‘Dancing on the Edge’ episode guide
BBC Two’s Dancing on the Edge is an explosive drama set in the early 1930s following a black jazz band in London at a time of extraordinary change.
BBC Two’s Dancing on the Edge is an explosive drama set in the early 1930s following a black jazz band in London at a time of extraordinary change.
Whilst the film is sumptuous to look at and the cast list is an agent’s wet dream, it doesn’t quite come off.
Sky has announced that Cinemax’s new action drama series Banshee will air on Sky Atlantic.
BBC One’s Ripper Street is a new crime drama in the East End of London as it moves into the last decade of the 19th century.
The ending is downbeat, full of a sense of hopelessness and hugely challenging; brave and gripping television.
The third episode of Dancing on the Edge is a slower, quieter affair.
There’s a point in many circus acts when the ringmaster, introducing the next death-defying act, calls for absolute silence, warning that even the slightest slip or miscalculation could result in injury, dismemberment, or even death. There’s no chance of that in Circus of Horrors, and not just because it’s a couple of hours of lots of sound and fury.
What is fascinating is the light Poliakoff shines on the upper classes as we see their actions through the experiences of the band.
Colin Morgan has been cast in Quirke, a new drama series for BBC One starring Gabriel Byrne.
Starring Myanna Buring (Downton Abbey), BBC One’s Ripper Street is a new police procedural drama in the East End of London in 1889.