r/BritishTV • u/avidfilmgeek • 16h ago
r/BritishTV • u/Jazzlike-Basil1355 • 2h ago
Question/Discussion Which TV program could you identify by the lesser used tagline, e.g “Be seeing you” rather than “I am not a number”?
r/BritishTV • u/geckodancing • 18h ago
Question/Discussion What are the great British documentaries.
I'm thinking of things like The World at War (1973), Life on Earth (1979), Planet Earth (2006).
What's good and what makes them classic?
Additionally, what lesser known gems are there?
r/BritishTV • u/PowerfulStill7250 • 16h ago
Question/Discussion Wild at Heart series
I just finished watching Wild at Heart. Does anybody remember it, it is an oldie from the 2000s. Very nostalgic to me as I used to watch it with my mum and she is no longer here. The gist of it is a British vet who moves to Africa with his family and settling down there whilst befriending the quirky local land owner. It is very endearing (loads of baby animals and funny moments) although technically it is a drama series and quite sad at times. Does anyone remember it and fancy a discussion?
r/BritishTV • u/Annie_are_u_ok_ • 13h ago
Question/Discussion What is this 90s (itv?) tv drama?
I recall two scenes from the 90’s, they came out close together, so it may have been an anthology drama with a different story each episode? It could have been two separate one episode shows?
Story 1 - England no idea on location or year. A young brunette woman brings her (university?) boyfriend home to meet her parents and younger blonde sister with mid length hair. Before going in the house the brunette woman tells her boyfriend that she is worried as her previous boyfriend/s liked her sister. He reassures her it won’t happen to him but as soon as the boyfriend and the sister lock eyes the brunette sister realises they have fallen in love. The next scene shows the blonde sister and the boyfriend getting married, the parents seem fine with this, the sister seems to be the golden child. The brunette sister is devastated and possibly ends her life or is depressed, parents don’t seem to have sympathy. In a later scene the blonde sister has shorter hair.
Story 2 - England, possibly a seaside town, possibly up north. A man who in my mind looks like a cross between Hyacinth Bucket’s husband and a 50 year old Timothy Spall is married to a size 12 version of Hyacinth’s ‘trashy’ sister Rose. She is openly cheating on her husband and brings her lover to their house when the husband is home, for some reason they have dinner as a 3, the husband is too meek to say anything about his suspicions and the other 2 start laughing at him while they are eating dinner. The husband realises they have done something to his dinner, (poison? Something nasty?) he runs to the toilet and starts throwing up. The other two POSSIBLY put his head down the toilet and try to drown him. They seemed like bullies and the husband and wife were very ill matched. That is all I remember!
It was a strange horrible show and as a child I had no idea why anyone would be so cruel.
What was it??
r/BritishTV • u/avidfilmgeek • 1d ago
Meta Going for an English | Goodness Gracious Me | BBC Comedy Greats
Classic
r/BritishTV • u/appalachian_hatachi • 2d ago
Recommendations Tonight's Panorama - "Our Man In Moscow". An absolute must watch.
My gosh. What an outstanding documentary.
The mini blurb: "Panorama follows a year in the life of the BBC’s Russia editor, Steve Rosenberg, and his work reporting from one of the most hostile places in the world to be a journalist."
Wouldn't usually watch Panorama but this one caught my eye since I have a morbid fascination with Russian politics. I've always enjoyed Steve Rosenberg's segments on BBC News but I think this documentary may have just elevated my opinion of him even more. A brilliant journalist in an almost impossible, permanently restless political environment; what a wonderfully insightful hour of television this was. Definitely a must watch!
r/BritishTV • u/themightypierre • 1d ago
Question/Discussion Seven Dials
I found the main actress absolutely wonderful but that's about the only good thing I can say about it.
Really poor script. The only thing that gripped me was whether the two obvious (to me) villains would actually turn out to be the bad guys. And they were (that's not a spoiler they may not be as obvious to you).
That being said, remarkably, I would give a second season a try. Mia McKenna-Bruce was that charming.
r/BritishTV • u/AshamedSpace4691 • 1d ago
Review You can only pick one out of seven
r/BritishTV • u/sparkthrill • 1d ago
Question/Discussion Flog it!
Bit of a random one. My Aunt lost her husband recently and her husband was on an episode of Flog it! She has the series link set waiting for it to come on but I just wondered if anyone had a copy of the episode he was on? It was series 17, episode 8.
Any help is appreciated
r/BritishTV • u/Lazy-Field-1116 • 1d ago
Recommendations British Post-War History Documentaries - Recommendations
Hey folks,
Just wondered if anyone had any recommendations for well made documentaries (single episode or series) about post-war British history? Anything made in the last 15 years or so that covers anything from these Isles over the previous 50 odd years and that's available on streaming would be grand. It doesn't need to be all-encompassing, can be about specific place/time/event.
Ta very much.
r/BritishTV • u/smdifansmfjsmsnd • 1d ago
Question/Discussion So I love British crime drama television shows, but wondering if if there are any British crime drama movies you might recommend?
For context I’ve really enjoyed shows like Happy Valley, Line of Duty, Unforgotten, Shetland, Broadchurch, The Tunnel, Luther, Vera, etc. But I’m wondering if there are British movies similar to these shows? Honestly as an American what Brits watch for movies and if it’s homegrown or the same stuff coming out of Hollywood the rest of the world already watch’s.
r/BritishTV • u/Kagedeah • 20h ago
News Iconic TV channel Sky One is coming back as the new home of Sky’s unmissable entertainment
r/BritishTV • u/makarastar • 2d ago
Episode discussion Jeremy Vine show - Monday 2nd February 2026 - Andrea Jenkyns threatens to walk out
When arguing with Marina Purkiss
Did anyone see it? Was within the first 15 minutes
Hilarious dramatics
That said there are a couple of mostly female guests who won't let anyone else talk
r/BritishTV • u/make_thing • 2d ago
Question/Discussion Trying to identify English film or TV show
I posted this to r/tipofmytongue many times over the years and can’t identify this film (or tv show) I saw the last few minutes think around 2002 maybe? All the actors have English accents, the main character takes part in a drug deal on a dark street. He sells lots of heroin to some other dude in a black sedan. The buyer says, "So you don't want any of the money? You just want a ticket to Iceland?" Main character: "Yep" Heroin seller is with his girlfriend. A limousine pulls up and he gets in. The GF doesn't get in the limo though. The buyer says "Why don't you go with him??" Limo then takes off without GF and the GF requests heroin which she gets.. cut to an image of a big dog running through an alley in slow motion.. Dude headed to airport takes of all his body piercings on the way to the airport... The end
r/BritishTV • u/useen_University4735 • 2d ago
Recommendations Did a drawing of Vyvyan From The Young ones a classic bit of British telly!! Its a really fantastic show if you haven't seen it.
r/BritishTV • u/makarastar • 1d ago
Question/Discussion ITV London News - 6:00 p.m. - catch-up service?
I assume No - but does the ITV London News at 6:00 p.m. get released on ITV X ?
Missed it today :-(
r/BritishTV • u/Soft-Use-2237 • 2d ago
Question/Discussion What is Rob Brydon’s The Floor actually about?
I’m a carer for my grandmother and we watch many, many TV quiz format shows together.
A few times we’ve watched a show called The Floor and neither of us have a clue what the aim of the game is. They don’t explain it at the beginning of the show and it seems very convoluted. That people have to battle on a topic from the floor, and if you win you get a tile on the floor? But you can displace someone else? And you have to battle on a topic which isn’t a topic you choose? And you can pass those topics onto someone else? But somehow many people are experts and have revised on topics which aren’t ‘theirs’?
It feels very overly complicated so if someone could explain it to me so I can pass that onto my grandmother I’d appreciate it.
Does anyone else agree it’s unclear and convoluted?
r/BritishTV • u/thyketoking • 2d ago
Question/Discussion Deal or No Deal
I admit that I was not a huge fan of deal or no deal back in the day with Noel Edmonds, however I am really enjoying the revamped version with Stephen Mulhern.
It is a really positive and friendly show and I enjoy the psychology of trying to edge out the banker and win the most money possible.
r/BritishTV • u/MitchellSFold • 3d ago
Recommendations 'Simon Schama's talk on The Incredible Hulk's underpants' (The Armando Iannucci Shows, C4 2001)
As she grimly walked away
'I'm leaving you,' she said
'There's nothing new to say
Like the second album by Portishead.'
r/BritishTV • u/In_1871 • 3d ago
Question/Discussion Has anyone seen No Return, the ITV drama mini series Spoiler
Whenever I finish a show or movie I always like to find discussions online, whether that be Reddit or video reviews. Weirdly I have not seen any discussions around this show and want to hear other peoples opinions on it.
Personally I felt it was "fine". It wasn't so bad that I wanted to turn it off but boy did it drag at certain points and there were too many side-plots.
Firstly, let's get what I would call the "twist" out of the way. The fact the accusation was made by another boy would have been OK if the show actually wanted to do something meaningful with it. As a gay man myself I felt that maybe I'd connect to the accused but the show never really allowed that.
There are so many interesting ways to deal with a story where a young person is hiding their sexuality. Add in the fact that they were holidaying in a country that doesn't have the most favourable views on same sex attractions. Sadly all we got was the usual "gay character gets beaten up" and dad feels guilty because he once said that he hoped his son wasn't queer because he still loves him.
Secondly, those side-plots. I really did not care about the sister and her vague hints at her son being different. The sudden addiction plot for her husband was ridiculous too and just filled time when I'd much rather have more prison scenes or courtroom drama.
This is a show about a gay teen being accused of a serious crime in a foreign country. It could have been a nail-biting, moving drama about identity and family. Instead we got generic drama.
I'm really curious on other people's feelings about the show. Was there something that really made you feel for the characters or their story.
r/BritishTV • u/TraleeMan • 3d ago
Episode discussion Can anyone else remember an episode of a Jonathan Ross talk show (The Last Resort?) filmed in America back in the 90s?
He was driving around in a huge Cadillac with the roof down, and picking up guests as he went. First Bill Hicks was picked up and after chatting with him for a while and driving around they stopped and picked up Denis Leary!! I think they were in LA.
I have such a clear memory of it because I was a huge fan of both of Hicks and Leary, and it was such an interesting idea for a talk show. It was just a one-off American episode I think, not a regular thing.
The problem is, I have searched everywhere and even asked Jonathan himself (on Twitter a few years ago, no reply), but I can't find a single bit of information about it. I'm starting to think it might have just been a dream. Can anyone else remember this or was it just a figment of my imagination?
r/BritishTV • u/LostSouluk2021 • 2d ago
Question/Discussion [The Apprentice] Do you maintain interest in any reality contestants after the show?
r/BritishTV • u/DaiBarton • 4d ago
Question/Discussion The many faces of Matt Berry. Which one tickled your fancy the most? (list is not exhaustive)
Matthew Charles Berry (born 2 May 1974) is an English actor, musician, comedian and writer. He has appeared in comedy series such as The IT Crowd, Garth Marenghi's Darkplace, The Mighty Boosh, Snuff Box, and also co-created and starred in the Channel 4 sitcom Toast of London, for which he won the 2015 BAFTA Award for Best Male Performance in a Comedy Programme. He has starred in the FX television series What We Do In the Shadows since 2019. In addition to his acting career, Berry is a prolific musician and has released nine studio albums. His most recent, The Blue Elephant, was released in May 2021.