TV critics – Page 80

  • Escape from Dubai: The Mystery of the Missing Princess
    Critics

    Escape from Dubai: The Mystery of the Missing Princess

    2018-12-07T09:34:00Z

    “A story so astonishing that at times even its participants are forced to admit that events sound far-fetched.”

  • North Korea: Life Inside The Secret State
    Critics

    North Korea: Life Inside the Secret State

    2018-12-06T13:20:00Z

    “A frightening, informative, look at life under the terror of a totalitarian regime.”

  • Rise Of The Clans
    Critics

    Rise of the Clans, BBC4

    2018-12-05T09:51:00Z

    “A superbly vivid account of how bloodthirsty Scottish tribes joined forces in the early 1300s to drive out the English.”

  • Nadiya's Asian Odyssey
    Critics

    Nadiya’s Asian Odyssey

    2018-12-04T09:37:00Z

    “The whole thing was a joy”

  • Gun No 6
    Critics

    Gun No 6

    2018-12-03T10:00:00Z

    “Quietly daring, profound and moving … went further in answering the question of why someone would pick up a gun than any single attempt I have seen.”

  • Kidding
    Critics

    Kidding

    2018-11-30T10:02:00Z

    “For all those who preferred the US version of The Office to the original it will do very nicely indeed.”

  • Death And Nightingales
    Critics

    Death and Nightingales

    2018-11-29T09:40:00Z

    “The book’s complex, flashback narrative structure and claustrophobic mood proved surprisingly well suited to the small screen”

  • Mrs Wilson
    Critics

    Mrs Wilson

    2018-11-28T09:37:00Z

    “This complex blend of deception and romance proved to be even better than hoped”

  • Babies: Their Wonderful World
    Critics

    Babies: Their Wonderful World

    2018-11-27T09:53:00Z

    “There was an orgy of cutesy background music, which added nothing except irritation, but there were useful snippets to confirm our adult prejudices.”

  • A Great British Injustice
    Critics

    A Great British Injustice

    2018-11-26T09:57:00Z

    “Conveyed a visceral sense of the incomprehensible horror of being the victim of such injustice.”

  • Inside The Foreign Office
    Critics

    Inside the Foreign Office

    2018-11-23T09:31:00Z

    “After last week’s pompous and staid introduction to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, this was an upbeat episode loaded with eccentricity”

  • Horizon: The Contraceptive Pill: How Safe Is It?
    Critics

    Horizon: The Contraceptive Pill: How Safe Is It?

    2018-11-22T09:52:00Z

    “An informative, thoroughly- researched and perhaps even too data-dense film”

  • The Final Table
    Critics

    The Final Table

    2018-11-21T09:38:00Z

    “Imagine a cooking programme so bombastic it makes Gordon Ramsay’s latest look like Lark Rise to Candleford”

  • Blood
    Critics

    Blood

    2018-11-20T09:48:00Z

    “It’s the twisted psychology that makes a noirish murder mystery so compelling, and Blood is dripping in it”

  • The Interrogation Of Tony Martin
    Critics

    The Interrogation of Tony Martin

    2018-11-19T09:55:00Z

    “Brilliant from the opening shot”

  • inside-the-foreign-office
    Critics

    Inside the Foreign Office

    2018-11-16T09:34:00Z

    “It is, technically, an exciting time to be an international diplomat. The problem is that this is just not very thrilling to watch”

  • Trust
    Critics

    Trust

    2018-11-15T09:29:00Z

    “This series has been like an ostentatious Roman feast — luscious and delicious, but self-indulgent.”

  • 16868162-high_res-stacey-dooley-the-young-and-homeless
    Critics

    Stacey Dooley

    2018-11-14T09:51:00Z

    “Dooley reaches parts of society that other documentary-makers would struggle to”

  • Liam Bakes
    Critics

    Liam Bakes

    2018-11-13T10:00:00Z

    “While Liam Bakes may not be the most demanding of TV cookery shows, it’s among the more enjoyable.”

  • Dynasties
    Critics

    Dynasties

    2018-11-12T09:47:00Z

    “The camerawork was gobsmacking, the narrative quietly compelling and the overriding message passionately but not stridently expressed”