Final Destination Bloodlines 2025 - Movies (May 31st)
Theres a Zombie Outside 2024 - Movies (May 31st)
Mountainhead 2025 - Movies (May 31st)
The Pickleball Exorcist 2025 - Movies (May 31st)
The Blinkless 2024 - Movies (May 31st)
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A RAD Documentary 2025 - Movies (May 30th)
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Daylight to Dark 2024 - Movies (May 30th)
Into The Gravel Pit 2025 - Movies (May 30th)
Invader 2024 - Movies (May 30th)
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Dr. Sanders Sleep Cure 2024 - Movies (May 30th)
Gates of Flesh 2025 - Movies (May 30th)
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Guardian 2025 - Movies (May 30th)
Greet Your Demons 2025 - Movies (May 30th)
Blue Rodeo Lost Together 2024 - Movies (May 30th)
Dont Make a Sound 2024 - Movies (May 30th)
The King of Kings 2025 - Movies (May 30th)
On Patrol- Live - (Jun 1st)
Godfather of Harlem - (Jun 1st)
Have I Got a Bit More News for You - (Jun 1st)
MobLand - (Jun 1st)
James Martins Saturday Morning - (May 31st)
Good Boy - (May 31st)
Britains Got Talent - (May 31st)
Best of The Beat with Ari Melber - (May 31st)
Blankety Blank - (May 31st)
Doctor Who- Unleashed - (May 31st)
Secrets of the Royal Traditions - (May 31st)
Bridge of Lies - (May 31st)
Doctor Who - (May 31st)
The Hit List - (May 31st)
Lucky - (May 31st)
WWE Main Event - (May 31st)
Saturday Kitchen Live - (May 31st)
LOL- Last One Laughing Colombia - (May 31st)
Pop the Balloon LIVE - (May 31st)
Our Unwritten Seoul - (May 31st)
What ought to have been night of celebration turns sour for Grand National winning owner "Coates" (Nigel Patrick) when a contretemps with his drunken wife "Babs" (Moira Lister) leaves him the subject of a police investigation. The thing is - what really happened that night and can the pernickety "Insp. Ayling" (Michael Hordern) piece it all together? Lister features but sparingly, but her characterisation of "Babs" does rather get under your fingernails, so as the police work proceeded I did start to feel just a bit of sympathy for her rather idiotic, but good natured, husband - and Patrick is on decent form in that role here. It skips along nicely and engagingly for eighty minutes with a solid contribution from the usually reliable Noel Purcell and a soupçon of glamour from the underused Beatrice Campbell too. Maybe not his "latest and greatest screen role" as it said in the publicity blurb, but it's not a bad vehicle for a star who does enough here to keep it interesting, if not exactly intriguing with what must have been a fairly limited budget.