AUG29

The Crimson Petal and the White

Based on Michael Faber's bestselling novel of the same name, this four part drama series from the BBC takes us back in time to the deliciously Dickensian streets of London in the 1870s.  

At the heart of the story is Sugar (Romola Garai), a young, titian haired prostitute who, according to folklore, "never disappoints".  The series tracks Sugar's taffeta flounced  journey, along claustrophobic alleys, from her mother's tawdry brothel to "liberation" as a kept courtesan. But don't go expecting a pretty woman type resolution. There's a darkness to Sugar, revealed through her murderous imaginings, that gives this series a jagged edge.

Keep an eye out for Gillian Anderson as Sugar's fresco faced mother/ madam, Mrs Castaway and Richard E Grant as a creepily dexterous physician.

Has it charmed the critics? Andrew asks Diamond Road Management's Paula McGrath, and writer, Sam de Brito.


LABELS:    111 Hits    Fremantle    Granada TV    Showcase    Ten    UKTV

MAY30

Downton Abbey

It's the show that's ticking everyone's boxes and is certainly doing the business for Channel 7. But we're not sure how this terribly British period drama ended up on Channel 7 when it feels so Sunday night ABC. 

It's all very upstairs, downstairs with a lineage that can be traced, via scribe Julian Fellowes, directly to the Robert Altman film Gosford Park. There's also more than a nod to original 1970's series Upstairs, Downstairs, which in a strange twist decided to roll out a new season of that show late last year, some 30 years after the series had ostensibly ended. 

Joining Andrew to discuss Downton Abbey's Edwardian shenanigans are the ever-so-Upstairs Jo Casamento (The Sun Herald) and Angus Fontaine (Time Out).


LABELS:    Seven    UKTV