Re: Upcoming Movies on TV (UK)
Posted: Wed Dec 04, 2024 10:19 pm
Lots of interestingly weirdo curios next week, as jlnight has noted. The two big film premieres are on Channel 4 with Everything Everywhere All At Once showing at 10:15 p.m. on Saturday 7th (which has not received a disc release in the UK as yet, so the television premiere has arrived first); and the Guillermo del Toro 2021 remake of Nightmare Alley at 10 p.m. on Sunday 8th. The other premiere is Rosaline on Film4 at 9 p.m. on Monday 9th.
Also there are nine Christmas TV movie premieres across the week - six on Channel 5 and three in a triple bill on the "ITVBe" channel throughout the entirety of Saturday afternoon.
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Repeat wise the big one as jlnight has noted is Film4 showing Andrei Tarkovsky's The Sacrifice at 1 a.m. in the early hours of Thursday 12th. Which is the first time it has screened on UK television since 2017.
BBC2 is showing Wang Xiaoshuai's So Long, My Son at 11:15 p.m. on Saturday 7th, which clashes up against Everything Everywhere All At Once. It has shown a few times before - premiered on BBC4 and then shown earlier in the year on the un-DOG-tagged BBC2 but at around 1 a.m. that time, which means that this is the first time it is showing at a decent hour! Which is important for a film that runs for three hours, although that means it still does not finish until 2:10 a.m.!
Also on Saturday 7th BBC4 has unearthed the 1984 children's fantasy series The Box of Delights to show on the run up to Christmas - the director Renny Rye does a new 10 minute introduction at 7 p.m. and the first two episodes (of six total) show from 7:10 p.m. Just as interesting is that later in the evening BBC4 shows the 1992 Benjamin Zephaniah film Dread Poets Society at 10:25 p.m., which also features Timothy Spall and Dexter Fletcher in the cast! Which has to be even more conceptually weird in its usage of Lord Byron, Percy Shelley and Mary Shelly than Ken Russell's Gothic! Who could have imagined that being trapped on a delayed InterCity125 inspired the creation of Frankenstein!
BBC2 is showing Bonnie and Clyde at 10 p.m. on Sunday 8th, which clashes up against Nightmare Alley. Also on Sunday 8th, and also clashing against Nightmare Alley, BBC4 does a night devoted to Judi Dench, and shows the first two (of four total) episodes of the 1966 entry into the Theatre 625 series Talking To A Stranger, in which Dench appears. Part 1 shows at 9:40 p.m., followed by Part 2 at 11:15 p.m.
Staying with BBC4, at 10 p.m. on Wednesday 11th they are showing another BBC drama directed by Mick Jackson after Threads from a few weeks ago. This one has a characteristically low-key Jeff Goldblum and Juliet Stevenson as geneticists discovering DNA in 1987's Life Story.
And on BBC2 at 9 p.m. on Friday 13th is a documentary Alan Bennett: 90 Years On.
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Radio-wise, BBC Radio 4's Book of the Week/Book at Bedtime 15 minute slot running through the weekdays next week is the abridged version of Alexei Navalny's autobiography Patriot, read by Benedict Cumberbatch.
Also there are nine Christmas TV movie premieres across the week - six on Channel 5 and three in a triple bill on the "ITVBe" channel throughout the entirety of Saturday afternoon.
___
Repeat wise the big one as jlnight has noted is Film4 showing Andrei Tarkovsky's The Sacrifice at 1 a.m. in the early hours of Thursday 12th. Which is the first time it has screened on UK television since 2017.
BBC2 is showing Wang Xiaoshuai's So Long, My Son at 11:15 p.m. on Saturday 7th, which clashes up against Everything Everywhere All At Once. It has shown a few times before - premiered on BBC4 and then shown earlier in the year on the un-DOG-tagged BBC2 but at around 1 a.m. that time, which means that this is the first time it is showing at a decent hour! Which is important for a film that runs for three hours, although that means it still does not finish until 2:10 a.m.!
Also on Saturday 7th BBC4 has unearthed the 1984 children's fantasy series The Box of Delights to show on the run up to Christmas - the director Renny Rye does a new 10 minute introduction at 7 p.m. and the first two episodes (of six total) show from 7:10 p.m. Just as interesting is that later in the evening BBC4 shows the 1992 Benjamin Zephaniah film Dread Poets Society at 10:25 p.m., which also features Timothy Spall and Dexter Fletcher in the cast! Which has to be even more conceptually weird in its usage of Lord Byron, Percy Shelley and Mary Shelly than Ken Russell's Gothic! Who could have imagined that being trapped on a delayed InterCity125 inspired the creation of Frankenstein!
BBC2 is showing Bonnie and Clyde at 10 p.m. on Sunday 8th, which clashes up against Nightmare Alley. Also on Sunday 8th, and also clashing against Nightmare Alley, BBC4 does a night devoted to Judi Dench, and shows the first two (of four total) episodes of the 1966 entry into the Theatre 625 series Talking To A Stranger, in which Dench appears. Part 1 shows at 9:40 p.m., followed by Part 2 at 11:15 p.m.
Staying with BBC4, at 10 p.m. on Wednesday 11th they are showing another BBC drama directed by Mick Jackson after Threads from a few weeks ago. This one has a characteristically low-key Jeff Goldblum and Juliet Stevenson as geneticists discovering DNA in 1987's Life Story.
And on BBC2 at 9 p.m. on Friday 13th is a documentary Alan Bennett: 90 Years On.
___
Radio-wise, BBC Radio 4's Book of the Week/Book at Bedtime 15 minute slot running through the weekdays next week is the abridged version of Alexei Navalny's autobiography Patriot, read by Benedict Cumberbatch.