster's enduring 1910 novel about morality, love and loss in Edwardian-era England.

The A Word, Series 2, BBC One review - is it turning into 'Emmerdale' with a twist of autism?

★★★ THE A WORD, SERIES 2, BBC ONE Is it turning into 'Emmerdale' with a twist of autism?

Return of the popular drama about everyday Cumbrian folk dealing with an autistic child

At its weakest The A Word is just Emmerdale with a twist of autism, especially when the drama swivels away from the little boy to focus on adult infidelities, a grumpy patriarch, sibling rivalries and comedy Poles wisecracking in subtitles.

Gunpowder, BBC One review – death, horror, treason and a hint of farce

★★★★ GUNPOWDER, BBC ONE Dark and Gothicky treatment of the plot to blow up Parliament 

Dark and Gothicky treatment of the plot to blow up Parliament

Much is being made of the fact that Kit Harington is not only playing the Gunpowder Plot mastermind Robert Catesby, but is genuinely descended from him (and his middle name is Catesby). However, despite its factual underpinnings and screenwriter Ronan Bennett’s flowery 17th-century dialogue, Gunpowder is drama in a historical vein, rather than nailed-down fact.

Doctor Foster, Series 2 finale, BBC One review - revenge is a dish best not served twice

★★★ DOCTOR FOSTER, SERIES 2 FINALE, BBC ONE Mike Bartlett's mock Jacobean drama never felt solid enough to go the distance again

Mike Bartlett's mock Jacobean drama never felt solid enough to go the distance again

The second helping of Doctor Foster (BBC One) looked for a long time as if it would taste exactly like the first. Another plate of hell hath no fury, please, with extra bile on the side. That was essentially the plot up until the end of last week’s episode, in which Simon Foster found himself evicted for the second time. What would Lady Bracknell say?

The Last Post, BBC One review - sundown on the Empire

★★★ THE LAST POST, BBC ONE Lust and bloodshed on the Arabian Peninsula

Lust and bloodshed on the Arabian Peninsula

Peter Moffat, author of Silk and The Village, has turned his sights on the last days of Empire for his latest series. Specifically, Moffat has mined his own memories of growing up in a British Army family in Aden in the 1960s, where his father was in the Military Police.

The Child in Time, BBC One review - lost in translation

★★★ THE CHILD IN TIME, BBC ONE Ian McEwan's novel doesn't feel entirely comfortable in this TV dramatisation

Ian McEwan's novel doesn't feel entirely comfortable in this TV dramatisation

Apparently this is the first time an Ian McEwan novel has been dramatised for television, but whether The Child in Time was the best choice for that singular honour is open to question.

Rellik, BBC One review - tricksy procedural messes with time

★★★ RELLIK, BBC ONE Tricksy procedural messes with time

How long have you got to watch Richard Dormer's disfigured cop hunt down a psychopath?

There are two Williams brothers – Jack and Harry – who are mainly known for two series of The Missing. No chance of the Williamses going missing. Quite the reverse. As of today – Monday 11 September – they seem to have cloned. Two new drama series by the Williams boys have started on BBC One and ITV at exactly the same minute, and they will both conclude at the same instant six episodes later.

Doctor Foster, Series 2, BBC One review - belief suspended for a pacy and tense return

★★★ DOCTOR FOSTER, SERIES 2, BBC ONE REVIEW - The revenge drama stretched credulity, but quickened the pulse

The revenge drama stretched credulity, but quickened the pulse

They say that living well is the best revenge. To be fair, they also say it’s a dish best served cold and I’m pretty sure they’re thinking of gazpacho, so I’m not entirely clear how much real meaning is to be found in these dictums.