Set in Iraq shortly after the 2003 fall of Saddam Hussein, it’s described as “part noir detective drama, part Le Carre and part Green Zone“. With Netflix money behind it, this could be a great deal of fun. It belongs to television now. Although Whishaw was confirmed as the show's leading protagonist recently, filming has yet to start due to COVID-19, so it could be a while before this actually hits screens. The story follows the leaders of the two groups  Sephy and Callum who were once childhood friends and features a highly-anticipated cameo by Stormzy, who is a big fan of Blackman’s work. See a teaser for the first, ‘Mangrove’, here. Tom Hollander and Saskia Reeves star as Douglas and Connie, a couple whose marriage is on the verge of falling apart when the family take a long-planned holiday touring European cities. The Crown and Lovesick’s Daniel Ings co-stars. BBC drama controller Piers Wenger said that the new drama will "not intend to sensationalise these crimes" but aims "to give voice to his victims". This ten-episode series aired on Sky Atlantic and NOW TV. Emily in Paris (Netflix) Air date: 2nd October 2020. Digital Spy participates in various affiliate marketing programs, which means we may get paid commissions on editorially chosen products purchased through our links to retailer sites. Originally broadcast in 1988 and 1998 and featuring a host of acting talent including Julie Walters, Maggie Smith and Patricia Routledge, the new Talking Heads starred Jodie Comer, Maxine Peake, Martin Freeman, Lesley Manville, Kristen Scott Thomas, Sarah Lancashire and more. Based on the real-life so-called “honour” killing of 20-year-old Londoner Banaz Mahmod, “murdered for falling in love with the wrong man”. Here’s the same for all the new British comedy on its way in 2020. Roadkill is the story of Peter Laurence (Laurie), a conservative minister with his eyes on the top job who attempts to out-manoeuvre the personal secrets threatening to wreck his public standing. The End is created and written by Samantha Strauss and stars Harriet Walter and Frances O’Connor in the story of three generations of the same family dealing with the thorny issue of dying with dignity. This six-part ITV true crime drama tells the tragic story of 1985’s White House Farm murders, the Essex killings of multiple members of the Caffell and Bamber families. It’s the story of Gemma and Kieran, a couple who decide to ease the financial burden of their London flat by taking in a lodger who soon becomes entwined in their relationship. Malorie Blackman’s hugely successful series of Young Adult novels have been adapted by Being Human’s Toby Whithouse for BBC One. Hugh Laurie, Helen McRory and Pippa Bennett-Warner are set to star in the upcoming four-part, political thriller for the BBC. Readers in the US are encouraged to contact RAINN, or the National Sexual Assault Hotline on 800-656-4673. Casualty‘s Patrick Robinson and Save Me‘s Nadine Marshall star. All nine episodes are available to stream on Sky and NOW TV. We might expect the working title of this one to change to avoid confusion with the Netflix stalker story of the same name, but as it stands, You will be an eight-part thriller coming to Sky. New talent Alice Seabright, who most recently directed two episodes of Sex Education (the trailer for which you can watch above), will write and direct Chloe – a six-part thriller series about a young woman who starts leading a double life to uncover the truth behind the death of her estranged best friend. This four-part drama by David Nicholls is an adaptation of his hugely popular novel of the same name. This recent BBC crime drama is set (unsurprisingly) on the remote Shetland Islands, and the vast landscape is as moody and gripping as the plot, which features murders, fire … The Robert Downey Jr version. The 2020 sunglasses trends you’re about to see everywhere, The first ‘it dress’ of 2020 has arrived – and it’s under £50, Jessica Brown Findlay on depression, her eating disorder and entering a Brave New World, 15 of the most memorable celebrity reality TV contestants of all time, Elizabeth Hurley on the agony of letting her son grow up and facing the heartache of his father’s sudden death. What we are doing is the same team are adapting Conversations with Friends, which is Sally's first book. The brilliant Sarah Phelps (And Then There Were None, The ABC Murders, Witness For The Prosecution, Ordeal By Innocence) is back with another Agatha Christie adaptation for BBC One. The BBC Two drama focused on the impact of the chemical attack on ordinary people and public services in the city, and boasted a terrific cast including Anne-Marie Duff, Rafe Spall, Mark Addy, Johnny Harris and MyAnna Buring. After a break due to COVID-19 restrictions, the drama resumed filming in July 2020 and is expected to land with an unnamed distributor in 2021. Coming to Sky One and NOW TV in 2021 is Intergalactic, an original, British space-set drama about a galactic pilot who’s falsely imprisoned, then breaks free with a gang of other high-security female prisoners. We’ll keep this list updated as new commissions, casting news, broadcast details and release dates arrive. Watch them on ITV Hub here. One for fans of Aussie period detective series Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries, perhaps? A five-part thriller is coming to ITV from Rillington Place (pictured) and Manhunt writer Ed Whitmore and Fleabag director Harry Bradbeer. the BBC are adapting her other cult novel, Things that would be missing from our lives if it wasn't for the BBC, One of 2020's biggest books is published today, The new American crime drama everyone is obsessed with. The first of the anthology’s five stories, all of which are set in London’s West Indian community, will be told across two episodes. It’s the story of a disgraced ex-army surgeon who joins a whaling expedition and finds himself “on an ill-fated journey with a murderous psychopath” and in a struggle to survive. It’s adapted from Brian Masters’ book Killing For Company, and will be told from the perspective of three men – Nilsen, DCI Peter Jay (played by Daniel Mays), and biographer Brian Masters (played by Jason Watkins) – and explore how Nilsen was able to prey on the young and the vulnerable. A new short from leading Scottish comedienne Janey Godley. Sister Clodagh (Gemma Arterton) and the nuns of St Faiths travel to Nepal during the latter years of British rule in India, to set up a branch of their order in a remote palace.