TV critics – Page 69
-
-
Critics
Seven Worlds, One Planet
“It was all as gorgeous, breath-taking, moving and harrowing as we have come to expect from this world-leading branch of the BBC.”
-
Critics
The Accident
“This was bold, knotty drama, powered by a heart-wrenching performance from Sarah Lancashire”
-
Critics
Warrior Women with Lupita Nyong’o
“Celebrity travelogues are hardly an underpopulated genre on our screens, but Lupita Nyong’o at least offered something fresh and enlightening”
-
Critics
The British Tribe Next Door
“It remains to be seen what the Channel 4 commissioners were smoking when they put this on TV”
-
-
Critics
Modern Love
“One long, neutral-toned lifestyle advertisement designed to flatter New York Times readers and Amazon Prime viewers”
-
-
Critics
In the Long Run
“Idris Elba’s warm, witty, semi-autobiographical comedy feels nostalgic and modern, old and new”
-
Critics
Lenny Henry’s Race Through Comedy
“It was flabbergasting to look back and see how different the cultural climate was 50 years ago.”
-
Critics
Dublin Murders
“Pitched somewhere between a Nordic noir and a classic episode of Cracker, this dark, intriguing series has already wormed its way under my skin”
-
-
Critics
Million Dollar Wedding Planner
“What could have been an extravagantly point-and-boggle hour was instead infused with larger questions”
-
Critics
Van Meegeren; Catching Britain’s Killers; Rhythm + Flow
“Andrew Graham-Dixon navigated the story most entertainingly, veering between disdain and astonishment”
-
Critics
Doing Drugs for Fun?
“It manages to be compelling, honest and unpreachy, and treats its subject with robust respect.”
-
Critics
Motherland
“The first episode of series two was, for the second half at least, so crazed it was as if it had been at the crack pipe”
-
Critics
The Americas with Simon Reeve
“As always, he was able to find positive stories and fascinating characters throughout”
-
-
Critics
The Apprentice
“The Apprentice isn’t what it once was, but it’s still very much worth our time.”
-