Marlborough Express

This month’s must-see TV

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As the cold weather closes in for the next couple of months, it’s good to know there are plenty of viewing options to warm up the country’s long winter nights. While the free-to-air channels are once again dominated by multi-night reality shows such as

Big Brother (TV3) and the new-look Masterchef Australia (TVNZ2), there are lots of alternativ­es for those seeking less-manufactur­ed dramatic fare.

Netflix’s eclectic lineup includes a new season of The Umbrella Academy (July 31), a reboot of the popular 1980s and 90s pseudo-documentar­y series Unsolved Mysteries (on now), a re-imagining of

The Babysitter­s Club (from today), highly anticipate­d comic-book adaptation Warrior Nun (on now), The Grudge-movie franchise spin-off Ju On: Origins (from today) and the Spanish-version of You, Dark Desire (July 24).

Sky is celebratin­g July 7’s Neon-lightbox merger with the exclusive New Zealand debuts of the Zoe Kravitz-led High Fidelity (July 13) and the Kat Dennings vehicle Dollface (July 29), the History channel has Jeff Daniels’ six-hour stint as Washington (July 6), and National Geographic boasts the second season of Gordon Ramsay: Uncharted (July 7).

Elsewhere, Acorn TV has season nine of longrunnin­g British dramedy Cold Feet, TVNZ Ondemand has a new Kiwi kids’ series The Exceptiona­l Squad (from tomorrow), TV3 has another round of the Dwayne Johnson-hosted

Titan Games (on now), TVNZ1 has former Blackadder star Tony Robinson travelling Around the World By Train (on now), and July 31 sees the welcome return of those felty favourites in Disney+’s Muppets Now.

However, after looking through the schedules, Stuff has come up with a list of 10 shows we believe are well worth checking out this month.

This 10-part reimaginin­g of the Arthurian legend is based on the recent young adult illustrate­d novel by Frank Miller and Tom Wheeler. It focuses on a teenage sorceress named Nimue who encounters a young man on a quest to find a powerful and ancient sword. 13 Reasons Why’s Katherine Langford and Westworld’s Gustaf Skarsgard star.

Patrick ‘‘Mcdreamy’’ Dempsey stars as business powerbroke­r Dominic Morgan in this 10-part, 2011 London-set drama about a high-flying Italian banker whose life goes into a downward spiral after his drugaddict­ed wife is involved in a scandal.

Based on the best-selling novel by

Guido Maria Brera, the show is also scheduled to debut on Neon on July 15.

Mark Bonnar and Chernobyl’s Jamie

Sives star as two very different brothers in this British contempora­ry crime-thriller.

Max and Jake are forced to join forces after they accidental­ly kill an old man. ‘‘What elevates Guilt – besides the artful direction, eye-catching production design and a killer soundtrack – is the rich river of black humour that bubbles through it,’’ wrote The Guardian’s Graeme Virtue.

Utrax programme. She finds assistance in the unlikely form of her previous nemesis, CIA agent Marissa Wiegler (Mireille Enos), who must protect herself and Hanna from the ruthless organisati­on she once trusted.

Based on Sakyo Komatsu’s best-selling

1973 disaster novel (which took him nine years to write), this 10-part anime series revolves around an ordinary family who are put to the test when a series of massive earthquake­s throws Japan into total chaos. The book has previously been adapted as a live-action movie, re-edited for American audiences as Tidal Wave, a 1975 Japanese TV series, and Shinji Higuchi’s Sinking of Japan in 2006.

Billed as a love letter to New York’s diverse musicality, this 10-part rom-com ‘‘explores the universal journey of finding your authentic voice in your early 20s’’.

The combined creation of Lost’s

JJ Abrams and musician Sara Bareilles (best known for the stage musical Waitress), it stars Brittany O’grady (who spent time in New Zealand last year making the horror movie Black Christmas) and Skins’ Sean Teale. be safely solved! There’s no need to worry!,’’ wrote Radio Times’ Eleanor Bley Griffiths.

Lennie James is back for this second six-part series about one man’s desperate search for his missing daughter. The dark drama’s impressive cast also includes Lesley Manville, Suranne Jones, Ade Edmondson, Kerry Godliman, Stephen Graham, and Jason Flemyng.

‘‘It starts with the kind of bang that insists you pay attention to find out how we got here. Then, the [opening] episode ends with the kind of bang that insists you watch the next one immediatel­y,’’ wrote The Guardian’s Rebecca Nicholson.

New Zealand’s own Rachel House joins a host of Australia’s finest (Cate Blanchett, Asher Keddie, Yvonne Strahovski, Jai Courtney, Marta Dusseldorp) for this six-part drama that centres on four strangers at an immigratio­n detention centre.

It was partly inspired by the real-life story of Cornelia Rau, an Australian permanent resident who was unlawfully detained under the Australian Government’s mandatory detention programme.

‘‘This is exceptiona­l film-making, from the writing and direction to the casting and the way the cinematogr­aphers have captured the distinctiv­e quality of the light in the South Australian desert. It is absolutely compelling, a ripping yarn,’’ wrote The Age’s Melinda Houston.

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