30 Days of Fright: Christmas 2011 DVD roundup
Your brain is empty when it comes round to thinking of what to give your Auntie Linda this Christmas, until it finally strikes you: Kill List is the ideal yuletide treat for a loved one.
Your brain is empty when it comes round to thinking of what to give your Auntie Linda this Christmas, until it finally strikes you: Kill List is the ideal yuletide treat for a loved one.
The core concepts of The Inbetweeners are very much apparent and ultimately create an excellent send-off for the characters and show.
In six nicely contained but flowing episodes, Harry takes centre stage like never before.
The fourth series of The Sarah Jane Adventures continues to be bold and thrilling, with a genuinely charismatic ensemble.
Premature burial, feral women, some exceedingly dodgy childcare and, erm, Nazi zombie horses all have a role to play in this year’s advent.
For those uninitiated into the wonders of dinosaurs, Planet Dinosaur is as good a starting point as any, and for those seeking their fix, the series successfully satiates that particular craving.
When it comes down to it, how much you enjoy Series 6 is down to what you believe Who actually is.
Viewed purely as a drama, this six-part serial for children filmed entirely on location in London in 1968 is risible as best. As a document of a halcyon time now long past, it’s enthralling.
For many of us, Torchwood: Miracle Day was a disappointment. Too baggy and too sprawling a journey of ten weeks, it felt like a drunken meander through various high-octane scenarios. And, like many a drunken meander, it began with ill-judged certainty, became directionless before leading to violence, then ultimately left us scratching our heads, questioning … >
The most successful of Irwin Allen’s 1960s television sci-fi series takes a bow on DVD as this final season of underwater escapades bids a fond, if undignified farewell.