You Don’t Know Me (Photo: BBC/Snowed In/Helen Williams) You Don’t Know Meĭropping into the timeslot vacated last Sunday by Showtrial is yet another courtroom drama, although the legal case here is more of a framework on to which to hang the story of Hero ( Samuel Adewunmi), a young man from south London, who is in the dock for murder.
Garraway reveals the latest on husband Derek Draper’s battle to recover from the impact of Covid, after he spent months in hospital. Suitably enough, his subject is former fellow GMB presenter Kate Garraway, who’ll be taking over Life Stories once Morgan has headed off to Fox News Media. Phil Lynott: Songs for While I’m AwayĮight months after leaving Good Morning Britain for criticising the Duchess of Sussex’s Oprah performance, Piers Morgan now presents his final Life Stories. Or Noomi Rapace in these, the earliest screen interpretations? For me, Rapace is the original and the best – the least cartoonish, in any case, as Lisbeth continues her fight to clear her name and thwart the blond hulk with the medical condition that means he can feel no pain.
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Who’s your favourite Lisbeth Salander: Rooney Mara (in David Fincher’s movie of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo), Claire Foy ) in the latest Stieg Larsson reboot), Superman & Lois (Photo: BBC/DC, Warner Bros Entertainment) Stieg Larsson’s Millennium There is a “revelation” at the end concerning DNA tests and what used to be called a “lovechild,” while a familiar roll call of royal experts are enlivened by Snowdon’s biographer, Anne de Courcy. Stop me if you’ve already heard this one: the story of the Queen’s younger sister and her colourful love life, in particular her marriage to society photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones (later Lord Snowdon). And the big question for Clark and Lois (played by Tyler Hoechlin and Elizabeth Tulloch) is whether or not their sons Jonathan and Jordan have inherited dad’s superpowers. That is the premise for this latest entertaining spin around the Arrowverse. So, when Clark’s mother dies, the family leaves Metropolis and moves back to Clark’s childhood town of Smallville – an idyll interrupted when The Stranger arrives, along with the secret experiments of Morgan Edge. Lois Lane is fed up because of cutbacks at the Daily Planet, while Clark Kent feels that his Superman duties mean he is neglecting his teenage sons. They begin with a pivotal 48 hours during Operation Dynamo, the evacuation of British troops from Dunkirk in May 1940, pondering the controversial role of the RAF, Hitler’s mistaken “halt order” and the famous flotilla of little ships. “In every battle in every war, there is a decisive moment when the battle is won or lost,” says former X Factor presenter Dermot O’Leary, introducing the concept behind his new series, in which he is joined by ex-Royal Marine Arthur Williams and military historian Lucy Betteridge-Dyson to chew over such decisive moments in British military history. 48 Hours to Final Victory (Photo: Channel 4) Saturday Pick of the day: 48 Hours to Victory Except that this time there’s lover Cam (Rebekah Murrell) to contend with – and she won’t easily be fooled. As her mum Trina’s mental health deteriorates, Bethan once again finds herself hiding the truth about her home life from her school friends. Yet another miraculous aspect of Kayleigh Llewellyn’s coming-of-age drama is the way it never stumbles into melodrama – in fact everything is beautifully judged as Bethan (Gabrielle Creevy) faces the fall-out from her father’s arson attack. Meanwhile, flashbacks to the 1960s show how the spirit possessing Chucky, Charles Lee Ray, became a pre-doll mass murderer. But there’s a fine balancing act going on here between the serious and the absurd as bullied, artistically minded gay teenager Jake (Zackary Arthur) becomes Chucky’s new owner, picking him up at a jumble sale. Now Chucky gets a television spin-off that provides an origin story for long-time fans and introduces a new generation to the Brad Dourif-voiced doll. The director Tom Holland’s 1988 slasher-horror movie Child’s Play introduced the world to serial-killer doll Chucky – and bred a franchise of five sequels.
The iconic venue is also where the evening concludes, with Travis joined by the Scottish Symphony Orchestra in a recording of their 2016 collaboration. On the nearest Friday to Scotland’s national day, a slew of programming celebrates the nation’s music, starting at 7.05pm with Biffy Clyro: A Celebration Of Endings, in which the band perform a one-off, live show at Glasgow’s Barrowland Ballroom.