Sunday, 1 May 2016

The best TV Redefining Juliet; Paul Merton's Secret Stations Undercover


Shakespeare’s famous tragedy of star-crossed lovers is traditionally played by what we might call conventional, leads. But how do our perceptions of the play change if Juliet is small, unusually tall, has cerebral palsy and uses a fine documentary follows rehearsals for creative director’s theatrical production celebrating diversity, where six different women play Juliet and also discuss their life experiences. 

Beneath a curiously niche premise – Paul Merton travels the country using the rail network’s “request stops”, of which there are more than 150 nationwide – is a fairly standard, albeit charming, British travelogue show. Merton helps salmon at in the Highlands of Scotland, before heading down to the Lake District, where he visits the sprawling repository for “low-level” radioactive waste a followed by fell running up Black .
The penultimate episode of the deep-cover drama, now almost as good as Marcella over on . In court, Maya gives as good as she gets – but whether a smart black woman is able to get a fair hearing for her client in Arkansas is debatable. Nick, meanwhile, takes a secret meeting and is told “Big Ray” has been released from prison, and so he’ll be being closely watched – “Don’t get jumpy, though.” Easier said than done, obviously.
Where’s the damn rickshaw?” That’s just one of the big questions being asked in this week’s episode of the slow drama, dripping with beauty and humidity. The other one is: who’s the new viceroy? confronts Alice and about their affair, and the fabulous Cynthia helps the couple plan their escape to Australia. Will Charlie rumble what his wife’s been up to? Elsewhere, Ian gets drunk and makes a discovery that could threaten Ralph’s career.
First episode of historian Sam Willis’s journey along the titular trade route – the much-storied thoroughfare that meandered more than 5,000 miles from China’s ancient capital Xian to Istanbul and on to Renaissance Italy. These days, the Silk Road may not be as crucial to transcontinental commerce as it once was but, as Willis demonstrates, it endures as a both a conduit and a  of culture, religion and politics. Tonight, Willis sets out from Venice.
With climate change dragging the Arctic’s summer thaw into spring, the trip to the North Pole is harder than ever. Fewer than 50 people have ever completed the journey unaided, and adventurers Eric Larsen (pictured) and Ryan Waters want to join that club before membership ends for ever. This doc follows them through the unforgiving landscape where the sole respite from loneliness comes from creatures that want to kill them. Rock, meet hard place. 
The cult local government comedy has been resurrected of late by Dave, who are powering through its latter series via weekly double bills. Before its sixth and penultimate run kicks off next weekend, it’s time to round off season five, with Leslie defending a mini-golf from cuts before she and her staff take a fateful trip to Ron’s cabin. A fine excuse to treat yourself, even if you’ve already seen the series in full on Amazon.
Elysium is a space station decked out in five-star luxury for the wealthy, while the poor fester on the polluted Earth below. Matt Damon is miffed Max, who hatches a plan to sneak aboard to have his terminal radiation sickness treated. A pity the clever satirical setup dissolves into standard mayhem, with Max locked in a running battle with the brutal Kruger

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