But not everything is as it initially seems. As is usually the case with Sky's content, you'll also be able to watch these with a Now TV Entertainment Pass, too. Every episode lands on Sky and Now TV on February 21. It starts in June 2020.This felt like the big-budget centrepiece of the evening. Sky must have some confidence in the show – it announced a series two renewal as part of the event.
Maisie Williams (Game of Thrones) and Sian Clifford (Fleabag) star in this comedy drama about a young woman hunting for her dad's murderer.
I Hate Suzie is an intriguing drama about an actress (played by Billie Piper) whose popularity is in decline, which coincides with her phone being hacked and a private photo being circulated on the internet. They're also available on Now TV or those spinning disc things people used to likeThe box set: the perfect way to catch up on a series you missed, or to binge on an old favourite.
Vice's You've seen the hit drama and now have a taste for nuclear disaster. Below, we've picked out a few of our highlights from what Sky's got coming up in 2020. Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, But the small US town isn't used to crime, let alone murders. David Schwimmer, who continues to defy age over a decade and a half after Friends ended, stars in this intelligence agency-based sitcom from comedian Nick Mohammed. Yes, it might be over now but that doesn’t mean it’s not worth revisiting. There are, however, complications. … Please refresh the page and try again.TechRadar is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Expect yet more Michael Caine impressions. Attorney Charles "Chuck" Rhoades Jr (Paul Giamatti) has an axe to grind with Axelrod and wants to pursue him for financial crimes. Lucy Prebble, one of the writers of HBO sensation Succession as well as Piper's earlier series Secret Diaries of a Call Girl, is the creator of I Hate Suzie, and each of the eight episodes is themed around a different emotion: shock, denial and fear were three examples Prebble offered at the event. Conceived by anarchic English playwright Jez Butterworth, it’s like a thought experiment on how ludicrous a TV show he could get away with. Created by Armando Iannucci, the mind behind Liev Schreiber plays a fixer to LA's rich and famous and substitute father to his dysfunctional brothers until their real father, played by Jon Voight, makes an unwelcome return from prison. Together the friends embark on even bigger and bolder misadventures around the fictitious rural Lancashire town of Hawley. Lotte Ritter – a street-smart girl from the wrong side of the tracks – secures secretarial work at the police station, but ends up assisting uptight, PTSD-suffering Inspector Gereon Rath in investigating an extortion ring where politicians are filmed with prostitutes, and then in the case of smuggled gold and chemical weapons from Russia. This slow-moving, atmospheric show is one of the handful of examples where having a cast full of big-name Hollywood actors doesn't guarantee a cringeworthy flop. But behind the veneer of coddled children (Amabella, in particular, is a grating example) and perfect marriages, they are all hiding very big and ugly secrets: abuse, jealousy, infidelity, rape. About Brassic: Series 2 Co-created by Joseph Gilgun and BAFTA-winning writer Danny Brocklehurst, the action picks up a few months after the events of the series one finale. Their families are intertwined and a power struggle ensues. Troubled young mother Jane (Woodley) moves to the area with her young son Ziggy, and is immediately taken under the wing of local queen bee Madeline (Witherspoon) and Celeste (Kidman), triggering a series of events that end in murder.The HBO series is set in the exclusive (read: rich) Monterrey community, where competitive mothers who prance around their magazine-worthy houses in perfect designer apparel, seem to have it all. Chuck in a orphaned girl being trained to be the messiah by an outcast lunatic, a possibly demonically possessed Roman general (played with gusto by a scenery chewing David Morrissey), and unfathomable schemes to avert a prophesied end of the world, and you have a surprisingly watchable romp that’s huge amounts of fun, has a gleeful disregard for history, and is peppered with some gems of British psychedelic 60s pop. Everything can be hacked if the attacker is motivated enough. Among Sky's upcoming original comedies, this looked like the highlight. How long was it since you watched those early series anyway? A big budget, big stars and a chilly setting. It talks to the survivors of the disaster and those that helped in its clean-up, telling their uniquely personal stories. You will receive a verification email shortly.There was a problem. The series follows the empire of eccentric billionaire Bobby Axelrod (Damian Lewis), who made his fortune in the wake of the 9/11 terror attacks by gaming the stockmarket.
The former part sees Jude Law's character head to a strange British island where the inhabitants are determined to keep their traditions safe. There's a murder in Twin Peaks.