Showing posts with label Star Trek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Star Trek. Show all posts

Saturday, 28 June 2025

Raindance: Hang on tight

As usual with film festivals, I came to the end of the 33rd Raindance with a backlog of movies to watch and write about. But here's my post from the festival, which wrapped up last night with a screening of The Academy followed by a party - neither of which I was invited to, but that was fine. I needed the rest. I managed to catch 12 films at this year's Raindance, and the quality was uniformly strong. Here are the final four...

The Lonely Musketeer
dir-scr Nicolai Schumann; with Edward Hogg, Richard Glover 24/UK ***.
Featuring a single person in a small room, this experimental drama is shot in black and white and edited with restless energy that keeps the pace moving. Writer-director Nicolai Schumann relies heavily on the exceptional skills of audacious actor Edward Hogg to bring the surreal set-up to vivid life, creating a riveting one-man show. As the narrative unpicks the mystery, the film becomes increasingly murky and darkly disturbing.

Breakwater
dir-scr Max Morgan; with Daniel McNamee, Shaun Paul McGrath 25/UK ***
From the start, this British drama evokes a tone that hints at intrigue with tiny glances and brief cutaways. Writer-director Max Morgan uses eye-catching widescreen cinematography to create a strong sense of the settings and characters. Although these people speak in hesitant fragments, as if they're always hiding something. So while everything seems to move at a maddeningly underpowered pace the subtle performances bring out deeper feelings.

Beam Me Up Sulu
dir Timour Gregory, Sasha Schneider; with Stan Woo, George Takei 25/US ***.
Briskly traces the production of a Star Trek fan movie, this scrappy documentary uses terrific behind-the-scenes footage and extensive clips and interviews, plus some witty animation. Warm-hearted and engaging, it's a lovely depiction of one man's passion alongside remarkable explorations of US cultural history. Yes, the film goes down several sideroads, not all of them relevant. But everything feeds into a strongly entertaining portrait of a dedicated fanbase.

The Dark Fantastic
dir-scr Lg White; with Simon Boswell, Alejandro Jodorowsky 25/UK ****
Tracing the career of British film composer Simon Boswell, this punchy documentary deploys a flurry of split-screen and overlapping imagery to mix clips and interviews alongside a thunderous rock-n-roll sound mix. Filmmaker Lg White's whizzy editing style may play colourfully with images and text, but the focus remains tightly on the music. It's a sharply well-made movie that beautifully depicts the career of an inventive and prolific artist.

Full reviews of festival films will be linked here in due course: SHADOWS @ RAINDANCE >

Thursday, 16 January 2025

Critical Week: I feel pretty

While all eyes continue to be on Los Angeles as the extent of the fire damage becomes even more horrifically clear, the film industry here in London continues relatively as normal. Bafta announced their film awards nominations on Wednesday, the usual expected lists with idiosyncratic touches here and there. And among screenings this week, Michelle Yeoh popped in (on great form) for a lively Q&A at a press screening for Star Trek: Section 31, which spins her Discovery character Philippa Georgiou off for her own action-comedy mayhem. It will be interesting to see how franchise fans take on the film's riotous tone.

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There was also a late screening of Leigh Whannell's latest reworking of a monster classic: Wolf Man. Stars Christopher Abbott and Julia Garner make the most of the emotional angles in the somewhat thin script, and the grisly suspense will keep fans entertained. Tom Hanks and Robin Wright reunite with Robert Zemeckis for Here, a gimmicky experimental film that places a camera in one place for millions of years. The effects and imagery is impressive, but the mini-melodramas feel arch. From Lithuania, the New York-set drama The Writer features just two actors as they talk over the course of one afternoon, and it's properly gripping stuff, taking on big issues and quietly intimate emotion. Finally there was Charlie Shackleton's Zodiac Killer Project, documenting the film he never got to make. It's witty and inventive, and premieres at Sundance.

This coming week, among the films I'll be watching are Steven Soderbergh's Presence, the Irish drama Four Mothers, the musician doc Luther: Never Too Much and a restored screening of Peter Weir's Picnic at Hanging Rock, which I've never seen projected.

Monday, 4 April 2022

Screen: April TV Roundup

Recent travels and a film festival put me out of sync with television series, which I watch in gaps between movies to cleanse my palate, like an amuse bouche. And of course, the more I write about shows, the more are sent to me to watch before they air, so keeping up gets trickier and trickier. But I'm working through things! And here are things I've watched over the past couple of months...

Peacemaker
A riotous blast of James Gunn nuttiness, this DC spinoff is packed with terrific characters who are all at cross-purposes with each other. They're also unusually flawed for a superhero show, which makes them far more gripping to watch. John Cena is perfection as the too-focussed title character. Everything he says sounds sexist or racist, even though he's neither (his father, played unapologetically by Robert Patrick, is both and then some). Some of this is too wacky for its own good, but the central plot is surprisingly involving, and the core characters begin to feel like family: we wouldn't want to live with them, but we care. (HBO)

This Is Going to Hurt

Ben Whishaw gives a spectacularly committed performance as an NHS ob-gyn barely clinging to sanity amid the everyday chaos of his job. Writer Adam Kay based this on his experiences, and it plays at a blackly hilarious fever pitch, skilfully evoking the feeling of life out of control, plus a sense of impending doom. Thankfully the script continually surprises us, as do the unusually complex characters, with fine support from Ambika Mod (as Adam's newbie colleague), Rory Fleck Byrne (his gorgeous fiance), Alex Jennings (his thoughtless boss) and the great Harriet Walter (his imperious mother). And it's difficult to recall a more emotionally devastating series than this one. (BBC)

The Book of Boba Fett
 
While it looks great, making the most of its desert planet setting and first-rate effects, this spinoff series meanders between two timelines to tell the underwhelming story of the title character, played with understated steeliness by Temuera Morrison. Then it suddenly shifts and becomes its parent show The Mandalorian, which is much more involving. The overarching plotlines are a little awkward, such as contriving to get Grogu back into the show, but the Pedro Pascal brings some badly needed personality that sustains the simplistic storytelling. This includes a climactic battle sequence that's properly epic but so long and violent that it becomes oddly dull. (Disney)

The Afterparty

A clever premise sets this show apart, especially as it plays out so inventively. After a top actor/singer (Dave Franco) dies at his school reunion, his classmates are quizzed by a detective (Tiffany Haddish). Each episode centres on one person's account, told in different styles (including Ben Schwartz's full-on musical and Zoe Chao's bonkers animation) as bigger details emerge about the characters and their twisted connections over the past 15 years. The excellent ensemble includes Sam Richardson, Ilana Glazer, Ike Barinholtz and a wasted Jamie Demetriou. Each performer dives in fully to the sometimes frantic comedy and edgy drama. (Disney)

The Gilded Age

Is this the most sexless show HBO has ever made? Essentially a far less lusty American Downton Abbey, this lavishly produced series is set in 1880s New York as old money sneers at new, and dramas take place both up and downstairs. After a young woman (Louisa Jacobson) discovers her father has left her nothing, she turns to her estranged, imperious aunts (the fabulous but oddly muted Christine Baranski and Cynthia Nixon), and secretly befriends their ambitiously wealthy new neighbours (Carrie Coon and Morgan Spector). But it's relentlessly dull, with dense and oddly stilted conversations that leave little space for personality. I gave up after four episodes. (HBO)

Murderville

Too gimmicky for its own good, this comedy stars Will Arnett as a ridiculous detective whose ex-wife (Haneefah Wood) is the chief. Each episode features a rookie partnered with him for one case, with the hitch being that actors are playing themselves without a script and must identify the killer. Guest stars like Sharon Stone, Annie Murphy, Kumail Nanjiani and Conan O'Brien bring their specific energy to the show. So it's a shame that the narrative is set up so specifically that the show feels stale by the second episode. Little is made of the overarching mystery, Arnett is too dopey to be likeable and the only fun is found in the guests' throwaway gags. (Netflix)

Bridesman

One of the first series produced by a hook-up app, this wacky comedy features six brief but over-plotted episodes that follow chatty, self-absorbed Terry (Jimmy Fowlie), a bridesman in the wedding of his rather intense childhood friend Judith (Sydnee Washington). But he's unable to stop fantasising about her dumb-jock fiance (David Mudge). The story mainly centres on the cartoonishly spiky bridesdmaids, while Terry has a couple of superficial sexual encounters. It's bright and camp, and plays on several transgressive ideas, but it completely misjudges its intended audience by being merely goofy rather than even remotely lusty. (Grindr)

A N O T H E R   S E A S O N

Snowpiercer: series 3
 
Plotting gets increasingly central with each season, this time digging even deeper into the rivalry between Wilford (grinning villain Sean Bean) and Layton (tenacious nice guy Daveed Diggs). This war involves tactics, attacks and betrayals that grow increasingly nuanced. This isn't as compelling as the social satire of the earlier seasons (or the 2013 film), because the premise and characters are far more intriguing than violent tit-for-tats. But the season builds interest, adding dark complexity as things twist and turn around the growing possibilities that Melanie (Jennifer Connolly) is alive, and there might be somewhere on Earth that's thawing out. (Netflix)

Star Trek Discovery: series 4b

Fans will remain devoted, but this show continues its slide away from more intelligent interpersonal dynamics with each episode, falling back on much less engaging action, threats and antagonism. The superb cast skilfully continues at full speed, even in some dead-end plotlines. But it's tricky to stay engaged when favourite characters depart for realistic (but frustrating) reasons. It's also difficult to get very excited about another "anomaly" and the sciency jargon that goes with it. Still, the twists in the plot do manage to hinge around deeper character issues. And in the first-contact scenario in the final set of episodes, this season generates some terrific thrills. (Peacock)

O N G O I N G

Minx

A strong premise and terrific cast make up for some rather clunky writing in this enjoyable comedy about a group of people trying to launch a female-targetted magazine in the early 1970s, taking on the patriarchy of Playboy and Penthouse. Ophelia Lovibond is solid in a rather thankless role as an uptight feminist journalist who can't quite comprehend the sexy magazine she's editing. But she has great chemistry with Jake Johnson as the counterculture publisher who knows how these things work. Oddly, the show is still shot from a male gaze, essentially apologising for the lashings of masculine nudity. But at least the actors dive without hesitation. (HBO)

The Conners: series 4

As the grandkids begin growing up, this sitcom has found a variety of intriguing things to say about three generations of a family living under one roof. Carrying the plotting forward sometimes feels a bit forced, although the wedding episode did have some classic moments, while officially adding Katey Segal to this messy family. Laurie Metcalf still steals all the best lines, but everyone around her is on fine form too. These characters continue to have a properly current resonance, taking on big issues to create a much more grounded picture of American life than the usual shiny version on television. And the joke hit-rate is unusually high too. (ABC)

This Is Us: series 6

Quite why this show is ending with this season is anyone's guess, as the multi-timeline premise lends itself to endless reinvention. Oddly, these final episodes are circling around themselves rather pointlessly, continually revisiting the same situations and emotions without pushing people in new directions. The cast is still excellent, selling the big feelings even if we've felt them all before. Surely it would have been much better for the audience (and the ratings) to continue to push things forward into new territory, bringing new characters into focal positions. They've really missed a trick, and I wouldn't be surprised to see a spin-off or follow-up in a few years. (NBC)

L A T E   T O   T H E   S H O W

Shrill: series 1-3

I'd never heard about this show, but spotted a box set of all three seasons on my long flight to Los Angeles in March. I watched all of it, and really enjoyed the story of Annie (the likeable and seriously up-for-it Aidy Bryant) as she seeks to make the most of her life, even as everyone criticises her for her weight. Based on Lindy West's memoir, Annie is a superbly complex character, funny and confident, and also full of doubts. Relationships are also nuanced and beautifully played by a terrific ensemble cast (John Cameron Mitchell!). It's a rare TV series that's funny, hopeful and also realistically painful. (Hulu)

NOW WATCHING: Moon Knight, Our Flag Means Death, Minx, Bridgerton (2), Euphoria (2), Star Trek Picard (2), Young Rock (2), The Conners (4), This Is Us (6)
COMING SOON: Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, Only Murders in the Building (2), The Boys (3), Ozark (4b), Grace & Frankie (7b).

Sunday, 6 February 2022

Screen: February TV Roundup

I watched more TV than usual over the Christmas break, and then in January there was an onslaught of new material, while film screenings have been quiet. So here's an update on what I've been watching to kill time in between the movies...

Hawkeye
Due to my general exhaustion about Marvel-world, I was planning to skip this series. But the clips revealed a lively comical sensibility, so I've been sucked back in. And this is an enjoyable romp, with sparky turns from Jeremy Renner and Hailee Steinfeld as arrow-shooting heroes who bicker because the script insists that they must. The story is enjoyably convoluted and a bit out of control, packed with characters who are rather too sure of themselves based on flawed information. As Kate, Steinfeld's refusal to be the usual brooding hero is hugely refreshing. And the best surprise is the sizzling action-banter between Steinfeld and Florence Pugh's Yelena. Please give them their own movie. (Disney)

The Tourist
Jamie Dornan is terrific as a guy who wakes up in an Australian Outback hospital with no memory of who he is or how he got there. He makes a connection with Danielle Macdonald's rookie cop, while she intrepidly investigates his identity against all advice. Details about who he is and the trouble he's deeply into dribble out slowly over six episodes, maintaining a ripping sense of mystery while throwing in some heart-stopping action here and there. It's more violent than was strictly necessary, with one villain to many. But the variety of the baddies (from Olafur Darri Olafsson's man-beast to Alex Dimitriades' swaggering billionaire to Damon Herriman's wheezy cop) keeps things very lively. (BBC)


The Woman in the House Across the Street From the Girl in the Window 
Kristen Bell somehow maintains a straight face all the way through this thriller pastiche, which deploys every imaginable cliche of the mystery thriller genre with gusto. Although because those movies are essentially spoofs themselves (they never resemble anything like real life), this show really needed to go much further than this. Even the requisite steamy sex montage is oddly undercooked, as it were. Still, it's hilarious to watch Bell guzzle litre-sized glasses of wine as she gazes out her window, so emotionally wounded that no one believes she's witnessed a murder. As the whodunit takes some silly turns, more arch, over-the-top satire might have set this apart from the shows it's poking fun at. (Netflix)


A Very British Scandal
Claire Foy and Paul Bettany are terrific as the real-life Duke and Duchess of Argyll in this three-part drama about a 1963 court case that caused a seismic shift in Britain's tabloid coverage. There's a problem woven into the fact-based narrative, because it's impossible to end this story on a satisfying note. But the writers bravely refuse to embellish anything, so all of the events are deliberately left as hazy or undefined as history has recorded them, which is also slightly frustrating. Still, the entire cast is excellent, and the period is recreated with understated flair. It's also an eye-opening exploration of gender roles, centring on a woman who simply refused to be bound by the rules. (BBC)


Around the World in 80 Days
Lavishly produced on a remarkable scale, this grand adventure stars David Tennant and Ibrahim Koma as Phileas Fogg and Passepartout, with Leonie Benesch as a gender-swapped Fix, who's now a feisty journalist rather than a tenacious detective. Switching characters around isn't a problem, but the writers have essentially abandoned Jules Verne's novel completely, with big set pieces that feel contrived to add thrills at specific intervals. And the plot contrivances that have been inserted are surprisingly lazy and underdeveloped. Thankfully the actors are terrific, creating a nice sense of camaraderie between the bickering-but-loyal trio. And the landscapes are spectacular, augmented by above-average effects work. (BBC)


The Wheel of Time 
Clearly straining to be the new Game of Thrones, this over-serious epic about ancient lands and terrible wigs is bursting with convoluted mythology about the nature of fate (see the title) and how various people tap into power for good or evil, represented as white or black swirls, of course. The costumes designs are just as cliched, but at least the production is splashed with some bright colours to liven up the usual drab beige-greyness. Rosamund Pike produced the show, so it's surprising that she's wasted in an underdeveloped role (including two episodes in which she's unconscious). The rest of the cast has a fresh-faced intrigue that bodes well for a second series. Just give Pike more to do, please. (Amazon)


T H E Y ’ R E   B A C K !


And Just Like That: aka Sex and the City series 7 
This reunion show catches up with three of the central characters: Carrie, Miranda and Charlotte, played by Sarah Jessica Parker, Cynthia Nixon and Kristin Davis (Kim Cattrall's Samantha has moved to London). It works best when it's exploring how the characters have maintained their spark into their mid-50s, although packing so many momentous life events into these 10 episodes feels rather artificial. It also feels awkward as it tries to tick a series of trendy and politically correct boxes, while the darkly emotive sequences are rather soggy, as if concocted by writers to add depth on cue. That said, revisiting these characters is fun, and the lively and engaging new cast members add a fresh perspective. (HBO)


Dexter - New Blood: aka Dexter series 9
All these years later, we catch up with our favourite blood-spatter expert Dexter (Michael C Hall), who's now calling himself Jim and working in a weaponry shop somewhere very snowy. He's also being haunted the ghost of his snarky sister Debra (the great Jennifer Carpenter). Of course he's managed to fall in love the local police chief (Julia Jones). Then his now-teen son (Jack Alcott) turns up, triggering a series of momentous events that churn into a powerful finale. This has never been the most tightly scripted show, with its gaps in logic and continuity, but its characters have been so indelible that we hate to miss a single episode. And this limited series has clearly been created for the fans. (Showtime) 


A N O T H E R    S E A S O N


The Great: series 2 
Even more raucous than the first season, this historical romp continues to play loose with the facts while unpicking deeper truths about humanity. Everyone in the story is somewhat cartoonish, and the plots are bonkers, but that's the point, as present-day attitudes and dialog are overlaid on the 18th century Russian court. Now that Catherine (Elle Fanning) has seized control of the Russian Empire, her lovelorn husband Peter (Nicholas Hoult) languishes in house arrest. Although he can't be contained at all. The surrounding characters come into their own this season, orbiting hilariously around these bickering rulers. And then there's Gillian Anderson's riotous appearance as Catherine's mother. (Hulu)


The Witcher: series 2 
While this show still has some self-effacing wit, this season is far more serious than the lively, scruffy first set of episodes. This time it's much more about politics and power, as the characters jostle for position and engage in a lot of soapy melodrama that just seems silly because everyone maintains such a straight face. Which is even more astonishing since everyone is wearing an appalling wig. Thankfully, Henry Cavill knows how to rock a terrible weave, and his costars have plenty of tetchy energy as they circle each other. What makes this show so engaging is the fact that everyone is trying to find their place in this crazy world. But the writers need to have a lot more fun with it next time round. (Netflix)


Dickinson: series 3
The American Civil War is now raging, and the Dickinson family continues to battle among themselves, comically butting heads on all sides as poetry-minded Emily (Hailee Stanfield) tries to make sense of things in her askance, observant way. The narrative unfolds in a flurry of modern-day expressions mixed in with period detail in a way that's sometimes oddly jarring. But there's an important point being made here about the power of poetry to heal both a family and a society that are torn in half. And while the bigger issues may be rather overly pointed, and given rather a lot of artistic licence, the show does draw some well-deserved attention to the iconic poet and the challenges she faced. (Apple)


M O R E   T O   C O M E


Star Trek - Discovery: series 4a
Things get very dense very quickly this season, with yet another undefined "anomaly" causing catastrophe and confusion across the galaxy. The crew's various attempts to investigate this are rather tiresome, distracting from the much more intriguing interaction between them, which leaves their personal journeys to develop more slowly than usual. Sonequa Martin-Green is still a tremendous presence at the centre, complex and fascinating, and her connection with David Ajala's Book is at the show's heart. Also terrific are characters played by Anthony Rapp, Wilson Cruz and the excellent Blu del Barrio. But the departure of Mary Wiseman's Tilly feels like a mistake, as her fresh vibe is badly missed. (Peacock)


Ozark: series 4a
It hardly seems possible, but this saga turns even darker this season, as the Byrdes find themselves increasingly squeezed between the FBI, the Mexican drug cartel and local suppliers. As if the show needed another psychopath, the kingpin's nephew Javi (Alfonso Herrera) is perhaps even more wildly unpredictable than terrifying opium farmer Darlene (Lisa Emery). Meanwhile, Marty (Jason Bateman) keeps a level head, and Wendy (Laura Linney) is properly losing a grip on reality, especially where their daughter Charlotte (Sofia Hublitz) and 14-year-old son Jonah (a series-stealing Skylar Gaertner) are concerned. And it leaves things set up for even more carnage in the final run of episodes. (Netflix)


C A T C H I N G    U P 


Squid Game 
I defiantly refused to watch this Korean show when everyone else did, then finally gave in when I was in covid isolation over Christmas. It's an entertaining thriller packed with terrific characters and some gasp-worthy violence as society's losers are given a chance to make a fortune, or die trying. Colourful visual flourishes also make it stand out from bleak American thrillers. Although some more sharply pointed satire might make it more memorable. (Netflix) 


What/If 
I find Renee Zellweger mesmerising, even with her oddly pinched physicality. She's the driving force in this series, but remains mainly in the background as the central plot follows a young couple (Jane Levy and Blake Jenner) drawn into the gravitational pull of Renee's billionaire. The show is slick and prudishly sexy and, aside from the melodramatic reveals, it makes some nice observations about the power of greed and the strength of real relationships. (Netflix)


NOW WATCHING: The Book of Boba Fett, Peacemaker, The Afterparty, Pam & Tommy, Murderville, Euphoria (2), Snowpiercer (3), The Connors (4), This is Us (6).
COMING SOON: Severance, Star Trek: Picard (2), Star Trek: Discovery (3b), Killing Eve (4), The Marvelous Mrs Maisel (4).




Sunday, 22 November 2020

Screen: November TV Roundup

I'm still watching a bit more television than usual, thanks to lockdown - basically filling the time I would normally be travelling into central London for film screenings. There's been a lot on, and I'm behind with a few series, trying to take them one by one and getting easily distracted when something new pops up (The Crown!). Here's what I've been watching over the last few months, starting with a timely treat...

The Lego Star Wars Holiday Special
This animated 45-minute mash-up is an inventive mix of silly comedy and thrilling action. It's set after the nine-film saga as Finn and Poe plan a bustling Life Day party, and a magical Force Key sends Rey on a wildly chaotic journey through space and time, jumbling up the entire franchise. The mayhem is packed with knowing nods to fans, plus hilarious Lego-style gags as that black caped gang (Darth Vader, Kylo Ren and Palpatine) squares off against Rey, Luke and others. The holiday touches are amusing too, including Christmas jumpers, Poe's sentimentality and an unexpected snowfall. It's a lot of nutty fun, but not nearly as daring or ridiculous as the notorious 1978 Star Wars Holiday Special. (Disney)

We Are Who We Are
With the pungent subtitle "Right Here Right Now", this strikingly current series by Luca Guadagnino centres around teens living on a US military base in italy. The show has a loose-limbed exuberance to it that's engaging and freeform, allowing it to circle themes and deepen considerably as it spirals in unexpected directions. It also deliberately blurs lines of gender and sexuality in almost every character, which is fascinating as these young people take circuitous routes into their grown-up selves. The central friendship between Fraser and Caitlin is played with unapologetic complexity by Jack Dylan Grazer and Jordan Kristine Seamon. And their parents have their own messy journeys. (HBO)

Lovecraft Country
This ambitious series could have been this year's Watchmen, exploring history and major issues through story infused with fantasy. But it's not nearly as focussed or coherent. Jonathan Majors leads an above-average cast, holding attention even as the characters and plotting become increasingly opaque. Each episode is a combination of intrepid action and mind-bending supernatural freak-outs, all of which feels strangely random, especially as it never comes together to illuminate the bigger mystery. The themes are powerful, but the expository dialog is too dense, the dramatics exaggerated, and whole episodes are extraneous. Curiosity keeps us watching, but interest wanes. (HBO)

The Third Day 
With echoes of The Wicker Man, this series initially follows a man (Jude Law) to the island of Osea, off the Essex coast, where he runs into a freaky ancient cult that's up to something nefarious. And he's the person they're after. The perspective then switches to another woman (Naomie Harris) who arrives in Osea months later on her own private mission. These two plot threads are quickly revealed to be one, and the filmmaking approach skilfully keeps dropping creepy details into scenes, including wonderful performances from Law and Harris, plus Paddy Considine and an on-fire Emily Watson. It's uneven and not terribly convincing, but enjoyably chilling. (HBO)

Tehran
A twisty plot makes sure that this espionage thriller holds the attention over eight nail-biting episodes. It's about an Israeli agent (Niv Sultan) trying to complete her mission in Tehran while an Iranian security official (Shaun Toub) tries to stop her. Telling the story from both perspectives adds some unnerving nuance, which means that we don't want either side to succeed. Some of the plot points leave gaping holes here and there, and a tit-for-tat kidnapping tilts the story toward melodrama. As does a genuinely sweet romance that might just be part of a spy's job. But it's sharply well made and superbly acted, and it gets increasingly thrilling the events unfold. (Apple)

The Duchess 
London-based Canadian stand-up comic Katherine Ryan based this sitcom on autobiographical elements as a single mother who puts her daughter above everything else. There are some very funny and astute moments scattered throughout this show, and some terrific dialog, especially as Katherine storms around being brutally honest with everyone she meets. But she's not hugely likeable, and she mistreats the people in her life until they snap; and when they do something nasty, they're suddenly the villains. It's a bit frustrating to watch her fail utterly to learn anything from her errors. But it's blackly hilarious, and rather bleak fun. (Netflix)

Someone Has to Die [Alguien Tiene Que Morir]
From Spain, this three-part melodrama centres on a wealthy Spanish family that's infused with outrageously cruel bigotry. This latest conflict starts when prodigal son Gabino (Alejandro Speitzer) returns to Madrid from Mexico after 10 years away, and his father instantly exerts control, furious that Gabino brought a friend (Isaac Hernandez) home with him. The plot is simply bonkers, not only making very little sense in its histrionics, but always settling in on the worst possible things people can do to each other. As always, the great Carmen Maura livens things up as the imperious matriarch. But even her character is essentially thankless. (Netflix)

BACK FOR MORE

The Boys: series 2 
Diving straight back in with an all-new pile-up of decapitations, betrayals and Billy Joel tunes, this mis-titled rowdy series barely pauses for breath. The high-energy superhero characters are a mess from the very start, caught in spirals of inner turmoil and frustrated megalomania, which of course gives the actors a lot to work with and provides plenty of interpersonal fireworks. Literally. The various plotlines move in fits and starts, compromised by some soapy story points and sequences that strain to be over-cool. But there are plenty of intriguing wrinkles to the characters that catch us off guard, most notably whenever the engaging Hughie (Jack Quaid) is on-screen. (Prime)

The Crown: series 4 
Peter Morgan continues to mine the royal family for dramatic morsels, and as always his writing has the ring of truth to it even though it's pure fiction. Centring this season around Margaret Thatcher (Gillian Anderson) and Princess Diana (Emma Corrin), the show is immaculately produced, as each episode contains heart-stopping moments alongside the throwaway bits that make it feel so real. Even if the takeaway this year is that Prince Charles is a monster. And the cast deserves all the awards: beautifully anchored by Olivia Colman with Josh O'Connor, Tobias Menzies and Helena Bonham Carter, each of whom gets a chance to shine very brightly indeed. It'll be all-change for the next season. (Netflix)

ONGOING

Star Trek: Discovery: series 3 (in progress)
This season's opener sends this series into yet another whole new direction, and where it continues from here is beautifully crafted, reinventing the entire show once again with a very different set of tensions and intentions. The superior cast (led by Sonequa Martin-Green, Anthony Rapp and the awesome Michelle Yeoh) bridges all of this expertly, deepening their roles as they go while finding clever ways to reinvent the wider franchise for today's audience. Like the original series almost 60 years ago, this show continues to ask enormous moral and ethical questions in provocative ways, and it grapples with hot-potato issues using stories that are easy to identify with. (Netflix)

The Conners: series 4 
(in progress)
The astute writers on this sitcom have always reflected the times, and this new season is no exception. Embracing the pandemic and the economic carnage it has brought to the working class, the scripts are putting this already bedraggled family through the wringer with issues of health, work, finances and immigration flaring up in earthy, thoughtful ways. And throughout even the most serious stuff, this great cast (Laurie Metcalf continues to steal the show) manages to drop smart punchlines all over the place, reminding us that laughter can ease the pain, for a few moments at least. It's rare to have such a long-running show that actually feels like it's still going somewhere. (ABC)

CATCHING UP

Huge in France 
Acclaimed comedic actor Gad Elmaleh plays a version of himself in this amusing comedy about a top French comic who moves to Los Angeles to be closer to his teen son (Jordan Ver Hoeve), an aspiring model with his own issues. The show focuses on how Gad struggles with the fact that he's not famous in America and can't get a grip on the local sense of humour. With his identity in crisis, he's certainly in no shape to help his son pursue his dream, although his contacts come in handy (cue a terrific Jean Paul Gaultier cameo). Everyone in this show is struggling wildly with who they are, which gives the writers a chance to astutely satirise various aspects of show business.  (Netflix)

REALITY BITES

Reality competitions are comfort food during this pandemic, and have found clever ways to bubble, distance and so forth. The most comforting of them all, The Great British Bake Off: series 11 (C4), put its cast and crew in a bubble and made the show as normal with another terrific line-up of likeable contestants, plus a new host in the cheeky Matt Lucas. With a more complex style of safe distancing, Strictly Come Dancing: series 18 (BBC) is also back for another spin, with entertaining celebrities and up-for-it professionals. Quarantine measures make everything look very different, but there's plenty of glittery magic. And then there's I'm a Celebrity, Get Me Out of Here: series 20 (ITV), held this year in a superbly creepy castle in Wales, which has added some enjoyable twists for the typically eclectic cast of scene-stealers. And then there were two competitions that delayed their finals until the autumn: Britain's Got Talent: series 14 (ITV) saw the title going to a fitting winner who warms the heart with his witty quintessentially British act, while The Voice UK: series 9 (ITV) came back with two live shows to wrap up its truncated season and crown another seriously talented winner we'll probably never hear from again.

Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman hit the road again for Long Way Up (Apple), another likeable travelogue, this time from Tierra del Fuego to Los Angeles. The scenery is spectacular, and their stopovers add some pointed meaning. The first and last episodes get a bit bogged down in logistics, but it's a fabulous journey. And in Amy Schumer Learns to Cook: series 1-2 (Food) the comic and her chef husband take us into their lockdown life, teaching how to make cocktails and to recreate favourite restaurant dishes at home. It's loose and funny, with some great tips.

Finally, RuPaul had a few series running through the autumn as well, including Drag Race: Vegas Revue (VH1), following a group of queens as they launch a massive show on the Strip, and God Shave the Queens (WoW), with British drag stars putting on their own UK tour. Both featured plenty of lively backstage clashes, which isn't surprising with these divas. And both stage shows were cut short by Covid. I couldn't find a way to watch Drag Race Holland, and now Drag Race Spain is coming too.

I GIVE UP

  • Adult Material: I only made it through two episodes of this broad and contrived comedy-drama before giving up. The premise is solid, a soapy bit of madness set around the porn industry. But it's impossible to believe that these people are wealthy when they make such terrible porn and are so incapable of acting like humans. A waste of the terrific Hayley Squires and Rupert Everett. (C4)
  • Truth Seekers: As a fan of Simon Pegg and Nick Frost, I was looking forward to this ghost-hunting sitcom. But while it has a gently scruffy charm, it just isn't funny. Frost and Samson Kayo are a witty double act at the centre, as they face a variety of supernatural activity. And high-profile guest stars add sparky moments along the way. But after three dull episodes, I gave up. (Prime)

NOW WATCHING: The Undoing, Next, The Comey Rule, Des, The Mandalorian (2), His Dark Materials (2), Fargo (4), This Is Us (5), Superstore (6), Mom (8)

LOOKING FORWARD: The Stand, Bridgerton, The Morning Show (2), Dickinson (2), Shameless (11).