‘The Walking Dead’: Five questions that need answering
In anticipation of The Walking Dead’s return next month, we look at some of the questions which have been hanging over the mid-season hiatus like a lynched zombie dangling from a tree.
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In anticipation of The Walking Dead’s return next month, we look at some of the questions which have been hanging over the mid-season hiatus like a lynched zombie dangling from a tree.
The question at the heart of Inside Men is simple: which stops us from breaking the law … the knowledge that it’s wrong or a fear of being caught?
After a week of fevered conjecture about how Sherlock miraculously survived his apparently fatal fall from the roof of Barts Hospital, Steven Moffat has said: ‘There is a clue everybody’s missed.’
There is a tiny loose thread, a minor perplexity left to tease us until Sherlock returns to our screens: just how the hell did he get out of that?
So the long- rumoured Star Wars TV series, while still no closer to production, is still being developed and now even has a title; Star Wars: Underworld.
The Reichenbach Fall is not just magnificent, not just the best episode of the series (and thus the best of the show so far) and not just most likely the best thing you’ll see on the telly this year.
Although The Sensorites is almost three hours of slow-moving, black-and-white episodes light years from the colourful, lightning-paced contemporary incarnation of Doctor Who, the essential tenets are still in place.
With nearly nine months to go until Doctor Who returns to our screens (the longest gap between episodes since its rebirth in 2005) the wait is going to be harder than ever.
In the concluding part of Sherlock‘s second series, Sherlock and John lock horns with their old enemy in one final problem that tests loyalty and courage to their very limits.
The first two episodes are enthralling; well-directed by former producer Barry Letts with plenty of suspense, mystery and wonderfully undated location work.