TVReviews

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CRIME DRAMA MIDNIGHT MAN STV, Thu 8 May, 9pm 00.

Were James Nesbitt to be handed a script featuring the worst excesses of humanity, it would be difficult not to imagine him desperately looking for the jokes. Asides from his role as Ivan Cooper, the real-life civil rights activist of Bloody Sunday, there hasn’t been a TV part he’s taken which doesn’t feature him flashing a cheeky smirk or rolling his let-me-sleep eyes at some eejit. And even in this conspiracy thriller about state-sponsored murder there’s always an opportunity for Jim to lighten our loads.

In the three-part Midnight Man he plays Max Raban, whose fear of daylight leads him to rake the bins of the rich, famous and influential in an effort to get back into the journalistic game he slipped away from after the death of a source he once betrayed. Separated from his wife, Max rises at 6pm every day, just in time to ditch his daughter’s bedtime stories for JFK assassination theories before heading out in search of a story. It finally arrives in the shape of a steadily increasing pile of deceased anti-Iraq war activists, victims of a death squad led by, of all people, Reece Dinsdale. When Max gets too close to the truth, both he and his family become

targets.

If you can get past the Nesbitt factor, there’s a decent conspiracy thriller bubbling away, though whether fans of 24 and Jack Bauer will be consoled as their favourite programme continues to be denied them is unlikely. Would be fun to see James Nesbitt smashing someone’s spinal cord with a single karate chop, though. (Brian Donaldson)

REMOTE CONTROL

Brian Donaldson finds that natural beauty and unnatural acts are everywhere you look on the box

It's difficult not to come round to the conclusion that the BBC is utterly obsessed with teenage pregnancy. In recent times. we've had Baby Borrowers. Britain '5 Youngest Grannies and Adolescent Brunette Mothers on Crack with Guns. OK. maybe one of those is made up. but

102 THE LIST 8—22 May 2008

you could flick through the Current TV schedules and barely blink an eye should that title ever appear. Now they're at it again with Teen Mum High (BBC2, Mon 12 May. 9pm

00. ). a show which is part of their Bare Facts season about love. relationships and rutting among the y0ung folks of the nation.

The programme features one of Britain's specialist schools which girls who have become pregnant go to in order to keep up their education and find out all about the birds and the bees. which seems a little like bolting the stable door when the horse that got y0u up the duff is now out in the fields chewing on oats.

The girls are uniformly chavvy and all have mothers who themselves first gave birth far too early, but after the hour is through you should have melted at the sight of another strain on the state being pushed into the world. Still, if the BBC aren't showing us

f",

bairns with bumps. then chances are y0u're watching a ravishing natural documentary. Wild China (BBCQ, Sun 77 May. 8.05pm 000 ) is the latest in that line and is as familiar as it is gorgeous. Bernard Hill narrates this one in which crazy monkeys invade people's pools. old people break their backs in Technicolor paddy fields and no one mentions the Olympics. While there must be a dearth of acting jobs on Bernard's horizon. Melvyn Bragg has been keeping himself busy writing the odd book or two and on current evidence it seems he really should be giving up on his night job as his increasingly tired arts programme limps on through series after series. South Bank Show: Damned United (STV. Sun I I May, 70.50pm 00 ) is the perfect example of a good subject being regrettably wasted.

Yorkshire lad David Peace is one of the rising stars of the British literary game having produced psychological fictions about the landmark people and events which occured around his area while he grew up: his Red Riding Quartet focussed on the hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper. G884 dragged us back to the miners strike and with Damned United. he reflects on the 44 days in which mouthy old Brian

Clough was in charge of Leeds United.

It's a visceral and exciting book but Mel and co have made it out to be as gripping as a UEFA Cup tie at lbrox. Part one features Peace being given a tiny window of opportunity to read passages and explain his motivation while the camera lunges back and

forth from Mel's massive grin to images of Clough chatting to Parky. back to Mel, back over to Cloughy strutting about. The remainder of the show wheels out a succession of critics who by and large hate the book (Eamon Dunphy, Alan Plater. Sir Parkinson of Chat himself) giving Peace no chance to actually respond to the criticisms. A wasted opportunity.

Jon Ronson is a documentary maker who likes to take his chances and with Reverend Death (Channel 4, Mon 79 May, 70pm O... ) he's returned to the same kind of territOry he travelled to with Kidneys for Jesus as some religious people conduct themselves in a way that might be considered distinctly unreligious. Over the course of six years. Ronson has followed the story of George Exoo. a Unitarian minister who assisted the suicides of countless lost souls across America. even stretching his Grim Reaper-like influence into Ireland. What made him controversial (if you don't think the subject is already teetering on the dubious) is that terminally in individuals are not the people he's seeing off into the next life. but a bunch of folks who are merely kind of miserable.

Even those in general support of his actions question the methods without coming right out and confronting him about his motivations. though one British psychologist believes he has become hooked on the moment of someone's death and takes an almost orgasmic pleasure when chatting to a person on the phone as they swallow the hemlock. Never seeking to overly condemn, Ronson finds a soft spot for the Rev but is stricken with exasperation at the cash-driven goals of his new assistant as she takes advantage of Exoo‘s temporary incarceration to trade in her own suicide game.