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1-11 of 11
- Drama set in 1932 during the final years of British colonial rule in India.
- Falling into despair after his nine-year-old son leaves for Australia with his ex, Joseph walks away from his present life and boards a boat for Ireland to confront painful memories from his childhood.
- Romanticism from 200 years ago to 2001 is a reality system that comes from the imagination. It looks for and recognises extremes - from light to dark, from joy to dejection. Imagination, which creates the world, has to be kept supplied with feeling and intensified, otherwise the world dies. For the world to exist and for imagination to work, something has to be happening.
- It takes true originality, tenacity and talent to make it as a successful playwright in the competitive world of commercial theater. In The Play's the Thing, a major four-part series, Channel 4 has launched a search for a new British playwright - a new voice to enliven and invigorate the West End stage.
- Judah & Mohammad is an intimate portrait of two teenage boys, one from Israel and the other from Palestine, filmed over 18 months. As their personal development is shaped by the conflict that goes on around them and as violence in the Middle East reaches boiling point, the film features access to the pair's classrooms, where history lessons are as much about the present as past events.
- Sloman breaks into the band's flat after a massive party and sets up a makeshift studio in their front room, where he broadcasts all their secrets and videos. The songs include: I Kicked a Shark in the Face, Videogames, Life Is a Musical and Lez Be Friends.
- The first episode we meet the band in their crappy flat in South London England where they have no money and try to trick a pizza delivery girl into giving them free pizza by fooling the restaurant with the wrong address so they can get the pizza for free garlic bread because of their 30 minute delivery time rule. Ash the self proclaimed ladies man gives her a lame strip tease to get the pizza. She is a fan of the band so reluctantly lets this go. Their horrible manager comes over to see how they are doing and Stef asks when they will be able to get a performance venue, so he goes to a local club and tricks the manager into letting The Midnight Beast play. Things don't go so well.
- When the Beast's manager Chevy finally gets them a gig on a TV show, the boys are hit by a crisis of confidence after bumping into a mouthy hardcore band who are also appearing. They decide to try to change their image to compete, but discover that they should have had more faith in their own quirky style, as it might have avoided them being thrown off live TV when their performance doesn't quite go to plan.
- Stef stays up all night editing a rubbish animated video for the band's new track Booty Call. And Dru miraculously receives a maintenance cheque from his long-estranged dad. But when Ash unplugs the computer to make space for his video game, the entire music video is lost. Dru offers up his father's 'dirty money' to make a new video to be directed by art world icon Falco, played by Gerald Kyd. But the band soon realise it may be better to keep creative control... Three videos feature in this episode: Medium Pimpin, Daddy and Booty Call.
- The Midnight Beast are at crisis point... Dru has become hypnotised by his war-themed video games and Ash is being led around by the lump in his pants, leaving Stef to keep the band together. In an emergency intervention, their manager Chevy bans Dru from video games and urges him to get a girlfriend. Ash is forbidden from touching any girl until the band's problems are solved. Meanwhile, a wild-eyed obsessive girl called Frog, played by Hannah Tointon, falls head over heels for Dru, much to the horror of his flatmates. Two songs feature in this episode: Videogames and Life Is a Musical.
- The Midnight Beast have had enough of their budget starving-artist lifestyle. Chevy is just not cutting the mustard as their manager any more. The guys want money and fame, and they want it now. Unbeknown to the band, Dru takes matters into his own hands and makes a devil's pact with major label boss Jay Chitole. Will the group trade in their independence for sexy motorbikes and intergalactic superstardom and become just another boyband? Songs in this episode include: J£nny: Ready to Blow, Lez Be Friends and Just Another Boyband.