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DOCUMENTARY THE 9/1 1 FAKER Channel 4, Thu 11 Sep, 9pm 0000

And so let’s roll with the annual grief-fest which marks the day when planes smashed into the heart of New York’s business sector and flattened any notions of US impregnability. In the years which followed, tales of heroism and sacrifice emerged from the rubble of Manhattan as figures such as Welles Crowther, the man in the red bandana who lost his life after pulling several survivors out, were hailed.

Perhaps the story which captured the spirit of the times most perfectly was that of Tania Head, a fiscal trader who was only one of 19 people above the point of impact who came out alive (rescued by Crowther) albeit with horrible injuries to her arm. Having lost her fiancé in the attacks, Head went on to front the World

REMOTE CONTROL

Brian Donaldson finds some dramas over-stretching themselves and failing. while those staying within their means do the business

10 Sep, 9pm) 00

imagine a compelling if difficult night in

Too many costumey period dramas on the box? Definitely. Looking for a twist on the frilly bonnet sub-genre that has infested the small screen for decades? Not necessarily, no. Well, tough. because if anyone is going to offer a new take on a fusty old formula. it's our dear friends at ITV. Only those with a working knowledge and abiding love of Pride and Prejudice will get anything out of Lost in Austen (/TVI, Wed IO Sep, 9pm) 0 and happily going about my normal day in possession of neither. this seems like a below average 26-minute Tales of the Unexpected dragged out for week

after tedious week on primetime (at least until the Champions League boots it into touch). Amanda Price (Jemima Booper) gets so entangled in her obsession with P8P that she ends up having conversations with Elizabeth Bennet in her bathroom before discovering that her Narrria-esgue shower opens up onto a world of ‘sufferings and oppositions'. Suffering is about right. And before you ask. yes. Hugh Bonneville is in it.

Hot on the tail of David Hare's My Zinc Bed comes another stageplay leaping on to the telly as we get Caryl Churchill's A Number (BBCQ, Wed

Trade Center Survivors Network. But after several years as a 9/11 figurehead, Head’s story began to unravel as reporters discovered inconsistencies within her account and the full deception came to light. Not only was Head not pulled from the wreckage, but she wasn’t even in New York that day. There was no fiancé and her injuries were sustained in a horseriding accident or a car crash: the trail of lies went back some way.

For conspiracy theorists, this terrible tale acted as a microcosm of the official 9/11 story: a tissue of lies and a spreading of misinformation which misled a traumatised American public desperate for the truth about what happened on that epochal day. The swift disappearance of Head and eventual rumours of her suicide simply left a Ground Zero-sized hole in another 9/11 mystery. (Brian Donaldson)

the theatre watching actors such as Tom Wilkinson and Rhys lfans wrestling with Churchill's often impenetrable text. When it's in your living room. the choices left open to you are constant tea-making (check) and inevitable sofa-dozing (check). This meditation on human identity which examines the issue of human cloning is certainly a heavyweight topic which deserves attention. But the idea to have a closing shot of lfans' character staring at a room full of his clones (or. more accurately. comedy stereotypes) should really have been drowned at birth.

There's nothing particularly original about Mutual Friends (8807, Tue 9

. It‘s easy to

Sep, 9pm) .0. as it winds its merry way through a six-part trawl of modern late-thirtysomething relationships. Just seeing the likes of Marc Warren, Keeley Hawes and Alexander Armstrong having a ball with some light comedy drama is a pleasure in these uncertain post- Olympic times. At the beginning of The Children (/Tl/l, Mon 8 Sep, 9pm) .00 . a young girl is found

murdered in her own backyard. Stepfather Kevin Whater returns home to find the police cordoning off his home and the action slips back three months. Even without the barrier of a Caryl Churchill script. this is a troublesome tale to follow. as the backdrop of multi-stepfamilies has various parents here and a number of children there flitting in and out of different domestic situations. Throw in a murder mystery, allow to simmer for half an hour and simply wait for your head to explode. Chances are you'll quickly come up with yOur own number one suspect before jumping around a variety of candidates. Often. though not exclusively, it'll end up being the first person you thought of. Not really sure what's going on in Cracked {/TVi, Thu 4 Sep, 70.40pm) 00 either. a new drama series set

in a residential rehab clinic in the Scottish countryside. After STV's OK High Times arrives this not—so—alright affair in which a collection of disturbed types upset each other as we wonder out loud whether those in charge are the ones who really need treatment etc. Perhaps this will spawn a new sub-genre of ‘uninterrtional-comedy drama-lite'. which suitably describes this clumsy and clunky effort. And before you ask. no. Russell Brand isn't in it revisiting the addict he played in The Abbey. though it might have been the only thing to save Cracked.

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