Manhunt, Apple TV+ review - all the President's men

★★★★ MANHUNT, APPLE TV+ Tobias Menzies and Anthony Boyle go head to head in historical crime drama

Tobias Menzies and Anthony Boyle go head to head in historical crime drama

President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated on 14 April 1865, five days after General Robert E Lee’s surrender at Appomatox signalled the end of the American Civil War. The ensuing chase to catch his killer, John Wilkes Booth, is the basis of Manhunt (based on James L Swanson’s book).

The Gentlemen, Netflix review - Guy Ritchie's further adventures in Geezerworld

★★★★ THE GENTLEMEN, NETFLIX Riotous assembly of toffs, gangsters, travellers, rogues and misfits

Riotous assembly of toffs, gangsters, travellers, rogues and misfits

Welcome back to Guy Ritchie’s Geezerworld, familiar from such slices of lurid villainhood as Lock, Stock…, RocknRolla and The Gentlemen (the movie). The Gentlemen (the TV series) takes some cues from the similarly-named big-screen event from 2019, but becomes its own distinctive self as it unwinds across eight episodes.

Prisoner, BBC Four review - jailhouse rocked by drugs, violence and racism

★★★★ PRISONER, BBC FOUR Jailhouse rocked by drugs, violence and racism

Sofie Gråbøl joins a powerful cast in bruising Danish drama

The notion of prison as a pressure cooker of human behaviour and emotions is hardly a new one, but it can provide formidable fuel for drama. It does so here in this ferociously gripping Danish series, which hails from the same production company as The Killing and The Bridge. It also boasts a forceful roster of acting talent, not least Sofie Gråbøl (aka Sarah Lund from The Killing) and David Dencik (from Chernobyl and McMafia, among other things).

Drive to Survive, Season 6, Netflix review - F1 documentary overtaken by events

★★★ DRIVE TO SURVIVE, SEASON 6, NETFLIX Real-life dramas in the paddock were too late to make the cut

Real-life dramas in the paddock were too late to make the cut

When the first season of Drive to Survive launched on Netflix in 2019, it was greeted with suspicion by some in the Formula One paddock. But with its sixth season now up on Netflix, just ahead of next weekend’s 2024 season-opening race in Bahrain, the show can congratulate itself for having helped to bring about a revolution within Formula One.

Kin, Series 2, BBC One review - when crime dynasties collide

★★★★★ KIN, SERIES 2, BBC ONE Dublin becomes a war zone in Peter McKenna's addictive drama

Dublin becomes a war zone in Peter McKenna's addictive drama

The end of the first series of Kin found Dublin’s Kinsella crime family ridding themselves of bloodsucking drug baron Eamon Cunningham, but this was not an unalloyed blessing. As this second series opens, the Kinsellas are having to make new arrangements with the Batuks, the Turkish family who are the source of all the local drug supplies. Snag is, the Turks want the Kinsellas to repay Cunningham’s outstanding debt to them of €70m.

The New Look, AppleTV+ review - lavish period drama with more width than depth

★★★ THE NEW LOOK, APPLETV+ Lavish period drama with more width than depth

Ben Mendelsohn's tender performance as Dior anchors the spectacle in emotional truth

The frocks, the pearls, the chicest branding of any perfume in the world… Sorry, this is not what The New Look is about, for those who swooned at the V&A’s recent Chanel exhibition. 

Griselda, Netflix review - Sofía Vergara excels as the Godmother of cocaine trafficking

★★★ GRISELDA, NETFLIX Sofía Vergara excels as the Godmother of cocaine trafficking

How Colombia's Griselda Blanco brought vice to Miami

When Colombian drug potentate Pablo Escobar made his comment that “the only man I was ever afraid of was a woman named Griselda Blanco,” he ensured that Ms Blanco would achieve immortality in the annals of crime. Netflix’s new series about Blanco, starring and produced by Sofía Vergara, claims to depict Blanco’s life “as faithfully as possible”, though that famous line “when the legend becomes fact, print the legend” feels a bit nearer the mark.

The Traitors, Series 2, BBC One review - back to the mind-labyrinth

★★★★★ THE TRAITORS, SERIES 2, BBC ONE Back to the mind-labyrinth

Spoiler-free paean to keeping the murder mystery game fresh

Asking whether there could be an end to melody given only 12 notes to work with, Sergey Prokofiev compared the possibilities to a chess game: “for the fourth move of the White there will be about 60 million variants.”

So it is with the basic formula of The Traitors, subject to the infinite variety of human foibles, ambiguities and treachery, plus superficial twists introduced by the master planners, with the wry and stylishly, sometimes outrageously, clad Claudia Winkleman as their conduit.