Rochdale Observer

Troubled times for Special Forces

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We all know that the internet has made the world a much smaller place. But before we spent hours endlessly scrolling our feeds, it was the TV that brought foreign shores a little closer.

American culture has permeated almost every facet of our entertainm­ent industry, but other nations have carved out their own places in our hearts.

Few have done it quite as stylishly as France.

It’s easy from the lofty heights of Blighty’s shores to poke gentle fun at our near-neighbours, especially if all you know of their cultural output is some dodgy Seventies crooners and maybe evergreen rocker Johnny

Hallyday.

But, lest we forget, this is the nation that gave us the effervesce­nt Leslie Caron and Maurice Chevalier in Gigi, the wicked trickster Yves Montand in Jean de Florette, as well as Gerard Depardieu proving he was much more than a prosthetic nose in Cyrano de Bergerac. Bearing all that in mind, it’s perhaps less surprising to know that Brits are actually quite fond of French drama.

The rise of the streaming services has enabled the flow of quality programmin­g to go from a trickle to a flood, and recent years have seen us treated to French sci-fi drama Missions, following the first manned journey to Mars.

There was the frothy but hugely enjoyable Versailles, which managed to track several years at the court of King Louis XIV without the saucy monarch ageing a day.

And, of course, there was Spiral. Over the course of eight series it followed criminal investigat­ions in the French capital from the different points of view of everyone involved. Forget Emily in Paris, this gave us the gritty, beating heart of the City of Light served on a plate.

It brings us neatly to Dark

Hearts (Saturday, BBC Four, 9pm & 10.05pm),

a six-part drama, created and written by Dang Thai Duong and Corinne Garfin, that looks set to have everyone on the edge of their seats.

It follows a French special forces unit on the brink of the 2016 Battle of Mosul, in Iraq. With a terror threat hanging over their heads, the unit must track down the daughter and grandchild­ren of a prominent ISIS leader.

If they can safely extricate his relatives from the city, the leader promises he will give them muchneeded insider informatio­n. Marie Dompnier, Thierry Godard, Moussa Maaskri and Nicolas Duvauchell­e head the cast.

 ?? ?? Under pressure Marie Dompnier stars as Adele
Under pressure Marie Dompnier stars as Adele

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