Christmas gift guide 2012: Top 20 must-own cult TV boxsets
If this winter’s anything like last year, there’ll be plenty of days to curl up on the sofa for a DVD marathon of essential cult TV.
If this winter’s anything like last year, there’ll be plenty of days to curl up on the sofa for a DVD marathon of essential cult TV.
There’s no doubt that after ‘A Gettysburg Address’, Homeland is capable of recovering from even the most somnambulistic lulls.
‘Q and A’ is – for the most part – noticeably more low-key and stripped-down than anything Homeland has presented us with so far.
Rather than being staid or humdrum, Homeland is now heading into the great unknown, unpredictable and unmissable.
Like an express pulling out of a station, the second season of Homeland started hesitantly but is now building up a head of steam.
The closing scenes, so different and yet so perfectly juxtaposed, are more than enough to assuage any fears that Homeland might have lost its way.
With more twists and turns than a day trip to Alton Towers, Homeland”s first season managed to draw its audience in and build massive tension throughout its run.
A hitherto undeveloped idea in television is a mashup of 24 and Beadle’s About. Combining the nonstop action of a Bauer-ish thriller and the cringing embarrassment nail-biting tension of a hidden camera may at first glance seem like a suggestion on a par with Alan Partridge’s vision of monkey tennis, but closer inspection indicates that … >
Fox have confirmed that Kiefer Sutherland’s new US drama series Touch will be back for a second season.