Brian and Maggie, Channel 4 review - Thatcherism's date with TV destiny

James Graham's dramatisation of Brian Walden's fateful 1989 interview

The thesis underlying this two-part drama is that Brian Walden’s 1989 TV interview with Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher marked the end of the long-form, forensic political interview, while also being a catalyst for Thatcher’s resignation a year later. Stephen Frears directs, and James Graham wrote it, basing it on the book Why Is This Lying Bastard Lying To Me? by Rob Burley, a producer of a string of political programmes for ITV and the BBC.

Prime Target, Apple TV+ review - the appliance of science

★★★ PRIME TARGET Boffins and baddies collide in Steve Thompson's complicated thriller

Boffins and baddies collide in Steve Thompson's complicated thriller

An opening sequence of a drone flying over a busy street in Baghdad, followed by a huge explosion that leaves many casualties and a gaping hole where a row of buildings used to be, suggests that Prime Target is going to be another special forces, war-on-terror type of drama.

Out There, ITV1 review - drugs and thugs disfigure the Welsh landscape

★★★★ OUT THERE, ITV1 Martin Clunes stars in Ed Whitmore's smartly-written drama

Martin Clunes stars in Ed Whitmore's smartly-written drama

If nothing else, ITV’s new thriller Out There is a fabulous advertisement for the Welsh countryside. Many scenes were shot in Brecon and the Black Mountains, amid acres of wild, rambling moorland and majestic hillsides. But it’s not always a happy place. Here, farmer Nathan Williams (Martin Clunes) is trying to hang on to his family business, but profits are low, overheads are high, and the recently widowed Nathan isn’t as young as he used to be.

What's the Matter with Tony Slattery?, BBC Two review - absorbing but troubling search for answers

RIP TONY SLATTERY - WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH TONY SLATTERY? BBC TWO How mental illness cut short a brilliant showbusiness career

RIP TONY SLATTERY How mental illness cut short a brilliant showbusiness career

In the late Eighties and Nineties, Tony Slattery became one of the most ubiquitous faces on television, appearing regularly on Whose Line Is It Anyway? and Have I Got News For You while popping up in quizzes and sitcoms all over the place (as well as in the movies Peter’s Friends and The Crying Game). He even became a film critic for a while, hosting Saturday Night at the Movies.

American Primeval, Netflix review - nightmare on the Wild Frontier

★★★★ AMERICAN PRIMEVAL, NETFLIX Peter Berg's Western drama is grim but gripping

Peter Berg's Western drama is grim but gripping

It seems The Osmonds may not have been the worst outrage perpetrated on an unsuspecting public by the Mormons. American Primeval is set in the 1850s, and is based around the real-life massacre of settlers travelling from Arkansas to California by the Mormon militia known as as the Nauvoo Legion. This took place at Mountain Meadows, Utah, apparently triggered by rising tensions between the US federal government and Mormon leader Brigham Young.

SAS Rogue Heroes, Series 2, BBC One review - Paddy Mayne's renegade warriors invade Italy

★★★★ SAS ROGUE HEROES, SERIES 2, BBC ONE Paddy Mayne's renegade warriors invade Italy

Second helping of Steven Knight's hard-rockin' World War Two drama

Having carved a swathe of terror and destruction through the Axis forces in North Africa, the SAS return for a second series (again written by Steven Knight, and with another rockin’ soundtrack featuring the likes of The Cult’s “She Sells Sanctuary”, Deep Purple’s “Highway Star” and Magazine’s very apt “Shot by Both Sides”).

The Split: Barcelona, BBC One review - a soapy special with seasonally adjusted sentimentality

Abi Morgan's fine legal drama loses its sting on foreign soil

Maybe it was the timing, even though most of the action takes place in bright sunlight, that made The Split’s two-parter uncharacteristically soft-centred. This was a Christmas-but-filmed-last-summer special, often a guarantee of a mushy mash-up. And indeed, it was as if writer Abi Morgan had started channelling Richard Curtis. 

Best of 2024: TV

BEST OF 2024: TV Stars of stage and big screen all want to be on the telly

Stars of stage and big screen all want to be on the telly

They say cinema is dying (you never know, they may be wrong), but you can’t help noticing the stampede of movie stars towards TV and streaming. Many of 2024’s most memorable shows had a big-screen name attached, even if it was impossible to be entirely certain that it really was Colin Farrell inside all those prosthetics as he romped his way through the gripping second season of The Penguin (Sky Atlantic).