The 10 best TV shows of 2018: From Dynasties to Killing Eve
In a year when politics split the nation, television brought everyone back together. Ed Cumming names the best series of 2018
Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.It’s debatable whether any TV can begin to match the heights of banter, pathos and skulduggery offered by our politicians this month. But it is a happy Christmas exercise to cast our minds back to a simpler time where we still looked for other forms of entertainment.
I am not including repeating series in this list but a couple of things are worth noting. It was a good year for reality TV, which seems to have matured into a sophisticated late stage that rewards respectable, conservative family values. On the sex competition Love Island Jack and Dani secured the hearts of the nation by not having any. In the jungle on I’m a Celebrity… Harry Redknapp showed that “proper football man” need not always be a condemnation.
On Netflix, meanwhile, BoJack Horseman used its fifth season for even more audacious explorations of depression. Atlanta season two was discomfiting. The Good Place divided viewers into those who thought it had lots of jokes and those who thought it had none. There were 4,000 true-crime documentaries. My Brilliant Friend made mid-century southern Italy seem at once glamorous and gritty.
Not everything was a success. Bodyguard stormed into our Sunday nights in the autumn threatening to explode but it turned out the vest was stuffed with twaddle. Informer took a good concept and marred it with a dodgy script.
It has been a good year for Sky Atlantic, which kept up an impressive hit rate during the Game of Thrones fallow year. Netflix early-mover advantage is rapidly being eroded, and will take a big hit when Disney launches its own streaming service next year. Throwing money at #content may no longer be enough. The networks have to choose carefully, and so do we.
10. Save Me
Lennie James’s missing-child thriller Save Me looked as though it might be a paint-by-numbers affair. Instead it was a gripping start to Sky Atlantic’s impressive run, with James taking the lead as Nelly, the womanising bum who gains a new lease of investigative energy when his estranged daughter Jody vanishes. A smart script kept us guessing right up to an ending that denied us the closure we had expected. A second series has been commissioned.
9. Cunk on Britain
How much you enjoyed Philomena Cunk’s history of Britain depends on how funny you find Diane Morgan’s resting confused face. I find it hilarious. Her interviewees are kind of in on the joke but clearly briefed to take it as seriously as possible. They’ll be mid-flow and she will cock her head and drain all the interest from her face. “What’s the most political thing that’s ever happened?” she asked Robert Peston, who did his best to answer with a straight face. Co-producer Charlie Brooker’s fingerprints are everywhere in the way Morgan’s vain, poorly informed, easily distracted Cunk operates within a ruthlessly satirical production, which sends up the tropes and clichés of every dodgy documentary and history programme. She might not be the comic creation we need, but she is the one we deserve right now.
8. Sally4Ever
You either love Julia Davis or think her sick filth ought to be banned. Sally4Ever proved yet again that there is nobody working today – or at least nobody with the same platform – with a blacker sense of humour. Sally (Catherine Shepherd) was already surrounded by monsters: her loser of a boyfriend (Alex MacQueen) and tricky colleagues played by Julian Barratt and Felicity Montagu. Then Emma (Davis herself) arrived, a tornado of sex and bad intentions. Beneath the shagging, drugs, excrement, manipulation and malice were pockets of tenderness, but you had to look pretty hard to see them. Luckily there were also gales of laughter. NB If you have yet to see it, please do not watch it with your parents or children on Boxing Day and then write in to complain.
7. The Little Drummer Girl
This was a spiritual successor rather than a sequel to The Night Manager. It was still a Le Carré adaptation on the BBC sprinkled with famous faces, but the differences were as pronounced as the similarities. Park Chan-Wook, the Korean auteur, directed with a high sense of style. Florence Pugh was dazzling as the ingenue actress Charlie, recruited for a dangerous mission across Europe, ably supported by Alexander Skarsgard and Michael Shannon as her spook handlers. Some viewers switched off after the first episodes, which took time to set the scene. They missed out on a vivid, beautifully told thriller.
6. A Very English Scandal
Hugh Grant… can act? That was the first surprise in this smooth, stylish BBC retelling of the Jeremy Thorpe scandal. He burst convincingly out of the charming fop mould he has slept in so comfortably for 30 years. What have we been missing all this time? The other shock was remembering how recent it all was. The government is still up to a lot of nonsense, but the days of this kind of cover-up, for these reasons, is surely over. Or is it?
5. Patrick Melrose
Edward St Aubyn’s Patrick Melrose novels have the kind of precisely drawn interiority that makes any kind of adaptation seem doomed to fail. Instead, the Sky Atlantic series brought them convincingly to life. It is not a happy tale. In flashback we saw Patrick’s childhood in the shadow of his monstrous father David (Hugo Weaving), and the decades of self-loathing and substance abuse that followed. At the centre of all this was Benedict Cumberbatch, as good as he’s ever been. His Patrick could be brilliant, witty, cruel and pitiful, sometimes in the same smack-addled sentence. Weaving, Jennifer Jason Leigh as David’s wife Eleanor and Pip Torrens as his ghastly friend Nicholas Pratt all put in memorable performances, too.
4. Dynasties
At an age when most of us are long past doing anything, David Attenborough is still changing our expectations of what a nature documentary can do. Like The Rolling Stones, he has been on his farewell tour since about 1970, but unlike Jagger & Co, the returns are not diminishing. Is he fuelled by anger at the world’s response to climate change? Or simply driven by some massive internal dynamo, a soul-quest to improve our ability to relate to penguins? Whatever the motivation, Dynasties was wonderful, telling complex stories of the animal kingdom with beautiful photography.
3. Killing Eve
It’s unusual for a TV writer to attract more attention than the stars or director. Perhaps the world is changing. Or perhaps it’s simply that the writer of Killing Eve was Phoebe Waller-Bridge, star of Fleabag, Star Wars and one of the country’s outstanding new talents. Here she turned her hand to a spy thriller, an adaptation of Luke Jennings’s novels about a beautiful assassin, Villanelle (Jodie Comer), and the MI6 agent given the task of hunting her down, Eve Polastri (Sandra Oh). Both leads demanded attention: Comer the magnetic murderer, Oh the harassed but brilliant spy. The script swerved between comedy, action and drama often enough to keep everyone guessing.
2. England vs Colombia
Yes, the national team have played on television in a World Cup before, but I’m including this because the outcome, an England penalty shoot-out victory, was so unusual as to count as a whole new format. At a time when we all watch things at different times, here was something unmistakably live. We watched Gareth Southgate’s men knowing that the rest of the country was, too, poised in living rooms and pub gardens, ready to bury their heads in a sofa or throw their pints in the air. No other TV programme sold as many waistcoats.
1. Succession
The ageing patriarch and his scheming children. Not an original concept. Trust, the drama about the last days of Getty family, proved that it was possible for a series built on this premise to have actors, scenery, direction, script etc, etc, and still somehow fall short. Succession, by comparison, felt alive. If American production values and ambition gave it its scale, its heart was dark and British. We can thank Jesse Armstrong, co-creator of Peep Show, and his all-star line-up of British writers, including Lucy Prebble, Tony Roche and Georgia Pritchett. They made the Roy family expats themselves, and you could hear the old aristocratic froideur in every withering put-down or stab in the back. But we cared for them, too, even at their most monstrous. One of the many* TV professionals I consulted for this list thought Succession was so much better than everything else this year that the top 10 should just have it listed in bold and then nine blank spaces. I wouldn’t go that far but it’s certainly at the top.
*Four
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments