Saturday 18 May 2019

TV Column: HATTON GARDEN + THATCHER: A VERY BRITISH REVOLUTON


This article was originally published in The Courier on 18th May 2019.


NEXT WEEK’S TV

HATTON GARDEN
Monday to Thursday, STV, 9pm


Despite taking place just four years ago, the notorious burglary of the Hatton Garden Safe Deposit Company has inspired three films. The most recent, King of Thieves starring Michael Caine and Ray Winstone, was released only last year. You would, therefore, be forgiven for presuming that this four-part dramatisation of the biggest burglary in English legal history is surplus to requirements. Fortunately, it isn’t. Co-written by esteemed factual dramatist Jeff Pope (Philomena; Cilla; Stan & Ollie), it’s a typically well-researched affair boasting more depth and detail than its predecessors. A strong cast including Timothy Spall, Kenneth Cranham and David Hayman flesh out Pope’s compelling account of how an unlikely gang of elderly crooks (almost) got away with it.

THATCHER: A VERY BRITISH REVOLUTION
Monday, BBC Two, 9pm

29 years after her turbulent reign was vanquished, Margaret Thatcher is still one of the most divisive figures in British politics. You don’t have to be a fan to enjoy this exhaustive five-part documentary charting her rise and fall, it’s fascinating. It begins, aptly enough, with her early 1970s emergence as a prominent political figure and milk snatcher. Only the second woman to hold a position in a Conservative cabinet, Thatcher was a tirelessly driven workaholic. She was also, in the words of Ken Clarke, “a bizarre character, one of the most unlikely human beings I ever met.” He’s joined by other notables such as Shirley Williams and Norman Tebbit. It also boasts a wealth of rare archive footage.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL: DEPRESSION AND ME
Tuesday, BBC Two, 9pm


Much like Thatcher, infamous Labour spin doctor Alastair Campbell could hardly be described as a sympathetic political figure. However, to his credit, he’s had a long history of talking publically about his mental health issues: Campbell has struggled with depression for most of his life. In this candid documentary, part of a short series of programmes tied in with Mental Health Awareness Week, he explains and explores the various ways in which he’s learned how to live with his condition, in the hope of getting a better understanding of it. He talks to psychiatrists, doctors and members of his own family. The nuanced and sometimes drily funny results are the most valuable thing he’s ever contributed to public life.

VICTORIAN SENSATIONS
Wednesday, BBC Four, 9pm

The rapid change of Britain in the 1890s made Dylan’s decision to go electric in 1965 look like a big fuss about nothing. In this lively new series, mathematician Hannah Fry, psychotherapist Philippa Perry and – not to be outdone - actor Paul McGann traverse a decade in which the electrified modern world sparked into life. Our host in episode one is the engaging Fry, who provides a wry account of the dawn of this brave new electric age. She describes it as “an unregulated free-for-all where enthusiasm still exceeds understanding.” Britain was experiencing progress on an unprecedented scale, hence the sheer number of weird and wonderful developments it went through. You can’t beat a bit of eccentric Victoriana.

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