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1-6 of 6
- With Scotland in the World Cup in 1974, Stephen (Iain de Caestecker) is more into Glam Rock than football. A story of a family coming to terms with change in uncertain times.
- Bye-Child is Bernard MacLaverty's film version of Seamus Heaney's poem of the same title. It concerns the story of a male child who is secretly kept in a henhouse at the bottom of a garden in a village in Ireland. The child, it is implied, is the product of incestuous relations, the mother (Susan Lynch) having been sexually abused by her monstrous father (Dick Holland). The child (Jenna McCormick) lives in the henhouse, being fed scraps of left-overs in secret at night. The reason for hiding him is given in flashback sequence: the father tries to smother the child and in terror the woman strikes him on the head, rendering him incapacitated for the rest of his days. She takes the baby and leaves him in the henhouse. it is implied that this is not an easy decision, but that the mother feels it is the only way to save the child. The discovery of the freal boy is made when some local boys are playing hide-and-seek in the garden and one child (Daniel McGrady) sees the boy at the window. This is reported to the local priest (Brian Devlin) after the following Sunday's service and the priest responds by going to the house to find out for himself. In a shocking sequence he opens the door to the henhouse and on seeing the child is absolutely appalled. He takes the child out, through the house, past the woman and her father, and into the street where the audience see the child's face for the first time. The ending is shocking, MacLaverty creating a visual contrast between the 'normal' boy who instigated the find and the poor, feral child, unable to speak and completely dehumanised.
- When Glasgow City Parks' Department employee Shugie (Hugh) McCracken gets caught red-handed stealing £6.99 to buy booze and ciggies, he blames mice for the crime, claiming that they "ate the tickets". Scared of taking on the Union (who rise to the defence of McCracken) management backs down and to Shug's astonishment he finds himself reinstated.
- The exclusive story of scientists around the world who are in race against time to find the secret of flu pandemics that wipe out millions. The worst one in recorded history was in 1918 and experts fear another one could be just around the corner. The 1918 Spanish flu pandemic killed an estimated 40 million people - more people than died in the First World War - and was the biggest infection in history. Many of its victims were young, fit people. The virus killed in an unusual way, by flooding the lungs with fluid and causing haemorrhaging. It died out as mysteriously as it began. But despite the pandemic's impact, scientists still do not know what caused it. One expert called it "an 80-year-old murder mystery" and this TV special investigates how it is about to be solved.
- A man and woman discover a severed bear's paw in a park and it unearths dark thoughts and strange perversions.