The Guardian (USA)

‘Guaranteed to be a banger’: the 50 must-see TV shows for 2024

- Stuart Heritage and Kate Abbott

Mr Bates vs The Post Office

Despite being one of the biggest miscarriag­es of justices in history, the British Post Office scandal – in which nearly a thousand sub-postmaster­s were privately prosecuted for theft or fraud in error, due to a faulty IT software system – never gained the public traction it deserved. Hopefully Gwyneth Hughes’s new drama starring Toby Jones and Julie Hesmondhal­gh will give this matter the attention it deserves.• ITV1, 1 January

The Traitors

Hooded cloaks at the ready! Claudia Winkleman and her knitwear are back in the castle for the second season of the evil/genius reality TV smash hit. Will the new batch of Faithfuls manage to outwit the Traitors and take home the cash? And will anyone play as much of a blinder as Wilf? We live in hope.• BBC One, 1 January

Truelove

You know that friend you’ve loved dearly for decades, ever since you were young, wild and untethered? Would you kill them if they asked you to? That is the pitch-black premise of this euthanasia drama by Charlie Covell (known for The End of the F**king World) which stars Lindsay Duncan and Clarke Peters as the friends and former flames charged with the task of bumping off their old gang. Do they have the stomach for it?• Channel 4, 3 January

Julia

A world away from Sgt Catherine Cawood, Sarah Lancashire is back on cracking form (is she ever not?) as Julia Child, the pioneering, plummouthe­d, innuendo-loving TV chef. In this second outing, Julia heads to Paris to get more inspiratio­n for her show The French Chef – which is becoming so popular back home she ends up in the White House. As ever, expect this show to be swimming in so much butter your arteries will get clogged just watching. Yum.• Sky/Now, 5 January

Criminal Record

It seems like a tremendous oversight that the world has not already presented us with a crime thriller starring Peter Capaldi and Cush Jumbo, but at least Criminal Record is here to set things right. Created by genre veteran Paul Rutman (Marple, Inspector Lewis, Vera), this looks set to be gritty and grimy and growling in equal measure.• Apple TV+, 10 January

Echo

Fans of 2022’s Disney+ Hawkeye series will already be aware of Maya Lopez, a deaf hero driven to revenge following her father’s murder. In Echo, Lopez finally gets her own series. Best of all, however, is the fact that the wonderfull­y glowering Vincent D’Onofrio is returning as the evil crime lord Kingpin.• Disney+, 10 January

Gladiators

Gladiators, are you ready? Players, are you ready? The classic 90s show returns – pugil sticks, Hang Tough, The Wall and all – with more supremely ripped sporting heroes ready to try to whup brave members of the public. Will they have what it takes to beat Fury, Electro, Nitro and Bionic in the Eliminator?• BBC One, 13 January

Big Boys

Jack’s back – and he’s still as obsessed with huns as ever. As the second year of Brent uni kicks off, a newly out Jack (Dylan Llewellyn) is determined to have some sex at last – but he’d still rather watch Alison Hammond on Strictly than go out on Saturday night in Freshers’ Week. The sophomore season of Jack Rooke’s semi-autobiogra­phical comedy is just as much of a laugh-out-loud delight.• Channel 4, 14 January

True Detective

Although it’s hard to remember the ferocity with which True Detective roared out of the gates during its first season, it still has the ability to surprise and confound. The upcoming fourth season (the first not to be written by Nic Pizzolatto) is an Alaska-set thriller subtitled Night Country and has no less than Jodie Foster in the lead role.• Sky Atlantic/Now, 15 January

Expats

Amazon’s new drama already comes with a healthy dose of controvers­y: it was filmed in Hong Kong during Covid, and star Nicole Kidman made waves by being granted exemption from quarantine. Hopefully this will vanish into the distance when people have actually seen it; created by The Farewell’s Lulu Wang, it holds a lot of promise.• Prime Video, 26 January

Masters of the Air

You loved Band of Brothers. You loved The Pacific. And now the Spielberg/Hanks second world war extravagan­za concludes with Apple’s Masters of the Air. Like the two previous shows, this promises to be a sprawling ensemble piece that, a decade from now, will be remembered for launching dozens of young actors into the stratosphe­re.• Apple TV, 26 January

Mr and Mrs Smith

A TV show based on an almost 20year-old espionage thriller, Mr & Mrs Smith has not had the smoothest of journeys to TV. The adaptation was initially announced as being created by Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Donald Glover, who would also star. But then Waller-Bridge left, and Maya Erskine replaced her, and the thing was moved back from 2022 to 2024. Despite all the upheaval, this show still has a ton of potential.• Prime Video, 2 February

One Day

Thirteen years on from the Anne Hathaway movie (the less said about that the better), the hit David Nicholls book finally gets the nostalgic treatment it deserves, complete with lots of laughs and an impeccable soundtrack. Leo Woodall is a wonder as the entitled yet vulnerable posh boy Dexter, and Ambika Mod brings her excellent comedy chops to the role of Emma, as we watch the pair’s lives roll out via snapshots of one day every year. You will have goosebumps – and lots of them.• Netflix, 8 February

The New Look

Apple TV+ shows have come to be known for their immense production values. This means that The New Look – a drama about how Christian Dior and Coco Chanel created modern fashion from the embers of the second world war – is guaranteed to look spectacula­r. Ben Mendelsohn is Dior, Juliette Binoche is Chanel and Maisie Williams is Dior’s sister Catherine. This will have elegance in spades.• Apple TV+, 14 February

Palm Royale

Kristen Wiig and Laura Dern star in this fun piece of high camp about high society ladies who lunch in Palm Springs, 1969. Drenched in California sunshine, it’s a wild ride as Maxine (Wiig) desperatel­y tries to infiltrate an elite members’ club. She soon gets found out as an imposter, because she gets her haute couture by robbing an old woman, and her clothes are so not this season. All the women put in iconic turns, from Allison Janney to Carol Burnett. Ricky Martin also stars as an evil waiter. Yes please!• Apple TV+, 20 March

3 Body Problem

Based on Liu Cixin’s sprawling scifi series Remembranc­e of Earth’s Past (endorsed by the likes of George RR Martin and Barack Obama), this is Netflix’s big shot at globe-straddling Game of Thrones-style domination. Set in the future, present and past where Earth encounters aliens, the show has been brought to fruition by GoT’s David Benioff and DB Weiss with Alexander Woo. A big one.• Netflix, 21 March

Doctor Who

After his unconventi­onal introducti­on (regenerati­ng from David Tennant instead of Jodie Whittaker, and letting David Tennant also be the Doctor), it’s finally time to see what Ncuti Gatwa has in him. Luckily, Gatwa is young, charismati­c and beautiful, Russell T Davies is back in charge and Doctor Who is now dripping with Disney money. This could be spectacula­r. • BBC One/iPlayer, spring

Renegade Nell

Given the untrammell­ed success of Happy Valley, Sally Wainwright should by all accounts be swaggering into 2024 like a heavyweigh­t champ. As such, Renegade Nell will count as her victory lap. A period drama about the most feared highwaywom­an in the country, it stars Louisa Harland, Joely Richardson, Adrian Lester and Nick Mohammed. More than anything, though, it’s a Sally Wainwright show, so it’s guaranteed to be a banger.• Disney+, spring

House of the Dragon

The first season might have been slightly confusing, with its mid-season cast changes and unannounce­d time jumps, but its climax was an absolute thumper. The last we saw of Rhaenyra, her son had just been killed by his uncle. If the look in her eyes was any indication, then season two will be 10 hours of straight-up murder. Fantastic.• Sky Atlantic/Now, summer

A Gentleman in Moscow

An adaptation of the 2016 novel by Amor Towles, this prestigiou­s series is a decades-spanning drama set against the Bolshevik revolution of the early 20th century. Ewan McGregor is the fictional Count Alexander Ilyich Rostov, an aristocrat doomed to spend the rest of his life under house arrest. If nothing else, this is worth watching purely to see McGregor’s wildly ostentatio­us moustache.• Paramount+

Alice & Jack

Victor Levin, a writer with credits including Mad Men and The Larry Sanders Show, has created what sounds like one of the year’s most intriguing offerings. Alice & Jack charts the course of a 16-year relationsh­ip between Andrea Riseboroug­h and Domhnall Gleeson, and by all accounts sounds ambitious and heartfelt in equal measure.• Channel 4

Alma’s Not Normal

One of the very best comedies of 2021 – an audacious and uproarious look at class, sex work and brilliant northern women – is coming back for more, neon fur coats and all. The last time we saw Alma Nuthall (the exceptiona­l Sophie Willan), she had to make the tough decision about whether to go on tour with her theatre troupe, or set her dreams aside to care for her mum who had started using heroin again. Let’s hope Siobhan Finneran and Jayde Adams will still be by her side.• BBC

Big Mood

It’s going to be a huge year for Nicola Coughlan, who’s taking up the lead in Bridgerton in May, while also starring opposite Lydia West – another woman of the moment – in this Channel 4 show about two thirtysome­thing best friends, one of whom has bipolar disorder which may derail their life-long relationsh­ip. It’s sure to be a funny, sensitive take on mental health and sisterhood and the things that bind us together. • Channel 4

Black Doves

Joe Barton, of Giri/Haji and The Lazarus Project, returns with his biggest show yet. In Black Doves, Keira Knightley plays a politician’s wife who passes all her insider informatio­n on to a shadowy intelligen­ce organisati­on headed by Sarah Lancashire, until a shocking act ruins everything. Better still, Ben Whishaw gets to play a suave, champagne-swigging assassin. Perfect.• Netflix

Blue Lights

Two of the greatest new police dramas of our day get their sophomore outings in 2024: The Responder, starring a spectacula­r Martin Freeman as a soul-destroyed scouse night cop, plus the second runout for the blistering Belfast cop drama. As it returns, our response officers are caught in the crosshairs of a gangland feud, so expect even more explosive TV – plus, we’re told, an incredibly starry cameo. • BBC

Bluey

Bluey is the best show on television, thanks in part to its wildly ambitious attitude to storytelli­ng. This is the show, remember, that told the entire history of humanity from prehistory to a post-Earth utopia in just seven minutes. So think what could happen in its upcoming 28-minute episode. Minds will be blown. Tears will be shed. This could be everything.• BBC

Breathtaki­ng

Covid dramas tend to be quite patchy (especially any that involve Boris Johnson impersonat­ions), but Jed Mercurio’s new series has a great deal of potential. Based on Rachel Clarke’s memoir of the same name, Breathtaki­ng promises to plunge us into the struggle of healthcare workers during the terrifying early days of the pandemic. Few people do medical drama as well as Mercurio, so this should be thrilling.• ITV

The Day of the Jackal

Lots of potential here, in this contempora­ry reimaginin­g of Frederick Forsyth’s classic spy novel. Written by

 ?? Composite: ITV/BBC/ Guardian Design ?? Irresistib­le … Sophie Turner in Joan and Levi Brown in This Town.
Composite: ITV/BBC/ Guardian Design Irresistib­le … Sophie Turner in Joan and Levi Brown in This Town.
 ?? Photograph: HBO/2023 Home Box Office, Inc. All Rights Reserved. ?? Cracking … Julia.
Photograph: HBO/2023 Home Box Office, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Cracking … Julia.

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