Business Day

Five things for you to watch this weekend

- /Tymon Smith

BOY SWALLOWS UNIVERSE NETFLIX

Based on the novel by Trent Dalton, this energetic Australian series swings between heartbreak and happiness in its retelling of the story of 13-yearold Eli, whose life on the margins of lower-class Brisbane is full of eccentric, dangerous characters and obstacles that he must navigate to keep his family afloat.

Darkly humoured, it’ sa smartly realised comedy drama which offers plenty of memorable moments and a refreshing lack of judgment on its seedy characters and their morally dubious actions.

SALTBURN — PRIME VIDEO Emerald Fennell’s follow-up to

Promising Young Woman offers a dissection of British class in a film that has echoes of

Brideshead Revisited in its story of the corruption of a workingcla­ss Oxford student (Barry Keoghan) by the charms of a handsome upper-class fellow student (Jacob Elordi) and his eccentric wealthy family.

When he’s invited to spend the summer at the family’s country estate, things take a dark turn, and though it might all end up Agatha Christie-ish, the acerbic stabs Fennell inflicts on the absurditie­s and shallownes­s of the English upper-set, together with Keoghan’s dark, brooding central performanc­e, more than make up for it.

BLUE LIGHTS — SHOWMAX A quietly smart police procedural series set in the post-Troubles streets of Belfast, this is the kind of low-budget, low-on-cliffhange­rs, high-oncharacte­r and personal drama cop show that we see far too little of these days.

Following the trials and struggles of three recruits as they battle against their personal traumas, the attitudes of their community and the scars of the brutal history of Northern Ireland, it doesn’t hit you on the head with its politics while offering a no-frills examinatio­n of the realities and everyday challenges of the job.

MEDICINE FOR MELANCHOLY — MUBI.COM

Oscar-winning Moonlight director Barry Jenkins’ debut film from 2008 is an intelligen­t romance drama that never shies away from addressing big issues around race, social injustice and class divisions in modern America.

Wyatt Cenac and Tracey Higgins star as the odd couple at the film’s centre he a dedicated social activist, she an affluent profession­al who meet at a party and have a one-night stand. As the sun rises on the morning after, the two lovers’ conversati­ons about politics, race and social difference­s reveal that the divide between them may be too great to straddle.

CRIMINAL RECORD APPLE TV +

Cush Jumbo and Peter Capaldi star in this police thriller as two differentl­y motivated but equally sharp detectives drawn together after a desperate anonymous phone call to emergency services reopens an old murder case that one is determined to uncover the truth about and the other will do whatever it takes to keep closed.

As they battle to outwit each other, the fight keeps us guessing as to whether the truth will be revealed.

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