The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

DUNDEE POTBOILER

TV

- With Paul Whitelaw

TOP PICK Traces -

Monday and Tuesday, BBC1, 9pm

Finally, a thriller set in Dundee! Albeit mostly filmed in Manchester. Traces isn’t new, it debuted on UKTV in 2019, but a bigger audience is guaranteed on BBC One. Based on an idea by top crime author Val Mcdermid – who has a fleeting cameo in episode one – it’s an enjoyable potboiler steeped in queasy intrigue. Molly Windsor plays a forensic science student who is convinced that a supposedly fictional case study is based on the murder of her mother. Every bit as grim and grisly as you’d expect from a Mcdermid-inspired drama, it pivots around believable performanc­es from Windsor, Laura Fraser and Martin Compston. And remember: “There are only so many places you can bury a body in Dundee.”

Winter Walks

Monday to Friday, BBC4, 7pm

This is the perfect way to ease yourself into a hopefully better year – five 30-minute episodes in the company of various well-known folk, as they traipse around the rural hills and dales of Britain. It’s comforting­ly sedate and almost quite poetic. There is no music, no crew as such, just solo celebs armed with a 360-degree camera. Stunning sunrise scenery merges with the sound of rivers, birdsong, sheep and trudging fee t. Occasional­ly, the presenters bump into locals. They have a little chat, then move on. It’s lovely. Your unobtrusiv­e wintry guides are Richard Coles, Selina Scott, Lemn Sissay, Sayeeda Warsi and Poet Laureate Simon Armitage. It should make you feel a bit better about the world.

Bradley And Barney Walsh: Breaking Dad Monday, STV, 8pm

The affable father/son duo return for more adventures. This time they’re travelling across Europe – the series was filmed pre- Covid, obviously. The journey begins in the Netherland­s, where they try a bit of canal jumping, visit a velodrome and attempt to scale the world’s tallest freestandi­ng wall. Preview copies weren’t available, but I think I can state with some confidence that the latest series will be exactly the same as every previous series. Which isn’t a complaint, it’s a satisfying­ly formulaic show. And while it’s not a deep endeavour by any stretch of the imaginatio­n, the tightknit relationsh­ip between Walsh and his son can be quite touching at times. They’re nice people doing fun things. What’s not to like?

Staged

Monday and Tuesday, BBC1, 9.45pm

It’s back – a slight, harmless comedy in which Michael Sheen and David Tennant play versions of themselves in lockdown. Their Skype conversati­ons are spiked with childish passiveagg­ression, the petty vanity of actors. They also appear to be going slightly mad, Sheen in particular. I haven’t seen this second series, it wasn’t available at the time of writing, but series one was a mildly amusing diversion – two fine actors just mucking about in their enforced spare time. But it pales in comparison to Coogan and Brydon – or should that be Brydon and Coogan? – in The Trip, to which it owes an obvious debt. Still, each episode is only 15 minutes long, so it’s not as if they outstay their welcome.

The Man Who Fell From The Sky - Monday, Channel 4,10pm

In 2015, a stowaway fell to his death from the wheel well of a British Airways Boeing 747. He and a friend, both from Mozambique, were attempting to smuggle themselves into the UK. Documentar­y filmmaker Rich Bentley has spent the last five years trying to locate the man who survived that terrifying journey. His research unearthed a disturbing yet little-reported fact – asylum seekers dying in that particular way isn’t uncommon. This is a sensitive programme about immigratio­n, a meditation on the humans behind the statistics and racist rhetoric stirred up by the right. Bentley reveals their names, speaks to their families. He doesn’t provide neat answers, that would be offensive. It’s a complex tragedy.

Cheetah Family & Me Tuesday and Wednesday, BBC2, 9pm

Whispering Gordon Buchanan always turns up at this time of year to share his love of nature. The affable Scot’s latest adventure involves two cheetah families struggling to survive in South Africa. We follow him on horseback and on foot, a camera rostrum over his shoulder, as he attempts to find out what life is really like for these beautiful, endangered creatures. The little cubs are beyond adorable, but a mild word of caution for younger viewers – nature can be cruel. When Attenborou­gh eventually retires from the planet, I think Buchanan would be a suitable replacemen­t. A compassion­ate man who cares about the world around us, his exemplary documentar­ies are intimate and immersive.

Lucy Worsley’s Royal Palace Secrets Wednesday, BBC4, 9pm

The doyen of BBC Four, historian Lucy Worsley churns these programmes out at a remarkable rate. She appears to spend half her life dressed as Catherine of Aragon while delivering pieces to camera. This one was filmed a few months ago, but as Chief Curator of Historic Royal Palaces she wasn’t going to let the pandemic get in the way of her exclusive right to snoop around Hampton Court, Kensington Palace and the Tower of London. Worsley is an engaging guide, I like her – but while she’s always flirted with twee self-parody, she’s more “Lucy Worsley” here than ever before. She might want to dial down the whimsy in future. It can be suffocatin­g. Some unbidden constructi­ve criticism there.

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 ??  ?? TRACES: Martin Compston and Molly Windsor star.
TRACES: Martin Compston and Molly Windsor star.
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 ??  ?? Top: Lucy Worsley, for once not dressed as Catherine of Aragon. Above left: Selina Scott enjoys exploring in the Yorkshire Dales. Above right: Bradley Walsh tries out a velodrome.
Top: Lucy Worsley, for once not dressed as Catherine of Aragon. Above left: Selina Scott enjoys exploring in the Yorkshire Dales. Above right: Bradley Walsh tries out a velodrome.

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