Until I Kill You, review: Anna Maxwell Martin is superb as the courageous Delia Balmer
Shaun Evans is unrecognisably vile as the killer John Sweeney, but it’s Maxwell Martin who steals this grim true-crime drama
Shaun Evans is unrecognisably vile as the killer John Sweeney, but it’s Maxwell Martin who steals this grim true-crime drama
For his latest mind-boggling opus, Sir David takes on the largest continent on Earth
Mobeen Azhar’s Second World War documentary fills in the gaps in the British school curriculum – but misreads some of its lessons
Frederick Forsyth’s assassin already has one superb screen incarnation in Edward Fox – and now this thrilling series gives us another
There’s an endless appetite for spooky stories, but this series kicks off with two ‘hauntings’ that have been raked over countless times
This exemplary documentary allows all sides to have their say on the shocking events at the Tory Party conference of October 1984
Inspired by her father’s diagnosis, Anna Richardson’s documentary provides a useful guide to what lies ahead for dementia sufferers
Filmmaker Karl Taylor spent three years searching the sea floor for two vessels that are believed to have sunk each other during WW1
Radio 4 has a welcome series of adaptations of Charles Dickens’s prescient works; plus, Punt and Dennis return with a new comedy series
From sparring wit in Much Ado About Nothing to extraordinary courage in A German Life, the late Maggie Smith let her work speak for her
Footage captured by Hamas and by survivors from the Nova music festival forms the backbone of this distressing, vital documentary
Worsley’s new series explores entertaining stories about how Victorian women sought highly creative escape routes to a better life
Despite being from the mind of Liane Moriarty, and having a cast led by Annette Bening and Sam Neill, this boilerplate drama is a slog
Francis Whately’s series about the late, great rockstar explores his time in Berlin, from flat-sharing with Iggy Pop to writing Heroes
Harriet Dyer and Patrick Brammall have triumphed over the ‘second series curse’, crafting a hilarious, affecting portrait of modern life
Joanne Bourne’s Flint tells the nigh-mystical story of a stone that has, with quiet majesty, borne witness to all human history