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Spiral, Series 8, BBC Four review - dark days in the City of Light


Spiral, Series 8, BBC Four review - dark days in the City of Light | reviews, news & interviews
Spiral, Series 8, BBC Four review - dark days in the City of Light
Spiral, Series 8, BBC Four review - dark days in the City of Light
Final series of the show that's more than just a 'policier'
by Adam SweetingSunday, 10 January 2021
The discovery of a grotesque murder is the traditional way to begin a new series of
Spiral, and this time around the cadaver belonged to a young Moroccan boy, nicknamed Shkun. He’d been beaten to death with an iron bar and stuffed into a laundromat washing machine.

Paris , France-general , France , Morocco , French , Moroccan , Amin-allawi , Audrey-fleurot , Ali-amrani , Bourdieu-clara-bonnet , Gilou-thierry-godard , Arnaud-beckriche-valentin-merlet

"Spiral" – The Maelstrom [MOVIE REVIEW]


“Spiral” – The Maelstrom [MOVIE REVIEW]
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Caroline Proust (Laure Berthaud) in “Spiral.” Photo courtesy of Photo courtesy of Caroline Dubois / Son et Lumière /
Canal+
Still atop the
New York Times list of must-see TV, “Spiral” (“Engrenages”), the police drama from France, launches its eighth and final season on January 5 on MHz Choice, with a release of a new episode each week. Marine Francou supervised the writing staff on what was her plotline for this season. She doesn’t disappoint.
As explained in the review of Season 7, “Spiral” is an intense look at the French justice system from all the intermeshed points of view.  Beloved and complicated judge advocate Roban is no longer part of the team. His forced retirement has removed him from the central role he played in years past when adjudicating the solution of the crimes the police of the Second District were tasked with solving.

New-york , United-states , France , Morocco , French , Moroccan , Lucie-bourdieu , Clara-bonnet , Tewfik-jallab-ali-amrani , Eric-edelman , Josephine-karlsson , Caroline-proust

21 for 2021: St Vincent, Lana Del Rey, James Bond, Dune, Arab Strap, David Byrne


As we creep blinking out of our homes into a vaccine-enabled version of normality, some semblance of order should return to the world of arts and entertainment. In that spirit, and with the usual caveats, here are 21 reasons to look forward to 2021.
Television
Line Of Duty
Filming on series six of the BBC’s blockbuster drama about a police anti-corruption was curtailed by the pandemic. It has now finished so it won’t be long before we’re once again gripped by questions both large (is Adrian Dunbar’s Superintendent Ted Hastings really H, the criminal mastermind the team have been chasing for years) and small (why does Martin Compston’s Cockney accent never slip?). This season’s star turn comes from Kelly Macdonald as DCI Joanne Davidson. Date: March.

New-york , United-states , Arkansas , Arbroath , Angus , United-kingdom , Glasgow , Glasgow-city , Deadwater , Northumberland , Glen-lyon , Perth-and-kinross

Winter TV Preview: 21 Shows to Watch


Winter TV Preview: 21 Shows to Watch
Newcomers and old favorites include a Marvel series, the long-awaited return of “Gomorrah” and Judi Dench among the orangutans.
“Judi Dench’s Wild Borneo Adventure," a two-part documentary, features Dench as an orangutan groupie.Credit...Discovery+
Dec. 31, 2020
After a historically awful year, you can take it as either bewildering or reassuring that television steams ahead on a mostly steady course, providing familiar entertainment amid the vast disruptions of politics and the pandemic. This chronological listing of programs to look forward to in the first two months of 2021 includes a blend, comfortingly or distressingly recognizable, of new shows and old favorites (and a major new streaming service, Discovery+).

New-york , United-states , United-kingdom , Paris , France-general , France , Israel , Florida , Italy , Senegal , Brooklyn , Spain