review - Properganda Online
Transcription
review - Properganda Online
Review 17.02.08 Two’s company Kathryn Williams and Neill MacColl on family and folk Mulholland drive The artist who is taking over Glasgow Starman Could Andrew Crumey’s Sputnik Caledonia be a novel to rival Lanark? PLUS Arts, Books, Film, Music, Games, Cinema Listings, Television & Radio CONTENTS SCOTLANDonSUNDAY February 17, 2008 CONTENTS THE PROMPT AIDAN SMITH 17.02.08 FILM FILM Knocked Up star Katherine Heigl talks to Siobhan Synnot about why she refuses to keep her mouth shut in Hollywood And Stallone’s return as Rambo leaves our film critic speechless, plus reviews of Jumper and My Blueberry Nights Actions speak louder... Straight talking Page 4 TV “Music is the only ARTS Dancing to a new tune thing that helps to X Factor dance company’s Alan Greig explains why reconnect the neural new work Other Voices, pathways to the brain” their Other Rooms breaks the mould Pages 7-9 BOOKS Page 19 Melody Gardot, Page 17 MUSIC Musical map Nobody panic! In tune, and on song Aidan Smith on why a new documentary about Scottish music has missed several tricks Plagues, terror and food — Bill Jamieson reviews a book which investigates the main areas of panic in our everyday lives Chitra Ramaswamy meets Kathryn Williams and Neill MacColl as they prepare to release their album of duets Page 6 Page 11 Page 14 PLUS ❃ Cinema ❃ TV & Radio ❃ Arts ❃ Going out ❃ Staying in ❃ Listings 17 9 19 OUR WRITERS’ WEEK Each week we will be letting you in on what has been happening in the Review office. From album previews to advance film screenings, festival launches and general cultural life, here’s what some of us have been up to this week. STUART KELLY LITERARY EDITOR It seems like a match made in heaven: one of my favourite novels of last year was Michael Chabon’s The Yiddish Policeman’s Union (a parallel universe noir thriller where Alaska was the Jewish homeland) – and it emerges the Coen Brothers are to adapt and direct the film version. Hopefully it REVIEW 3 might re-ignite interest in the long-stalled version of Chabon’s The Amazing Adventures Of Kavalier And Clay. FIONA LEITH ARTS EDITOR My Oscar research project of a week started off well, with Juno and No Country For Old Men bagged by Monday, but thanks to Vue computer gremlins, I turned up on Tuesday for a preview of There Will Be Blood which didn’t exist. Bah! Went home and consoled myself by listening to Karine Polwart’s new album, This Earthly Spell, which is impressively richer, sexier and angrier than anything she’s done to date. Stand out track: Rivers Run. Album out March 10. CHITRA RAMASWAMY ARTS WRITER Discovered Madam this week when I was sent her upcoming debut album, In Case Of Emergency, out in March. I see she has already been compared to Kylie, Alison Goldfrapp, Mark Lanegan, PJ Harvey and Nick Cave. Hmmm, wait a minute, what exactly does that mean? My advice is to just get on MySpace and check her out. ‘Call America’ is all twisted Americana, and Portisheadlike vocals. Oops, I’ve just done it myself. Cover: Central Press/Getty Images Review, 108 Holyrood Road, Edinburgh, EH8 8AS Tel: 0131-620 8424 Fax: 0131-620 8491 Display advertising: 020 7961 0200 or 0131-620 8990 Classified advertising: 0131-620 8811 Editor: Fiona Leith e-mail: fleith@scotlandonsunday.com Design: Mark Grayson, Angela McKean, Iain Donnachie & Colin Heggie Pictures: Pamela Grigg & Alan Macdonald Production: Ann Temple & Chris Dry E’RE rubbish at rugby and our footballers no longer qualify for World Cups, so you can understand the SNP’s enthusiasm for Scotland to be represented at international tournaments. But the Eurovision Song Contest?… Our men in Brussels are excited about finding a loophole in the rules, which means that, after all those years of competing as Britain, we can enter in our own right. “Having looked into it, I know the door is open for us,” says Nationalist Euro MP Alyn Smith. And they’re no less excited over at Holyrood. “There is a huge amount of talent in Scotland and we would be happy for it to be showcased,” asserts Culture Minister Linda Fabiani. The door is open. We don’t have to be boombang-a-banging on it anymore. But what kind of door are we talking about? The SNP, although they don’t quote Aldous Huxley directly, presumably believe it to be a door of perception. Millions of Eurovision viewers would perceive Scotland as standing proud next to all those other pocket-sized nations in the broken-down Balkans and that’s an unmissable marketing opportunity. Fair enough, but we have to be sure we want to open that door. For these days the door to the contest is a closet door. Eurovision is camp nonsense. Nothing wrong with camp nonsense, of course, but the last time I looked, that’s all it is. I suspect the SNP are not fully aware of just how many pairs of leather shorts feature these days. They probably still think it’s a songwriting competition. I used to think that, too, but in my defence I was nine years old. Too young to stay up and cheer for Sandi Shaw, I couldn’t sleep for the excitement of not knowing that she’d won – for Britain, and for the continuance of our fine traditions of Lennon and McCartney, Flanders and Swann and Pinky and Perky. I think it was when Cliff Richard did his strange, rubber-kneed dance during ‘Power To All Our Friends’ that I realised Eurovision was bilge, and that our best choonsmiths weren’t deigning to participate. By then, I was well on the way to becoming a musical snob. The wilderness years for Eurovision were followed by the irony years, when Terry Wogan exploited its comic potential. The irony years then gave way to the camp years, and they’re still with us. I salute the chaps in leather shorts. If it wasn’t for them, the contest would have died. So I hope the SNP know what they’re getting us into. Right now, I can’t get an image of Alex Salmond in leather shorts out of my head. It’s even more camp than the image of Jack McConnell in a pinstriped, too-short kilt and I’m sure Salmond will hate the comparison. To quote Huxley again, he’s seeking a brave new world for Scotland. But maybe as regards Eurovision he should heed the words of that other great intellectual, Larry Grayson – “Shut that door!” ❖ W ➡ Agree/Disagree? Tell us what you think at scotlandonsunday.com REVIEW 4 R EVIEW FILM ATHERINE Heigl may be hot property right now, but she has never been one to keep her mouth shut, marking her out as a rare woman in her acting community. “People who know me well know that I have an opinion about pretty much everything,” Heigl agrees. Tall with thick, blonde hair, soft features and an easy smile, in the past 12 months, the TV star turned big-screen Hollywood actress has made a perfect transition between media, while continuing her role as intern Izzie on hospital drama Grey’s Anatomy and fitting in marriage during a rare break in filming. Hollywood carries its own set of taxes; Oscar dress scrutiny and high-profile divorces are just two of them. Yet Heigl seems all too willing to pay for another moviestar rite of passage: controversy. For instance, she’s not afraid to call her co-stars to account for bad behaviour. Last year, her Grey’s Anatomy colleague Isaiah Washington allegedly used an offensive word (“faggot”) to refer to T R Knight, who plays George on the show. Washington denied uttering the slur, then while denying it again to reporters backstage at the Golden Globes last year, he used the word again. An exasperated Heigl declared that Washington “needs to just not speak in public, period”, and told Entertainment Weekly he was “thoughtless and boneheaded”. In an otherwise tight-lipped community, Heigl stands out because she speaks as she finds. “Oh I didn’t K February February17,17,2008 2008SCOTLANDonSUNDAY SCOTLAND on SUNDAY have a courageous moment,” she says dismissively. “I had a couple of glasses of champagne.” But it hasn’t put Heigl off speaking her mind, part of a conscious decision she made some years ago. So, when she won her acting award at the Emmys and her name was mispronounced, she corrected the announcer. More recently she has said she doesn’t like the relationship her Grey’s Anatomy character is having with a married man in this current series, calling it “a ratings ploy”. However, when her comedy hit Knocked Up was released, it was hard to find anyone who could express dissatisfaction without sounding like a Victorian aunt. After all, the film acknowledges some of the difficulties of family life in the post-feminist age when Alison, played by Heigl, becomes inconveniently pregnant by a jobless, pot-smoking loser called Ben (Seth Rogen). The difference between men and women, however, seemed to be that the men explored their choices with good humour and some imagination, while Alison and her sister were fretful, obsessed by domesticity and devoid of one-liners. Usually, these gripes are left to critics, but while the film was still on release, Heigl admitted that she’d found it “a little sexist”. “It paints the women as shrews, as humourless and uptight, and it paints the men as lovable, goofy, fun-loving guys. It exaggerated the characters, and I had a hard time with it. On some days. I’m playing such a bitch; why is she being such a killjoy? Why is this how you’re portraying women? Ninety-eight percent of the time it was an amazing experience, but it was hard for me to love the movie.” Months later, she stands by these remarks but is anxious that her reservations should not be read as ingratitude: “I realise I was very lucky to be in that movie. They took a huge chance on casting me. I was a TV star and that was it. The way it came out sounded like I wasn’t somehow grateful,” she squirms. What she finds salutary is that she is still being asked about her comments, “because they’re just opinions. They weren’t that interesting, and it wasn’t that outrageous”. SAY WHAT? Katherine Heigl isn’t the only American actress who has spoken out on the machine that is Hollywood, or the treatment of women in Tinseltown, or how annoying other celebs can be. Here are some of our favourites… BARBRA STREISAND I arrived in Hollywood without having my nose fixed, my teeth capped, or my name changed. That is very gratifying to me. AVA GARDNER I do everything for a reason. Most of the time the reason is money. CAMERON DIAZ I don’t want to go to work and get into bed with someone else, not even Tom Cruise. It’s not like I enjoy it. CATHERINE ZETA JONES Everyone knows we get paid a lot of money, so why pretend otherwise? COURTNEY COX I would like to do a part that would stretch me. In America it seems to me that you just take your clothes off and that helps, but I wouldn’t want to do that. CYBILL SHEPHERD If you’re considered a beauty, it’s hard to be accepted doing anything but standing around GLENN CLOSE Celebrity is death, the worst thing that can happen to an actor. GWYNETH PALTROW I don’t get Robbie Williams. I think he seems rude and he’s always getting his knickers off. MARILYN MONROE A sex symbol becomes a thing. I hate being a thing. SIGOURNEY WEAVER The movie business divides women into ice queens and sluts, and there have been times I wanted to be a slut more than anything. Grey’s Anatomy star Katherine Heigl doesn’t hold back in slamming the submissive role of women in movies – or living up to it in her new wedding rom com, she tells Siobhan Synnot PANDORA’S SOAPBOX EVIEW 5 REVIEW FILM R February 2008 SSCOTLANDonSUNDAY COTLAND on SUNDAY February 17, 17, 2008 hadnever never wanted ‘I ‘Ihad wantedtoto doaamedical medical drama. do drama.I I nevereven even watched watched ER’ never ER’ Never the bride: Heigl as (from top) Dr Isobel Stevens in Grey’s Anatomy; as the fretful, pregnant wife of Seth Rogen in Knocked Up, and donning a sari as a bridesmaid in 27 Dresses. Main photograph: Frazer Harrison/Getty “It’s kind of opened Pandora’s Box,” she laughs. “Now I won’t shut up – ask me anything!” Heigl does have a point. The world does need more films starring fun-loving, wisecracking women, and she has been busy on two more. Gerard Butler will be her sparring partner in The Ugly Truth later this year, but first there is 27 Dresses, an ambivalent frou-frou of a romantic comedy about a woman who loves weddings, but is always the bridesmaid, never the bride. 27 Dresses certainly dodges the charge of providing Pronuptia porn for girls of every age, but it still tries to have its wedding cake and eat it too. The film may vaguely float the notion that a single woman who reads Brides magazine in the privacy of her home is sad, but ultimately, all the wedding paraphernalia – the bridesmaid dresses, the wedding chit-chat, the last-minute crush on another guy – is what ultimately drives the story. Heigl brings a spark to her ostensibly mousy character, even with her hair dyed a little darker, to signify that she’s the plain sister, but Jane’s fatalism is still in stark contrast to Heigl’s default assertive go-getterism in life. Tired of waiting for her boyfriend, singer-songwriter Josh Kelley, to propose, she demanded to know what his intentions were, picked out the diamond for her ring, and organised their wedding last December, eschewing her character’s little-girl obsessions over the perfect wedding. “It actually makes me angry because those women have ruined it for the rest of us,” she asserts. “Weddings have become such a racket and they can charge three times as much for everything because women insist on the dream wedding.” Heigl’s star is on the rise: her price has risen from the $300,000 she got for Knocked Up to $6m for 27 Dresses but any working actor knows that it’s luck, as much as the talent and connections, that end up paying the bills. Heigl was nine years old when her aunt sent pictures of her to a modelling agency who signed her up for catalogue work. Three years later, she made her film debut in That Night, starring Juliette Lewis. And at 14, she played Gérard Depardieu’s bratty daughter in My Father The Hero. She went on to star in Under Siege 2 with Steven Seagal, after he invited Heigl out to Los Angeles and booked her a suite at the Beverly Wilshire for over a week. “He flew me in, put me up at this extravagant hotel where Julia Roberts’ character stayed in Pretty Woman, and didn’t even come and meet me,” she says. Aged 18 she landed a lead role in teen extraterrestrial alien show Roswell, but when that was cancelled, and she started being turned down for everything from cable weepies to Wedding Crashers, she thought her career had stuttered to a halt. “I was just about to call it quits,” she admits. Then she was hired for Grey’s Anatomy, although “I had never wanted to do a medical drama. I never even watched ER,” she confesses. Grey’s Anatomy never pretended to be as deep as, say, Lost. At its best, it’s a serious guilty pleasure combining death, disease, and fit bodies swaddled in scrubs, and despite a pay dispute last year, Heigl plans to stick with the show’s contract, making movies in the three months of the year when she isn’t holding dummy thermometers. Despite being painted as a forthright Jane Fonda, she has no weighty political projects in mind, preferring to stick to the shallow end of the pool for now. “I’m a commercial kind of gal so I don’t have any grand aspirations to do my Academy Award-winning movie,” she laughs. “I mean, I love Kate Winslet, but I know I couldn’t have her career.” ❖ 27 Dresses is on release March 14 www.27dressesthemovie.com 6 REVIEW February 17, 2008 SCOTLAND on SUNDAY The BBC has missed a golden opportunity by trying to cram Scotland’s myriad musical icons and influences into a mere hour, writes Aidan Smith N MUSIC, as in comedy, timing is everything. There was little point in calling your band Glencoe and standing on the stage of Edinburgh’s old Empire Theatre, all long hair and legsapart heroic, evoking an image of a country on the march with pumped-up passion in its breast... and doing all of this a full nine years before the closure of Ravenscraig. Glencoe, as the warm-up for Argent, were the very first band I saw perform live. They had a big sound and – though I can’t be sure on account of being drunk on two pints of lager and lime – I think they were quite political. But at that time Scottish audiences didn’t want politics from its indigenous acts. If the charts were any guide, they wanted Neil Reid, Lena Martell and – soon to stomp over yonder glen, plaided up to the hilt – the Bay City Rollers. No one remembers Glencoe now. You can’t buy their two early Seventies albums on Amazon. They don’t rate a mention in Brian Hogg’s definitive book, The History Of Scottish Rock And Pop. And a new BBC Scotland documentary, Caledonia Dreamin’, can find no room for them. This is a strange programme. Nothing to do with the Glencoe omission, but it can’t seem to work out what it’s trying to be. Then I again, maybe that’s deliberate. For this wouldn’t be an entirely inaccurate description of Scottish music. Are we macho or are we fey? Are we bedsit-scratchy or are we over-produced? Do we sing in Scottish accents or warble in American ones? What’s the link, apart from Scotland itself, between Lonnie Donegan and Franz Ferdinand? Does a native sound exist or is that just too salmon-slippery a concept? Caledonia Dreamin’ starts off as a profile of Postcard Records, the independent label run from a second-floor Glasgow tenement flat by Alan Horne, Scotland’s Andy Warhol. Then it gets bogged down in politics with contributions from singers who, railing against Thatcherism, allowed their music to get bogged down in politics. Fearful of missing anyone out, it mentions as many acts as possible, losing focus. And it still ends up neglecting some bands: Fire Engines, Aztec Camera and Big Country, from different sections of the documentary. It tries to be a broad history of our music. But you can’t do that in an hour. So why wasn’t this a series? If we self-important hacks can hog screen-time for six weeks – last year’s Deadline: The Story Of The Scottish Press – then why not our bands? Caledonia Dreamin’ is a missed oppor- tunity and a frustrating one because all the participants speak well. Justin Currie of Del Amitri recalls the schoolboy thrill of spotting Orange Juice’s Edwyn Collins from the top deck of a bus. “It was like seeing Elvis,” he says. “I wrote ‘I love Edwyn’ on my schoolbag in fourth-year and got called a poof.” Pre-Edwyn, Scots rockers were ancient. Maggie Bell looked like your mum, Dan McCafferty of Nazareth must have been 70 if he was a day and everyone knew that Alex Harvey was 108 and could remember a world without Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone. Postcard billed themselves the “Sound of Young Scotland” and sparked a pop goldrush among London talent scouts. “You just had to wear the right trousers and you got yourself a record deal,” recalls Altered Images’ Steve Lironi. There’s great archive footage of Horne, then a student, conducting a tour of Postcard’s “HQ” – an imitation-teak wardrobe – and in sandals and Argyle socks, swinging an ankle grandiloquently. But apparently he couldn’t be persuaded to reflect on those heady days from the perspective of 2008. Doubtless that’s a Warholian stance, although it’s to the documentary’s detriment. In strict business terms, Postcard lasted as long as it takes to choose a sea view and write “Wish you were here”. Just 13 singles. Suddenly in Scotland, skinny boys and ironic playfulness were out and ambition and ideas in widescreen were in. “We just realised we were a commercial entity,” says Justin Currie. And Pat Kane of Hue And Cry adds: “It [the 1980s] was a time for am- bitious young men and women to get to the place they wanted to get. Suits were worn and grandiosity was embraced.” This was the decade when schizophrenic Scotland swapped credibility for popularity. Simple Minds and Deacon Blue sold more records but interested pre-eminent pop pundit Paul Morley less and, according to author Christopher Brookmyre, Wet Wet Wet suffered a peculiarly Caledonian fate: “In Scotland there’s an enduring hatred of people who are too successful.” All of this is fascinating and deserves a fuller debate than is afforded here. The same could be said of the risky business of mixing pop with politics – not in song but on the soapbox, and not in accents that on record, as the documentary points out, were “more Memphis than Motherwell”. The Proclaimers, of course, were consistently more Muchty even than Motherwell. But there isn’t enough room in a one-off programme, and by the time it reaches Memphis, or mock-Memphis, you almost forget that it began at 185 West Princes Street in Glasgow with Collins hiding behind his floppy fringe and Horne, in the words of another contributor, “sneering at everything”. Alex Kapranos returns us to Postcard when he recalls his excitement at discovering the band who would go on to influence Franz Ferdinand after finding two old Orange Juice singles in a market-stall. “They were quite expensive – a pound each. But I was like: ‘Why had nobody told me about this stuff before?’ ” REVIEW SCOTLAND on SUNDAY February 17, 2008 More slaughter on the sly Edwyn Collins on a nostalgia allergy Edwyn Collins sheds some light on the mysterious non-appearance in Caledonia Dreamin’ of Postcard impresario Alan Horne. “He hates nostalgia,” says Collins. “As far as I know, he’s living quietly in Glasgow and no longer involved in music – but we’ve fallen out.” Collins’ wife Grace adds: “Edwyn felt Alan crossed the line. My reaction was: ‘Alan Horne is a scheming mixer – hold the front page!’ I didn’t think he’d behaved any worse than before. He got in touch when Edwyn was unwell [having suffered two brain haemorrhages]. I miss Alan: he could be very funny, and when I think back, the pair of them were arrogant so-and-sos.” “Ach, I suppose we were,” says Collins. Orange Juice inspired countless Scots to pick up a guitar. Collins acknowledges his Scottish roots, but is not a fervent flag-waver for his homeland. “I’ve always called myself an internationalist,” he says. “Yes, I look to Scotland, but I also look to Europe, America and the Far East. I don’t like parochialism, the ‘Wha’s like us?’ stuff.” Nevertheless, he says the Scots pop heritage is vivid and important enough to merit a series. “I was too ill to take part in this programme but I’m surprised it’s only a one-off.” Top of the Scots: clockwise from top left, Roddy Frame from Aztec Camera; Belle & Sebastian; Franz Ferdinand’s Alex Kapranos; The Associates; Altered Images’ Clare Grogan; Justin Currie of Del Amitri; Hue and Cry; and Orange Juice Stuart Murdoch was another who was too young to appreciate the Alan Horne aesthetic first time round, but when he formed Belle And Sebastian he wanted them to be “Son of Postcard”. There’s enough material for an hour entirely devoted to Postcard, and more than enough for another edition of Caledonia Dreamin’ on just politics. So why isn’t it a series? All the bands missed out – and they include Primal Scream, Jesus And Mary Chain and the Cocteau Twins – could fill another hour. Without trying too hard, we’ve just assembled a four-and-a-half-parter and maybe, because we’re Scottish and a bit perverse, that would do nicely. There might even be room for a snippet about Glencoe. The documentary, as it currently stands, ends with a roll-call of the contemporary acts, such as KT Tunstall, the Fratellis and the View, who show Scotland in a confident light, a country “more at ease with itself”. What a pity that someone at the BBC – either in Glasgow or London – didn’t have the same confidence in making more of such a cracking yarn. But that’s typically Caledonian too: snatching defeat from the jaws of victory. ❖ Caledonia Dreamin’ is on BBC4 on Friday at 9pm 7 FILMOFTHEWEEK ALASTAIR MCKAY . RAMBO (18) Director: Sylvester Stallone Running time: 93 minutes ★★★★★ HE Motion Picture Association of America has its own ratings system, designed to help parents avoid unpleasant films and, perhaps, to guide their children towards them. Occasionally, the association’s judgments read like a capsule review of a film. Rambo, the MPAA asserts, has “strong graphic bloody violence, sexual assaults, grisly images and language”. Well, with an estimated body count of 236, there’s no denying the graphic bloody violence, but I would quarrel about the feckin’ language. There is scarcely any language in the film at all. Apart from a few ejaculated expletives, most of the communicating is done with saturnine grunts, which operate as punctuation between the sexual assaults and the grisly images, all of which are delivered in the service of the action. Indeed, for quite a while, Rambo is so taciturn that it’s tempting to believe he has forgotten how to talk. When he does, Sylvester Stallone’s diction is akin to that of an Italian boxer who has been raised by apes, and what he says is “f*** the world”. Charming. Those who have not followed the Rambo saga will be at a slight, but not insurmountable, disadvantage. In previous instalments, Rambo has established himself as a cinematic representation of American foreign policy at its most hawkish. He is a creature of the Reagan years, a kind of Colonel Oliver North with muscles where the diplomatic tact should be, and less rigorous personal hygiene. It was Rambo, remember, who helped the Mujahideen defeat the Soviets in Afghanistan. He is an uber-cowboy, a bandanawearing symbol of rugged individualism who has experienced enough violence to know the power of it, but also its danger. This great wisdom has come at a cost. He has a bit of post-traumatic stress, flashbacks to Vietnam, and is living peacefully in an obscure corner of Thailand when he is disturbed by a wellmeaning group of missionaries, who want to go upriver to help the victims of repression in Burma. It’s fair to say that Rambo doesn’t have much time for do-gooding, but he is quite taken by Sarah (Julie Benz). Naturally, when the party is attacked by pirates who threaten Sarah, a very large fuse blows inside Rambo’s head, and he is suddenly cured of his nihilistic pacifism. He kills the bad men, even though he is T Ramble: when he does talk, Stallone’s speech is akin to that of an Italian boxer raised by apes ridiculously outnumbered and stands no chance. That’s what Rambo does. So, after a decent interval of 20 seconds to consider the implications of this massacre, the missionaries continue upriver and Rambo returns home to have a nightmare in his hammock. Then another do-gooder turns up to tell him that Sarah and the other churchy types have been taken prisoner. Rambo tries not to intervene, but a little voice in his head tells him: “War is in your blood. When you’re pushed, killin’s as easy as breathin’.” Actually, this may be an understatement. Rambo’s breathin’ is a bit laboured sometimes, especially when he runs. Anyway, bad things are happening in Glasgow Film Festival This week’s highlights MR LONELY: Harmony Korine’s Scottish-set drama starring Samantha Morton. Cineworld 15, Monday, 8.45pm; Tues, 1.30pm CONSENTING ADULTS: See why Sean Biggerstaff won a Scottish Bafta. GFT, Tuesday, 8.15pm FUNNY GAMES: Michael Haneke remakes his own film for Hollywood. Starring Naomi Watts and Michael Pitt. Cineworld 15, Wednesday, 8.45pm THE COTTAGE: London to Brighton director Paul Andrew Williams again teams violence with comedy. GFT, Saturday, 9.15pm THE BANK JOB: Jason Statham stars in this true story of a Seventies steal. Cineworld 4, Tuesday, 8.20pm Until February 24 www.glasgowfilmfestival.org.uk Burma. There are massacres in which soldiers throw mines into shallow water and then order innocent people to run through the puddles to the other side. If they survive, they are shot. It is killing as sport, and Stallone, who directs the film as well as starring in it, treats it this way. Perhaps Stallone is sincere in his abhorrence of the Burmese regime, but his filmmaking has the political sophistication of a cartoon, and a profound fear of stillness. His action scenes are shot with the camera stuck on fast-forward and the volume turned up to 11. You may, without watching the film, be able to guess the outcome. Stallone doesn’t really bother with characters, but it’s worth noting the performance of Graham McTavish, a graduate of The Bill and Casualty, who delivers a hilariously over-the-top turn as Lewis, a cockney mercenary. Lewis, another mercenary explains, is old-school SAS; a good soldier, but a total maniac. He also believes he is harder than Rambo, which is a silly mistake, even for a nutter. Anyway, Rambo sorts him out by pointing a crossbow in his eye and baffling him with gnomic philosophy: “Live for nothing or die for something.” It’s not exactly Descartes, but it does allow Stallone to kill people in ever more shocking ways, from speedy splatter to heads being blown off, and worse. The crowd I saw this with enjoyed it ironically, which I wouldn’t recommend, but it’s hard to know how else to deal with such unrelenting stupidity. Rambo isn’t so bad that it’s good. It is worse than that. On general release from Friday ➡ Agree/Disagree? Tell us what you think at scotlandonsunday.com 8 REVIEW FILM February 17, 2008 SCOTLAND on SUNDAY A leap into the overblown . JUMPER (12A) Director: Doug Liman Running time: 88 minutes ★★★★★ HE film starts with a voiceover, in which teenager David Rice (Max Thieriot) is explaining his special gift. “Once I was a normal person,” he says, “a chump, just like you.” The action flashes back to the moment in David’s adolescence when he first began to throw off the shackles of chumphood. He is being taunted by a bully, who throws the Eiffel Tower snowglobe he has bought for his prospective girlfriend on to a frozen lake. Undeterred by the danger of the situation, the weed David ventures on to the ice, before suddenly disappearing from view. Ordinarily, he would drown. Instead, his panic propels him to safety. “One second I’m a goner,” he reports, “next thing I know I’m at the Ann Arbor public library.” David is a Jumper. He can teleport himself around the world at will, escaping from difficult situations T ABERDEEN Cineworld, Queens Links Leisure Park (0871 200 2000) Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun-Wed 11am, 1.10 Sweeney Todd (18) Sun/Mon 9 Jumper (12A) 11.20am, 1.30, 4, 6.15, 8.30 Underdog (U) 11.50am, 1.50 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 3.50 Penelope (U) 11.40am No Country For Old Men (15) Sun-Wed 6 Cloverfield (15) 2, 4.10, 6.40, 8.50 The Water Horse (PG) 11am, 1.20, 3.50, 6.30 (Sun/Mon/Wed/Thu) Juno (12A) 11am, 1.20, 3.45, 6.20, 8.40 Definitely, Maybe (12A) Sun-Tue 3.15, 8.40; Wed/Thu 3.15 (Wed) 8.50 There Will Be Blood (15) 1, 4.30, 8 The Bucket List (12A) 12.30, 3, 5.30, 8.10 Sunday (12A) Tue 7 National Treasure (PG) 11.10am, 2, 5, 6.10, 8.15, 9 U2 3D (U) Wed/Thu 11am, 1, 3, 5, 7, 8.30 (Wed) 9 The Belmont, Belmont Street (01224 343536) There Will Be Blood (15) 2.15, 5.15, 8.15 The Band’s Visit (12A) Sun 1.30; Mon 6.30 Juno (12A) 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 The Diving Bell And The Butterfly (Le Scaphandre Et Le Papillon) (12A) Sun 3.50, 6.20, 8.45; Mon-Thu 1.20, 3.50, 6.20 (Tue-Thu) 8.45 (Mon/Wed/Thu) Azur & Asmar: The Princes’ Quest (U) Sun/Mon noon Paris, Texas (15) Tue 8.45 and travelling to the Wonders of the World while still being home for his tea. His first journey is to travel away from his alcoholic abusive dad, to New York, where he hones his jumping skills in Central Park. At first, his control is erratic and he collides with trees. Soon enough, he is shamelessly exploiting his talent. He robs banks, and keeps a yuppie apartment with an ornamental motorbike and a pillar box in the lounge. He drops into London, arriving on the clockface of Big Ben. He goes surfing in Fiji. He has a sandwich on top of a Sphinx. If his choices seem slightly clichéd – and oddly similar to the vacation enjoyed by Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman in The Bucket List – it’s because he can only jump to places he has seen a picture of. Hence, he tends to turn up at picture-postcard locations. Eight years go by, and David is now played by Hayden Christensen. He is being pursued by Roland (Samuel L Jackson, with scary white hair) who is a Paladin. Viewers with memories of Glen Michael’s Cartoon Cavalcade will be excused a smile at this point, but CAMPBELTOWN Campbeltown Picture House, Hall Street (01586 553899) Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) 7 CLYDEBANK Empire, Britannia Way (0871 471 4714) Cloverfield (15) 1.30, 3.40, 5.50, 8.20 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 3.30, 8.40 All The Boys Love Mandy Lane (18) 2.40, 4.50, 7.10, 9.20 The Water Horse (PG) 10.40am (Sun) 1.10, 3.50, 6.30 Juno (12A) 11.20am, 1.40, 4.20, 6.50, 9.15 The Bucket List (12A) 1, 3.20, 5.40, 8.10 National Treasure (PG) noon (Sun) 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 9 Jumper (12A) 11.30am (Sun) 1.50, 4.10, 6.40, 8.50 The Ugly Duckling And Me (U) Sun 10.45am, 12.40 Penelope (U) 1.20, 6.10 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 4, 8.30 (Sun-Tue) No Country For Old Men (15) 9.10 Underdog (U) Sun 11.50am, 1.45, 6.20; Mon-Thu 1.45, 6.20 (Mon/Tue) St Trinian’s (12A) Sun 11.40am Hoodwinked (U) Sun 11am Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun 11.20am Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 6.20, 8.30 Stormbreaker (PG) Sun 11am DUMFRIES Vue, Shiprow Odeon, Shakespeare Street (0871 224 0240) (0871 224 4007) The Bucket List (12A) noon (Sun-Tue) 3, 5.15, 7.45 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 4, 8.45 (Sun/ Mon/Wed/Thu) Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/ Thu 5.45, 8.15 Definitely, Maybe (Subtitled) (12A) Tue 8.45 Sweeney Todd (18) 8.15 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 1.40, 6.30 Jumper (12A) 11.40am (Sun-Tue) 2.20, 4.30, 6.45, 9 Penelope (U) Sun-Tue 12.15 National Treasure (PG) 11.10am (Sun-Tue) 2, 5, 8 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Mon/Tue 11.20am Alvin And The Chipmunks (Subtitled) (U) Sun 11.20am The Water Horse (PG) Sun-Tue 12.30, 3.15, 5.45; Wed/Thu 3.15 Cloverfield (15) 2.40, 4.45, 7, 9.15 Juno (12A) 11am (Sun-Tue) 1.20, 3.40, 6, 8.30 ANNAN Annan Lonsdale Cinema, Moat Road (01461 206901) The Water Horse (PG) Sun 12.45, 3.15; MonThu 1.45 (Tue) 5.45 Sweeney Todd (18) 8 National Treasure (PG) Sun/Mon/Wed/Thu 12.15 (Sun) 2.55 (Sun) 5.35, 8.10; Tue 1.45, 5.30, 8.10 Brick Lane (15) Sun 5.55 AYR Odeon, Burns Statue Square (0871 224 4007) The Water Horse (PG) 1.30, 4.15 (Sun) Stardust (PG) Tue 11.30am National Treasure (Parent And Baby Screening) (PG) Tue 11am Over Her Dead Body (12A) Sun 1.15 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun 12.30 National Treasure (PG) 2.30, 5.30, 8.20 Cloverfield (15) 6.15 (Mon-Thu) 6.45, 9 Jumper (Subtitled) (12A) Sun 4; Mon 6.30; Tue 8.50; Thu 1.45 Juno (12A) 1.15 (Mon-Thu) 3.45, 6.20, 8.45 Jumper (12A) Sun/Mon 1.45, 4 (Mon) 6.30 (Sun) 8.50; Tue-Thu 1.35 (Tue/Wed) 4, 6.30, 8.50 (Wed/Thu) National Treasure (PG) 2.30, 5.30, 8.15 Stardust (PG) Wed 10.30am Penelope (U) Sun noon Robert Burns Centre, Mill Road (01387 264808) The Kite Runner (12A) Thu 10.45am Lust, Caution (18) Wed/Thu 7.30 DUNDEE Cineworld, Kingsway West (0871 200 2000) National Treasure (PG) 11.30am, 2.20, 3.20, 5.10, 6.10, 8, 9 Jumper (12A) 12.15, 2.30, 4.40, 6.55, 9.10 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) 11.30am, 1.25 Enchanted (PG) 11.05am Sunday (12A) Mon 8.20 Juno (12A) 11.45am, 2, 4.15, 6.30, 8.50 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/ Thu 1.50, 6.35, 8.55 The Bucket List (12A) 1.15, 3.45, 6.15, 8.45 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 3.35, 6, 8.40 The Water Horse (PG) 11am, 1.20, 3.40, 6.05 Cloverfield (15) 2.55, 4.55, 7, 9.05 No Country For Old Men (15) Sun/Tue 8.20 Penelope (U) 11.15am, 1.40 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 11.50am, 1.50 (Sun-Tue) 4, 6.20 (Sun-Tue) Underdog (U) 11.20am, 1.10 Sweeney Todd (18) 8.30 DCA, Nethergate (01382 909900) Miracle In Milan (NC) Sun 3.30 Roald Dahl’s Matilda (PG) Sun 1 British Animation Awards (NC) Thu 6 The Happiness Of The Katakuris (15) Sun 1 The Killing Of John Lennon (15) Sun/Tue 1 (Tue) 6; Mon/Wed 3.30, 8.30; Thu 1, 8.30 In The Valley Of Elah (15) Sun 3.30, 6, 8.30; Mon-Thu 1.30, 4, 6.30, 9 Tale Of The Pale And Silvery Moon After The Rain (PG) Tue 4 Hotel Harabati (NC) Sun/Tue 8.30; Mon/Wed 1, 6; Thu 3.30 Roland is not a brass lamp with an attitude problem. He is a scary policeman of the jumping world. When he catches a Jumper – a process which involves a kind of Taser/ twiddling stick and high voltage cables – he stabs them to death, “because only God should have the power to be in all places at all times”. That’s pretty much as deep as it gets. In place of nuance, Liman (the director of Swingers, whose stewardship of The Bourne Identity propelled him into action movies) opts for special effects, a chase, and a buddy routine with a more experienced Jumper, whose misfortune it is to be called Griffin (Jamie Bell). There is a girl, Millie (Rachel Bilson), who gets to be girlish in Rome while the boys joyride round Tokyo in a stolen Mercedes, or accidentally teleport into a Chechen battlefield. Griffin, at least, has some imagination. David seems trapped in an adolescent fantasy which struggles to approach the complexity of a comic book. ALASTAIR McKAY On general release from Friday Odeon Douglasfield, Douglas Road (0871 224 4007) Stardust (PG) Tue 11am Penelope (U) 11.15am (Sun-Tue) 1.15, 6.15 Definitely, Maybe (12A) Sun-Tue 11am, 1.30, 6.30; Wed/Thu 11 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 3.30, 8.30 No Country For Old Men (15) 8.15 National Treasure (PG) 11am, 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 9 Juno (12A) 11.30am (Sun/ Mon/Wed/Thu) 2, 4.15, 6.30, 8.45 Jumper (Subtitled) (12A) Sun/Mon 2; Tue/Wed 9; Thu 11.15am, 6.45 Jumper (12A) 11.15am (Sun/ Mon/Wed) 1, 2 (Tue-Thu) 3.15, 4.15, 5.45, 6.45 (Sun-Wed) 8, 9 (Sun/Mon/Thu) Bee Movie (U) 11am Interview (15) Tue 9 Juno (Parent And Baby Screening) (12A) Tue 11am Sweeney Todd (18) Sun-Tue 4, 9 (Sun/Mon) The Water Horse (PG) 11.15am, 1.30, 3.45, 6 Underdog (U) 11am, 1 The Ugly Duckling And Me (U) 11am, 1 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) 11am Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 11.15am, 1.30, 4, 6.30, 8.45 The Bucket List (12A) 1.30, 4, 6.15, 8.45 Cloverfield (15) 3, 5, 7, 9 DUNFERMLINE Odeon, Whimbrel Place (0871 224 4007) Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporium (U) Sun 11.50am National Treasure (PG) 11.30am (Sun) 1.45, 2.30, 4.45, 5.30, 7.45, 8.30 Over Her Dead Body (12A) Sun-Tue 11.15am (Sun) 2, 6.35 Penelope (U) 11.20am (Sun) 2 National Treasure (Parent And Baby Screening) (PG) Wed 11am Interview (15) Wed 8 Stardust (PG) Wed 11.45am Bee Movie (U) Sun 11am The Water Horse (PG) 11.50am (Sun) 3, 5.30 Sweeney Todd (18) Sun-Tue 4.05, 8.50 The Ugly Duckling And Me (U) Sun 11.45am The Bucket List (12A) 2, 4.15, 6.35, 9 There Will Be Blood (15) 1.15, 4.40, 8 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun 11am Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 2.30 (Thu) 4.45, 7, 9.15 Cloverfield (15) 4.45, 7, 9.15 Definitely, Maybe (12A) Sun-Tue/Thu 8.45; Wed 2.30 Jumper (12A) 12.30 (Sun) 2, 3.15, 4.15, 5.45, 6.45, 8, 9 Juno (12A) Sun-Tue/Thu 11.30am (Sun) 2, 4.45, 7, 9.25 Juno (Subtitled) (12A) Wed 2, 4.45, 7, 9.25 EAST KILBRIDE Odeon, Olympia Shopping Centre, Rothesay Street (0871 224 4007) Bee Movie (U) Sun 11am No Country For Old Men (15) 8.40 Jumper (12A) 2 (Mon-Thu) 4.10, 6.50 (Sun/Tue-Thu) 9.15 Jumper (Subtitled) (12A) Sun 2; Mon 6.50 Definitely, Maybe (12A) Sun-Tue 4, 9; Wed/Thu 8 Cloverfield (15) 2.30, 4.40, 7, 9.10 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 1.40, 4, 6.30, 9 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun-Tue 11.25am (Sun) 1.40, 6.40 Interview (15) Tue 8 The Bucket List (Parent And Baby Screening) (12A) Tue 11am Juno (12A) 11.10am (Sun) 1.30, 3.50, 6.20, 8.50 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 11.05am (Sun) 1.20, 3.40, 6.40, 9 Penelope (U) 12.10 (Sun) 3, 5.40 Sweeney Todd (18) Sun/Mon 8 The Bucket List (12A) 1.50, 4.20, 7, 9.20 The Water Horse (PG) 12.30 (Sun) 3.20, 6 Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporium (U) Sun noon Stardust (PG) Tue 11am National Treasure (PG) 11.20am (Sun) 2.20, 5.30, 8.30 The boy gets around: Hayden Christensen and Rachel Bilson are all over the place in Jumper. EDINBURGH Odeon Wester Hailes, Westside Plaza (0870 755 1231) Stardust (PG) Tue 11.15am Definitely, Maybe (Parent And Baby Screening) (12A) Tue 11.15am Definitely, Maybe (12A) 12.30 (Sun/ Mon) 5.45 Cloverfield (15) 3.45, 6, 8.15 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 3.15, 5.45, 8.15 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun/Mon 1.30 Sweeney Todd (18) Sun-Tue 3, 8 Jumper (12A) 1 (Sun/Mon) 3.30, 6, 8.30 No Country For Old Men (15) 8 Juno (12A) 1 (Sun/Mon) 3.30, 6.15, 8.30 National Treasure (PG) Sun/Tue-Thu 1.45 (Sun) 4.45, 7.30; Mon 1.45 National Treasure (Subtitled) (PG) Mon 4.45, 7.30 The Water Horse (PG) 2.15 (Sun/Mon) 5, 7.30 Penelope (U) 1.45 (Sun/Mon) 3.45, 6 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 1 (Sun/Mon) 3.15, 6.15 (Sun-Tue) 8.30 Cameo, Home Street Juno (12A) 1.25, 4, 6.45, 9.15 No Country For Old Men (15) Sun-Tue 3.30 (Mon/Tue) 6.15, 9 A Comedy Of Power (L’Ivresse Du Pouvoir) (PG) Mon-Thu 1 Paranoid Park (15) Sun 1.30 There Will Be Blood (15) 1.40, 5.25, 8.40 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 3.45, 6.20, 9 Cineworld, Dundee Street (0871 200 2000) There Will Be Blood (15) 1.05, 4.30, 8 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 12.20, 3, 5.50, 8.40 Juno (12A) 11.10am, 1.30, 4, 6.30, 9 The Water Horse (PG) 11.05am, 1.25, 3.45, 6.10 (Sun-Tue) Cloverfield (15) 12.05, 2.15, 4.35, 6.50, 9.05 No Country For Old Men (15) Sun-Tue/Thu 3.10, 5.55, 8.45; Wed 3.10 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 6.30 Penelope (U) 11am, 1.05 My Blueberry Nights (12A) Wed 8.45 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 11.50am, 2 Underdog (U) 11.10am Sweeney Todd (18) Sun-Tue 8.35 Jodhaa Akbar (12A) 11am, 3.15, 7.30 U2 3D (U) Wed 8.45; Thu 11am, 1, 3, 5, 7.10, 9.20 Jumper (12A) 11am, noon, 1.20, 2.20, 3.40, 4.40, 6, 7, 8.20, 9.20 National Treasure (PG) 11.20am, 12.25 (Sun-Wed) 2.20, 3.20 (Sun-Wed) 5.15, 6 (Sun-Wed) 8.10, 9.10 The Bucket List (12A) 12.40, 3.15, 5.50, 8.30 All The Boys Love Mandy Lane (18) 4.15, 6.30, 8.50 Dominion, Newbattle Terrace (0131 447 4771) In The Valley Of Elah (15) 6.05, 8.35 Sweeney Todd (18) 8.50 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 1.30 (Sun/Mon/Thu) 4.10, 8.45 The Water Horse (PG) 1 (Sun/Mon/Thu) 3.30, 6.10 National Treasure (PG) 2.15 (Sun/Mon/Thu) 5.15, 8.05 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 6.40 Penelope (U) 1.50 (Sun/Mon/Thu) 4 Filmhouse, Lothian Road (0131 228 2688) The Diving Bell And The Butterfly (Le Scaphandre Et Le Papillon) (12A) 3.45, 6.15, 8.45 Before The Devil Knows You’re Dead (15) 1.15, 6 (Sun) 8.30 Paris, Texas (15) Sun 2, 8.15 Beauty In Trouble (Kraska V Nesnazich) (NC) Sun 5.45 Piglet’s Big Movie (U) Sun 1; Mon 10.30am Osama (12A) Thu 6 Hammett (NC) Wed 8.45; Thu 3.30 Bad Education (La Mala Educacion) (15) Tue 6 The Witnesses (Les Temoins) (15) Mon 6 British Animation Awards Programme 2 (15) Tue 3.30; Wed 6.30 In The Valley Of Elah (15) Mon/Tue/Thu 5.45 (Mon/Thu) 8.20; Wed 2.45, 5.45 Marty (NC) Mon 3.30; Tue 6.15 Azur & Asmar: The Princes’ Quest (U) 1.30 (Mon-Thu) 3.45 Odeon Lothian Road (0871 224 4007) Cloverfield (15) Sun/Mon/Wed/Thu 5.30, 8 (Sun/Mon/Wed); Tue 8 Jumper (12A) 1 (SunTue) 3.15, 5.30, 8.15 Juno (Subtitled) (12A) Mon 6.30; Thu 8.45 Cloverfield (Subtitled) (15) Tue 5.30; Thu 8 Juno (12A) 2.15, 4.20, 6.30 (Sun/ Tue-Thu) 8.45 (Sun-Wed) Stardust (PG) Tue 11am National Treasure (PG) 2.30, 5.30, 8.15 The Water Horse (PG) Sun 1; Mon-Thu 1 (Mon/ Tue) 3.15 Jumper (Parent and Baby Screening) (12A) Tue 10.30am The Water Horse (Subtitled) (PG) Sun 3.15 (0871 224 4007) The Scotsman Hotel, North Bridge (0131 556 5565) Last Tango In Paris (18) Sun 8 Vue, Omni, Greenside (0871 224 0240) Juno (12A) 10.50am (Sun/Mon) 1.20, 4, 6.30, 9 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 1.10, 4, 6.50, 9.30 Penelope (Subtitled) (U) Sun 11.45am Definitely, Maybe (12A) 4.50 (Sun/Mon/Wed/ Thu) 7.30 Definitely, Maybe (Subtitled) (12A) Tue 4.50 Penelope (U) 11.45am (Mon) 2.15 National Treasure (PG) 10.30am (Sun/Mon) 11.30am (Sun/Mon) 1.30, 2.30, 4.40, 5.30, 7.45, 8.30 Cloverfield (15) 11.15am (Sun/Mon) 1.45, 4.15, 6.40, 9.15 The Bucket List (12A) 12.15, 2.45, 5.15, 8 There Will Be Blood (15) 12.45, 4.30, 8.15 Over Her Dead Body (12A) Sun-Tue 9.30 The Water Horse (PG) Sun-Tue 10.20am (Sun/Mon) 1.10, 4, 6.50 Jumper (12A) 10.40am (Sun/Mon) 1, 3.45, 6, 8.45 Vue, Ocean Terminal, Victoria Dock (0871 224 0240) All The Boys Love Mandy Lane (18) 2.15, 4.30, 6.45, 9.15 The Bucket List (12A) 12.15 (Sun/ Mon) 2.45, 5.15, 7.45 Jumper (12A) 10.10am (Sun/Mon) 11.10am (Sun/Mon) 12.40 (Sun/Mon) 1.40, 3.10, 4.10, 5.40, 6.40, 8.10, 9.10 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 3, 5.45, 8.45 Sweeney Todd (18) 8.50 Underdog (U) Sun/Mon 10.20am, 12.20 Penelope (U) Sun-Tue 10.15am (Sun/Mon) 12.45 (Sun/Mon) 3, 5 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 8.40 Cloverfield (15) 2.20, 4.50, 7, 9.20 Juno (12A) Sun 10.20am, 12.50, 5.50, 8; Mon-Thu 10.20am (Mon) 12.50 (Mon) 3.20, 5.50, 8 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 3.40, 6.10 The Water Horse (PG) 10am (Sun/Mon) 10.40am (Sun/ Mon) 12.20 (Sun/Mon) 1, 2.50, 3.30, 5.20, 6, 8.20 Charlie Wilson’s War (15) Sun-Tue 7.50 Bee Movie (U) Sun/Mon 10am National Treasure (PG) 10.30am (Sun/Mon) 11.30am (Sun/Mon) 1.30, 2.30, 4.30, 5.30, 7.30, 8.30 Elizabeth: The Golden Age (12A) Wed 11.30am Juno (Subtitled) (12A) Sun 3.20 National Treasure (Parent And Baby Screening) (PG) Wed 11.30am Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun/ Mon 10.05am, 12.05 The Ugly Duckling And Me (U) Sun-Wed 10.20am, 12.50 ELGIN Moray Playhouse, High Street (01343 542680) Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun 11.20am National Treasure (PG) 1.40, 5, 7.50 The Water Horse (PG) 1.30, 4.40 Enchanted (PG) Sun 11am Cloverfield (15) 8 FALKIRK Cineworld, Central Retail Park, Old Bison Works (0871 200 2000) Jumper (12A) 11.30am (Sun/Mon) 12.30 (Sun/ Mon) 1.50, 2.50, 4.10, 5.10, 6.30, 7.30, 8.50, 9.40 National Treasure (PG) 11am (Sun/Mon) noon (Sun/Mon) 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 9 You Kill Me (15) Wed 7 All The Boys Love Mandy Lane (18) 2.40, 4.50, 7.20, 9.35 The Bucket List (12A) 1.25 (Sun/Mon) 3.45, 6.15, 8.45 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 3.30, 6, 8.30 Juno (12A) 11.20am (Sun/Mon) 2.10, 4.30, 6.50, 9.30 The Water Horse (PG) 11.10am (Sun/Mon) 1.35 (Sun/ Mon) 4, 6.25 Cloverfield (15) 4.15, 6.40, 8.50 No Country For Old Men (15) 9 Penelope (U) Sun-Wed 12.20 (Sun/Mon) 2.30, 4.45, 7 (SunTue) Over Her Dead Body (12A) Sun-Wed 11.40am (Sun/Mon) 2, 4.15, 6.30, 8.45 (SunTue) Underdog (U) Sun/Mon 10.50am, 12.45 Sweeney Todd (18) Sun-Tue 9.10 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun/Tue-Thu 11.45am (Sun) 2.05; Mon 11.45 Enchanted (PG) Sun/Mon 10.55am Bee Movie (U) Sun/Mon 11.05am, 1.10 The Devil Wears Prada (PG) Mon 2 U2 3D (U) Wed 8.45; Thu 3, 5, 7.10, 9.20 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed 9.05; Thu 2.15, 4.30, 6.45, 9.05 FTH Cinema, Falkirk Town Hall, West Bridge Street (01324 506850) Brick Lane (15) Wed 11am, 1.30, 7.30 The Killing Of John Lennon (15) Sun 7.30 The Band’s Visit (12A) Thu 7.30 GALASHIELS Pavilion, Market Street (01896 752767) Cloverfield (15) 8.30 The Water Horse (PG) 1.20 (Sun) 5.40 Jumper (12A) 6, 8.20 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 5.50 St Trinian’s (12A) Sun 3.20 Penelope (U) Sun 3.50 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Thu 8 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 8.10 Sweeney Todd (18) Sun-Wed 8 National Treasure (PG) 1.50 (Sun) 5.30 Underdog (U) Sun 1.10 Enchanted (PG) Sun 3.10 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun 1 GLASGOW Capitol, Sauchiehall Street (0141 331 1040) Atonement (15) Mon-Thu 6, 8.30 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 5.30, 8 National Treasure (PG) 2.45 (Sun/Thu) 5.15, 7.45 Cineworld Parkhead, Forge Shopping Centre, 1221 Gallowgate (0871 200 2000) Cloverfield (15) Sun-Tue 8.50 The Water Horse (PG) 10.50am, 1.20, 3.50, 6.20 Juno (12A) 3.40, 6.30, 8.50 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 3, 5.40, 8.20 The Bucket List (12A) 11.20am, 1.40, 4, 6.30, 9.10 National Treasure (PG) noon, 2.40, 5.40, 8.40 Jumper (12A) 11.50am, 2, 4.20, 6.40, 9 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 8.50 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 6, 8.30 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) 11.10am, 1 Underdog (U) 12.10, 2.10, 4.10 Penelope (U) 11.30am, 1.30 FILM REVIEW 9 SCOTLAND on SUNDAY February 17, 2008 OTHER RELEASES . MY BLUEBERRY NIGHTS (12A) Director: Wong Kar Wai Running time: 111 minutes ★★★★★ BE KIND REWIND (12A) Director: Michel Gondry Running time: 101 minutes ★★★★★ ONG Kar Wai is one of the great stylists of contemporary cinema, at least when he has cinematographer Christopher Doyle in tow. His 2000 film, In The Mood For Love, was one of the most sensuous, beautiful works of recent years, and the prospect of those sensibilities being applied to his first American film was mouth-watering. The screenplay is by the thriller writer Lawrence Block, and in casting Norah Jones opposite Jude Law, Wong seemed to be following the lead of Jim Jarmusch in exploiting the aura of famous musicians. In reality, My Blueberry Nights is pretty without being gorgeous, but in opting for a road movie around some fairly obvious locations, Wong offers reminders of directors who have W Cineworld Renfrew Street (0871 200 2000) The Bucket List (12A) 10.50am, 1.20, 3.40, 6.10, 8.40 National Treasure (PG) 11.20am, 11.50am, 2.20, 3, 5.20 (Sun/Mon/Wed/Thu) 6.10, 8.20 (Sun/Mon/Wed/Thu) 9.15 U2 3D (U) Wed 8.30; Thu 11am, 1.30, 3.50, 6.20, 8.50 Jumper (12A) 10.20am, 11am, 12.50, 1.50, 3.20, 4.30, 6, 7, 8.45, 9.40 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 6.40, 9.10 Cloverfield (Subtitled) (15) Sun 1.50; Mon 6.30 Cloverfield (15) 11.30am, 1.50 (Mon-Thu) 4.10, 6.30 (Sun/TueThu) 8.50 The Diving Bell And The Butterfly (Le Scaphandre Et Le Papillon) (12A) 3.50, 6.30, 9.15 (Sun-Tue) The Ugly Duckling And Me (U) 11.30am, 1.40 The Water Horse (PG) 12.10, 2.50, 5.30 Juno (12A) 10.30am, 1.10, 4, 6.40, 9.20 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 11.30am, 2.30, 5.20, 8.10 There Will Be Blood (15) 12.50, 4.20, 8 All The Boys Love Mandy Lane (18) 4.20, 6.50, 9.20 P.S. I Love You (12A) Sun-Tue/Thu 8.20 My Blueberry Nights (12A) Wed 8.45 Jodhaa Akbar (12A) 11am, 3.15, 7.30 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) 10.50am Sweeney Todd (18) 4.10, 6.50, 9.10 Underdog (U) 11.50am, 2.10 Over Her Dead Body (12A) Sun-Wed 11.20am, 1.50, 4.10, 6.40, 9.10 (Sun-Tue) Penelope (U) 11.40am, 2 No Country For Old Men (15) 11.40am, 2.40, 5.50, 8.50 Glasgow Film Festival: CCA (0141 332 6535) MAP: Visible Cinema (NC) Sun 6.30 An Unlikely Weapon (NC) Tue 6.15 How Do I Love You? (NC) Sun 4.30 XXY (NC) Tue 8.30 Bonds Of Belonging (NC) Sun 2.30 Four Minutes (Vier Minuten) (NC) Wed 6.15 Black, White + Gray (NC) Wed 8.30; Thu 6.15 A Walk Into The Sea: Danny Williams And The Warhol Factory (NC) Thu 8.30 Glasgow Film Festival: Cineworld (0141 332 6535) You, The Living (Du Levande) (NC) Tue 6.15 The Bank Job (NC) Tue 8.20; Wed 2 Redacted (NC) Tue 8.45; Wed 1.30 Return To Goree (Retour A Goree) (NC) Wed/Thu 6.15 Shotgun Stories (NC) Wed 8.20; Thu 2 Funny Games (NC) Wed 8.45; Thu 1.30 Irina Palm (NC) Thu 6 My Blueberry Nights (12A) Sun 8.45 Mister Lonely (NC) Mon 8.45; Tue 1.30 Charlie Bartlett (NC) Thu 8.45 King Corn (NC) Thu 8.20 The Spiderwick Chronicles (NC) Sun 1 Teeth (NC) Sun 2; Mon 8.20 The Aerial (NC) Sun 6 Honeydripper (NC) Sun 6.15 The Great World Of Sound (NC) Sun 8.20; Mon 2; Tue 6 Thieves (Ladrones) (NC) Mon 1.30; Wed 6 The Second Wind (NC) Mon 5.45 White Night (NC) Mon 6; Tue 2 Glasgow Film Festival: Glasgow Film Theatre, Rose Street (0141 332 6535) Unrelated (NC) Thu 8.15 The Trap (Wana) (NC) Thu 6.15 Water Lilies (Naissance Des Pieuvres) (NC) Thu 6 Mr Skeffington (NC) Thu 1 Garage (18) Wed 9; Thu 3.45 In Search Of A Midnight Kiss (NC) Wed 8.30; Thu 2.30 Peer To Peer (NC) Wed 6.30 The Collector (Komornik) (NC) Wed 6.15 The Second Wind (NC) Sun 1.15 The Old Maid (NC) Sun 1 Oliver Twist (PG) Sun 3.30 John Sayles (NC) Sun 4.15 Caramel (NC) Sun 6 We Are Together (NC) Thu 8.30 King Corn (NC) Wed 3.30 The Little Foxes (PG) Wed 1 Empties (Vratne Lahve) (NC) Sun 6.15 Chacun Son Cinema (NC) Sun 8.15; Mon 2.30 The Inheritence (NC) Sun 8.30 Dark Victory (NC) Mon 1 An Unlikely Weapon (NC) Mon 3.30 Children Of Glory (Szabadsag, Szerelem) (NC) Mon 6.15 The Girl By The Lake (La Ragaza Del lago) (NC) Mon 6.30; Tue 3.30 The Last Mistress (Une Vieille Maitresse) (NC) Mon 8.30; Tue 2.30 Far North (NC) Mon 8.40; Tue 1 The Letter (NC) Tue 6 Them (15) Tue 6.30 Consenting Adults (15) Tue 8.15 Angel (NC) Tue 8.30; Wed 2.30 Glasgow Film Festival: Grosvenor Cinema, Ashton Lane (0141 332 6535) Crazy Love (NC) Thu 6.30 You, The Living (Du Levande) (NC) Wed 6.30 Children Of Glory (Szabadsag, Szerelem) (NC) Tue 6.30 My Blueberry Nights (12A) Mon 6.30 George A Romero’s Diary Of The Dead (NC) Sun 6.30 Grosvenor Cinema (0141 339 8444) The Little Polar Bear (U) Sun 10.30am Cloverfield (15) Sun 8.10; Mon 8.45 The Kite Runner (12A) 12.50 There Will Be Blood (15) Sun 12.30, 3.50, 7; Mon-Thu 11.30am, 2.50, 6, 9.10 No Country For Old Men (15) 3.20, 8.45 (Tue) The Kite Runner (Parent And Baby Screening) (12A) Thu 10.30am Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 8.30 IMAX Cinema, 50 Pacific Quay (0871 540 1000) Bugs! 3D (U) Tue/Wed 10am (Wed) 11 Space Station 3D (U) Sun/Tue-Thu 12.15 (Sun) 2.15 CyberWorld 3D (PG) Sun 1.15, 3.15; Tue-Thu 1, 3.30 Odeon Springfield Quay, Paisley Road (0871 224 4007) Cloverfield (15) 4.30, 7, 9.30 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 6.15 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 2.15, 4.30, 6.45, 9 Enchanted (PG) Sun 11.30am Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) 11am (Sun) 1 Jumper (12A) 11am (Sun) 1.15, 3.45, 6.30, 9.15 Juno (12A) 1, 3.30, 6, 8.45 National Treasure (Subtitled) (PG) Tue 5; Thu 1.45 National Treasure (PG) Sun/Mon/Wed/Thu 1.45 (Sun/ Mon/Wed) 5, 8.15; Tue 1.45, 8.15 No Country For Old Men (15) 3.15, 9.15 Over Her Dead Body (12A) Sun/Mon/Wed/Thu 9.30 Jodhaa Akbar (12A) 3, 7.45 Penelope (U) noon (Sun) 2.15 The Ugly Duckling And Me (U) 11am (Sun) 1 The Bucket List (12A) 1.15, 3.45, 6.30, 9 Southland Tales (15) Tue 9 Jumper (Parent and Baby Screening) (12A) Tue 10.30am Stardust (PG) Tue 11am Bee Movie (U) Sun 11am The Water Horse (PG) 12.45, 3.15, 6 (Sun/Tue-Thu) Showcase, Coatbridge (0871 220 1000) Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 11.20am, 2.10, 5.05, 7.35, 10 Juno (12A) 11.25am, 2.20, 4.40, 7.10, 9.30 Sweeney Todd (18) 4.30, 7.15, 9.55 The Ugly Duckling And Me (U) 11am, 1.15 Jumper (12A) 11.35am, 12.05, 2, 2.30, 4.25, 5.05, 7.05, 7.45, 9.35, 10.10 National Treasure (PG) 1, 1.50, 2.20, 4.40, 5.10, 7.30, 8, 10.20, 11.30 The Water Horse (PG) 11.05am, 2.15, 4.50 P.S. I Love You (12A) 7.30 (Sun-Tue) 10.20 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) 12.05, 2.30, 4.45 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 7, 9.45 The Bucket List (12A) 12.20, 2.50, 5.20, 7.50, 10.15 Penelope (U) 11.45am, 2.10, 4.50, 7.15, 9.30 No Country For Old Men (15) 7.45, 10.30 (Sun-Tue) Underdog (U) 11.30am, 2.05, 4.10 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 1.35 (Sun-Tue) 4 (Sun-Tue) 7.05, 9.25 Cloverfield (15) 12.15, 2.40, 5.15, 7.40, 9.50 All The Boys Love Mandy Lane (18) 12.45 (Sun-Tue) 3.15, 5.35, 7.55, 10.25 done more with similar material. Jones plays Elizabeth, a woman who shares her romantic woes with Jeremy (Law), who owns a café in New York and keeps a jar full of keys donated by the heartbroken. The forced symbolism of this is nothing compared to the pointless artifice of Law’s Mancunian accent, but Elizabeth keeps in touch as she travels round America while apparently saving money for a car. She goes to Memphis, where an alcoholic cop (David Straithairn) is mourning the loss of his wife (Rachel Weisz), and on to Vegas, with a beautiful gambler (Natalie Portman). Everyone is alienated and rootless, and all the stories are chiselled from pulp, but despite some flashes of beauty, Wong struggles to go beyond tourism. The best moment is a long shot of Jones asleep on a bar with melted ice cream on her lips. Wi t h B e K i n d Rewind, Michel Gondry also fails to live up to the reputation earned from his Definitely, Maybe (12A) 1.15 (Sun/Mon) 8.45 The Water Horse (PG) 3.30 (Sun/Mon) 6.15 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) 11.40am (Sun) 2.10 (0871 224 4007) PAISLEY ROTHESAY Odeon, Queen’s Drive Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun 2, 3.50 National Treasure (PG) 2.15 (Sun) 5.15, 7.50 Penelope (U) Sun 1.55, 3.45, 6.10; Mon-Thu 6.10 Jumper (12A) 6, 8.15 The Bucket List (12A) 3.45 (Sun) 8.10 Juno (12A) 8.10 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 5.50 Underdog (U) Sun 2.05, 4 HAMILTON KIRKCALDY The Waterfront Cinema (01475 732201) Vue, Palace Towers (0871 224 0240) Adam Smith Theatre, Bennochy Road (01592 412929) National Treasure (PG) 11.10am (Sun) 2, 3.10, 5, 6.10, 7.50, 9 The Water Horse (PG) 10.20am (Sun) 11.40am (Sun) 12.50, 2.10, 3.30, 5.10, 6 (Sun-Tue) 7.40 Juno (12A) 1.10 (Mon-Thu) 3.20, 5.40, 8 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun 10.30am, 12.25 Penelope (U) Sun 10.50am, 1 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 1.30, 6.30 Underdog (U) Sun 11.20am, 1.20 Cloverfield (15) 2.20 (Sun/Mon/Wed/Thu) 4.30, 6.40, 8.50 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 6.25, 8.40 Elizabeth: The Golden Age (12A) Tue 2.20 Bee Movie (U) Sun 10.40am Over Her Dead Body (12A) 11.15am (Sun) 4.10, 9.10 Jumper (12A) 11.30am (Sun) 1.40, 4, 8.20, 8.30 Sweeney Todd (18) SunTue 8.40 The Bucket List (12A) Sun 12.40, 5.50, 8.10; Mon-Thu 3.15, 5.50 (Mon/Wed/Thu) 8.10 The Bucket List (Subtitled) (12A) Sun 3.15; Tue 5.50 Iris (15) Mon 3 The Shawshank Redemption (15) Mon 7.30 Brick Lane (15) Sun 8 Inside I’m Dancing (15) Mon 5 La Vie En Rose (La Mome) (12A) Sun 5 Breakfast On Pluto (15) Sun 2.30 INVERNESS Sweeney Todd (18) 8.30 Elizabeth: The Golden Age (12A) Tue 1 Underdog (U) Sun 11.30am, 1.45 National Treasure (Subtitled) (PG) Sun 11.15am; Tue 5.15 Jumper (12A) 10.45am (Sun) 1.15, 3.45, 6.15, 8.45 The Bucket List (12A) noon (Mon-Thu) 2.30, 5, 7.45 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu noon, 2.30, 5, 7.30 National Treasure (PG) 2.15, 5.15 (Sun/Mon/ Wed/Thu) 8.15 Bee Movie (U) Sun noon Juno (12A) 10.30am (Sun) 12.45, 3, 5.30, 8 Definitely, Maybe (12A) Sun-Tue noon (Mon/ Tue) 2.30 (Mon/Tue) 5, 7.30 The Water Horse (PG) 11am (Sun) 12.15, 1.30, 3.15, 5.45 Cloverfield (15) 1.45 (Mon/Wed/Thu) 4, 6.30, 9 Penelope (U) Sun 10.15am, 12.30, 2.45 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 4.15, 6.45 (Sun/Mon/ Wed/Thu) 9.15 Eden Court Theatre, Bishops Road (01463 234234) Ahlaam (15) Wed 9; Thu 6.30 I’m Not There (15) Sun 2, 8; Mon/Tue 6.15; Thu 8.30 Talk To Me (15) Sun 5; Mon 9 Les Chansons D’Amour (Love Songs) (15) Sun 7.30; Mon 6 Nancy Drew (PG) Sun 1.30 Blade Runner: The Final Cut (15) Sun 5.30 Silent Light (Stellet Licht) (15) Mon/Tue 8.30; Wed/Thu 5.45 Late Chrysanthemums (PG) Tue 6; Wed 8.30 Youth Without Youth (15) Tue 9; Wed 6.15; Thu 8.45 Vue, Inverness Retail & Business Park (0871 224 0240) The Bucket List (12A) 1 (Sun) 3.20, 5.50, 8.10 Elizabeth: The Golden Age (12A) Tue 2.30 Bee Movie (U) Sun 12.30 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 2.50, 7.50 (Sun-Tue) Underdog (U) Sun 5.15 Penelope (Subtitled) (U) Sun 1.40 No Country For Old Men (15) 8.20 Penelope (U) Sun 11.30 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 5.50, 7.50 Cloverfield (15) 3.50, 6.15, 8.40 Definitely, Maybe (12A) Sun 12.10; Mon/Tue 5.15 National Treasure (PG) 11.50am (Sun) 2.40, 5.35, 8.30 The Water Horse (PG) 3, 5.40 There Will Be Blood (15) 1.15 (Mon/Wed/Thu) 4.40, 8 Jumper (12A) 1 (Sun) 3.20, 5.50, 8.10 Both on general release from Friday KILMARNOCK Jumper (12A) Sun 11.40am, 2, 6.30, 9; Mon-Thu 2, 4.15, 6.30 (Mon/Wed/Thu) 9 (Mon-Wed) Enchanted (PG) Sun 11.10am Definitely, Maybe (12A) Sun-Tue 5.50, 8.40 Cloverfield (15) 2.10, 4.30, 6.50, 9.10 The Bucket List (Parent And Baby Screening) (12A) Tue 11am Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 4.10, 6.30, 8.55 Southland Tales (15) Tue 8.30 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun noon Stardust (PG) Tue 11am Bee Movie (U) Sun 11am The Water Horse (PG) 12.50 (Sun) 3.30, 6 The Bucket List (12A) 12.40 (Sun) 3.10, 5.40, 8.10 Sweeney Todd (18) Sun/Mon/Wed/Thu 8.30 Penelope (U) Sun-Tue 1 (Sun) 3.20; Wed/Thu 1.50 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 1.30 (Sun) 3.50, 6.10, 8.40 National Treasure (PG) 11.20am (Sun) 2.20, 5.20, 8.20 Juno (12A) Sun/Mon 1.10 (Sun) 3.50, 6.20, 8.50 Jumper (Subtitled) (12A) Sun 4.15; Tue 6.30; Thu 9 GREENOCK last two films (Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind and The Science Of Sleep). It’s a slight story, written by Gondry, with echoes of Paul Auster’s collaborations with Wayne Wang (Smoke and Blue In The Face). Mr Fletcher (Danny Glover) runs a video store in Passaic, New Jersey, with the aid of Mike (Mos Def) and despite the interventions of his eccentric friend Jerry (Jack Black, below). When Jerry becomes magnetised, he erases the shop’s videos, so he and Mike hatch a plan to re-enact all the films. With the aid of a girl from the laundry, they fashion instant versions of Ghostbusters, King Kong and Robocop. It is, of course, ridiculous, but Black – flickering between Quentin Tarantino and Ricky Gervais – is funny enough, and there are cameos from Mia Farrow and Sigourney Weaver. Gondry’s effort seems sincere in his appreciation of DIY filmmaking, but this little film falls between whimsy and experiment. ALASTAIR McKAY KIRKWALL New Phoenix Cinema, Pickaquoy Centre, Muddisdale Road (01856 879900) We Own The Night (15) Tue/Wed 7.30; Thu 6.30 P.S. I Love You (12A) Sun 6; Mon 7.30 Hallam Foe (18) Thu 8.45 LIVINGSTON Vue, McArthur Glen Designer Outlet (0871 224 0240) NEWTON STEWART The Cinema, Victoria Street (01671 403333) Over Her Dead Body (12A) Wed/Thu 8 OBAN Highland Theatre, George Street (01631 562444) No Country For Old Men (15) 3.45 (Sun/Mon) 8.30 Underdog (U) 1.30 (Sun/Mon) 6.30 Showcase, Griffen Avenue, Phoenix Business Park Discovery Theatre, Victoria Street (0871 220 1000) P.S. I Love You (12A) Sun-Wed 2.30 (Sun) 7.45 P.S. I Love You (12A) 9.30 Underdog (U) 11.30am, 2.05, 4.10 Sweeney Todd (18) 7.15 (Sun-Tue) 9.55 In The Valley Of Elah (15) SunTue 10 The Water Horse (PG) 11.05am, 2.15, 4.50, 7.25 The Ugly Duckling And Me (U) 11am, 1.15 The Bucket List (12A) 12.20, 2.50, 5.20, 7.50, 10.15 No Country For Old Men (15) 5 (Sun-Tue) 7.45, 10.30 Over Her Dead Body (12A) Sun-Tue 11.15am, 1.35, 4, 7.05, 9.25; Wed/ Thu 7.05, 9.25 Cloverfield (15) 12.15, 2.40, 5.15, 7.40, 9.50 National Treasure (PG) 11am, 11.30am, 1.50, 2.20, 4.40, 5.10, 7.30, 8, 10.20 Jumper (12A) 11.35am, 12.05, 2, 2.30, 4.25, 5.05, 7.05, 7.45, 9.35, 10.10 All The Boys Love Mandy Lane (18) 12.45, 3.15, 5.35, 7.55, 10.25 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) 12.05, 2.30, 4.45 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 7, 9.45 Juno (12A) 11.25am, 2.20, 4.40, 7.10, 9.30 Penelope (U) 11.45am, 2.10, 4.50, 7.15 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 11.20am, 2.10, 5.05, 7.35, 10 SALTCOATS PERTH Caledonian Playhouse, Murray Street (01738 623126) No Country For Old Men (15) 3, 8.10 St Trinian’s (12A) Sun/Tue 12.30 Cloverfield (15) 8.35 Bee Movie (U) Mon 1 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 3.10, 5.45 (Sun-Tue) 8.20 Juno (12A) 3.30, 6, 8.30 The Water Horse (PG) 12.20, 3.05, 5.50 National Treasure (PG) 2, 5, 8 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 12.30, 5.45 The Bucket List (12A) 1.05 (Wed/Thu) 3.25, 5.55, 8.25 Jumper (12A) 1.30 (Wed/Thu) 3.50, 6.10, 8.35 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun-Tue 1.30 Enchanted (PG) Sun-Tue 12.55 Penelope (U) 1.10 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 12.40, 5.40 RENFREW Odeon Braehead, Kings Inch Road (0871 224 4007) The Ugly Duckling And Me (U) Sun 10.30am The Bucket List (12A) 12.30, 3, 5.50 (Sun-Tue/ Thu) 8.30 Underdog (U) Sun 11am Stardust (PG) Tue 11am Bee Movie (U) Sun 10.30am The Darjeeling Limited (15) Tue 8 U2 3D (U) Thu noon, 2.15, 4.30, 6.45, 9 There Will Be Blood (Subtitled) (15) Mon 4.30 Juno (Parent And Baby Screening) (12A) Tue 11am There Will Be Blood (15) 1, 4.30 (Sun/Tue-Thu) 8 The Water Horse (PG) 12.40 (Sun/Mon/Wed/Thu) 3.20, 6.10, 9.20 The Water Horse (Subtitled) (PG) Tue 12.40 Sweeney Todd (18) Sun-Tue 9.20 Penelope (U) Sun 10.40am, 1.10, 3.40; Mon-Thu 1.10, 3.40 (Mon/Tue) Over Her Dead Body (12A) Sun-Wed 12.10, 2.40, 8.10 No Country For Old Men (15) Sun-Wed 5.10 National Treasure (PG) 12.20, 2.30, 3.30, 5.30, 6.30, 8.40, 9.40 The Bucket List (Subtitled) (12A) Wed 5.50 Juno (12A) 1.20, 3.50, 6.20, 8.50 All The Boys Love Mandy Lane (18) 4.50, 7.20, 9.50 Jumper (12A) 12.50, 1.50, 3.10, 4.10, 5.40, 6.40, 8.20, 9.10 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 6 (Sun-Tue) 9 Cloverfield (15) 2, 4.40, 7.10, 9.30 Be Kind Rewind (12A) Wed/Thu 4.20, 7, 9.20 (01700 502151) Apollo Leisure, Winton Circus (01294 471777) Underdog (U) Sun 2.15, 6.15 National Treasure (PG) Sun noon, 2.30, 5.15, 7.45; Mon-Thu 7.30 The Water Horse (PG) Sun noon, 4, 8; Mon-Thu 7.30 ST ANDREWS New Picture House, North Street (01334 473509) Penelope (U) 2.30 (Sun) 6.25 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 8.35 Pulp Fiction (18) Wed 9 National Treasure (PG) 2 (Sun) 5.50, 8.25 Atonement (15) 8.25 The Water Horse (PG) 2.20 (Sun) 6 STIRLING Carlton Cinema, Allanpark Road (01786 474137) The Water Horse (PG) 11.45am (Sun) 2.30, 5.15 Enchanted (PG) Sun 11.15am National Treasure (PG) 1.45, 4.45, 7.45 Cloverfield (15) 8 MacRobert, University Of Stirling, (01786 466666) Charlie Wilson’s War (15) Sun 8.15; Mon 5.15 Stardust (PG) Sun 1.30 No Country For Old Men (15) Sun/Thu 5.15, 8.15 (Thu); Mon/Wed 2.30 (Wed) 7.30; Tue 5 The Rocky Horror Picture Show (12A) Tue 7.30 Vue, Forthside Road (0871 2240 240) Bee Movie (U) Sun 10.30am Cloverfield (15) 1.45 (Sun) 4, 6.20, 8.45 Definitely, Maybe (12A) 3.20, 8.20 Enchanted (PG) Sun 10.20am Jumper (12A) 10.50am (Sun) 1 (Sun) 3.30, 6, 8.30 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun 11am Juno (12A) 12.30 (Sun) 3, 5.30, 8 The Water Horse (PG) Sun 10.40am, 1.10, 2.30, 3.45, 5.15, 6.30; Mon-Thu 2.30, 3.45 (Mon/Tue) 5.15, 6.30 (Mon/Tue) National Treasure (PG) 11.10am (Sun) 2, 5, 7.45 No Country For Old Men (15) 7.50 Over Her Dead Body (12A) 12.50 (Sun) 5.50 Penelope (U) Sun 10am, 12.10 Sweeney Todd (18) Sun-Tue 9 The Bucket List (12A) 12.40 (Sun) 3.10, 5.40, 8.10 STRANRAER Ryan Centre, Fairhurst Road (01776 703535) Sweeney Todd (18) Thu 8.30 P.S. I Love You (12A) Thu 6 THURSO All Star Factory, Ormlie Road (01847 890890) National Treasure (PG) 3.30 (Sun) 6, 8.30 Alvin And The Chipmunks (U) Sun 1.30 The Water Horse (PG) Sun 1, 3.15, 5.45; Mon-Thu 5.45 Aliens Vs Predator – Requiem (15) 2 (Thu) 8.15 10 REVIEW BOOKS February 17, 2008 SCOTLAND on SUNDAY WE HAVE LIFT-OFF Andrew Crumey’s hugely ambitious space-race fantasy puts the Scottish writer into a new orbit, says David Stenhouse . SPUTNIK CALEDONIA Andrew Crumey Picador, £7.99 T IS an interesting fact that two of the most brilliant and experimental writers of what we could call scientific fiction began with academic specialisms in physics, that purest and most masculine of the sciences. Richard Powers, the experimental American writer, enrolled as a physics major in college before turning to English Literature. Andrew Crumey went one better and completed a PhD in theoretical physics. The two writers on opposite sides of the Atlantic have been following parallel paths; each writing elegant literary novels which combine a deep understanding of theoretical science with ingenious narrative structures. Some time ago, Powers was awarded a “genius grant” from the MacArthur Foundation worth half a million dollars. In this country, Crumey, who served as literary editor of this newspaper, scooped the biggest literary prize going: a £60,000 grant from Northern Rock allowed him to write his latest novel full time. As it turns out, it was one of the bank’s wiser investments. Sputnik Caledonia is a bold advance on Crumey’s five previous novels. In Möbius Dick and Mr Mee the reader often marvelled at Crumey’s intelligence and narrative skill but sometimes longed for something resembling a character to put in an appearance. In Sputnik Caledonia Crumey’s wit has matured into broad though intelligent comedy, science has been rooted in its social and historical context, and characters are distinct individuals, not types or exemplars of I some narrative trick or astonishing twist. Like Alasdair Gray’s Lanark, which it resembles in both scale and ambition, Sputnik Caledonia is a novel in separate books in which a recognisable Scottish reality is contrasted with a distorted, fantastical version of itself. Section one is a warm, nostalgic portrait of a West of Scotland childhood dominated by two powerful forces, the dreams of our hero Robbie Coyle, who wants nothing less than to go into space, and those of his father Joe. Joe is the kind of humane, scientifically-minded socialist dad ‘Its sweep sweep and ‘It’s andscope scope should leave you should you breathless with breathless with aaddmirationn’’ who often appears in Gray’s novels. Because of his singleminded devotion to socialism (the Coyle’s neighbours, the Dunbars, will be first against the wall come the revolution because of their conspicuously bourgeois lifestyle), Robbie decides that he wants to be a cosmonaut. He spends his time dreaming of a life in space, though disturbing pseudo-sexual thoughts flit across his pre-adolescent mind too. In section two, Scottish social realism is translated into something more disturbing. Coyle has the chance to live out his own dreams in a fantasy land drawn from his father’s: a secretive scientific installation on Scottish soil is devoted to the space race, but in an alternative political reality, a British People’s Republic where the laws of physics are taught in terms of the timeless principles of dialectical materialism. His mission is to travel to what in the capitalist world is called a “Black Hole”. In one of this novel’s wittiest asides he and his fellow recruits are told: “We reject the term, Rocket science: Crumey’s skewed world invites comparisons with Alasdair Gray’s Lanark. Photograph: Neil Hanna with its colonialist implications, its unsavoury air of medieval clericalism, its sheer inaccuracy.” Before long it is dubbed the “Red Star”. Will Coyle qualify for the mission, and will his messy, inchoate love life ever resolve itself into an adult relationship? The socialist paradise is closer to a prison camp than Robbie’s dad would ever have believed. It has made spies of neighbours, subversives of Christians and prostitutes of decent women, forced to sell their bodies to the political elite to gain basic foodstuffs. It has also generated one of the most memorable villains in recent Scottish writing, the odious Davis, a senior party apparatchik who makes it his business to first root out, then exploit human weaknesses. Section three is both a culmination and a contradiction of much that has gone before. We are back in the Scotland of the first section but Robbie’s parents, Joe and Anne, are older, failing. Their broad comedy has soured in the face of family tragedy, Joe himself is teetering on the edge of dementia, and they are struggling to deal with the loss of their son. What has happened to Robbie? Not everything works. The novel feels too long and should be edited in the middle. Robbie is an oddly inconsistent character, by turns dreamy and gentle, masterful and occasionally cruel, and the tone in the final section sometimes swer ves too abruptly between comedy and pathos. But the sweep and scope of Sputnik Caledonia should leave you breathless with admiration: not only do we learn, as we often have from Crumey’s novels before, but we also laugh, a lot. The final revelation on which the novel ends is both emotionally powerful and intensely satisfying. Sputnik Caledonia is a quantum leap forward for the Scottish novel. ❖ www.crumey.toucansurf.com BOOKS REVIEW 11 SCOTLAND on SUNDAY February 17, 2008 Flock together: the media descend on Cellardyke in Fife in April 2006 after a swan was found infected with avian flu. Photograph: Julie Howden Tuber lovers come feast or famine . PROPITIOUS ESCULENT John Reader Heinemann, £18.99 FORDYCE MAXWELL AN might not be able to live by bread alone, but he could on potatoes. Four kilos a day of the propitious esculent – a grandiose enough title for a dietary staple – will provide the protein, calcium and iron needed for a physical worker, plus enough of the necessary vitamins for health and energy. And all fat-free. It is remarkable, Reader believes, that a crop which first appeared as small, knobbly, poisonous tubers thousands of feet up in the Peruvian Andes became one of the “calorific engines of civilisation”. Much of that transition is not recorded, although we can assume that discovering, several thousand years ago, that small fleshy growths in mountain soil were poisonous cost lives. Even in recent history the only certainty about the potato’s appearance in Europe is that it was not brought by Sir Walter Raleigh. It might have reached here by the late 1500s, but, after early attempts to promote the fleshy tubers as an aphrodisiac foundered, it took another two centuries before potatoes became as popular as oats and wheat. Other countries adopted the new crop sooner and more wholeheartedly. That led to the Irish famine of 1845 when the country’s main variety, the Lumper, succumbed to a previously unknown disease – blight, a fungal infection spread by aphids sucking juice from potato leaves. It took another 20 years to establish how blight spread and a further 20 before a mixture of copper sulphate and lime was recognised as a control of sorts. M Our addiction to fear With modern life safer than ever, why are we in such a panic, asks Bill Jamieson . PANICOLOGY Simon Briscoe and Hugh Aldersey-Williams Viking, Penguin Books, £20 HAT is it that explains our fixation with fear, our unfailing susceptibility to panic? We are living longer and more healthily than ever. Yet barely a day passes without a collective panic or alarm. Climatologists warn of the rising death toll from global warming, health experts of obesity and binge drinking, financial experts of debt, and welfare workers of social breakdown. No day seems complete without the earnest promotion of an issue to drive us further up the wall of worry. Blame the media? By all means, since newspapers and broadcasters are the first port of call for lobbyists, government quangos and zealous corporate public relations types anxious to promote their raisons d’être. Many of the breathless statistics on problems from wildlife endangerment to health and safety campaigns come from governments and official ‘task forces’ desperate for coverage and to justify their grants and budgets. The paradox is greater still when you consider the triumph of secular thinking over religious belief and the relentless rise of scepticism about governments, official institutions and experts. We have never been better equipped to deal with irrational or exaggerated scares. Yet panic has never been more popular. Can we ever break this addiction? And if so, how? Panicology, written by Simon Briscoe (an economist) and Hugh Aldersey-Williams W (writer and curator), sets out to cure us. It does so by taking a dispassionate look at some top 40 scares, ranging from killer birds to rising sea levels and death by heat. Bird flu is an obvious example. Throughout the winter of 2005-06 this was billed as an impending human pandemic that would wipe out a large proportion of the Earth’s population. Yet the H5N1 type of flu virus had led to the deaths of fewer than 300 people worldwide. The book is upbeat and reassuring in tone. Have any of these scares led to the devastation that they were deemed capable of unleashing? Not yet. Might they do so in future? Possibly – but unlikely. Readers will wrestle with a scoring sys- ‘Birdflu flu was was billed ‘Bird billedasasa a pandemic that pandemic thatwould would wipeout out much much ofofthe wipe the Earth’s population’ population’ Earth’s tem that seeks to rank each panic example through a triple assessment: scores of zero to five for panic, risk and “personal empowerment” (what we can do about it). It is not clear how the ‘panic-meter’ scores are arrived at, or how the risk is assessed. It might have been useful to have had some measure of panic persistency – over how many months, for example, did it receive media attention, or whether any of the dire consequences ever came to pass. Assessing risk is more problematic. Two of the examples cited – personal debt and house prices – have become considerably more of a worry since this book went to press. Indeed, the whole sub-prime mortgage lending debacle in the US which triggered the global credit crisis, massive bad debt write-offs by banks and quick-fire cuts by the world’s biggest central bank to stave off recession may be seen as a prime example of how experts under-priced risk. As a result, highly toxic debt was spread through the world’s financial system. It is also wrong to say, as the authors do, that queues of worried investors outside Northern Rock were not logical. Until Chancellor Alistair Darling stated that he was extending the guarantee to savers to cover deposits up to £100,000, withdrawing your uncovered savings was absolutely the rational thing to do. What the growing Faculty of Panic Studies really needs is not another trot round the familiar examples of scares and panics with an obvious sceptical toolkit, but a more thoughtful discussion as to why we have a predisposition to buy the panic story and whether it is more or less pronounced than in previous generations. It does seem that there are more scares about. But Charles Mackay’s Extraordinary Popular Delusions And The Madness Of Crowds was first published in 1841. It catalogued public obsessions with witchcraft, mesmerism and tulips, as well as fears of annihilation by everything from flooding to chemical poisons. So is there anything new here at all? The safer and more health-conscious our lifestyles appear to be, the more we are fixated by visions of sudden, inexplicable and horrible death, against which, it seems, we are powerless. Might it just be that we enjoy the thrill of an unsafe world? ❖ ‘Early attempts attempts to ‘Early to promote them them as promote asan an aphrodisiac foundered’ aphrodisiac foundered’ That was also the origin of today’s multibillion-pound agrochemical industry. Breeders are also working on blightresistant varieties, a long-term process because the potato is a tuber. Once established a variety produces identical clones for ever to the gratitude of amateur gardeners everywhere. Breeding a new variety has to start with seeds produced, and collected, from the leaves above ground. Luck can play as big a part as skill and amateur and scientific breeders have produced a succession of new varieties. Reader argues persuasively that the future of a crop of which most of us know little more than what appears on our plate mashed, boiled, baked or chipped, can be as fascinating and productive as its past. If only blight could be beaten. 12 REVIEW BOOKS February 17, 2008 SCOTLAND on SUNDAY You wouldn’t like to see Mr Hyde when his pants catch fire… The One Book, One Edinburgh version of Stevenson’s Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde is now out, and with it, a number of events – including a screening of the classic 1920 silent film version, with John Barrymore, at the Edinburgh Filmhouse next Saturday. The press release claims there are 123 film versions – a fact I decided to check. Let’s just say a pinch of salt might be required, since the 123 includes The Nutty Professor (1963 and 1996 versions); Fight Club; and an episode of Gilligan’s Island. There’s also a surprising number of, ahem, adult versions; including Dr Sexual And Mr Hyde and others where Hyde is a lady nymphomaniac. Surprisingly, the most famous Hyde rip-off – The Incredible Hulk – isn’t mentioned. My brother has, however, sent me a weblink – kennethjohnson.us/HulkOutList.html – which lists all 117 Hulk transformations. It’s hilarious – especially “Having several clay pots broken over his head in the middle of a burning room, and then knocking an entire case of same clay pots on to same head, and then, while lying very still and struggling not to get angry, having his pants catch fire”. Mind the quality Why Zadie will get this judge’s vote What’s more contentious than awarding a literary prize? Well, not awarding one. Zadie Smith, below, judging this year’s Willesden Herald £500 short story competition, decided to do just that, on the grounds that the judges “could not find the greatness we’d hoped for”. Not only do I sympathise, I’m inclined to say Hallelujah. Too often prizes go to “the best of a bad lot”, or “the committee’s least disliked option”. To actually stand up for quality that you believe in, pure and simple, has become rather unfashionable in the literary world, especially with a (collective noun deleted) of bloggers ready to cry elitism whenever they’re overlooked. This year I’d like to see Zadie Smith not awarding all the literary prizes, up to and including the Nobel. I don’t know if there is a collective noun for authors, although apparently, it’s an “obscurity of poets”, and, since I’ve just checked the ever-unreliable Wikipedia, it’s a “worship of writers”, but whatever you call them when there’s a gaggle of them altogether, that’s what there was at the Society of Authors Scotland Conference last Saturday. It was a rather interesting event, with one question on everyone’s lips: “Where can I get a load of money?” Of course, the Digital World loomed large as both opportunity for boundless riches and threat of absolute impecuniosity. The presentation by two chaps from a rather nebulous internet company was full of vim and promise, although the more specific they got, the more my confidence waned. It’s de rigueur (or e-rigueur) to give away things for free, and as they itemised the various “freemium” possibilities (e-texts, audio recordings, copies of everything you’ve ever written) one snag appeared – under most authors’ contracts, all those things belong to the old-fashioned paper and ink publisher. Exasperated, one eventually said the authors should give away all the chapters and paragraphs cut out by nasty old editors. So “quality content” actually meant “off-cuts and first drafts”. Jacket required This July, HarperCollins are publishing a novel by Sean Dixon called The Last Days Of The Lacuna Cabal – which involves a Canadian Book Club who end up in Iraq on account of reading The Epic Of Gilgamesh. Sounds cute enough: but the publishers have teamed up with the Saatchi Gallery to solicit designs for the cover. There are details at www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/ lacunacabal. Given the reputed depths of the Saatchi pockets, it might be the beginning of a very lucrative career for someone. ROUND-UP: GRAPHIC NOVELS BRITTEN & BRÜLIGHTLY Hannah Berry Jonathan Cape £12.99 The first of three crime graphic novels kicks off with an impressive debut from Brighton University illustration graduate Hannah Berry. Set in a beautifully evoked bygone era, it’s a tale of private investigation that takes its narrative cue from the writing of Dashiell Hammett and its visual styling from American film noir. The protagonist is a PI named Fernández Britten, whose probings into the sordid lives of his clients has earned him the nickname Heartbreaker. The case here involves one such client with numerous skeletons in the closet. Also try: Kickback by David Lloyd CRIMINAL: LAWLESS Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips Titan Books £9.99 It’s back to the boys for the second volume of writer Brubaker and illustrator Phillips’ almost irredeemably hard-bitten ongoing series of stories about criminal low-lifes up to no good in modern-day America. Lawless features a traumatised Iraq War veteran returning home to avenge the murder of his kid brother by hooking up with a gang of thieves who may have had something do with it. But the plot takes an unexpected twist and a sympathetic emotional note is introduced into the otherwise bleak and cynical proceedings. Also try: Criminal: Coward by Brubaker and Phillips 100 BULLETS: ONCE UPON A CRIME Brian Azzarello and Eduardo Risso Titan Books/Vertigo £8.99 Those coming to 100 Bullets for the first time are likely to be flummoxed by this 11th edition of Azzarello and Risso’s projected 13volume labyrinthine crime saga. All the more reason to go back to the beginning and read the previous 10 collections. Once Upon A Crime catches up with a group of enforcers of a secret cartel that runs America who, at this late stage in the grand narrative, have split into three factions and look set to whack one another. Also try: 100 Bullets: First Shot, Last Call by Azzarello and Risso MILES FIELDER BOOKS REVIEW 13 SCOTLAND on SUNDAY February 17, 2008 An inquiry into divine deceivers will soon convince you it’s a literary masterpiece, writes Stuart Kelly The trick is to keep you reading . TRICKSTER MAKES THIS WORLD Lewis Hyde Canongate, £16.99 HERE has to be a better word than “non-fiction”. Any genre would buckle if it had to encompass memoirs, travelogue, polemics, history, belles-lettres, biography, essays, popular science and every other academic discipline under the sun. In recent years there have been rushes around certain subjects (atheism, for example, or the ethics of food) and fashions for certain methods (the “surprisingly interesting history” of longitude, aspirin, cholera or cod). But here’s a test: how often do you re-read a non-fiction book for its literary qualities rather than just refer back to it? But amid the information overload there are gems. Rebecca Solnit, Rachel Cohen, Paul Collins and Richard Klein have all written persistingly good literature based on facts and opinions rather than characters and plots. Lewis Hyde’s new book is an exemplar of what this genre can achieve: it is a masterpiece. His subject is deceptively simple. All cultures have “trickster gods”: Hermes in Greece, Loki in Scandinavia, Eshu to the Yoruba, Coyote to the Navajo, T Monkey to Chinese Buddhism and Seventies television. Trickster gods are associated with crossroads and boundaries, points of change and transition. They are both benefactors (stealing fire or food from Heaven) and inveterate troublemakers. They represent luck or chance, in its fortuitous and malign forms. As he explores the prevalence of this archetype, Hyde finds deeper resonances. These cock-snooking immortals are creators of culture, commerce and art, at the same time as creating dirt, theft and lies. They are “incorrigibly plural” to use the poet Louis MacNeice’s phrase. In a universe of black and white, they are black and white and red all over, like either a newspaper or a sunburnt penguin. Whenever there’s an either/or, they’re both, and neither. Trickster Makes This World is structured around broad themes associated with these gods, mostly derived from the Homeric Hymn to Hermes (which Hyde translates in full). He covers appetites and accidents, impurity and impudence, “speechless shame and shameful speech”. But Hyde’s book isn’t simply an enquiry into ancient myths. Along the way his journey into legends rubs against modern art. John Cage, Marcel Duchamp, Allen Ginsberg and Robert Mappleth- orpe all echo blips on his radar. Not only art, but genetics, ethnography, contemporary politics – heck, the whole “non-fiction” charabanc goes along too. There is something of the trickster about Hyde himself. His imagination is serendipitous. He may ‘Theyare are black ‘They blackand and white and and red white red allover, over, like all likeaa sunburnt penguin’ sunburnt penguin’ start out discussing the Fon trickster, Legba, but he soon leaps to Carl Jung, alchemy, Mardi Gras and the Carnivalesque, rightwing attacks on arts funding, Aids and Platonism. It is the kind of non-fiction writing in which where we end up can hardly be deduced from where we start out. The most daring parts of the book are concerned with Frederick Douglass, the 19th-century former slave and abolitionist. On the face of it, little connects the sincerity, social conscience and evangelical ardour of Douglass with these gods of chance and chaos. Hyde then picks out subtle parallels – Douglass “steals away” and “steals” his education, he crosses boundaries, he eludes categories (as Hyde puts it, Douglass “became a black man”, despite his white father and rumoured Indian ancestry). But while he illuminates these links, Hyde also stresses the crucial differences between Douglass and the trickster gods; showing how radicals are coopted into the society they’ve Charming: Hermes, or Mercury as the Romans knew him, sends Argos to sleep with his flute before killing him, in the painting by Abraham Hondius changed, and how, despite challenging authority, Douglass ends up re-affirming it. Whereas traditional non-fiction is content to explicate its topic, Hyde’s work constantly complicates its material. The thrilling thing about reading non-fiction such as Hyde’s is not just that it gives you new thoughts: it also changes the way you think. Like its subject, Trickster Makes This World resis ts simple classification. I wonder where it will be shelved in bookstores, given that it might happily sit in philosophy, folklore, criticism, history, religion, art or that vague catch-all “cultural studies”. Wherever they put it, seek it out. ❖ Poignant search for calmer waters in father’s wake . THE ROWING LESSON Anne Landsman Granta, £12 VANESSA CURTIS N THIS ambitious follow-up to her much-praised debut, Anne Landsman makes the brave and unusual decision to write in second-person narrative throughout. Betsy Klein is called away from her home in America to the bedside of her dying father, Harold. As he deteriorates, she whiles away the endless tedium of sitting I in a ward by reliving her father’s life as it might have happened. We glimpse Betsy’s father as a child, sitting around the dinner table with his chaotic family: “You’ve never ever wanted to eat in this house, with its brown walls and brown food and brown couch, browning like the onions always browning , browning on the stove.” And then time propels us forwards to the bedside of the grown man at the end of his life. Landsman displays an enviable ability to draw full portraits with the minimum of strokes, convey- ing the daunting strength and power that emanate from Harold even as he lies close to death. Over the course of the novel, Harold moves from being a child to an ambitious and determined medical student and then a pioneering doctor. Respected by his patients in later life, Harold fails to win the trust and support of his own family in quite the same way: the teenage Betsy suffers from “the snuffling terrors” as she waits for her father to react to a brother failing his first-year exams. Landsman excels at taking an object and revealing its painful associations. Offered the engagement ring on her mother’s finger as she waits for her father to die, Betsy stares into the “unblinking hard stone” of her parents’ marriage. Ageing and imminent ill health figure highly, along with the stench and decay of hospitals and death. A wry humour balances out the gloom: “My mother was thickening at the waist, middle age congealing like a slow-cooking stew.” The complexity of the father/daughter relationship is mercilessly examined in this tale of love mixed with resentment, devotion soured by frustration. Despite the author’s unique voice and the lyricism of her prose, it proves difficult at times to find a core to this novel. The Rowing Lesson floats away before the reader can truly get to grips with it, a little like the boat implied by the title in which Betsy and her father sail, caught by the wind and propelled too quickly downstream. Anne Landsman will be at the next Gliterary Lunch at the Jam House, Edinburgh, on February 28 www.gliterarylunches.com REVIEW 14 R EVIEW MUSIC February February17,17,2008 2008SCOTLANDonSUNDAY SCOTLAND on SUNDAY IT TAKES TWO Teen horror icon Sarah Michelle Gellar would ratherplay an offbeat porn star than a romantic lead – so long Neill MacColl and Kathryn Williams didn’t realise how much they had in common until they hit the haven’t told you this says has Neill resulted like In most of their sentences a full-stop‘Itisfeels bumped out of headed into her studio, or rather a garage with some studio. Their shared folkbefore," legacy in an album toI’vecherish, discovers Chitra Ramaswamy “ I ‘I MacColl to Kathryn Williams, "but when you sing with me on ‘Innocent When HAVEN’T told you this before,” says Neill MacColl YouWilliams, Dream’ you sound mum did to Kathryn “but whenlike youmy sing on ‘InwhenYou sheDream’ was inyou hersound twenties. It’smum very nocent When like my odd." Considering MacColl’s mother is Peggy did when she was in her twenties. It’s verySeeger, odd.” Considering MacColl’s is Peggy the American folk singer for mother whom his fatherSeeger, Ewan the American folkthe singer for whom his father, MacColl wrote classic ‘First Time Ever Ewan I SawMacYour Coll, wrote the classic ‘First Time Ever I Saw Your Face’ Face’, I’m not surprised Williams is tickled pink at, I’m the not surprised Williams is tickled pink at the comparison. comparison. "That is weird," says the Mercury-nominated “That is weird,” says the Mercury-nominated folk singer. singer. thinkfit ourtogether, voices fit like together, when “I folk think our "I voices whenlike you hearyou a hear aand brother and sister singing." "I think we need brother sister singing.” therapy," MacColl quips. Both of them dissolve into gig“I think we need therapy,” MacColl quips. Both of them dissolve gles. into giggles. We’re atin Inverness’s Eden We’re Inverness’s EdenCourt Courttheatre, theatre,where wherethe theduo duo will later perform songs from their upcoming album, Two, will later perform songs from their brilliant upcoming one of which is a whimsical cover of Tom Waits’ ‘Innocent album, Two, one of which is a whimsical cover of Tom When You Dream’. They’re doing warm-up gigs in the Waits’ ‘Innocent When You Dream’ . They’re doing warmHighlands because, according to Williams, their music up gigs themountains, Highlands because, according to Williams goes withinthe and because MacColl, whose father a Scot, takes every head north. theirwas music goes with theopportunity mountainsto(it does), and Two is a sublime record of intimate folkasongs, and because MacColl, whose father was Scot, written takes every recorded by Williams and MacColl in less than a fortnight at opportunity to head north. her studio in Newcastle. Like all great collaborations, from Two is a sublime, understated record of intimate folk June Carter and Johnny Cash to Robert Plant and Alison songs, written and recorded by Williams and MacColl in Krauss, it’s the frisson between them, in this case less than a fortnight at her studio in Newcastle. Like all the marriage of Williams’ sweet, hushed greatwith collaborations, fromharmonies June Carter and Johnny Cash vocals MacColl’s high and fragilePlant guitar to Robert and Alison Krauss, it’s the frisson between p ithem, c k i n gin s , this t h a tcase the marriage of Williams’ sweet, makes it so very hushed vocals with MacColl’s high harmonies and fraggood. ile guitar pickings, that makes it so very good. It ’s not It’sisnot surprising, then, to see how much they like each su rpr other. ing then"It’s funny how people suddenly enter your life and it," says Williams. "I just can’t imagine not having toshape see how much Neillaffecaround now." She looks at him and starts laughing. stripped away a and the way by a hearty laugh, and, not unlike a brother layer, andvery it helps me sister, they love teasing one another. "You’re quiet, tion they have for each other. “It’s grow as a writer and Neill." Williams mocks. "I feel the same," he mumbles, funny how people suddenly enter looking pleased. your life and shape it,” says Williams. “I artist… ‘It feels like stripped awayher a Arriving with husband, who is also can’t imagine not Williams’ having Neill around I’ve now.” In most of their sentences full-layerhats and and it helps manager, all three of them sportawoolly order stop is bumped outsalads. of the way a hearty me growthey as a writer poached salmon Thebynight before, played laugh, and, not unlike a brother and andartistand ‘It feels like their first ever gig together in Fortsister, William, despite they love teasing one another. “You’re very being seasoned performers - Williams has released six quiet, Neill,” Williams mocks. “I feel the albumsheand MacColl has played with Eddi Reader, Steve same,” mumbles, looking pleased. Earle and KD Lang amongst others - they tell me they had never been so nervous. They made mistakes - it is a warmup tour, after all - and couldn’t look at each other because they were terrified they would start laughing and never be able to stop. Sure enough, later that evening on stage, every time their eyes meet I’m convinced it’s going to set them off. They first met a couple of years ago at a folk concert in Cork where, aptly, they sang ‘First Time Ever I Saw Your Face’. The song was Williams’ choice. "It was funny when we rehearsed it, because I kept saying ‘don’t play it like that, do it like this’," she giggles. "I’ve done it loads of times, and with all due respect to the people I’ve played it with, I never felt it was to satisfaction," says MacColl. "Until this time." They agreed on the spot that they wanted to work together, but Williams was about to have a baby and it took them more than a year to meet up. In the meantime, they sent each other "haiku jokes". "They weren’t strict haikus, because they have to be 17 syllables, don’t they?" asks MacColl. "I stuck to 17 syllables," boasts Williams. "No, you didn’t. I counted every one of them," he bats back. Eventually, MacColl went to stay with Williams and they instruments in it. Everything happened unbelievably fast. "In six days we had 22 finished songs," says MacColl. They Arriving with Williams’ husband, who is also her manhad never written together had barely the ager, all three of them sportand woolly hats and been orderin poached same room but somehow, it worked. Me’, ever a salmon salads. The night before, they‘Come playedWith their first breathtaking, song about friends deciding gig together romantic in Fort William and, two despite being seasoned performers – Williams has released six was albums and Macwhether to take their relationship further, completed has played Steve Earle"It and KD Lang inColl an hour and awith half.Eddi And Reader, they were drunk. was late amongst others – they tell me they had never been at night after dinner and we were like, let’s just do one so nervous. They made mistakes – it is a warm-up tour after all more hour," recalls Williams. "Then whoosh, it came out." – and couldn’t look at each other because they were terSimilarly, Williams inand one on to MacColl rified they would startwalked laughing beday unable stop. Sure singing ‘Innocent When You Dream’ in the studio warm enough, later that evening on stage, every timetotheir eyes upmeet his voice. She insisted theyto record it, with I’m convinced it’s going set them off. her backfirstsomet couple of "Before years ago a folk ing vocals,They and did in a asingle take. weat started making this album Neill wasn’t confident about singing at all," says Williams. "But it sounded so lovely." "I have sung all my life but I’ve got out of the habit and if you don’t exercise the muscle, you lose confidence," he admits. In the past Williams has been described as timid. "I’ve changed since having a baby," she says. "I used to get terrible stage fright. Doing this used to mean everything to me to the point where I wouldn’t be able to sleep if I’d played a wrong note. I’d feel like everything was against me and I had terrible paranoia. But having a baby changed everything because now that’s the most important thing. And once you’ve pushed a human body out of your arse, what is there to be nervous about?" When it came to recording Two, Williams and MacColl wanted to capture the moment instead of tweaking each song endlessly to create something perfect, a process which produces what Williams calls "plastic surgery records, because they’re the equivalent of sticking a needle of Botox in your face". They wanted it to be EVIEW 15 REVIEW MUSIC R February 2008 SSCOTLANDonSUNDAY COTLAND on SUNDAY February 17, 17, 2008 concert in Cork where, aptly, they sang ‘First Time Ever I spirit to song the folk the early Sawcloser Your in Face’ . The wasrecordings Williams’ of choice. “It Sevenwas ties, like we those of MacColl’s parents. funny when rehearsed it because I kept saying ‘don’t brings their families. Williams’ father was play itWhich like that, do itme liketothis’ ,” she laughs. “I’ve done it loadsinofLiverpool times, and all dueAfter respect a folk musician in with the Sixties. sheto tells the me, people I’ve played it with, I never felt it was to with a deadpan expression, that her father is satin fact isfaction,” says MacColl. “Until this time.” Ewan MacColl, and we get the ensuing laughter out of They agreed on the spot that they wanted to work tothe way, they tell me a lovely story about an old tape gether, but Williams was about to have a baby and it took recorder andaset ofto tapes bought yearsthey ago at them more than year meetWilliams up. In the meantime, flea market. She stored under the strict bed where Macsentaeach other “haiku jokes”.them “They weren’t haikus, because they while have to bemade 17 syllables, they?” asks Coll slept they Two anddon’t only recently redisMacColl. “I stuck to"The 17 syllables,” boasts “No, you of covered them. tapes were fullWilliams. of rare recordings didn’t. I counted every one of them,” he bats back. his mum and dad playing live at folk festivals in 1962," Eventually, MacColl went to stay with Williams and they she says. They both shake their heads, bemused and headed into her studio, or rather a garage with some delightedinby coincidence. instruments it.the Everything happened unbelievably fast. of them passionate about music They from a “In sixBoth days we had 22were finished songs,” says MacColl. though Williams shy and used had young never age, written together andwas hadpainfully barely been in the same butplay somehow it secret. worked. ‘Come With , a so toroom, sing and guitar in This is why sheMe’ sings breathtaking, romantic about two friendswith deciding quietly, she reckons.song MacColl was touring his parwhether to take their relationship further, was completed ents at six months, started playing guitar at 10, and was in an hour and a half. And they were drunk. “It was late at in his parents’ band as a teenager. When did he realise, night after dinner and we were like, let’s just do one more though, his was not awhoosh, conventional "It hour,” recallsthat Williams. “Then it camechildhood? out.” was hammered home when came to my junior Similarly, Williams walked in one they day on MacColl singing schoolWhen and played," he winces. thought I wasup going ‘Innocent You Dream’ in the "I studio to warm his to voice. insisted they record it, with her backing vocals, dieShe of embarrassment." and did so in a single take. “Before we started making this Williams’ son may only be two years old butathe’s already album, Neill wasn’t confident about singing all,” says written “But his first song and regularly taken on tour with Williams. it sounded sois lovely.” hishave parents, just MacColl was, while both and of his “I sung all mylike life but I’ve got out of the habit if you don’t exercise the you both lose confidence,” he says. teenage sons are inmuscle, bands. For of them, music realIn the past Williams has been described timid. “I’ve ly is a family affair. Did MacColl ever makeas music with his changed since having a baby,” she says. “I used to get half-sister, Kirsty, the renowned singer-songwriter who terrible stage fright. Doing this used to mean everything to tragically died in a boat accident? He falls quiet at her menme to the point where I wouldn’t be able to sleep if I’d tion. "She was note. in oneI’d offeel my first whenwas I was 15," he played a wrong like bands everything against threw her paranoia. out because wehaving didn’t need a girl singer. mesays. and"We I had terrible But a baby changed everything because nowThe that’s theAddicts, most important Her first proper band, Drug threw herthing. out as And once you’ve pushed a human body what out ofgave yourher arse, well for the same reason. Maybe that’s the what is there to be nervous about?” strength that she needed to go, well, fuck you. There was When it came to recording Two, Williams and MacColl only six months between us so it was a close bond." wanted to capture the moment instead of tweaking each quickly stepssomething in. "I had aperfect, band with my sissongWilliams endlessly to create a process ter when I was 14," sheWilliams says. "Wecalls wore“plastic pink tops and miniwhich produces what surgery reskirtsbecause and were calledthe Yakequivalent Attack." It works: MacColl starts cords, they’re of sticking a needle of laughing. Botox in your face”. They wanted it to beacloser "That’s the perfect name for band in forspirit you," to the folk recordings of the early Seventies, like those of he teases. She sticks two fingers up at him, and just like that they’re off again. ❖ ‘Come With Me’ is released Feb 25, with the album, Two, to follow MacColl’s parents. Which brings me to their families. WilMar 3 (Caw). Kathryn and Neill MacColl play Red Rooms, Perth, liams’ father wasWilliams a folk musician in Liverpool in the SixMar 24, Cabaret Voltaire, Edinburgh, Mar 25, and Classic Grand, Glasties. After she tells me, with a deadpan expression, that her gow, Maris26in fact Ewan MacColl, and we get the ensuing father laughter out of the way, they tell me a lovely story about an old tape recorder and set of tapes Williams bought years ago at a flea market. She stored them under the bed where MacColl slept while they made Two and only recently rediscovered them. “The tapes were full of rare recordings of his mum and dad playing live at folk festivals in 1962,” she says. They both shake their heads, bemused and delighted by the coincidence. Both of them were passionate about music from a young age, though Williams was painfully shy and used to sing and play guitar in secret. This is why she sings so quietly, she reckons. MacColl was touring with his parents at six months old, started playing guitar at 10, and was in his parents’ band as a teenager. When did he realise, though, that his was not a conventional childhood? “It was hammered home when they came to my junior school and played,” he winces. “I thought I was going to die of embarrassment.” Williams’ son may only be two years old, but he’s already written his first song and is regularly taken on tour with his parents, just like MacColl was, while both of his teenage sons are in bands. For both of them, music really is a family affair. Did MacColl ever make music with his halfsister, Kirsty, the renowned singer-songwriter who tragically died in a boat accident? He falls quiet at her mention. “She was in one of my first bands when I was 15,” he says. “We threw her out because we didn’t need a girl singer. Her first proper band, The Drug Addicts, threw her out for the same reason. Maybe that’s what gave her the strength that she needed to go, well, f**k you. There were only six months between us so it was a close bond.” Williams quickly steps in. “I had a band with my sister when I was 14,” she says. “We wore pink tops and mini-skirts and were called Yak Attack.” It works: MacColl starts laughing. “That’s the perfect name for a band for you,” he teases. She sticks two fingers up at him, and just like that they’re off again. ❖ Come With Me is released on February 25, with the album, Two, released March 3 (Caw). Kathryn Williams and Neill MacColl play Red Rooms, Perth, March 24; Cabaret Voltaire, Edinburgh, March 25; and Classic Grand, Glasgow, March 26 www.kathrynwilliams. net/two 16 REVIEW MUSIC February 17, 2008 SCOTLAND on SUNDAY ALBUMS CHANGING TRACKS Comedian Andy Parsons shares his top five musical moments AMERICAN IDIOT Green Day This is the song I go on stage to – I just love the guitar riff. It’s powerful, emotive, I just think it’s brilliant. I’m hoping to persuade Green Day to let me use the guitar riff as a sort of musical interlude to cut between scenes in my new sitcom for Radio 4. ALL THESE THINGS THAT I’VE DONE The Killers I play this song as a kind of warm-up for my stand-up shows – it’s one of those songs I really like, it really gets me in the mood for performing. I saw The Killers at the Brixton Academy last year, where they performed this song; I’ve never seen so many people dancing. It was like a massive party. ROCK & POP GARY LOURIS Vagabonds ★★★★★ Rykodisc RCD10925, £12.99 The higher harmony of the Jayhawks and the darker, denser muse of Golden Smog, this debut solo album from Louris is overdue but not overcooked. Country and rock in equal measure, sometimes fused as one with the deftest of touches, slow twists such as ‘She Only Calls Me On Sundays’ or sedate anthems such as ‘We’ll Get By’ are equally rewarding. The title track’s wailing harmonica and soaring chorus are a beautiful modernising of the old Southern rock school. CS Download this: Omaha Nights, Vagabonds RELAX, TAKE IT EASY Mika Glastonbury last year was fantastic, although the weather wasn’t – it was raining for more or less the whole festival. Anyway, Mika had been performing this song, when suddenly the sun decided to come out for the first time that weekend. The whole crowd decided to get up and dance after that. It was one of those moments where you can’t really explain to anyone why it was any good, yet it was. THREE BLIND MICE Thomas Ravenscroft Back in the heady days of sketch comedy in the Nineties, I gave out some musical handbells to the audience during a show of mine at the Edinburgh Festival and attempted to have them perform ‘Three Blind Mice’. It was an absolute triumph on the first night, but one of the audience stole one of the bells. We never noticed until the following night when we tried to do it again. Needless to say, it didn’t work. LIVE ALEXANDRA PALACE 2005 Paul Weller I went to the gig with a friend of mine, who was probably the biggest Weller fan in the world. He had unfortunately contracted food poisoning and during the first song of the night had to dash to the toilet. He spent the whole gig being sick, missing out on what ended up being acclaimed as the best show Weller had done for years. I still gleefully recount the night’s set list to him. Andy Parsons appears at The Garage, Glasgow (0870 013 5464), on March 7 www.andyparsons.co.uk THE FEELING Join With Us ★★★★★ Island 1761894, £12.99 Did Nostradamus not predict that rock music’s death would be signalled by the rise of five young men from Sussex playing pop in powdered form? Instant in every way: bland, and lacking any taste or substance. Guitars introducing ‘Without You’ are coated in syrupy synths, and though the band aspire to being Supertramp they end up sounding like Edison Lighthouse. The title track echoes Matt Monro’s ‘We’re Gonna Change The World’ with its happyclappy philosophy, while S Club 7 might have done a better job of ‘Won’t Go Away’. Sadly, The Feeling probably won’t. CS Download this: Join With Us, This Time HAYSEED DIXIE No Covers ★★★★★ Cooking Vinyl COOKCD454 , £11.99 It was a great gag: dungareed hillbillies give the rocking repertoire of AC/DC the bluegrass treatment. Seven albums on, the band have made a record ALBUM OF THE WEEK VARIOUS ARTISTS DIY Scotland 77-81 ★★★★★ Messthetics 105, £13.99 This is a lovingly curated collection of scruffy Scottish punk and indie rock instigated by the tenacious US label, Messthetics. Having personally lost or misplaced 10 or more of these 7" slices of Caledonian 20th-century culture to thoughtless storage and multiple house moves, it is amazing to hear all of them spruced up to sound so sparkly on this CD. The accompanying booklet is painstakingly researched, and a fascinating snapshot of social history. From Edinburgh proto-art rockers Metropak to Stirling’s awkward postpunk stylings of The Vertical Smiles and Aberdeen’s post-punk He’s Dead Jim, this is a fascinating sweep of comprised of original compositions, with considerable musical accomplishment but a sense of humour seriously laboured. Tunes such as ‘Set Myself On Fire’ or ‘Donkeys In Morocco’ recall Dr Hook without the gnarled charm; agreeably daft but too detached to connect. ‘Stonewall Hicks’ reminds us the band are big in Germany, but so is Hasselhoff. And this band are much better than that. CS Download this: Bouncing Betty Boogie, Frustration. FOLK STEVE FORBERT Strange Names And New Sensations ★★★★★ Hypertension HYP7257, £11.99 Bombs go off in Forbert’s ‘Baghdad Dream’, and his only chart hit, ‘Romeo’s Tune’, gets a facelift. Uillean pipes, mandolin, campfire harmonica and accordion also make appearances, but it’s mostly business as usual for the veteran folk rocker and songwriter. Irony and a rueful sense of fun are here from the opening track’s meditation on (his own) ‘Middle Age’ to its companion lyric ‘Thirty More Years’, while love gets sentimental in ‘Man, I Miss That Girl’ and ‘You’re Meant For Me’, then cosmically divine in Scottish bands operating on the periphery of the critical radar. Context is provided by better known names such as The Fire Engines, and that group’s Tam Dean Burn-fronted predecessors, The Dirty Reds. The Ettes represent the chafing chord-driven aspirations of lesser known but equally bright capital lights, while Ian Burgoyne’s Jazzateers’ smooth sounds pre-empt the lounge stylings of many an Eighties’ Glasgow outfit. Sadly it is hard to imagine anyone in Scotland devoting the same time and attention to detail to produce such a labour of love. Those who lived through the era may be startled at the enduring quality of music seemingly fuelled solely by the sense of urgency incumbent of the time. COLIN SOMERVILLE Download this: New Messiah by Restricted Code, Event To Agree/Disagree? Come by Tell us what you think at Article 58 scotlandonsunday.com ➡ ‘I Will Sing Your Praise’. Forbert holds up a musical mirror to the times, but feels no hurry to do anything about it. NORMAN CHALMERS Download this: Middle Age, Simply Spaulding Gray CALUM STEWART Earlywood ★★★★★ Earlywood EWCD01, £11.99 The six-holed wooden flute has undergone a revival over the last 20 years, having fallen out of sight from its 19th century heyday. Joining the handful of accomplished Scottish performers is Morayshire’s Calum Stewart. This remarkable talent has already collaborated with Nitin Sawhney and Iranian musicians, and Stewart’s determination to take the flute out of its sonic tramlines is the main feature of his debut album – a showcase of assertive technique and imaginative instrumental interplay. NC Download this: Haughs, Looking At A Rainbow Through A Dirty Window JAZZ RUBY BRAFF Little Things Live In Dublin 1976 ★★★★★ Nagel Heyer 104, £13.99 A good live recording should make you wish you were there – and, for the most part, this one does. Cornetist Braff is at the peak of his powers, both on hard-swinging roof-raisers and on gentle ballads. His masterful tone is complemented by the piano work of Tony Drennan, and the overall impression is of a relaxed, friendly session. But did the CD have to include a final track entitled ‘Braff Talk’ in which we have a unwelcome souvenir of the cantankerous cornetist in rant mode? ALISON KERR Download this: Sweet Lorraine, Solitude ZOOT SIMS Love For Sale – Live In Dublin 1978 ★★★★★ Nagel Heyer 102, £13.99 The sound quality may not be as good as on the Braff CD (above), but the quality of the playing by the American star is in the same class. Zoot Sims was an extraordinarily lyrical tenor saxophonist with a particularly plaintive and beguiling sound and a penchant for the less obvious song choices – as this programme, which includes one of his latter favourite tunes, the theme from The Prime Of Miss Jean Brodie, shows. AK Download this: Jean, In the Middle Of A Kiss CLASSICAL SIMONE DINNERSTEIN JS Bach: Goldberg Variations ★★★★★ Telarc CD-80692, £13.99 A late work from a composer of genius, there is a symmetry to Bach’s ‘Goldberg Variations’ that satisfies almost as much as the music itself. Here performed by the young American pianist, there’s a double sense of both lightness and sureness of touch that rewards repeated listening. Dinnerstein performs Bach’s multi-section work, an aria to open and close the music and 30 variations in between, on a 1903 Hamburg Steinway previously owned by Hull Council, rescued from its bombed town hall, relocated to New York and restored for the reopening of the World Trade Center’s Winter Garden. ALEXANDER BRYCE Download this: Aria RPO, RLPO, BOURNEMOUTH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAS, CITY OF LONDON SINFONIA Robert Simpson: Complete Symphonies ★★★★★ Hyperion CDS44191/7, £29.99 Some composers drive you to drink, or at least to ordering a double at the interval; Robert Simpson is one of these. His music is inventive and hugely orchestral, but hardly user-friendly and unlikely to have you emerging from the auditorium humming the tunes. So why buy a box set of his 10 symphonies? In part, precisely because he poses such challenges. Simpson took on allcomers in the late 20th century before his death in 1997, and if his music seems uncompromising, perhaps it is because we are too comfortable with the familiar. Worth exploring, but don’t say you weren’t warned. AB Download this:, Symphony No 10, Allegro leggiero ➔ To order any of the CDs above, call the order line on 01634 832 327, Monday to Friday 8am to 6pm and Saturday 10am to 2pm. This price includes P&P. Please allow 21 days for delivery MUSIC REVIEW 17 SCOTLAND on SUNDAY February 17, 2008 The crash that nearly killed Melody Gardot was the catalyst for her career, writes Alison Kerr Melody maker terness when she relates how, four years ago, when she was a fashion student, she was knocked off her bike by a jeep and suffered devastating injuries which have left her unable to walk without a cane, and with an excruciating aversion to light and noise. “It’s funny, in America, if I were to tell someone that a guy ran a red light and hit me, the response would be: ‘Did you sue?’ It’s what we do. It’s bizarre. But to me, it was an accident, and money wouldn’t have made everything better.” Gardot endured horrific injuries to her head, back and pelvis, and, for a while, doctors were unsure if she would walk again. “Six months came and I hadn’t taken a single step. I was bedridden for a long time. I had to learn how to walk three times: every time I learned, I learned wrong.” MMENDS Before the accident, Gardot REVIEW RECO S had earned pocket money by NG RI ST BASQUIAT ined jazz ted classically tra n Davis playing piano in bars but had ina om -n ry cu er M Be t and composer never considered music as quintet with cellis s. on drum anything other than a hobby. and Seb Rochford Edinburgh (0131-220 s, om Ro oo od Vo However, it was the accident e Th 8pm 3234), Tuesday, which inadvertently led Gardot to where she is today. eir th e os GALLOWS lo punk-rockers let “About a year after the acShouty hardcore s. ve Orchestra of Wol 4000 818), Saturday, 7pm cident, I went to see the doc870 ABC, Glasgow (0 tor because I was sick from all the many medications,” N A sea of soundalike singers, Melody Gardot’s sweet, intimate and slightly bluesy vocals are like a breath of fresh air. Like Madeleine Peyroux before her, the Philadelphia-based singer-songwriter has an unusually characterful voice which quietly demands attention – and a knack for blurring the lines between jazz, folk, blues and country. Her debut album, Worrisome Heart, has a retro appeal, yet all the songs are originals written by the eloquent 23-year-old herself. You don’t need to have read anything about Gardot to sense – from the yearning in her vocals – that this is a young woman who has been through the mill. Not that she displays even the tiniest hint of bit- I Accidental songstress: Melody Gardot was merely obeying doctor’s orders when she began learning to play the guitar she says. “My body was shutting down, and my liver was really sick and I had lost about 15 pounds. I took all my bottles and pills in a bag, threw them down on his desk and said: ‘I’m not taking any more!’ “He was horrified and said: ‘These are heavy prescription drugs – you can’t just stop.’ But I already had. Anyway, the doctor replied by saying: ‘Well, first things first, Melody. We need to find something that will make you happy because you’re obviously not in the right spirit. What did you do before the accident?’ “My mum was there and she told him that I used to play piano in piano bars. His eyes lit up and he said: ‘You have to do music. You have to. Music is the only thing that helps to reconnect the neural pathways in the brain.’ ” However, piano was no longer an option. “I had pelvic fractures so all the pressure would go on those fractures when I sat down.” So Gardot’s mother bought her a guitar and she learned to play while lying on her back. Once she had taught herself the basics of the guitar, songwriting was the natural next step. “It came on its own and it came as a surprise,” says Gardot. “I just sat down one day to play and ‘Some Lessons’ came out. That was the first song I wrote.” It appeared on a six-track EP entitled Some Lessons – The Bedroom Sessions, which first attracted attention on the internet, and it’s on the new album. It’s a highly per- sonal and very gentle affair. “Soft sounds are the only ones that my hearing can tolerate,” she says. Gardot was recently quoted as saying that writing a song is like farting. “Oh no!” she squeals. “That was supposed to be off the record.” Genuinely mortified, the unpretentious songstress reluctantly fleshes out the analogy. “Okay, when I write songs, I’ve got about 15, 20 minutes to do it. It happens like an instinct, like an urge in my body – that’s why I made that comparison. You feel it coming, and then you have to let it go, let it happen, stand aside and pray that it doesn’t stink.” Worrisome Heart (UCJ) is out on Monday www.myspace.com/melody 18 REVIEW ARTS February 17, 2008 SCOTLAND on SUNDAY Artist of note worth watching With his own art-rock opera and video, Craig Mulholland’s imagination knows no bounds as he explores life in the surveillance age, writes Moira Jeffrey CRAIG MULHOLLAND: GRANDES ET PETITES MACHINES Glasgow School of Art, Sorcha Dallas, Glasgow Film Festival, until March 22 T’S A short film. It’s some sculpture. It’s a whole whack of paintings. It’s a four-screen video installation. It’s an art-rock opera with a proper libretto, created on the kind of computer technology usually reserved for that modern musical genre apparently known as happy hardcore. The standard tabloid line about contemporary artists is that they are lazy underachievers. Glasgow artist Craig Mulholland’s excessive masterwork Grandes Et Petites Machines, elements of which have invaded the city’s art school, its arthouse cinema and the commercial gallery Sorcha Dallas this week, suggests the opposite. The two sister exhibitions and Mulholland’s film Peer To Peer, which will get its theatrical premiere on Thursday at the Glasgow Film Festival, contain such a wealth of creative references that is hard to imagine the artist has slept in recent months. I Mulholland is an artist whose work bridges any number of divides. He is a highly skilled painter whose career, since graduation from Glasgow in 1991, has included shows at some of the country’s crustier traditional venues. Yet in recent years his work has also been seen in places considered the epitome of contemporary cool such as Tate Britain and the Whitechapel Project Space. His handiness with a paintbrush is not in doubt, yet these days, he is as well known for his digital animations as his brushwork. For these shows the list of materials is somewhat mind-boggling: video, aluminium, polycarbonate, palette knives, pegboard and string. I can’t remember when, if ever, my own scribbled notes on an exhibition have contained such gems as “brain on a plinth” and “fleshy tripods riot”. At the heart of all the work is the creation of the 12-minute digital animation Peer To Peer, for which Mulholland received a recent Scottish Arts Council/Scottish Screen Film and Video Award. It is a bombastic exploration of the information age, which meshes imagery of our surveillance culture, CCTV and satellite technology with a cut-and-paste collage aesthetic that originated with movements such as Dada and Surrealism at the turn of the last century. 19-21 Dundas St Edinburgh EH3 6QQ 0131 557 1875 "Kweilin is a long time local favourite" - New York Times have been breaking about “mosquitoes”, devices which emit high-frequency sound allegedly only perceptible to young ears and designed to drive young people off city streets. This is not unfamiliar territory for Mulholland. Previous exhibitions such as Bearer On Demand at Glasgow’s Transmission Gallery and Plastic Casino in a former sweatshop space in the city’s Osborne Street have tackled such weighty topics as the monetary system and consumer culture. His show RFID at Stirling’s Changing Room was inspired by the development of radio frequency tracking devices: controversial technology used to trace the physical movement of consumer goods. REVIEW RECOMMENDS Cantonese Restaurant Established since 1984 Traditional Cantonese Cuisine While technology nowadays can produce images of startling and seamless beauty, Mulholland deliberately uses it to recreate the monochrome and juddery visuals of an era when moving film was still in its infancy and the anxiety and excitement of the machine age was in its first flow. Even more incongruous is the fact that Peer To Peer is actually an opera, with music by Mulholland and words created with his collaborator, artist Laurence Figgis. Its narrative thrust is the interdependent relationship between a camera operator and the technology he serves. If this sounds a bit like the film Red Road, be assured it is miles away from it in both look and feel. The work certainly won’t be to everyone’s taste. Some of it is clunky; some of it is high camp. If at times it feels like Mulholland has tried to stage a musical version of The Matrix using some paper plates and computer technology from the era of the ZX Spectrum, you’ve got to assume it is done knowingly and admire his zest and ingenuity. Why work in opera format when exploring social control? It’s apparently inspired by the experimental use of classical music in shops and public places to discourage crime. If this all seems a bit paranoid then remember this is a month in which news stories DANCE SCOTTISH DANCE THEATRE: DEFINED Liv Lorent’s ‘tenderhook’ is teamed with a new work by highly acclaimed young choreographer Hofesh Shechter in this impressive double bill, right. Dundee Rep Theatre (01382 223 530), ThursdaySaturday, 8pm KIDS HEELIE-GO-LEERIE Licketyspit start their stint as one of the Brunton’s resident theatre companies with a mix of bagpipes, African drumming, dancing and games in a show inspired by playground games (Ages 3-12). Brunton Theatre, Musselburgh (0131-665 2240), Wednesday, 1pm, Thursday, 10.30am and 1pm, Friday, 10.30am, Saturday, 11am and 3pm THEATRE EQUUS Peter Shaffer’s recently revived play, which caused a stir in London’s West End, comes north of the border with Alfie Allen in the role of the disturbed 17-year-old who poses a psychiatrist’s biggest challenge. Also starring Simon Callow and Linda Thorsen. King’s Theatre, Edinburgh (0131-529 6000), TuesdaySaturday, 7.30pm TALKS KATIE PRICE The less-buxom-these-days blonde gets the crowds in as she signs copies of her latest biographical instalment, Jordan: Pushed To The Limit. Waterstone’s, Edinburgh (0131226 2666), Monday, 4pm ARTS REVIEW 19 SCOTLAND on SUNDAY February 17, 2008 Honoured guests mind their dancing feet on the stairs FACTOR’S latest work, Other Voices, Other Rooms, is a departure for the leading dance theatre company in many ways. “It’s like an experiment,” admits artistic director Alan Greig. “Can we do a site-specific performance with live music, an actor, professional dancers and dancers with learning difficulties, and can I be in it and direct at the same time?” It’s a long list of questions but, judging by the exclusive peek I’m given of the piece, taking place in the corridors, stairwells and basements of Edinburgh’s grand Freemasons Hall, it looks as though they can. It is the first time since 1992 that X Factor has made site-specific work, and it’s also the first time that Greig has worked with an actor, in this case Grant Smeaton from It’s Only An Excuse, and several Suspect Culture theatre productions. Playing a master of ceremonies, it’s a similar role to the one Smeaton took on in the Arches’ site-specific production of Dante’s Inferno (though I still associate him most with his brilliant turn as a transsexual in their Spend A Penny monologues). Though they have never worked together before this, Smeaton is an old friend of Greig. The director introduced him to the George Street building when his version of Talking Heads was there during last year’s Edinburgh Fringe. “I knew it would challenge me choreographically,” Greig says, as the three of us head upstairs to one of the studies. Next door in the Grand Committee Room, Greig points out a couple of original Henry Raeburn paintings, each worth a million pounds. How did they ever get permission to put on a piece of dance theatre here, in the home of the Grand Masonic Lodge of Scotland? “I knew someone who is really high up and we managed to get an interview,” says Greig. “At first we thought the cost would be totally unrealistic, but when they recognised we’re a charity, it came down, and we just kept pleading.” “Everyone has been really good a b o u t u s b e i n g h e r e ,” s a y s Smeaton. “We’ll be rehearsing and shouting, and then a mason comes around the corner.” Rather than follow a narrative or linear journey, Other Voices, Other Rooms is a response to the fabric of the building, devised over a fortnight within its walls. A series of impressions, it combines solos, duets and group dances with live music and spoken-word X All-round view: clockwise from far left, Mulholland’s globe reflecting the way we are under the constant gaze of satellites; two clips from Peer To Peer, and a painting which continues the theme of surveillance. Main photograph: Robert Perry Grandes Et Petites Machines is an attempt to visualise some of the more hidden aspects of our obsession with information: the way that through everything from computer search engines to supermarket loyalty cards we unthinkingly conspire with those agencies that compile and store data about us. The two exhibitions spin out from the film in various ways, including related drawings and artworks that double as props. In the Mackintosh Gallery at Glasgow School of Art we find a series of abstract drawings and paintings. Some are created by etching and drilling aluminium in a method that echoes the manufacture of circuit boards, others use the rather sad material of painted and ragged peg board. Not all of these are as careful and considered as the work in film. Of the sculptural works, the strongest is Paths Of Resistance a riotous assembly of sinister tripods, which have sprouted odd fleshy protuberances or sinister spikes. At Sorcha Dallas there is a fourscreen digital animation, Rising Resistance, which draws on the imagery of Peer To Peer and uses florid language lifted not from revolutionary politics as one might assume, but from stock market commentary. A sculpture of an aluminium globe reflects the way in which global mapping leaves us under the perpetual watchful eye of satellite technology. Mulholland has name-checked the I can’t recall my recall my notes on aa notes show ever show ever containingg co such gems gems such ‘brain as ‘brain on a plinth’ on plinth’ and ‘fleshy and ‘fleshy tripods riot’ tripods riot’ sounds and visuals of consummate art band Kraftwerk as a key influence on his work. He has spoken in interviews of his love of Joy Division and New Order. Recently pop culture has been recycling imagery from those odd years of musical creativity on the cusp between the Seventies and Eighties. What with the chill wind of recession, the credit crunch and an increasing sense of bugging-induced paranoia, there’s plenty of room for a contemporary revival of the darker aesthetics of that age, and Grandes Et Petites Machines fits firmly into this tradition. There is, however, a healthy dose of cheeky humour and self-awareness in the work as well: mock opera as much as rock opera. When the show travels to Bristol venue Spike Island later this year it will be reconfigured again. Mulholland might need to assess whether, in the longer term, his artistic route should itself be grand or petite. I do wonder if de-cluttering some of the source material and more repetitive two-dimensional work would have allowed the video and the strongest sculpture to speak much more clearly. On the other hand, it’s hard not to admire an artist whose work ethic and artistic control extends from craft to keyboard and from the palette knife to the page of a musical score.❖ Screening of Peer To Peer and artist’s talk at the Glasgow Film Theatre on Thursday www.glasgowfilmfestival.org.uk performances taken from sources as varied as Alan Bennett’s Talking Heads, The Killing Of Sister George, Abigail’s Party and some Tennessee Williams. Even the audience numbers have been decided by the length of the grand staircase, so each person will have their own step to look over the banister and watch the dancers below, leaping on marble floors. It all ends in the basement, with Smeaton in a sumptuous parachute dress, singing a lullaby with torches blazing around him. “It wasn’t the dance, or the text that came first,” says Smeaton. “It was the building. We feel like we’ve lived here for the past two weeks.” “X Factor is in its 18th year now and I just wanted to do something different,” says Greig. “When X marks the spot: artistic director Alan Greig in Edinburgh’s Freemasons Hall you’re always in a black box, it becomes hard to come up with fantastic new ideas all the time. Here, the space dictated everything. I don’t want to recreate this piece anywhere else.” There’s even a tongue-in-cheek reference to that rather betterknown rival. “I come out and do a kind of X Factor spoof,” says Greig. “So many people ask why we took our name from the TV programme, and I say: ‘Actually, we were around 18 years before that.’ ” As for appearing in Other Voices, Other Rooms h im s e lf, Greig says it keeps him interested. “You’re alive in the show when you’re a performer,” he says. “But if you’re a director, once you’ve created it, it’s done. Also, I’m 45 now, so I might as well keep moving while I can.” CHITRA RAMASWAMY Other Voices, Other Rooms is at Freemasons Hall, Edinburgh (0131-225 5525), Tuesday until March 1, 6.30pm and 8.15pm (not Sunday, Monday) www.xfactordance.co.uk 20 REVIEW February 17, 2008 SCOTLAND on SUNDAY Illustration: Colin Heggie MY CULTURAL LIFE: DARA Ó BRIAIN What is your favourite film and why? I don’t have one; I don’t think anyone could actually pick a favourite film if you asked them to really, it all depends on your mood. That whole “I must see everything de Niro’s ever made” boy-ish obsession stopped being that important to me in my thirties, weirdly enough. The piece of music that means the most to you? Bizarrely, it would be a piece of choral or string music. When I was growing up, we had stuff like ‘Ave Maria’ or Mozart’s ‘Requiem’ playing in the house. Particularly, as an atheist, it’s like my guilty secret that I like choral music – well, I don’t particularly like it, it’s just evocative. The best performance you’ve ever been to? A performance of Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka in a theatre in London last year, which was basically a load of gymnasts pretending to be cockroaches while Nick Cave’s music was playing. It was fabulous. My wife and I wouldn’t leave the theatre until it was completely over; like when you’re watching the end of a film and you don’t want to spoil the illusion, it was that good. The book you have read more than once? A book called Laughter by an American neuroscientist called Dr Robert Provine. It explains things like that most of the time laughing is simply a nervous mechanism, a breaking of tension. It’s fascinating stuff; for a comedian, it’s an essential ‘How To...’ book. The fictional character whose life you would like to lead? There isn’t one off the top of my head, but I’m sure there are X-men I wouldn’t mind borrowing a power off of here or there. I think I’ve finally grown out of that phase where you think “God, if only I was...” Your idea of classic TV? I generally like any those dense American series like The West Wing, and I’ve also just finished watching series three of The Office USA. I couldn’t go back to the British one now because the USA one is not only funnier but with 22 shows per series you get to know the characters a bit better. I know that in this part of the world you’re only supposed to make 12 beautifully composed episodes per series and leave it at that, but there’s also something nice about just immersing yourself in a show. Your favourite work of art? As a teenager, there was one time when I turned a corner in the Louvre and the Venus de Milo looked particularly stunning – but then I went back to the Louvre some time later and it wasn’t quite as breathtaking. Also, the Rothko paintings in the Tate modern are incredibly brooding; they’re in a room on their own and it’s very still, very quiet, so different to everything else going on outside. Prediction for star of the future? Michael Cera – he was in Arrested Development, he was in Superbad, and now he’s in Juno. He just seems to have a nose for picking out really funny things. He’s hilarious, an incredibly funny improviser and a joy to watch. Essential website? Videosift.com is very good. It’s basically an example of where someone has edited down the internet and got rid of all of the nonsense. It’s like a sieve running to youtube to find more interesting things. Another one is Why, That’s Delightful!, the blog by Graham Linehan, who wrote Father Ted. The entertainment gadget you can’t live without? There isn’t one because I have four of everything anyway; if one of my iPods break I use the iPhone, if my Wii breaks I play my Xbox 360, and if that breaks I’ll finally move on to the Playstation 3 – but definitely only in that order. The one gadget that I heartily recommend though is a Sonof, which is a wireless music system that takes the music you have stored on your computers and plays it all over the house – like you can have different speakers in different parts of the house playing different things, or have them all playing the same thing. It almost sounds like I have this fabulous ‘house of the future’. If you’re really insane, you can have 32 of them all over the house. Dara Ó Briain plays Edinburgh Playhouse, March 9, The Music Hall, Aberdeen; Royal Concert Hall, March 11, Glasgow, March 12. Tickets via Ticketmaster (0870 380 0017) www.myspace.com/daraobriain ENTERTAINMENT LISTINGS ART STUART HAYGARTH Haygarth transforms the status of everyday objects by combining them to make a range of functional and structural creations. The Lighthouse, Glasgow (0141-221 6362), until February 24 JOHN WATSON PRIZE: PAUL CHIAPPE This year’s winner is Edinburgh Art College graduate Paul Chiappe, who creates intriguing illusions by transforming vintage photographs with pencil drawings. National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh (0131-624 6200), until February 24 A SURGICAL THREAD An insight into the methods used in hospitals prior to the invention of the anaesthetic. Aberdeen Maritime Museum (01224 337 700), until March 16 REUNITED: RUBENS – RIBERA The Spanish artist’s Drunken Silenus is displayed with Rubens’ Feast Of Herod. National Gallery Complex, Edinburgh (0131-624 6200), until April 6 LOTTE GERTZ: MATCH PLAY, MATCH SPENT Gertz looks at identity and image, portraying a clash between the real and the ideal in works that combine woodcut printing, painting, drawing and collage. Mary Mary, Glasgow (0141-226 2257), until March 1 STEPHEN HEALY: ETHEREAL Using artificial light on water in remote locations, Healy’s body of photographs allude to the spectacle of spiritual miracle. Street Level Photoworks, Glasgow (0141-552 2151), until March 22 GLIMMERS IN LIMBO Four site-specific works by resident artist Minty MacDonald explore the evolution of Tramway. Tramway, Glasgow (0845 330 3501), until March 2 BUY MY LOVE Fashionable London-based artist Insa, who is known for his graffiti work, unleashes the sub-cultural fetishism of modern society with his new collection. Recoat Gallery, Glasgow (0141-341 0069), until March 13 (not Mondays) LET ME SHOW YOU SOME THINGS Experimental short films presented by The Magic Lantern are combined with a newly commissioned film from Sarah Tripp, Let Me Show You Some Things, which is framed by two new installations from sculptor Robert Orchardson. CCA, Glasgow (0141-352 4900), until March 29 KURT HENTSCHLAGER: FEED A performance with no performers, this is the British premiere of Hentschlager’s recent solo work, which uses artificial fog, light and projections. Part of ‘New Territories 2008’. Tramway, Glasgow (0845 330 3501), Tuesday and Wednesday, 7.30pm DANCE KIDS COMPAGNIE THOR: V NIGHTMARES Experimental dance performance from Belgian Compagnie Thor, who turn Vivaldi’s Four Seasons on its head to use as inspiration for ‘a nightmare in four movements’. Part of ‘New Territories 2008’. Tramway, Glasgow (0845 330 3501), Parts 1 & 2: Friday, 7.30pm; Parts 3 & 4: Saturday, 7.30pm LAZYTOWN LIVE! Sportacus and pink-haired newcomer Stephanie go up against super-villain Robbie Rotten. Edinburgh Festival Theatre (0131529 6000), Thursday, 5pm, Friday and Saturday, 11am, 2pm and 5pm RAMBERT DANCE COMPANY The modern dance company are back with a new programme of four contrasting works for their World View Tour, including the world premiere of ‘Scribblings’ by American choreographer Doug Varone. His Majesty’s Theatre, Aberdeen (01224 641 122), WednesdayFriday, 7.30pm CABBAGES AND KINGS Tabula Rasa Dance Company give a creative dance performance set in a magical garden. (Ages 4 plus). Regal Community Theatre, Bathgate (01506 433 634), Wednesday and Thursday, 1.30pm MUSIC ELECTRIC SIX The wild-child novelty rock stars crash-land in Inverness for the only Scottish date of their tour. Ironworks, Inverness (0870 7894 173), Friday, 7pm FAIRPORT CONVENTION The influential folk collective play songs old and new to mark their 40th anniversary year. Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh (0131668 2019), Saturday, 8pm CARIBOU Electronica stalwart Daniel Snaith, left, gives another generous helping of psychedelic music. New Stereo, Glasgow (0870 220 1116), Monday, 8pm; The Tunnels, Aberdeen (01224 211 121), Tuesday, 8pm; Cabaret Voltaire, Edinburgh (0131-220 6176), Wednesday, 7pm DELAYS High-pitched indie boys hailing from Southampton ready to release their third album, Everything’s The Rush. Liquid Room, Edinburgh (0131-220 3234), Wednesday, 7.30pm; Moshulu, Aberdeen (0870 907 0999), Thursday, 7.30pm EDUARDO NIEBLA World-class flamenco jazz from the acclaimed Spanish guitarist who has collaborated with sitar virtuoso Nishat Khan and George Michael. Lochalsh Arts Network, Ross-shire (01599 555 208), Monday, 8pm; The Ceilidh Place, Ullapool (01854 612 103), Tuesday, 8.30pm; An Lanntair, Stornoway (01851 703 307), Thursday, 8pm SIMON TRPCESKI The much in-demand Macedonian pianist who recently sold out London’s Wigmore Hall gives his celebrated performance of Chopin and Rachmaninov. Perth Concert Hall (0845 612 6324), Thursday, 7.30pm INSTAL 08 Kazoo-playing Nashville group The Cherry Blossoms and Japanese improvisational artists Marginal Consort play on the third and final day of the experimental underground music festival. The Arches, Glasgow (0141-565 1000), today, 4pm THEATRE GREAT EXPECTATIONS Adapted for the stage by Jo Clifford and featuring a live soundscape from composer Dave Fennessy. Gordonstoun School, Elgin (01343 837837), Tuesday, 8pm; Adam Smith Theatre, Kirkcaldy (01592 583 302), Wednesday, 7.30pm; Paisley Arts Centre (0141-887 1010), Thursday, 7.30pm; Birnam Arts Centre, Dunkeld (01350 727 674), Friday, 8pm; Arbroath Webster Theatre (01241 435 800), Saturday, 7.30pm ENDGAME Theatre Workshop use kinetic sculptures from Sharmanka for their production of Beckett’s play. Byre Theatre, St Andrews (01334 475 000), Tuesday, 8pm; East Kilbride Arts Centre (01355 261 000), Thursday, 8pm; Gilmorehill G12, Glasgow (0141-330 5522), Saturday, 7.30pm STATIC Dan Rebellato’s latest play fuses music and sign language to tell of a widow who finds a compilation tape left by her husband. Tron Theatre, Glasgow (0141-552 4267), until Saturday, 8pm SIX CHARACTERS IN SEARCH OF AN AUTHOR Based on Luigi Pirandello’s drama, this study in meta-theatre explores truth, reality and the nature of existence as six characters look to a theatre company for help on how to play out their story. Royal Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh (0131-248 4848), until March 8, 7.45pm ROSANNA CHIANTA ENTERTAINMENT REVIEW 21 SCOTLAND on SUNDAY February 17, 2008 THEGAMER KATE HEAVENOR URNOUT Paradise (PS3 and XBox, £49.99, ★ ★ ★ ★ ★) is the new concept for the Burnout brand, which some gamers have kept an open mind about while others have responded with major resistance. This concept is taking the already eye-blisteringly quick game, which is full of single races and crash junctions, and turning it into an open world in which you decide where to race, how to reach your goal, or just drive around taking in the scenery. B At first you’ll think you may have been given a bit too much freedom as you’re plonked into paradise city and just expected to get on with it. If you want to take part in a race you can make your way to one of the 120 junctions, spin your wheels and the race is explained in terms of start and finish lines. It’s a very free game world and the lack of intervention presents a problem: it’s all just a bit too quick. When you combine the speed of this game with trying to navigate a map and concentrate on not taking a wrong turn, you find yourself crashing more than ever. With no after-touch to scupper the opponents behind you, scrapping your car just isn’t that much fun. In time you are supposed to learn the city and its landmarks by memory, and in that respect the game does get better the more you play it. As you drive around the 30 square kilometres you can choose from three car classes: Speed, Stunt and Aggression cars. Instead of unlocking new cars and classes you now have a driving licence that gets upgraded when you complete a certain number of challenges. If you are used to being spoon-fed your games and races, I don’t think you’ll get much from this game. However if you like to explore, and don’t mind getting lost and retracing your steps time after time, you may be on to a winner. There’s one thing I can’t stand at the moment and that’s having to wave the Wii remote around when it would be just as simple to press a button. Thankfully in the new game Zack and Wiki: Quest for Barbaros’ Treasure (Wii, £39.99, ★ ★ ★ ★ ★), the Wii remote is essential, DVD RELEASES MICHAEL CLAYTON (12) £19.99 Spills: Burnout can get a bit too fast which makes it an absolute joy to play. This game harks back to the days of old graphic adventures such as Monkey Island, but with the emphasis more on puzzle solving within a level as you play through the story. You play a pirate boy called Zack and his flying sidekick mate Wiki as you go on a quest to find the various parts of the big pirate Barbaros. For some strange reason Barbaros has turned himself into treasure, so the game involves you getting to each treasure chest so that you can open it and claim what’s inside. Like puzzle games of old you can also die in this game. Luckily the death scenes are pretty amusing, and you don’t feel like your hard work has gone to waste as, providing you repeat the same steps in the correct order, you’ll end up back at the point you left off. This is the best use of the Wii remote I’ve seen to date. It’s mega playable and addictive. FREE BOOK OF SCOTTISH CURSES AND INSULTS INSIDE EVERY COPY NOT FOR THE EASILY OFFENDED! But if you don’t like it, awa’ an raffle yer onions! IN NEXT WEEKEND'S RUN FAT BOY RUN (12) £19.99 Director: Tony Gilroy Running time: 115 minutes ★★★★★ Director: David Schwimmer Running time: 96 minutes ★★★★★ This is a cool and classy piece of filmmaking, thanks to a stark and clinical style of camera work teamed with George Clooney in one of the most sophisticated and underplayed roles of his career. Some snipers have suggested that for underplayed read underwhelming, but Clooney puts more method into his part as top lawyer-cum-fixer than merely allowing his stubble to grow and leaving the Just For Men in the cabinet. When Clayton’s fellow lawyer (Tom Wilkinson) has a breakdown in the middle of handling the company’s most important case Clayton is sent in to straighten everyone out. Instead, a combination of conscience and a mid-life crisis kicks in, and Clooney’s ‘janitor’ role begins to raise questions of himself. Tilda Swinton plays a blinder as the hard-ball defender of the pharmaceutical company who is only ever treading murky water. If box office return alone is anything to go by then there is little to throw at this comedy, directed by Friends’ David Schwimmer and starring Simon Pegg and Thandie Newton. Pegg plays the kind of Englishman he always plays – a little bit peelie wallie, a little bit left on the shelf, but just enough of a little bit of an achiever to always walk away with redemption/ romance/his life in the end. Here Pegg has left Newton at the altar five years previous, and when it occurs to him that this was perhaps not the wisest life choice, she is already bringing up their fiveyear-old with a far more attractive American. And so ensues the comedy value of Pegg training for a marathon to prove his virility and worthiness in the eyes of his wife-that-never-was. Despite Schwimmer’s hand, it does feel like a very British comedy but, disappointingly, an overly familiar one at that. FIONA LEITH 22 REVIEW TELEVISION February 17, 2008 SCOTLAND on SUNDAY ONTHEBOX AIDAN SMITH . LILY ALLEN AND FRIENDS BBC3 Tuesday, 10.30pm . SKINS Channel 4 Thursday, 10.35pm . MISTRESSES BBC1 Friday, 9pm . ECENTLY, while waiting to meet a star of stage and screen, I was simultaneously impressed and appalled by a fellow hack and his mastery of his state-of-the-art mobile phone. It was one of those all-my-world-in-aloganberry-type contraptions. The impressive bit was his confident manner as he broke off from our chit-chat to conduct a Q&A about food with a pop musician which recorded straight into the phone’s memory. The appalling bit was his callousness as his finger hovered over the delete button. The memory already housed his conversation with an actor but he’d been struggling to sell this interview. “No one wants to know about Cuba Gooding Jr anymore,” the scribe groaned. There were a number of us in the room and the others sympathised, in a way that only journalists can. “Have you tried Tepid?” asked one, the inference being that CG Jr’s time of being hot enough for Heat was long gone. Another quipped that there R Sofa so ok: it wasn’t exactly David Frost meets Nixon, but Lily Allen’s chat with Cuba Gooding Jr was surprisingly funny. Teen drama Skins, below would be more chance of flogging an interview with Cuba Gooding Senior. What a rotten bunch, I thought to myself, at the same time questioning my own showbiz morals. Was I not a bit like them? Oh probably. But if it’s any consolation to Junior, when he turned up on the first of Lily Allen And Friends, I cheered. Way to go, Cuba. But a chat show which refuses to accept that the genre is dead following Parky’s retirement and the atrocity that was Davina? Hosted by another foxy singer even though Charlotte Church’s attempt at telly talk was so dismal? Featuring the USP of Allen’s “friends” deciding on the direction of each edition? This didn’t sound good, and at first, it wasn’t. Allen rose to prominence through her MySpace page, so you can understand the BBC’s thinking in opening up the programme to the hodden blogging mass. TV, like other traditional media, is scared of being rendered brontosaurus-like by the worldwide web. It thinks its only option is to gulp hard and invite bloggers into their old-fangled world. The trouble is, bloggers are dull. All right, not dull exactly, but whatever it is that makes them untamable and anti-corporate and frequently hilarious seems to disappear when they’re confronted by lights and cameras. They just look stunned by them. A large part of the “whatever” is the web’s anonymity. TV requires you to show your face, and your personality. But internet “phenomena” such as Tay Zonday (sings a strange song called ‘Chocolate Rain’ in an equally strange basso profundo) and Chris Crocker (Britney Spears’ great, blubbing defender; 44 million MySpace plays to date) came across poorly on Lily Allen And Friends, which doubtless brought a smirk to the faces of the traditionalists. This isn’t the programme to marry TV with the web but it still works in the prehistoric sense, with Allen proving herself a sparky presenter. I don’t really care for her music, but on the chat sofa she’s superior to both Charlotte Church and Davina McCall. Not only that, she re-opens a favourite debate of mine: how come Jonathan Ross gets paid so much money – and don’t tell me it’s because he cracked the atom with his impudent line in questioning? And Cuba? Well, straight off. Allen asked him about winning the Oscar, a triumph of 12 long years ago. Then he whooped and hollered and bragged and stripped to the waist until our host sighed: “Yes, I’m sure you’ve got a massive cock.” It wasn’t David Frost ensnaring Tricky Dicky Nixon but, in ‘I‘Idon’t don’t care care for her her music music buton onthe the chat sofa but sofashe’s she’s superior to to both Charlotte superior Charlotte Churchand and Davina Davina McCall’ Church McCall’ this dumbed-down age, it was still pretty funny. If Lily Allen And Friends made you feel old, then Skins must have prompted choruses of “Is it lunchtime yet?” and a horrendous bathchair pile-up in an effort to grab front-row places for a game of bingo. It’s the saga – not to be confused with Saga – of teenage life in modern Britain which reveals exactly what goes into the topselling Domino’s pizza and why it makes the kids so happy. One test of good drama is the house parties and how realistic they are. Last time out, Skins threw the best parties since Howard Kirk’s in The History Man. That ages me somewhat, but my memories of Kirk’s bashes are vivid even though the look of them was anything but: uniformly Seventies beige. By contrast, Skins is an orgy of nu-rave primary colour, and even Harry Enfield and Bill Bailey as concerned dads are required to dress in shocking pinks and electric blues. The second series promises to be darker, in mood if nothing else, with Tony (Nicholas Hoult) struggling to remember who he was before being hit by a bus. Previously, Tony was a creep, albeit one who got lots of sex. It’s by no means certain he will come out the other side an adult, or that this run will feature a reduction in the levels of pillpopping and bed-hopping. Tony is still able to attend parties, to the relief of the girls, one of whom told him: “You look so, so, okay, not like, well, they said you were a total mong and I would have been so so pissed if you were a veg and had to be switched off, yah?” And that’s another test of a good drama: the accurate depiction of posh ninnies. So farewell, Mistresses. A yawning Fridayprimetime-sized hole has opened up for my wife and its other fans, the vast majority of them women, who loved this drama from the first Pino Grigio-fuelled confessionnight to the last. In the end, the doctor didn’t lose her job for mercy-killing her lover, the lawyer didn’t lose her marriage for getting pregnant by the snake-faced colleague across the desk, the events-organiser learned to love herself instead of everything in trousers (and then skirts) and the mum shopped her husband for a 9/11 scam nicked from the Neil LaBute play The Mercy Seat. I thought it was watchable tosh. Maybe a man would say that. Being competitive as well, I’d like to award the acting honours, not to the prerace favourite Agree/Disagree? (Sarah Parish), Tell us what you think at but to Sharon scotlandonsunday.com Small. ➡ TELEVISION REVIEW 23 SCOTLAND on SUNDAY February 17, 2008 TV Week ahead FILMS OF THE WEEK by Mik Duffy PICK OF THE WEEK That Mitchell And Webb Look BBC2, Thursday, 9pm Having delighted viewers as the heroically hapless nerds of Channel 4’s Peep Show, the first series of comedy duo Mitchell and Webb’s BBC2 skit show was met with disappointment in some quarters. Only fitfully funny and noticeably dumbed down from their brilliant Radio 4 tomfoolery, it felt like a badly botched compromise. Thankfully, however, this second series is a vast improvement, offering us an irresistible mix of cerebral satire and all-out silliness. Though it’s obviously premature to compare the pair with the Monty Python posse, they have evidently incorporated a Pythonesque drive for invention into their shtick. With most modern skit shows relying entirely on annoying repetition, this duo often discard ideas before they’re played out. So we can enjoy gems like their inspired visit to a “bawdy 1970s hospital” without fear of the punchline being diluted by a dozen reprises and an avalanche of catchphrase-laden merchandise. Mitchell and Webb’s polite but pointed jabs at the state of telly are also devastatingly effective. Whether they are artfully deconstructing Five’s “sensitive freak-show” documentaries or explaining the Beeb’s baffling need to keep re-commissioning Two Pints Of Lager…, their anger about television’s misdeeds always hits the mark. If only all TV funnymen were quite so consistent. BEST DOCUMENTARY My Street Channel 4, Thursday, 9pm Though soap operas perpetuate the notion that streets are micro-universes where THE MAN IN THE IRON MASK Five, Sunday, 6.30pm Leonardo DiCaprio takes on the dual role of King Louis XIV and his imprisoned twin Philippe in the sequel to 1993’s The Three Musketeers. It’s interesting to note that whilst this is an adaptation of a quintessentially French story, it only manages to cast one French actor; namely Gérard Depardieu, above centre, as the uncouth Porthos. THE NAKED GUN: FROM THE FILES OF POLICE SQUAD Channel 4, Monday, 11.35pm Hit skits: Mitchell, right, and Webb bring an irresistible mix of cerebral satire and all-out silliness to BBC2 everyone’s on a first-name basis, here in the real world many neighbours are strangers to each other. It’s a predicament film-maker Sue Bourne found herself wrestling with until she hit upon the novel idea underpinning this sublime documentary. Boldly venturing beyond her own doorstep, she decided to knock on every other door in her street to discover more about her neighbours. What she uncovers is a touching and ultimately life-affirming social tapestry teeming with joy, tragedy and character. Also try: The Day Of The Kamikaze (Channel 4, tomorrow, 9pm). An extraordinary look at the Second World War’s much-feared aerial suicide bombers BEST THRILLER The Last Enemy BBC1, today, 9pm Last Enemy: Nick Sidia and Benedict Cumberbatch, who becomes the pawn in a mysterious conspiracy RADIO ORGET the proverb; if wildlife enthusiast Bill Bailey endorses curiosity, I’m sure it didn’t kill the cat. And who wants to float around in a pool of selfperpetuated ignorance when there’s knowledge of such pressing topics as pineapples and Father Christmas to gain? This week Bailey and F With most modern espionage thrillers dominated by implacable killing machines this new serial offers us a refreshing alternative to the likes of Bourne, Bauer and Bond. A painfully reclusive mathematician with a mild case of OCD, Benedict Cumberbatch’s Stephen Ezard is categorically not an action hero. Unfortunately, however, his ivory tower existence is about to be shattered by a series of developments, which will see him Blackadder producer John Lloyd open The Museum Of Curiosity (BBC Radio 4, Wednesday, 6.30pm), a new six-part series akin to QI (Alan Davies does make an appearance). It aims to arm the listener with some interesting and, it has to be said, downright bizarre knowledge, inviting a different panel of guests from the worlds of comedy and academia each week to enlighten our minds. swapping complex theorems for oldfashioned body counts. Returning to London for his brother’s funeral, Ezard is soon up to his bewildered puppy dog eyes in a labyrinthine conspiracy involving an Orwellian national database, a deadly new virus and a rogue assassin played by a disconcertingly silent Robert Carlyle. Copious thrills, spills and kills ensue. Also try: Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles (Thursday, Virgin 1, 10pm). Bad-ass single mom Lena Headey battles cyborgs as the movie franchise transfers to the small screen BEST ARTS True Stories: Derek More4, Tuesday, 10pm A controversial provocateur as well as a gifted film-maker, Derek Jarman’s passing left depressing voids in both British cinema and contemporary art. Here fellow film-maker and artist Isaac Julien offers us a tour through Jarman’s life. It’s a frank and moving portrait with archive interview footage, mesmerising extracts from Jarman’s films and the recollections of muse Tilda Swinton revealing a complex man whose notoriety masked a warm and witty soul. Also try: George Melly’s Last Stand (BBC2, today, 10pm). An engaging and unexpectedly funny look at the final months of the eccentric jazz legend Asking questions of a different nature – and not just “am I bovvered?” – is Catherine Tate, who starts a game of celebrity tag in Chain Reaction (BBC Radio 4, Thursday, 6.30pm), a show where the interviewee becomes the interviewer. In the first of a four-part series, Tate interviews David Tennant before handing him the baton to quiz Richard Wilson the next week. Wilson then interviews Arabella Weir, who chats to her Fast Show comrade Paul Whitehouse When To Run (BBC Radio 4, Thursday, 2.15pm), Sophie Woolley’s radio adaptation of her praised tragicomic play about three women runners and a dog-sitter, should also be worth tuning in for. And finally, if trying to nab tickets for Duffy’s sold-out gig in Glasgow this week left you high and dry, Jo Whiley (BBC Radio 1, Friday, 10am) provides consolation when the Sixtiessounding next big thing performs in the live lounge. ROSANNA CHIANTA A spin-off from the original television series, Leslie Nielsen shines as the evergreen Lieutenant Frank Drebin. A young OJ Simpson also appears as the increasingly incompetent Nordberg, as Drebin attempts to foil a terrorist plot to assassinate the Queen. THE PURSUIT OF HAPPYNESS Sky Movies Premiere, Tuesday, 8.pm, Based on the true story of how stock market millionaire Chris Gardner struggled with homelessness while serving an apprenticeship as a stock market broker. Will Smith gives his all in his role as Gardener, earning an Oscar nomination for his efforts. ROCKY Sky Movies Drama, Thursday, 8pm Sylvester Stallone steps into the ring for the first time as local underdog Rocky Balboa prepares to take on the reigning world champion. After the bell sounds at the end of the big fight, Rocky’s competitor declares that there “Ain’t gonna be no rematch.” Somewhat ironic, as the movie went on to produce four sequels over the next three decades. THE BOURNE IDENTITY STV, Saturday, 9.45pm, Doug Liman reimagines Robert Ludlum’s amnesia-bound CIA agent Jason Bourne as a man with an altogether more menacing past. Matt Damon, above, stars as the eponymous assassin trying to regain his memory. THE BIG LEBOWSKI Channel 4, Saturday, 1.15am Jeff Bridges stars as LA slacker Jeff Lebowski; a man who becomes entangled in a dangerous kidnapping plot when he is mistaken by a group of gangsters for a millionaire of the same name. SCOTT MURRAY 24 REVIEW SUNDAY 17.02.08 BBC ONE 6.00 Breakfast.* 81256562 7.50 Match Of The Day.* 2638369 9.00 The Andrew Marr Show.* 32388 10.00 The Big Questions.* Discussion from Nottingham University. DAYTIME 83746 11.00 Countryfile.* John Craven visits the isolated Flat Holm island community. 63982 12.00 The Politics Show.* 7599388 1.15 ’Allo ’Allo!* Presuming Rene is dead, Edith hunts for his will and a new husband. (R) 373291 1.45 Match Of The Day Live: The FA Cup.* Sheffield United v Middlesbrough (Kick-off 2.00pm). This afternoon’s fifth-round tie comes from Bramall Lane, where the Blades are aiming to claim their third successive Premier League scalp. 71176456 4.05 Diagnosis Murder.* A cardiac surgeon’s patient dies. (R) 2527833 4.50 Lifeline.* 9043253 5.00 5 PM 5.35 BBC TWO 6.00 CBeebies: Fimbles.* (R) 7335098 6.20 Tikkabilla.* (R) 4955765 6.50 Step Inside.* (R) 2008843 7.00 CBBC: Jakers!* (R) 3974388 7.20 BB3B.* (R) 7400562 7.45 The Secret Show.* (R) 8218982 8.10 Thumb Wrestling Federation: TWF.* (R) 8232475 8.20 Skunk Fu!* (R) 8223727 8.30 Raven.* (R) 93524 9.00 Hider In The House.* 23630 10.00 Something For The Weekend.* 60956 11.30 Animal Park.* Lion cubs have to steal their food. (R) 24036 12.30 Ben Fogle’s Extreme Dreams.* The final day of the expedition looms. (R) 34369 1.00 Rugby Union.* Highlights include Bath v London Wasps. 65340 1.30 River City.* Ruth makes a startling discovery about Marty’s health. 5492630 2.25 EastEnders.* Omnibus. Stacey is rushed to hospital following her collapse. 517098 4.25 FILM We Dive At Dawn (1943).* A British submarine crew face a fight for survival when they are left stranded during a mission in the Baltic Sea. Adventure starring John Mills. 10277727 9 PM 10 PM 11 PM ONWARD 12.30-1.00 Fred Dibnah’s World Of Steam, Steel And Stone.* (R) 1.30 EastEnders.* 3.30 FILM: We Dive At Dawn.* 5.05-7.00 FILM: Zulu Dawn.* N East Of England: 12.30-1.00 Fred Dibnah’s World Of Steam, Steel And Stone.* (R) 1.30 EastEnders.* 3.30 FILM: We Dive At Dawn.* 5.05-7.00 FILM: Zulu Dawn.* 5.45 Time Team.* The team excavate a field outside Bath to search for the remains of a grand Georgian house built by a local MP 200 years ago. 684104 6.45 Channel 4 News.* 540388 7.00 Our Big Fairtrade Adventure.* School pupils decide to produce their own ethical clothing. 2229 7.30 8.00 Tropic Of Capricorn.* Simon Reeve travels through Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Madagascar. 4949 8.30 Dancing On Ice: The Skate Off.* The two lowest-scoring couples compete. 3746 8.00 Wife Swap.* An authoritative mother trades places with a permissive housewife. 9017 9.00 Around The World In 80 Gardens.* Monty Don visits the private oasis of artist Burle Marx. 4185 9.00 Kingdom.* Aunt Auriel’s home suffers from a faulty sprinkler system, and a raging storm floods the streets of Market Shipborough. Last in series. 1611 9.00 FILM Kingdom Of Heaven (2005).* Première. Drama following a blacksmith’s rise to knighthood and journey to Jerusalem, where tensions between Christian and Muslim factions are poised to boil over into war. Orlando Bloom stars. 81690794 8.00 CHOICE Lark Rise To Candleford.* When a homeless family abandon their young daughter in Lark Rise, Robert attempts to find her a new home. See Pick of the Day. 6307 9.00 The Last Enemy.* New series. A man who returns to a futuristic London for his brother’s funeral to discover everyone is now under constant surveillance. Drama with Benedict Cumberbatch and Robert Carlyle. 5272272 8 BBC2 Northern Ireland Ski Sunday.* Highlights from the World Cup meeting in Zagreb-Sljeme, Croatia. Plus Ed Leigh visits the Himalayas to try a relatively untouched part of the snowboarding world. 8901 7.00 Dancing On Ice.* The couples dance Sixtiesinspired routines. The skateoff is at 8.30pm. 3581494 1.00-1.45 Cash In The Attic.* (R) 10.45 The Politics Show.* (R) 11.05 FILM: Runaway Jury.* 1.05 Sky High. (R) 1.20-1.50 Sign Zone: A Passion For Plants. N East Of England: 1.00-1.45 The Super League Show.* 6.10 The Hoobs.* (R) 7333630 6.35 Transworld Sport.* 3049291 7.30 Barcelona World Race. 8248123 7.55 World Cup Skiing. 2163388 8.50 T4: The OC.* (R) 3556746 9.50 T4: Hollyoaks.* Omnibus. Nancy is troubled by Jake’s obsession with ensuring the wedding goes ahead in the face of Charlie’s chemotherapy. (R) 53804388 12.25 T4: Vanity Lair.* 6511122 1.30 T4: The Hills.* Lauren and Jason fall out. 51036 2.00 T4: Friends.* Rachel’s mother plans to move in. (R) 9950494 2.35 T4: Smallville.* An illegal immigrant asks for Clark’s help. Tom Welling stars. 8174217 3.35 T4: The Simpsons.* Homer worries about his marriage. (R) 4027611 4.05 T4: The Simpsons.* Lisa falls for the school bully. (R) 7673949 4.40 Terror In Frostbite Canyon.* A man struggles to escape from the subterranean depths of the Utah Canyon, hoping to raise the alarm after an accident leaves his brother gravely injured. Part of the Alive strand. 3009272 6.10 Antiques Roadshow.* The team examine an exemplary piece of silverware and a collection of postcards. 7659 PM Beat: Life On The Street.* The work of police community support officers. 4599678 Scotland Today.* 345949 ITV News.* 333104 BBC1 Northern Ireland CHANNEL FOUR Celtic Connections.* Mary Ann Kennedy presents highlights of the music festival. 42388 6 PM 7 PM 6.00 GMTV.* 8759562 9.25 CITV: Jim Jam & Sunny.* 1856185 9.40 Jim Jam & Sunny.* 7098456 9.50 Tricky Quickies.* 7087340 10.00 Nick Hancock’s Fishing School.* The students face a four-mile trek. (R) 43630 10.30 Nick Hancock’s Fishing School.* The students fish a loch of their choice. (R) 35794 11.00 FILM Columbo: Ashes To Ashes (1998).* The detective investigates the complex case of a murdered Hollywood gossip writer. Drama starring Peter Falk. 72019253 12.50 ITV News; Weather.* 94544272 1.00 Scotland Today/North Today.* 44053369 1.05 Midsomer Murders.* Barnaby and Troy investigate the members of an art class after one of their number is found dead. Drama starring John Nettles. (R) 53366291 3.10 Agatha Christie’s Poirot.* An archaeologist’s beautiful wife is murdered during an excavation in the Middle East. Fortunately a holidaying Poirot is on hand to investigate. Mystery starring David Suchet. (R) 36689036 5.40 5.55 6.00 7.00 REGION STV 5.10 Songs Of Praise. Sally Magnusson journeys to Cape Town to meet Nobel Peace Prize winner Archbishop Desmond Tutu. 8267369 BBC News.* 987814 Life In Cold Blood.* How amphibians first took to dry land. (R) 44746 6.00 February 17, 2008 SCOTLANDonSUNDAY Wild At Heart.* A rare white lion is discovered in the bush and the identity of the poachers is revealed. 64765 10.25 BBC News.* 850098 10.45 FILM Runaway Jury (2003).* Thriller starring John Cusack, Gene Hackman and Dustin Hoffman. 89654611 10.00 George Melly’s Last Stand.* Candid documentary detailing the last few months of the art critic’s life. 7272 10.00 ITV News.* 148765 10.15 CHOICE Thank God You’re Here.* With guests Jessica Hynes and Marcus Brigstocke. Last in series. (R) See Pick of the Day. 956833 12.50 Sign Zone: Around The World In 80 Gardens.* (R) 5140692 1.50 Sign Zone: Holby City.* (R) 5862055 2.50 Sign Zone: Watchdog.* (R) 3956708 3.20 Sign Zone: Wanted Down Under.* (R) 3480418 4.05 BBC News 24.* 710944 11.00 Blue Blood — Storyville.* The inner workings of the Oxford University Boxing Club. 551123 12.25 The Super League Show.* 4121728 1.10 FILM Limbo (1999).* Drama starring Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio. 578906 3.10 BBC News 24.* 62988760 11.15 FILM Hot Shots! Part Deux (1993).* Comedy starring Charlie Sheen and Valeria Golina. 177659 12.45 FILM Duel (1971).* Thriller starring Dennis Weaver. 1592079 2.00 Dial A Mum.* (R) 8585505 2.40 Reality Bites.* (R) 3921012 3.05 Reality Bites.* (R) 50285470 3.30 People’s Court.* (R) 7111429 4.20 ITV Nightscreen. 7716465 5.30 ITV Morning News.* 38875 Kingdom Of Heaven, Channel 4, 9pm Border 10.00 Championship Goals.* 78814 1.00 Border News; Weather.* 44053369 5.40 Border News; Weather.* 345949 10.14 Border Weather.* 205659 Tyne Tees 10.00 Championship Goals.* 78814 1.00 North East News.* 44053369 5.40 North East Tonight.* 345949 10.14 North East Weather.* 205659 11.45 Alan Carr’s Celebrity Ding Dong.* (R) 282746 12.35 Smirnoff Experience: Shanghai.* 2166505 1.05 The Album Chart Show.* (R) 1192483 1.35 FILM Women Talking Dirty (1999).* Drama starring Helena Bonham Carter. 906692 3.15 Honeymoon.* (R) 71215 3.45 Unreported World.* (R) 70586 4.15 Dispatches: The Children Left Behind.* (R) 4878760 5.10 Countdown.* (R) 4618147 5.55 Grabbit The Rabbit. (R) 6681692 FIVE 6.00 Milkshake! Tickle, Patch And Friends.* 75765291 6.25 Angels Of Jarm.* (R) 84756494 6.30 Ebb And Flo.* (R) 90745340 6.40 Animal Families.* 90741524 6.50 Hi-5.* (R) 5321982 7.30 The Beeps.* (R) 6635543 7.45 Make Way For Noddy.* (R) 6630098 8.00 Rupert Bear.* (R) 4707185 8.15 Little Princess.* (R) 4720036 8.30 Hana’s Helpline.* (R) 8817825 8.45 Roary The Racing Car.* (R) 7362730 9.00 Gerald McBoing Boing.* (R) 1316229 9.25 Jane And The Dragon.* (R) 6835938 10.00 Dangerman Adventures: Eye Of The Storm.* (R) 3199746 10.45 Desert Giants: Austin Stevens’ Adventures.* (R) 55945369 11.50 FILM The Grass Harp (1995).* Drama starring Sissy Spacek. 39250369 1.45 Football Italiano.* Live coverage of a match from Italy’s Serie A. 65214291 4.10 FILM Sinbad And The Eye Of The Tiger (1977).* Sinbad fights to free a prince from the grip of an evil spell. Adventure starring Patrick Wayne. 61399369 6.15 6.30 Five News; Sport.* 9700776 FILM The Man In The Iron Mask (1997).* The three Musketeers set out to depose the villainous King of France and reinstate his imprisoned twin brother. Adventure with Leonardo DiCaprio. 8535949 9.00 FILM Today You Die (2005).* Première. A thief is left to take the blame for a botched armoured car robbery and thrown in jail, but escapes to exact revenge on his betrayers. Thriller with Steven Seagal. 21844291 10.45 FILM The Stone Killer (1973).* Thriller starring Charles Bronson as a police detective out to stop a recently released Mafia hoodlum with murder in mind. 99898524 12.35 Live NBA Basketball. The All-Star game (Tip-off 1.00am). 66470215 3.40 Boxing USA. 5256876 4.35 Motorsport: Arenacross. 5571789 5.10 Wildlife SOS.* (R) 59927437 5.35 Wildlife SOS.* (R) 19661654 REVIEW 25 SCOTLANDonSUNDAY February 17, 2008 PICK OF THE DAY SATELLITE, CABLE & DIGITAL FILM SKY MOVIES PREMIERE Lark Rise To Candleford BBC1, 8pm More sumptuous Sunday evening comfort food as the period drama du jour continues. Lady Adelaide considers adopting a foundling but Sir Tim harbours grim suspicions about the wean. 10.00 Family Close Up. 85630 10.30 Drama Close Up. 64036 11.00 Modern Greats & Classics Close Up. 95920 11.30 Comedy Close Up. 49479 12.00 Luna: Spirit Of The Whale. 375949 1.55 Save The Last Dance 2: Stepping Up. 82654123 3.50 Arthur And The Invisibles. 819825 5.40 Sci-fi & Horror Close Up. 278678 6.10 Barnyard. 48809123 8.00 The Pursuit Of Happyness. 10727 10.00 The Last King Of Scotland. 35481017 12.10 Gone. 190963 2.00 Close. SKY MOVIES DRAMA 7.05 True Grit. 40557611 9.20 A Fish Called Wanda. 78893659 11.25 Oscar Fever. 83427659 11.45 Walk The Line. 95572098 2.15 The English Patient. 28398678 5.05 Oscar Nominations Special. 5664272 5.35 Walk The Line. 42437185 8.00 The English Patient. 55071291 10.45 The Usual Suspects. 95197678 12.35 All The President’s Men. 85543050 2.55 The Usual Suspects. 8510050 4.45 True Grit. 29953050 SKY MOVIES CLASSICS 6.00 The Mark Of Zorro. 60019185 7.35 Sands Of Iwo Jima. 83922320 9.25 Hellfighters. 27440036 11.30 North To Alaska. 67129388 1.35 Rio Grande. 42373104 3.25 Sands Of Iwo Jima. 90313543 5.20 The Mark Of Zorro. 41830253 6.55 North To Alaska. 28518291 9.00 McLintock! 19393253 11.10 Hellfighters. 75112369 1.20 Soldier Blue. 9315470 3.20 McLintock! 80603789 5.35 Rio Grande. 62507596 Supernatural ITV2, 9pm Further mayhem from the US supernatural drama show as demon-slaying siblings Sam and Dean discover a hedonistic party town where the whole concept of hellraising is being taken a little too literally. BOX OFFICE DIGITAL Thank God You’re Here STV, 10.15pm Paul Merton’s improvisational skit show always improves when high-profile talent is pushed through the door. So with Spaced writer/actress Jessica Hynes in the house there’s even more mirth than usual. RADIO Every 15 mins from 6.00am: The Bourne Ultimatum. Every 150 mins from 6.00am: Spider-Man 3. Every 2 hours from 6.00am: Deck The Halls, Paradise Lost. Every 30 mins from 6.00am: Shrek The Third, Surf’s Up, Transformers. Every 90 mins from 6.00am: Die Hard 4.0, La Vie En Rose. Every hour from 6.00am: Bratz, Evan Almighty, Hairspray, Ocean’s Thirteen, The Hoax. Every 2 hours from 6.30am to 9.30pm: The Good German. Every hour from 6.30am to 9.30pm: Fantastic Four: Rise Of The Silver Surfer, Hostel: Part II, Vacancy. Every hour from 6.30am: Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix, Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World’s End, This Is England. ENTERTAINMENT SKY ONE 6.00 Hour Of Power. 31185 7.00 Pokémon Advanced. 33765 7.30 Pokémon Advanced. 12272 8.00 Brainiac: Science Abuse. 99543 9.00 Football Icon. 81678 10.00 Vroom Vroom. 18456 11.00 WWE: Experience. 21920 12.00 Robot Wars Extreme. 64524 1.00 Crash Test Dummies. 73272 2.00 The Dog Whisperer. 36479 3.00 Project Catwalk. 81727 4.00 Malcolm In The Middle. 3494 4.30 Malcolm In The Middle. 9678 5.00 Malcolm In The Middle. 9036 5.30 Malcolm In The Middle. FREEVIEW BBC 3 7.00 Freaky Eaters. 8.00 Find Me The Face. 9.00 Two Pints Of Lager And A Packet Of Crisps. 9.30 Little Britain. 10.00 Phoo Action. 11.00 Family Guy. 11.45 Two Pints Of Lager And A Packet Of Crisps. 12.15 Marc Wootton Exposed. 12.45 Find Me The Face. 1.40 Phoo Action. 2.40 Freaky Eaters. 3.35 Marc Wootton Exposed. 4.05 Close. Wife Swap: The Aftermath. 81177524 9.30 FILM: Mystic Pizza. 60580185 11.35 The Convention Crasher. 85990291 12.35 The War At Home. 29601963 1.05 Scrubs. 13244692 1.35 The Big Bang Theory. 86557418 2.05 My Name Is Earl. 81665079 2.25 FILM: Mystic Pizza. 23761437 4.10 Ed. 30943499 4.50 Switched. 28153321 5.35 Switched. 81878296 BBC 4 MORE4 7.00 Dear Television. 2839123 7.10 Poldark. 8011475 8.00 The Cult Of Sunday Night. 2968475 8.30 Doctors To Be: Twenty Years On. 2947982 9.00 The Jet Stream And Us. 4610475 10.00 Earth: The Power Of The Planet. 4613562 11.00 The Late Edition. 1679104 11.30 The Cult Of Sunday Night. 2595098 12.00 The Jet Stream And Us. 7549741 1.00 Space Odyssey: The Robot Pioneers. 3186708 1.50 Doctors To Be: Twenty Years On. 44843692 2.20 The Cult Of Sunday Night. 73782383 2.50 The Jet Stream And Us. 5030876 3.50 Close. ITV2 9.25 American Idol. 11.15 American Idol. 12.15 Movies Now. 12.25 Emmerdale. 3.15 Coronation Street. 5.40 American Idol. 7.30 American Idol. 8.30 Hey Paula! 9.00 Supernatural. See Pick of the Day. 10.00 FILM: In The Line Of Fire. 12.30 Supernatural. 1.30 Dancing On Ice: The Skate Off. 2.00 Teleshopping. 5.00 ITV2 Nightscreen. 6.00 Close. ITV3 6.00 The Rockford Files. 7.55 Ironside. 9.00 Upstairs, Downstairs. 11.10 The Wonder Years. 12.10 Jeeves And Wooster. 1.20 Robin Of Sherwood. 2.35 FILM: The Sundowners. 5.10 Inspector Jeeves And Wooster, ITV3, 7.50pm Morse. 7.15 Revisiting Brideshead. 7.20 On The Buses. 7.50 Jeeves And Wooster. 9.00 Super Sleuths. 10.00 FILM: In The Name Of The Father. 12.35 Hammer House Of Horror. 1.40 The Rockford Files. 3.15 On The Buses. 3.40 Emmerdale. E4 6.00 Anything Goes. 35430543 7.55 Our Showbiz Mates. 95667272 8.55 E4 Loves Skins. 82275272 11.55 Mika — Live In Paris. 58702320 1.00 Switched. 40556036 1.30 Big Brother US. 85643235 2.20 Big Brother US. 23181456 3.15 Runaway. 78729727 4.05 Ed. 93018415 5.00 Friends. 62411776 6.00 The War At Home. 10015562 6.30 The Big Bang Theory. 10006814 7.00 Scrubs. 61061235 7.30 My Name Is Earl. 10002098 8.00 Friends. 62608340 9.00 3630 6.00 The Simpsons. 4253 6.30 The Simpsons. 4123 7.00 The Simpsons. 9272 7.30 The Simpsons. 4497 8.00 The Simpsons. 8920 8.30 The Simpsons. 4727 9.00 Lost. 36765 10.00 Weeds. 792253 10.35 Weeds. 592340 11.10 Wives. 675272 12.10 Road Wars. 7964505 1.10 Road Wars. 7331418 2.00 Tenerife Uncovered. 4394019 2.50 Crash Test Dummies. 5554302 3.40 America’s Dumbest Criminals. 64875470 4.05 Bite Size Brainiac. 40532925 4.20 Rescue Me. 6064079 5.10 Guilty! 8373147 6.00 Lesley’s On The Bike. 6.30 New Every Morning. 6.58 Outdoor Conditions. 7.00 News. 7.05 The Greetings Programme. 7.58 Weather. 8.00 News. 8.05 A Life In Question. Colin MacKay talks to musician Paul Baker Hernandez. 8.30 Franchi On Faith. New series. Members of the public discuss their religious beliefs. 9.00 Sunday Live. 10.30 Battle Lines. 11.00 News. 11.05 New Hands. 11.30 Turning Point. 12.00 News. 12.05 FM: The Beechgrove Potting Shed. 12.05 MW: Off The Ball’s Sunday Supplement. 12.58 FM: Weather. 1.00 News. 1.05 FM: The Reel Blend. 1.05 MW: Sportsound. 3.00 FM: News. 3.05 FM: Classics Unwrapped. 5.00 News. 5.05 FM: Women On Top. 5.05 MW: Women On Top. 5.30 Grassroots. 5.58 Weather. 6.00 News. 6.05 Mary Ann Kennedy’s Global Gathering. 7.58 Outdoor Conditions. 8.00 Brand New Country. Bryan Burnett interviews Allison Moorer, who also performs in the studio. 9.59 Weather. 10.00 News. 10.05 The Jazz House. 12.00 As Radio 5 Live. Radio 4 5.30 News Briefing. 5.43 Bells On Sunday. 5.45 Profile. 6.00 News Headlines. 6.05 Something Understood. 6.35 On Your Farm. 6.57 Weather. 7.00 News. 7.07 Sunday Papers. 7.10 Sunday. 7.55 Radio 4 Appeal. 7.58 Weather. 8.00 News. 8.07 Sunday Papers. 8.10 Sunday Worship. 8.50 A Point Of View. 9.00 Broadcasting House. 10.00 The Archers. 11.15 Desert Island Discs. Kirsty Young chats to Professor Martin Evans. 12.00 News. 12.01 LW: Shipping Forecast. 12.04 Just A Minute. 12.30 The Food Programme. The flavours of Extramadura. 12.57 Weather. 1.00 The World This Weekend. 1.30 Advice To The Living. People with only a short time to live offer advice. 2.00 Gardeners’ Question Time. 2.45 The Drawings On The Wall. 3.00 The Classic Serial: Fortunes Of War. 4.00 Open Book. Mariella Frostrup and guests discuss the work of George Glissing. 4.30 Poetry Please. Poems by writers better known as novelists. Last in series. 5.00 File On 4. 5.40 Profile. 5.54 Shipping Forecast. 5.57 Weather. 6.00 News. 6.15 Pick Of The Week. 7.00 The Archers. 7.15 Go 4 It. Barney Harwood learns about author Laura Ingalls Warner. 7.45 A Brush With Fame. The first of five stories about encounters with celebrity. 8.00 Feedback. Listeners’ views. 8.30 Last Word. 9.00 Money Box. 9.26 Radio 4 Appeal. 9.30 In Business. The impact of the Three Gorges Dam in China. Last in series. 9.59 Weather. 10.00 The Westminster Hour. 11.00 The Learning Curve. 11.30 Something Understood. Questioning the possibility of being both innocent and wise. 12.00 News; Weather. 12.15 Thinking Allowed. 12.45 Bells On Sunday. 12.48 Shipping Forecast. 1.00 World Service. 5.20 Shipping Forecast. Radio 3 7.00 Martin Handley. 10.00 News; Iain Burnside. 12.00 Private Passions. 1.00 The Early Music Show. Composers and performers associated with the Concert Spirituel. 2.00 Radio 3 Requests. 4.00 Choral Evensong. Live from the Chapel of New College, Oxford. 5.00 Discovering Music. 6.30 The Choir. 8.00 Drama On 3. The Cool Bag Baby, by Katie Hims. 9.15 BBC Singers. 9.30 Sunday Feature: South American Currents. 10.15 Words And Music. 12.00 The Early Music Show. 1.00 Through The Night. Radio 1 5.00 Ras Kwame. 7.00 Nihal. 10.00 Dick And Dom. 1.00 Sara Cox. 4.00 Radio 1’s Chart Show With Fearne And Reggie. 7.00 Switch With Annie Mac. 10.00 Sunday Surgery. 12.00 Rob Da Bank. 2.00 Rob Da Bank And Friends. 4.00 Dick And Dom. Radio 2 7.00 Aled Jones. 9.00 Steve Wright’s Sunday Love Songs. 11.00 Eamonn Holmes. 1.00 Elaine Paige On Sunday. 2.30 Pick Of The Pops. 4.30 Johnnie Walker. 6.30 Alan Titchmarsh. 8.30 Sunday Half-Hour. 9.00 Russell Davies. 10.00 Malcolm Laycock. 11.00 The David Jacobs Collection. 12.00 Janice Long. 3.00 Alex Lester. 1.00 Rat Race. 6923497 3.00 Cattle Empire. 71286307 4.35 Penny Serenade. 22289036 6.55 Crocodile Dundee II. 58592901 9.00 An Officer And A Gentleman. 91068814 11.20 Battle Royale. 45010104 1.35 Southern Comfort. 9998944 3.35 Close. SPORT SKY SPORTS 1 Die Hard 4.0, Box Office Digital Radio Scotland FM 92.4-94.7; AM 810kHz,Radio 4 FM 92.4-95.8; LW 198kHz, Radio 3 FM 90.2-92.4, Radio 1 FM 98-99.5, Radio 2 FM 88-90.2, Radio 5 Live AM 693 and 909kHz, Classic FM FM 100-102, Radio Nan Gaidheal FM 103.5-105 FM, Virgin AM 1215kHz, Talksport AM 1053/1089kHz, World Service FM 92.4-94.7; LW 198kHz and MW 810kHz Radio Scotland FILM4 Toughest Tribes. 9811104 5.00 World’s Toughest Tribes. 7412340 7.00 World’s Toughest Tribes. 1788524 8.00 American Chopper. 1797272 9.00 World’s Lost Tribes: The New Adventures Of Mark And Olly. 1717036 10.00 Deadliest Climb — Everest. 1710123 11.00 A World Without Water. 9311291 12.30 North Mission Road. 1767596 1.00 Body Of Evidence. 4398654 1.30 North Mission Road. 9867383 2.00 Forensic Detectives. 2579166 3.00 World’s Lost Tribes: The New Adventures Of Mark And Olly. 4152079 3.50 Deadliest Climb — Everest. 9884654 4.40 Mythbusters. 7957296 5.30 How It’s Made. 9357302 DISCOVERY 6.00 How Do They Do It? 3862320 7.00 How Do They Do It? 4118494 8.00 How It’s Made. 7438388 8.30 How It’s Made. 7437659 9.00 How It’s Made. 7411611 9.30 How It’s Made. 3713630 10.00 Mythbusters. 6626982 11.00 Mythbusters. 6646746 12.00 Deadliest Catch. 3703253 1.00 Deadliest Catch. 3712901 2.00 Deadliest Catch. 7321388 3.00 World’s 9.00 Barcelona World Race. 81110123 9.30 Scrapheap Challenge. 40497291 11.40 Scrapheap Challenge. 63301098 12.45 Location, Location, Location. 42707388 1.55 Location, Location, Location. 17635765 3.00 Location, Location, Location. 38928765 3.35 Come Dine With Me. 63902562 4.05 Come Dine With Me. 28200415 4.40 Come Dine With Me. 42745678 5.15 Come Dine With Me. 19051524 5.45 Come Dine With Me. 95879901 6.20 Jamie At Home. 95552681 6.55 Jamie At Home. 17633272 7.30 Beyond River Cottage. 18847217 8.00 Meet The Natives. 17115475 9.00 The Secret Millionaire. 30098307 10.05 Baby Bible Bashers. 13464765 11.05 Father Ted. 94652611 11.40 Father Ted. 61824659 12.15 Curb Your Enthusiasm. 37725382 12.55 The IT Crowd. 65149302 1.25 The Secret Millionaire. 41518741 2.20 Baby Bible Bashers. 68900483 3.20 Close. Radio 5 Live World Service 5.00 Morning Reports. 6.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 SportsWeek. 10.00 Phil Williams. 12.00 5 Live Sport. Including Sheffield United v Middlesbrough (Kick-off 2.00pm). 6.00 6-0-6. 7.30 Five Live Report. 8.00 The Weekend News. 10.00 Stephen Nolan. 1.00 Up All Night. 5.00 World Briefing. 5.30 Reporting Religion. 6.00 The World Today. 6.30 Politics UK. 7.00 The World Today. 7.30 Heart And Soul. 8.00 The World Today. 8.30 Reporting Religion. 9.00 World News. 9.06 The Ticket. 10.00 World Briefing. 10.20 Sports Round-up. 10.30 The Instant Guide. 10.41 Over To You. 11.00 World Briefing. 11.20 From Our Own Correspondent. 11.30 The Interview. 12.00 Newshour. 1.00 World News. 1.06 Global Business. 1.30 Reporting Religion. 2.00 World News. 2.06 Have Your Say. 3.00 World News. 3.06 From Our Own Correspondent. 3.30 Politics UK. 4.00 World Briefing. 4.30 The Interview. 5.00 World News. 5.06 Sportsworld. 6.00 World Briefing. 6.30 Heart And Soul. 7.00 World News. 7.06 The Word. 7.30 Close Up. 8.00 World News. 8.06 Have Your Say. 8.50 The Instant Guide. 9.00 Newshour. 10.00 News Summary. 10.06 BBC World Drama: Kim’s Game. 11.00 The World Today. 11.30 The Interview. 12.00 World News. 12.06 The Ticket. 1.00 World Briefing. 1.20 World Business Report. 1.30 Charlie Gillett’s World Of Music. 2.00 World Briefing. 2.20 Analysis. 2.30 Heart And Soul. 3.00 The World Today. 3.30 The Instant Guide. 3.41 Over To You. 4.00 The World Today. Classic FM 7.00 Myleene Klass Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Henry Kelly. 12.00 If You Liked That, You’ll Like This. 2.00 Natalie Wheen. 4.00 The Great Movie Composers On Classic FM. 5.00 Live From The Liverpool Philharmonic. 7.00 Smooth Classics At Seven. 9.00 The Guest List. 11.00 Lisa Duncombe. 2.00 Mark Griffiths. Radio Nan Gaidheal 3.00 Dèanamaid Adhradh. 3.30 Mar Radio Alba. 9.00 Dèanamaid Adhradh. 9.30 Tro Shàmhchair An Fheasgair. 10.00 Mar Radio Alba. Virgin 6.00 John Osborne. 10.00 JK And Joel. 1.00 Leona Graham. 5.00 The Geoff Show. 7.00 Ben Jones. 10.00 Iain Lee. 1.00 Tim Lichfield. 4.00 Robin Burke. Talksport 6.00 Fisherman’s Blues. 8.00 Andy Townsend And Mike Parry. 12.00 Football First. 5.00 Final Whistle. 8.00 The Rugby Show. 10.00 James Whale. 1.00 Mike Mendoza. 6.00 Live International Cricket. Australia v India. 2834098 11.30 Australian Soccer. 45949 12.00 FA Cup Special. 92456 1.00 Live Rugby Union. London Irish v Leicester Tigers (Kick-off 1.15pm). 183098 3.30 Live FA Cup Football. Preston North End v Preston v Pompey, Sky Sports 1, 3.30pm Portsmouth (Kick-off 4.00pm). 335659 6.30 Australian Soccer. 6123 7.00 Live Spanish Football. 222140 10.00 FA Cup Football. 25036 11.30 Australian Soccer. 21456 12.00 WWE: Heat. 57166 1.00 Live WWE Wrestling. 7127895 4.00 Close. SKY SPORTS 2 6.00 Watersports World. 3478123 7.00 Live Australian Soccer. 7926369 9.30 Champions League Weekly. 1868388 10.00 The Sunday Supplement. 3827017 11.00 Racing News. 6557746 11.30 Wild Spirits. 6558475 12.00 Super League. 8641982 2.00 Australian Soccer. 5856104 2.30 International Cricket. 7743543 4.30 Sailing. 6011746 5.00 Wild Spirits. 5847456 5.30 International Cricket. 4602630 7.30 Wild Spirits. 6012475 8.00 Live NASCAR. 3843833 12.30 Spanish Football. 7327296 2.30 FA Cup Football. 2917012 4.00 Australian Soccer. 3936234 4.30 Close. SKY SPORTS 3 6.00 Live European Tour Golf. 96402982 9.00 WWE: Afterburn. 43989843 10.00 WWE: Heat. 76481272 11.00 Watersports World. 76401036 12.00 World Sport. 71172479 12.30 Wild Spirits. 34706369 1.00 European Tour Golf. 98342320 5.00 WWE: Experience. 27651659 6.00 Rugby Union. 58834794 7.30 Spirit Of Yachting. 45265098 8.00 Golf Night. 87948562 10.00 Watersports World. 87934369 11.00 WWE: Late Night — Afterburn. 76482901 12.00 Golf Night. 64827128 2.00 Spirit Of Yachting. 52632876 2.30 Rugby Union. 29139128 4.00 Close. BRITISH EUROSPORT 7.30 Luge. 72678 8.00 Biathlon. 4554659 9.15 Live Alpine Skiing. 7290307 10.00 Live Cross-Country Skiing. 61562 11.00 Live Biathlon. 9991562 11.45 Ski Jumping. 298036 12.15 Live Alpine Skiing. 7746543 1.00 Live MotoGP. 4728949 1.50 Live Biathlon. 3172456 3.00 Live Snooker. 34833 4.00 WTA Tennis. 5193524 5.15 Winterpark Weekend. 8504456 5.30 Ski Jumping. 5631562 6.45 Winterpark Weekend. 444630 7.05 Live Snooker. The Welsh Open final. 26367712 10.00 MotoGP. 86307 10.30 GP2 Racing. 62727 11.00 French Rugby. 21369 11.30 Biathlon. 16524 12.00 Winterpark Weekend. 42514 12.30 Close. 26 REVIEW MONDAY 18.02.08 DAYTIME BBC ONE BBC TWO February 17, 2008 SCOTLANDonSUNDAY REGION STV 6.00 Breakfast.* 76216296 9.15 Animal 24:7.* 8215050 10.00 Homes Under The Hammer.* 17352 11.00 To Buy Or Not To Buy.* 9654 11.30 Cash In The Attic.* A woman raises money for her supportive husband. (R) 4352079 12.15 Bargain Hunt.* From Gloucester. (R) 6037586 1.00 BBC News.* 20692 1.30 Reporting Scotland.* 12972160 1.45 Doctors.* Julia attempts to reunite a daughter with her estranged father after 20 years. 423876 2.15 Diagnosis Murder.* Dr Sloan and a colleague get embroiled in a blackmail plot linked to the murder of a Hollywood madam. Dick Van Dyke stars. (R) 9404857 3.00 BBC News; Weather; Reporting Scotland.* 8669789 3.05 CBeebies: Mister Maker.* (R) 4439578 3.25 CBBC: Take A Bow.* (R) 8648296 3.30 Arthur.* (R) 4021437 3.55 Shaun The Sheep;* (R) Thumb Wrestling Federation: TWF.* (R) 1497906 4.05 The Revenge Files Of Alistair Fury.* 9339760 4.35 MI High.* 8529760 6.00 CBeebies.* 61418 8.00 CBBC: Wild Tales.* 91741 8.30 Arthur.* (R) 5541708 8.45 Dennis The Menace.* 5520215 9.05 The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.* (R) 1414050 9.35 What’s New Scooby-Doo?* (R) 6021128 9.55 Thumb Wrestling Federation: TWF.* (R) 4319960 10.00 Even Stevens;* (R) Diddy Dick & Dom.* (R) 92321 10.30 Beat The Boss.* (R) 10876 11.00 Animal Park: Wild On The West Coast.* (R) 24418 12.00 The Daily Politics.* 86988 12.30 Working Lunch.* 57895 1.00 Animal Park.* 26388944 1.25 FA Cup Sixth Round Draw.* Live coverage from Soho Square. 24985302 1.30 The People Watchers.* A team of psychologists perform a hidden-camera stunt in a shop. 3543296 2.15 Don’t Get Done, Get Dom.* A major electrical appliance company is confronted. (R) 9402499 3.00 Escape To The Country.* Finding a home in Cornwall. (R) 2951895 3.45 Flog It!* 3081857 4.30 Ready, Steady, Cook.* With Tim Vincent and Diane Louise Jordan. 1599302 6.00 GMTV.* 8726234 9.25 The Jeremy Kyle Show.* 5898963 10.30 This Morning.* Fern Britton and Eamonn Holmes catch up on the rinkside gossip with Dancing on Ice judge Jason Gardiner. 67437 12.30 Loose Women.* 99012 1.30 ITV Lunchtime News.* 43692 2.00 Doc Martin.* First episode of the drama starring Martin Clunes as a surgeon forced to retrain as a GP in a sleepy Cornish village after developing a blood phobia. With Caroline Catz, Stephanie Cole and Celia Imrie. (R) 97876 3.00 The Alan Titchmarsh Show.* 9895 4.00 The Royal Today.* A woman is admitted to the hospital after taking drugs in a nightclub, and Vijay is puzzled when he learns a patient’s broken arm has not shown any sign of recovery in three weeks. Heather presses Adam to set a date for their big day. Pal Aron, Ben Hull and Caroline Carver star; What’s Your Business Idea.* (R) 944 4.30 Golden Balls.* Game show hosted by Jasper Carrott ; What’s Your Business Idea.* (R) 42895 5.00 5.15 Newsround.* 9954429 Weakest Link.* (R) 7420963 5.15 Britain’s Dream Homes.* Melissa Porter and Rhodri Owen search for Britain’s best mill conversion. 7428505 5.30 The Five Thirty Show.* 708 6.00 6.30 BBC News.* 925 Reporting Scotland.* 505 6.00 6.30 Eggheads.* 895 Ben Fogle’s Extreme Dreams.* The presenter picks one person from each of the past four trips to form a team to scale Mount Roraima in Venezuela. 147 6.00 Scotland Today;* What’s Your Business Idea.* (R) 321 ITV Evening News.* 673 5 PM BBC1 Northern Ireland 1.30-1.45 Newsline.* 3.00-3.05 Newsline.* 6.30-7.00 Newsline.* 10.25 Newsline.* 10.35 Frozen North.* 11.15 Damages.* 12.00-2.00 FILM: French Connection II.* N East Of England: 1.30-1.45 Regional News.* 3.00-3.05 Regional News.* 6.307.00 Look North.* 10.25-10.35 Regional News.* BBC2 Northern Ireland 2.15 Stormont Live.* 3.30-3.45 Secret Gardens.* 10.00-10.30 ATL TV.* 11.20 Pulling.* 11.50 The Dodo’s Guide To Surviving Extinction: BBC 4 on BBC 2.* 12.50-2.00 BBC News 24.* CHANNEL FOUR FIVE 6.05 The Hoobs.* (R) 4911321 6.35 The Hoobs.* (R) 5721925 6.55 Freshly Squeezed.* 4923128 7.25 Everybody Loves Raymond.* (R) 7461673 7.50 Everybody Loves Raymond.* (R) 8291215 8.20 Just Shoot Me.* (R) 9986586 8.45 Frasier.* Niles and Frasier hold a dinner party. (R) 156692 9.15 Will & Grace.* (R) 153505 9.45 Will & Grace.* (R) 152876 10.15 Without A Trace.* (R) 7519505 11.05 ER.* A baby chimpanzee receives treatment. (R) 6877470 12.00 News At Noon.* 96296 12.30 A Place In Greece.* (R) 42963 1.00 Great British Brands.* History of Hovis’s popularity. (R) 60234586 1.15 FILM The Day The Earth Stood Still (1951).* Drama starring Michael Rennie as an alien ambassador who lands in America to deliver an ominous warning to humanity. 62638963 2.55 Come Dine With Me.* A fancy-dress company owner kicks off the competition in Derby. (R) 2167760 3.25 Countdown.* 2921654 4.15 Deal Or No Deal.* 2575470 6.00 Milkshake 5311673 9.00 The Wright Stuff.* 9189437 10.30 Trisha Goddard.* 4400470 11.30 The Hotel Inspector.* Ruth Watson meets actor-hotelier Robert Gray before assessing his three-bedroom B&B in Greenwich. (R) 2866586 12.30 Five News.* 29421147 12.45 Law & Order.* The murder of an apartment block resident prompts Briscoe and Green to investigate her long-standing battle with the landlord. (R) 5066924 1.45 Neighbours.* 7162499 2.15 Home And Away.* Martha manages to fight off the hospital attacker but he avoids getting caught yet again. 1105789 2.50 Animal Rescue Squad.* Highlights from the series in which Michaela Strachan and Matt Baker meet the people who are working to protect animals. 4587079 3.00 FILM Mary Higgins Clark’s Pretend You Don’t See Her (2002).* A New York estate agent becomes the target of an assassin after she witnesses a murder. Thriller starring Emma Samms and Beau Starr. 1003692 5.00 Richard & Judy.* 8708 5.00 5.30 Five News.* 7334050 Neighbours.* Toadie suffers a panic attack. (R) 7590925 6.00 The Simpsons.* Ned Flanders’ home is destroyed by a hurricane. (R) 963 Hollyoaks.* Louise becomes suspicious of Warren. 215 6.00 Home And Away.* Martha manages to fight off the hospital attacker. (R) 7520166 Animal Rescue Squad.* Two kittens are abandoned by their mother. 7511418 Border 6 PM 7.00 7.30 The ONE Show.* 3499 Watchdog.* 789 7 PM 7.00 7.30 6.30 The Twenties In Colour: The Wonderful World Of Albert Kahn.* A photographic record of the Middle East’s rebirth in the early 20th century. 4741 Mastermind.* Specialist subjects include Mary Tudor and the Cricket World Cup. 401 7.00 University Challenge.* Christ Church College, Oxford, take on the University of Manchester. 4019 MasterChef.* Contestants cook a chicken dish in the first semi-final. 9296 8.00 Paradise Or Bust.* Environmentalist James Strawbridge gives the island a makeover. Last in series. 6429 9.00 7.30 Emmerdale.* Jo puts on a brave face as her wedding day approaches. 1895 Coronation Street.* Carla gets a fright at her flat. 857 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal.* 7079 2.30 The Alan Titchmarsh Show.* 72147 3.30 The Royal Today.* 437 4.00 Doc Martin.* 8302 5.00 Golden Balls.* 9186 6.00 Lookaround.* 321 8.00 Expats Under Attack: Tonight.* 7215 10.35 FILM: First Blood.* 79896302 12.20 UEFA Champions League Weekly.* 6400529 12.45 Nightwatch With Steve Scott: Crime.* 494432 6.30 6.30 7.00 7.55 Channel 4 News.*790673 The Political Slot.* With Anne Snelgrove MP. 600760 7.00 7.30 Five News.* 7321586 How Do They Do It?* The secrets of the modern golf ball. 7500302 8.00 CHOICE Dispatches: How The Banks Bet Your Money.* The effects of the global credit crunch on Britain’s banks. See Pick of the Day. 8031 8.00 Fifth Gear.* Tiff Needell and Jason Plato face off in the new BMW 135i Coupe and the Porsche Cayman. 5900128 9.00 The Day Of The Kamikaze.* The story of the Japanese suicide pilots. 88302302 9.00 FILM Kiss Of The Dragon (2001).* Intelligence officer Jet Li is sent on assignment to Paris. Adventure with Bridget Fonda. 75964383 10.55 FILM The Killer (1989).* Thriller starring Chow Yun-Fat as a hit-man who accidentally blinds a nightclub singer — and subsequently forms a relationship with her. Dubbed in English. 52661302 Tyne Tees 8.00 8 8.30 PM 9.00 9 PM 10 PM 11 PM ONWARD EastEnders.* Tanya asks Stacey for help. See Pick of the Day. 2147 Panorama.* The popularity of bottled water in the UK. 1654 8.00 Life In Cold Blood.* David Attenborough examines how lizards colonised the planet, looking at how lace monitors lay eggs in Australia. 2857 9.00 CHOICE 8.30 8.30 Postcode Challenge.* Neighbours work together to win a cash prize; What’s Your Business Idea.* (R) 7215 Coronation Street.* A nervous Carla arms herself before confronting the intruder. 9050 The Palace.* Eleanor is moved into the palace. Rupert Evans stars. 7925 10.00 BBC News.* 841321 10.25 Reporting Scotland.* 342760 10.35 Damages.* Tom and Ellen conspire against Patty. 745586 10.00 Pulling.* Karen is stalked by a man with whom she once had a dalliance. 36447 10.30 Newsnight.* 11505 10.00 News At Ten; Weather.* 251437 What’s Your Business Idea.* (R) 604128 10.35 Scotsport.* 3045437 11.20 FILM French Connection II (1975).* Thriller with Gene Hackman. 557789 1.20 Sign Zone: Wonderland: The End Of The World Bus Tour.* (R) 9611141 2.00 Sign Zone: Attila The Hun.* (R) 79118 3.00 Sign Zone: Extreme Pilgrim.* (R) 56906 4.00 Sign Zone: Wanted Down Under.* (R) 5437548 4.45 BBC News 24.* 5138682 11.00 Newsnight Scotland.* 612514 11.20 The Dodo’s Guide To Surviving Extinction: BBC 4 on BBC 2.* An investigation into extinction using the Dodo’s story as a cautionary tale. 192505 12.20 BBC News 24.* 993093 2.00 BBC Learning Zone.* 4843890 11.55 Ceol Aig A Chaisteal. 113586 12.25 Fir Chlis. 6329600 12.50 UEFA Champions League Weekly.* 7135068 1.15 Marbella Belles.* (R) 2166906 1.40 Nightwatch With Steve Scott: Crime.* 7462839 2.35 Loose Women.* (R) 6223838 3.25 Make Me Perfect.* (R) 3441529 4.10 ITV Nightscreen. 1736722 5.30 ITV Morning News.* 27451 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal.* 7079 2.30 The Alan Titchmarsh Show.* 72147 3.30 The Royal Today.* 437 4.00 Doc Martin.* 8302 5.00 Golden Balls.* 9186 6.00 North East Tonight.* 321 8.00 Expats Under Attack: Tonight.* 7215 10.35 FILM: First Blood.* 79896302 12.20 UEFA Champions League Weekly.* 6400529 12.45 Nightwatch With Steve Scott: Crime.* 494432 10.35 Without A Trace.* A girl disappears after escaping a boy’s advances. 327079 11.35 FILM The Naked Gun: From The Files Of Police Squad! (1988)* Comedy with Leslie Nielsen. 974186 1.10 Sex Change Hospital.* (R) 5969703 2.10 World Cup Skiing. 829426 4.10 FIVB Beach Volleyball. 4846161 5.05 Richard & Judy.* (R) 9801432 The Palace, STV, 9pm 1.00 NASCAR. 5159906 1.50 US PGA Golf. 6570141 2.40 Race And Rally UK. 72925451 3.05 Motorsport Mundial. 63807722 3.30 Football Italiano Special. (R) 8516529 4.20 French Football — Le Championnat. 2446277 5.10 Neighbours.* (R) 59994109 5.35 House Doctor.* (R) 19565426 REVIEW 27 SCOTLANDonSUNDAY February 17, 2008 PICK OF THE DAY SATELLITE, CABLE & DIGITAL FILM FREEVIEW SKY MOVIES PREMIERE Being Human BBC3, 9pm After last week’s Phoo Action, Beeb 3’s refreshingly weird season of would-be pilots continues with this off-kilter drama in which a ghost, a vampire and a werewolf find themselves sharing a nice little des res. 10.00 Comedy Close Up. 27031 10.30 Family Close Up. 47944 11.00 Drama Close Up. 92418 11.30 Modern Greats & Classics Close Up. 93147 12.00 Luna: Spirit Of The Whale. 497741 1.50 Save The Last Dance 2: Stepping Up. 44260166 3.40 Barnyard. 155673 5.30 Premiere Close Up. 5586 6.00 Arthur And The Invisibles. 38708 8.00 The Last King Of Scotland. 85369418 10.05 The Pursuit Of Happyness. 35466708 12.10 Gone. 234987 2.00 Close. SKY MOVIES DRAMA 7.00 The Bishop’s Wife. 62959296 8.50 Witness. 85362586 10.45 Tsotsi. 25951166 12.25 Lawrence Of Arabia. 15842673 4.00 Cabaret. 47368302 6.05 Witness. With Harrison Ford. 57622499 8.00 Lawrence Of Arabia. 62658465 11.35 Cabaret. 93594418 1.50 Tsotsi. 5402068 3.30 Hustle And Flow. 4018277 5.30 The Bishop’s Wife. 27741987 SKY MOVIES CLASSICS Dispatches Channel 4, 8pm With the global credit crunch threatening to trigger a recession, financier Jon Moulton takes a closer look at this looming fiscal meltdown, furiously wagging his finger at banks and governments alike. EastEnders BBC1, 8pm More Sisyphean misery round Walford way as the Mitchells object to Jack’s promotional tactics, Stacey is devastated by Bradley’s return and Jase falls on hard times. RADIO 7.30 The Incredible Shrinking Man. 61307876 8.55 The Spy Who Came In From The Cold. 55602499 10.55 Three Faces West. 84795673 12.20 Titanic. 6394079 2.05 The Incredible Shrinking Man. 47235505 3.35 The Gunfighter. 18904654 5.05 Modern Greats & Classics Close Up. 72720050 5.35 Three Faces West. 45627609 7.00 The Spy Who Came In From The Cold. 3778876 9.00 The Comancheros. 46672437 10.50 The Egyptian. 87220337 1.15 Torn Curtain. 97583432 3.30 The Gunfighter. 5474600 5.05 Titanic. Drama with Clifton Webb 52959797 BOX OFFICE DIGITAL Every 15 mins from 6.00am: The Simpsons Movie. Every 150 mins from 6.00am: Goodbye Bafana. Every 30 mins from 6.00am: Knocked Up, Surf’s Up, The Bourne Ultimatum. Every 90 mins from 6.00am: Die Hard 4.0, La Vie En Rose. Every hour from 6.00am: Bratz, Ocean’s Thirteen, Shrek The Third, The Hoax, Transformers. Every 2 hours from 6.30am to 9.30pm: The Good German. Every hour from 6.30am to 9.30pm: Fantastic Four: Rise Of The Silver Surfer, Hostel: Part II, Vacancy. Every hour from 6.30am: Evan Almighty, Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix, Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World’s End, This Is England. ENTERTAINMENT SKY ONE 6.00 Dream Team. 21128 7.00 Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? 95302 8.00 Brainiac: Science Abuse. 96031 9.00 Cold Case. 56302 10.00 Stargate SG-1. 68925 12.00 Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? 61012 1.00 Cold Case. 70760 2.00 Las Vegas. 35050 3.00 Stargate SG-1. 71925 4.00 Stargate SG-1. 83760 5.00 Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? 7470 6.00 Futurama. 9789 6.30 Malcolm In The Middle. 3741 7.00 The Simpsons. 5499 BBC 3 Hollyoaks: In The City. 23975345 2.50 Style Her Famous. 68902180 3.10 Desperate Housewives. 21674451 3.55 One Tree Hill. 45198600 4.40 Switched. 61501600 5.45 Close. 7.00 Dragons’ Den. 8.00 The Real Hustle. 8.30 The Real Hustle Las Vegas. 9.00 Being Human. See Pick of the Day. 10.00 EastEnders. 10.30 Dawn Gets Naked. 11.25 Family Guy. 12.15 Being Human. 1.10 The Real Hustle Las Vegas. 1.40 Dawn Gets Naked. 2.35 The Real Hustle. 3.05 Find Me The Face. 4.05 Close. MORE4 BBC 4 7.00 World News Today. 2926499 7.30 The Cult Of Sunday Night. 7963166 8.00 The Great British Sunday. 4667383 9.00 Savile Row. 4687147 10.00 The Cult Of Sunday Night. 7897128 10.30 Summits. 3574128 11.30 The Great British Sunday. 8691215 12.30 Savile Row. 3544987 1.30 Summits. 6403109 2.30 The Cult Of Sunday Night. 7945646 3.00 Savile Row. 6486432 4.00 Close. ITV2 9.25 Smallville. 10.15 Judge Judy. 11.35 Airline. 12.00 Coronation Street. 1.00 Emmerdale. 1.30 The Jeremy Kyle Show. 3.45 Ricki Lake. 4.30 Sally Jessy Raphael. 5.20 The Montel Williams Show. 6.05 Judge Judy. 7.00 Smallville. 8.00 Harry Hill’s TV Burp. 8.30 Supermodels: Gone Bad. 9.00 Ghosthunting With Coronation Street. 11.00 Coronation Street. 12.00 FILM: Along Came Polly. 1.40 Teleshopping. 4.40 ITV2 Nightscreen. 6.00 Close. ITV3 6.00 Only When I Laugh. 6.25 Upstairs, Downstairs. 7.25 The Rockford Files. 8.25 Ironside. 10.25 The Magnificent Seven. 11.25 Quincy ME. 12.25 Lovejoy. 1.30 Heartbeat. 2.40 The Wonder Years. 3.40 Cagney And Lacey. 4.45 Maigret. 5.50 Heartbeat. 6.55 The Wonder Years. 8.00 Maigret. 9.00 Raines. 10.00 Judge Judy, ITV2, 10.15am; 6.05pm Numb3rs. 11.00 Hack. 12.00 Tales Of The Unexpected. 1.05 Quincy ME. 1.55 The Rockford Files. 2.45 Bramwell. 3.35 Only When I Laugh. 4.00 Teleshopping. E4 6.00 Anything Goes. 64906050 8.00 Just Mark Ronson. 22788166 9.00 Nothing But Music From Skins. 87334050 10.00 Like Indie? You’ll Love This. 40509128 11.00 Fresh Tracks. 31792654 12.10 Scrubs. 14935708 1.05 The Simple Life. 85567963 2.05 Style Her Famous. 61349050 2.35 Desperate Housewives. 99487876 3.30 One Tree Hill. 19616789 4.25 Hollyoaks. 79278079 4.55 Friends. 54986586 6.00 Scrubs. 65831895 7.00 Hollyoaks. 95366447 7.30 The Class. 10062470 8.00 Friends. 62675012 9.00 One Tree Hill. 62695876 10.00 Skins. 15261895 11.05 Hollyoaks: In The City. 54231215 12.05 Scrubs. 89879345 1.05 The Simple Life. 29402762 1.50 7.30 The Simpsons. 9925 8.00 The Simpsons. 4147 8.30 The Simpsons. 3654 9.00 Ross Kemp In Afghanistan. 26963 10.00 Prison Break. 29050 11.00 Journeyman. 47383 12.00 Road Wars. 80744 1.00 Tenerife Uncovered. 6320109 1.50 The Villa. 9962838 2.40 Mile High. 3493838 3.30 Las Vegas. 3025613 4.20 Dream Team. 6024451 5.10 Guilty! 8340819 6.00 Good Morning Scotland. 8.50 Morning Extra With Gary Robertson. 9.30 MacAulay & Co. 11.00 A Family Affair. New series. A woman’s fight to keep her son safe. 11.30 Case Reopened. Louise Welsh re-examines the death of Lord Darnley. 12.00 Scotland Live. 1.00 News. 1.15 The Book Café. 2.00 News. 2.05 Tom Morton. 4.00 Newsdrive. 4.00 Weather. 6.00 News. 6.05 Get It On With Bryan Burnett. 7.00 News. 7.12 Outdoor Conditions. 7.15 FM: The Book Café. 7.15 MW: Sportsound. 8.00 FM: News. 8.05 FM: Vic Galloway. 9.58 FM: Weather. 10.00 Scotland At Ten. 10.30 The Iain Anderson Show. 12.30 Case Reopened. 1.00 FM: As Radio 5 Live. 1.00 MW: Nightshift. Radio 4 5.30 News Briefing. 5.43 Prayer For The Day. 5.45 Farming Today. 6.00 Today. 9.00 Start The Week. 9.45 LW: Daily Service. 9.45 FM: Book of the Week: Trust Me I’m A (Junior) Doctor. By Max Pemberton. 10.00 Woman’s Hour. 11.00 Ghosts Of The Cornish Alps. 11.30 Tomorrow, Today! 12.00 News. 12.01 LW: Shipping Forecast. 12.04 You And Yours. 12.57 Weather. 1.00 The World At One. 1.30 The Garden Quiz. 2.00 The Archers. 2.15 Afternoon Play: Too Up Too Down. Jim Poyser’s comedy of life, love and five-aside football about a man reflecting on a past that has not gone to plan. Starring Jason Done and Emma Cunniffe. 3.00 Money Box Live. 3.30 Creating Writing Groups 2008. 3.45 Giving It All Away. 4.00 The Food Programme. The flavours of Extramadura. 4.30 Beyond Belief. 5.00 PM. 5.54 LW: Shipping Forecast. 5.57 Weather. 6.00 News. 6.30 Just A Minute. From the Playhouse, Salisbury. 7.00 The Archers. 7.15 Front Row. Mark Lawson hosts the arts and culture programme featuring a review of Be Kind Rewind, starring Jack Black. 7.45 Faust. 8.00 Dancing With The Russian Bear. Tim Whewell investigates the reasons why Russia cut off gas supplies to Ukraine, considering possible political undertones to the action. 8.30 The Learning Curve. 9.00 Secret Science. Part one of two. Investigating the littleknown work of the National Institute of Biological Standards and Control. 9.30 Start The Week. 10.00 The World Tonight. 10.45 Book at Bedtime: A Room With A View. By EM Forster. 11.00 Quote — Unquote. 11.30 Today In Parliament. 12.00 News; Weather. 12.30 Book of the Week: Trust Me I’m A (Junior) Doctor. 12.48 Shipping Forecast. 1.00 World Service. 5.20 Shipping Forecast. Concert. Beethoven and Chopin. 2.00 The Czech Philharmonic Orchestra And Friends. 5.00 In Tune. 7.00 Performance On 3. Ravel, Giya Kancheli, Musorgsky orch Ravel. 8.45 Composer Of The Week: Giuseppe Verdi. 9.45 Night Waves. Ronald Harwood’s new play An English Tragedy. 10.30 Artist Focus. Ravel’s Shéhérazade. 11.00 The Essay. Lesley Chamberlain gets all philosophical about death. 11.15 Lopa Kothari. 1.00 Through The Night. Radio 3 Radio 5 Live 7.00 Rob Cowan. 10.00 Classical Collection. 12.00 Composer Of The Week: Giuseppe Verdi. 12.00 News. 1.00 Radio 3 Lunchtime 5.00 Morning Reports. 5.30 Wake Up To Money. 6.00 Breakfast. 9.00 Victoria Derbyshire. 12.00 The Midday News. 1.00 Simon Mayo. 4.00 Drive. Radio 1 6.30 The Chris Moyles Show. 10.00 Jo Whiley. 12.45 Newsbeat. 1.00 Edith Bowman. 4.00 Scott Mills. 7.00 Zane Lowe. 9.00 In New Music We Trust. 10.00 Colin Murray. 12.00 The Radio 1 Rock Show. 2.00 The Radio 1 Punk Show With Mike Davies. 4.00 Dick And Dom. Radio 2 6.00 Sarah Kennedy: The Dawn Patrol. 7.30 Wake Up To Wogan. 9.30 Stuart Maconie. 12.00 Jeremy Vine. 2.00 Steve Wright In The Afternoon. 5.00 Chris Evans. 7.00 Paul Jones. 8.00 Mark Radcliffe. 10.00 Big Band Special. 10.30 Humphrey Lyttelton. 11.30 Music Club Weekly. 12.30 Janice Long. 3.00 Alex Lester. 1.00 Blood On The Sun. 71882470 2.45 Destination Gobi. 76641789 4.30 A Matter Of Life And Death. 1564963 6.30 I Am Sam. Drama starring Sean Penn and Michelle Pfeiffer. 8545321 9.00 Judge Dredd. 9939741 11.00 Battle Royale 2: Requiem. 71739673 1.40 The Return. 81798426 3.55 Close. SPORT. SKY SPORTS 1 Knocked Up, Box Office Digital Radio Scotland FM 92.4-94.7; AM 810kHz,Radio 4 FM 92.4-95.8; LW 198kHz, Radio 3 FM 90.2-92.4, Radio 1 FM 98-99.5, Radio 2 FM 88-90.2, Radio 5 Live AM 693 and 909kHz, Classic FM FM 100-102, Radio Nan Gaidheal FM 103.5-105 FM, Virgin AM 1215kHz, Talksport AM 1053/1089kHz, World Service FM 92.4-94.7; LW 198kHz and MW 810kHz Radio Scotland FILM4 3709437 7.00 Deadliest Catch. 1755296 8.00 Mythbusters. 1764944 9.00 Eddie Jordan’s Bad Boy Racers. 1784708 10.00 Mythbusters. 1787895 11.00 Most Evil. 6694383 12.00 North Mission Road. 9323345 12.30 Body Of Evidence. 5062708 1.00 Suburban Secrets. 4292426 1.30 Missing Persons Unit. 9761155 2.00 Forensic Detectives. 2546838 3.00 Eddie Jordan’s Bad Boy Racers. 4112451 3.50 Mythbusters. 9788426 4.40 Dirty Jobs. 7851068 5.30 How It’s Made. 9324074 DISCOVERY 6.00 Mythbusters. 7167532 7.00 Engineering The World Rally. 4185166 8.00 Deadliest Catch. 4186895 9.00 Future Weapons. 9376437 10.00 Mythbusters. 6693654 11.00 American Chopper. 6613418 12.00 Survivorman. 3770925 1.00 Deadliest Catch. 3789673 2.00 Forensic Detectives. 7381760 3.00 North Mission Road. 7532321 3.30 Body Of Evidence. 2642499 4.00 Mythbusters. 9484741 5.00 How It’s Made. 7544166 5.30 How Do They Do It? 2634470 6.00 Mythbusters. 9.00 Deal Or No Deal. 74539760 9.45 How Clean Is Your House? 13590944 10.15 You Are What You Eat. 13582925 10.45 Location, Location, Location. 13581296 11.15 FILM: Man With The Gun. Adventure starring Robert Mitchum. 33086437 12.55 3 Minute Wonder: Are You Sitting Comfortably? 34986079 1.00 3 Minute Wonder: Can You Believe Your Eyes? 92936741 1.05 3 Minute Wonder: Can You Believe Your Eyes? 92935012 1.10 Deal Or No Deal. 25367505 2.00 ER. 52079079 3.00 Hill Street Blues. 35512789 4.00 A Place In The Sun. 34318316 5.05 Grand Designs. 42792586 6.05 Deal Or No Deal. 78707418 7.00 Relocation, Relocation. 17173499 8.00 More4 News. 61470302 8.30 The Daily Show With Jon Stewart: Global Edition. 61499437 9.00 Grand Designs. 17162383 10.00 Grand Designs: Trade Secrets. 31024789 10.35 Curb Your Enthusiasm. 70119741 11.15 ER. 96911437 12.15 The Sopranos. 89375267 1.25 Grand Designs. 72695971 2.30 ER. 85463600 3.15 Countdown. 98035074 4.00 Close. 7.00 5 Live Sport. 10.00 Richard Bacon. 1.00 Up All Night. Classic FM 6.00 Easier Breakfast. 8.00 Simon Bates. 12.00 The Classic FM Most Wanted. 1.00 Classic FM Requests. 4.00 Drivetime. 6.30 Classic Newsnight. 7.00 Smooth Classics At Seven. 9.00 Evening Concert. Delius, Smetana, Anon, Gluck, Falla, Suk. 12.00 Lisa Duncombe. 2.00 Mark Griffiths. Radio Nan Gaidheal 7.30 Aithris Na Maidne. 9.03 Coinneach Maclomhair. 10.03 Mire Ri Mòir. 11.30 Bunaidean. 2.03 Caithream Ciùil. 4.03 Fàilte Air An Dùthaich. 5.00 Aithris An Fheasgair. 5.10 Siubhal Gu Seachd. 7.00 Litir Bheag. 7.05 Rapal. 9.02 Coinneach Maclomhair. 10.00 Bunaidean. 10.30 Fàilte Air An Dùthaich. 11.30 Mar Radio Alba. Virgin 6.00 Christian O’Connell’s Breakfast Show. 10.00 Russ Williams. 1.00 Leona Graham. 4.00 Nick Jackson. 7.00 Ben Jones. 10.00 The Geoff Show. 1.00 Tim Lichfield. 4.00 Robin Burke. Talksport 5.00 Mike Mendoza With The Moose And Faye Carruthers. 6.00 Alan Brazil And Mike Parry. 10.00 Jon Gaunt. 1.00 Danny Kelly. 4.00 Ian Wright And Adrian Durham. 7.00 Kick Off. 10.00 James Whale. 1.00 Ian Collins. World Service 5.00 World Briefing. 5.20 World Business Report. 5.30 World Briefing. 5.41 Analysis. 5.50 Sports Round-up. 6.00 The World Today. 8.30 Business Daily. 8.50 Analysis. 9.00 World News. 9.06 The Kremlin And The World. 9.30 Culture Shock. 10.00 World News. 10.06 Outlook. 11.00 World Briefing. 11.20 World Business Report. 11.30 World Briefing. 11.41 Analysis. 11.50 Sports Round-up. 12.00 World News. 12.06 The Kremlin And The World. 12.30 Health Check. 1.00 World Briefing. 1.30 Outlook In Brief. 2.00 Newshour. 3.00 World Briefing. 3.30 Culture Shock. 4.00 World Briefing. 4.20 World Business Report. 4.30 Health Check. 5.00 Europe Today. 6.00 World News. 6.06 World — Have Your Say. 7.00 World Briefing. 7.20 World Business Report. 7.30 Culture Shock. 8.00 World News. 8.06 The Kremlin And The World. 8.30 Health Check. 9.00 Newshour. 10.00 World Briefing. 10.20 Analysis. 10.30 Business Daily. 10.50 Sports Round-up. 11.00 The World Today. 11.30 Culture Shock. 12.00 World News. 12.06 The Kremlin And The World. 12.30 Health Check. 1.00 World Briefing. 1.20 World Business Report. 1.30 World Briefing. 1.41 Analysis. 1.50 Sports Round-up. 2.00 World Briefing. 2.20 Analysis. 2.30 Culture Shock. 3.00 World News. 3.06 Outlook. 4.00 The World Today. 6.00 Good Morning Sports Fans. 820418 9.00 FA Cup Football. 15692 10.30 Australian Soccer. 49465 11.00 Spanish Football. 92741 1.00 FA Cup Football. 99031 2.30 Australian Soccer. 7128 3.00 Spanish Football. 79499 5.00 Soccer AM: The Best Bits. 9470 6.00 Big League Rugby union: London Irish v Liecester Tigers, Sky Sports 2, 2.30pm Weekend. 80383 7.30 Monday Night Live. 971321 10.00 You’re On Sky Sports! 61050 11.00 Big League Weekend. 95050 12.30 Soccer AM: The Best Bits. 98722 1.30 Big League Weekend. 35451 3.00 Live International Cricket. 7174703 SKY SPORTS 2 6.00 Aerobics Oz Style. 3103673 6.30 Snow Adventures. 8647166 7.00 WWE: Bottom Line. 9764316 8.00 WWE: Afterburn. 8314875 9.00 Golf Night. 8648895 11.00 Rugby Union. 8988234 12.30 Golf Night. 4384944 2.30 Rugby Union. London Irish v Leicester Tigers. 3422944 4.00 Golf Night. 5813499 6.00 Snow Adventures. 6069383 6.30 Wild Spirits. 6083963 7.00 Show Jumping. 5827692 7.30 World Motor Sport. 1236944 10.00 Show Jumping. 9212302 10.30 Max Power. 7336944 11.30 World Motor Sport. 1014302 2.00 You’re On Sky Sports! 2993432 3.00 Close. SKY SPORTS 3 6.00 NASCAR. 81257215 10.30 Snow Adventures. 37972811 11.00 Racing News. 67964924 11.30 Aerobics Oz Style. 66514483 12.00 WWE: Afterburn. 34785876 1.00 WWE: Heat. 34761296 2.00 WWE: Experience. 92966418 3.00 WWE: Bottom Line. 58419019 4.00 WWE: Heat. 73269316 5.00 WWE: Raw. 28427906 7.00 WWE: Smackdown. 76460789 9.00 WWE Wrestling. The No Way Out extravaganza from Las Vegas. 35465321 12.00 Bass Fishing. 64898616 1.00 Thinking Tackle. 46176884 2.00 Live WWE: Late Night — Raw. 25119074 4.15 Close. BRITISH EUROSPORT 7.30 Winterpark Weekend. 2550019 7.45 Winterpark Weekend. 1005924 8.00 Biathlon. 30499 9.00 Biathlon. 83470 10.00 MotoGP. 4924437 10.50 Snooker. 1930654 12.00 Ski Jumping. 42876 1.00 Biathlon. 28296 2.00 Biathlon. 75692 3.00 Trial Bikes. 22673 4.00 MotoGP. 7902296 4.50 EuroCRASH! 4953037 5.00 Road To Euro 2008. 5031 5.30 Eurogoals. 893789 6.15 Strongest Man. 999789 7.15 Trial Bikes. 988673 8.15 GP2 Racing. 257215 9.15 MotoGP. 567654 10.05 Eurogoals. 702316 10.50 Snooker. 9515005 12.00 Road To Euro 2008. 93762 12.30 Close. 28 REVIEW TUESDAY 19.02.08 DAYTIME BBC ONE BBC TWO February 17, 2008 SCOTLANDonSUNDAY REGION STV 6.00 Breakfast.* 76110068 9.15 Animal 24:7.* The first-ever cataract operation on a golden eagle. 8282722 10.00 Homes Under The Hammer.* Properties in Harrogate, Reading and Devon. 89180 11.00 To Buy Or Not To Buy.* Property hunting in Stourport-on-Severn. 2068 11.30 Cash In The Attic.* Sisters aim to raise £3,500. (R) 4312451 12.15 Bargain Hunt.* From Glasgow. 6004258 1.00 BBC News.* 70432 1.30 Reporting Scotland.* 36596172 1.45 Doctors.* Archie helps reunite an ex-con with his son. 946277 2.15 Diagnosis Murder.* Dr Sloan investigates a 30-yearold case. (R) 9471529 3.00 BBC News; Weather; Reporting Scotland.* 8629161 3.05 CBeebies: Mister Maker.* (R) 2239190 3.25 CBBC: Take A Bow.* (R) 8542068 3.30 Shaun The Sheep.* (R) 6342857 3.35 Prank Patrol.* (R) 4078345 4.05 Thumb Wrestling Federation: TWF.* (R) 5204635 4.10 Best Of Friends.* (R) 6817451 4.35 Blue Peter.* 8596432 6.00 CBeebies: Tikkabilla.* (R) 37884 6.30 Teletubbies;* (R) Tweenies Songtime.* (R) 65068 7.00 Me Too!* (R) 3901432 7.20 Charlie And Lola.* (R) 5861364 7.30 CBeebies: Na Daoine Beaga (The Little People).* (R) 6424703 7.50 Blarag A’ Bho (Connie The Cow). (R) 3555432 8.00 CBBC: Wild Tales.* 74074 8.30 Arthur.* (R) 5501180 8.45 Dennis The Menace.* (R) 5597987 9.05 The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.* (R) 1481722 9.35 What’s New Scooby-Doo?* (R) 6918600 9.55 Thumb Wrestling Federation: TWF.* (R) 8614172 10.00 Even Stevens;* (R) Diddy Dick & Dom.* (R) 52548 10.30 Beat The Boss.* (R) 93109 11.00 Animal Park: Wild On The West Coast.* (R) 74258 12.00 The Daily Politics.* 77161 12.30 Working Lunch.* 24567 1.00 Open Gardens.* (R) 78074 1.30 The People Watchers.* 3447068 2.15 Don’t Get Done, Get Dom.* (R) 9399971 3.00 Escape To The Country.* (R) 2928567 3.45 Flog It!* 3058529 4.30 Ready, Steady, Cook.* 1566074 6.00 GMTV.* 8793906 9.25 The Jeremy Kyle Show.* 5865635 10.30 This Morning.* Fern Britton and Eamonn Holmes present as Charles Worthington gives three viewers a hair makeover. 48987 12.30 Loose Women.* Topical debate from a female perspective. 29838 1.30 ITV Lunchtime News.* 10364 2.00 Doc Martin.* The surgeon struggles to dissuade the locals from using his surgery as a drop-in centre and finds himself forced to deliver bad news to an ex-teacher already bitter at losing his job to Louisa. Martin Clunes stars. (R) 40703 3.00 The Alan Titchmarsh Show.* Afternoon chat show celebrating the best of British. 5109 4.00 The Royal Today.* A man who has failed to turn up for a vital operation in the past is finally admitted for surgery, while Carrie comes to suspect that a patient is a victim of domestic violence; What’s Your Business Idea.* (R) 703 4.30 Golden Balls.* Jasper Carrott hosts; What’s Your Business Idea.* (R) 23345 5.00 5.15 Newsround.* 2708141 Weakest Link.* 7497635 5.15 Britain’s Dream Homes.* Finding the UK’s best Victorian properties. 7495277 5.30 6.00 6.30 BBC News.* 884 Reporting Scotland.* 364 6.00 6.30 Eggheads.* 426 Ben Fogle’s Extreme Dreams.* Tempers flare as storms lash the jungle. 906 6.00 Torchwood.* An alien with the power to change memories infiltrates Torchwood. 121635 Torchwood Declassified.* Gareth David-Lloyd discusses his character Ianto Jones. 767635 7.00 5 6 PM 7.00 7.30 7 PM 8.00 8 PM 9.00 9 The ONE Show.* 1890 EastEnders.* Shabnam causes a domestic disaster, forcing the Masoods to take refuge at the Millers’ house – much to Keith’s dismay. 548 7.00 River City.* Heather decides to devote herself to Gerry’s recovery, but doubts her resolve when the reality of his needs hits her. A furious Ruth believes Iona is responsible for Marty’s STD. 2797 8.00 Holby City.* Joseph returns following his brother’s death to find Jac on trial as Sam’s replacement. 8161 9.00 7.50 8.30 9.50 7.30 BBC2 Northern Ireland Scotland Today;* What’s Your Business Idea.* (R) 180 ITV Evening News.* 432 7.20 Get Squiggling. 7.35 Charlie And Lola. 7.50-8.00 Take A Bow. 2.15 Stormont Live. 3.30-3.45 Secret Gardens. 7.00 Girl Racer. 7.30-8.00 Wainwright Walks. 10.00-10.30 Blackstaff Sessions. N East Of England: 7.20 Get Squiggling. 7.35 Charlie And Lola. 7.508.00 Take A Bow. 7.00 Girl Racer. 7.30-8.00 Wainwright Walks. 10.00-10.30 Mock The Week Again. Emmerdale.* Jo and Andy’s wedding day arrives. 3258 CHOICE UEFA Champions League Live.* Liverpool v Inter Milan (Kick-off 7.45pm). Steve Rider presents this evening’s last-16 first-leg encounter from Anfield. See Pick of the Day. 842451 An Island Parish.* Bishop Bill’s advice lifts Father Guy’s spirits. 8180 MasterChef.* The semifinalists cook at Luton and Dunstable Hospital. 4987 11 PM ONWARD Border 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal. 9242 2.30 The Alan Titchmarsh Show. 79635 3.30 The Royal Today. 628 4.00 Rosemary & Thyme. 4616 5.00 Golden Balls. 2529 6.00 Lookaround. 180 10.40 UEFA Champions League. 375242 11.40 Police, Camera, Action. 702242 6.05 The Hoobs.* (R) 7370161 6.30 The Hoobs.* (R) 4817513 6.55 Freshly Squeezed. 4810600 7.25 Everybody Loves Raymond.* (R) 7438345 7.50 Everybody Loves Raymond.* (R) 8268987 8.20 Just Shoot Me.* Jack challenges Elliott to a game of darts. (R) 9953258 8.45 Frasier.* Roz borrows money from Frasier. (R) 670722 9.15 Will & Grace.* (R) 677635 9.45 Will & Grace.* (R) 676906 10.15 Without A Trace.* Samantha goes undercover. (R) 7586277 11.05 ER.* Neela and Gallant decide to get married. (R) 6771242 12.00 News At Noon.* 79529 12.30 A Place In Greece.* (R) 19635 1.00 A Brief History Of Fun.* (R) 12916074 1.20 FILM City Under The Sea (1965).* Adventure starring Tab Hunter as an American diver who encounters a colony of ageless Victorian smugglers surviving in an undersea city off the Cornish coast. 58277906 2.55 Come Dine With Me.* (R) 2134432 3.25 Countdown.* 2825426 4.15 Deal Or No Deal.* 2479242 Horizon.* Dr Brian Wilcox investigates why particular groups of people reach advanced old age. 385513 Coast.* 618161 10.00 BBC News.* 994093 10.25 Reporting Scotland.* 315242 10.35 Boys Beyond Bars. Following five young offenders a year after their release. 454703 10.00 Girl Racer: This World.* Opportunities available to women living in Iran. 78890 10.30 Newsnight.* 94838 10.00 News At Ten.* 276221 10.40 Expats Under Attack: Tonight.* How Britons who relocated to rural Spain in search of tranquility have been targeted by Eastern European gangs. 797838 11.35 Imagine.* The success of self-help books and courses. 227426 12.25 Film 2008 With Jonathan Ross.* 8300198 1.00 Close. 1.15 Sign Zone: See Hear.* (R) 49907 1.45 Sign Zone: Natural World.* (R) 5798759 2.35 Sign Zone: Ben’s Zoo.* (R) 4399575 3.35 Sign Zone: Wanted Down Under.* (R) 7610074 4.20 BBC News 24. 552759 11.00 Newsnight Scotland.* 378529 11.20 Paradise Or Bust.* Environmentalist James Strawbridge gives the island a makeover. Last in series. (R) 243819 12.20 BBC News 24.* 973865 2.00 BBC Learning Zone.* 4747662 11.10 UEFA Champions League Highlights.* 248364 12.10 Nightwatch With Steve Scott: Crime.* 971407 1.50 Loose Women.* (R) 5708136 2.40 The Jeremy Kyle Show.* (R) 6108575 3.35 ITV Nightscreen. 705038 5.30 ITV Morning News.* 68339 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal. 9242 2.30 The Alan Titchmarsh Show. 79635 3.30 The Royal Today. 628 4.00 Rosemary & Thyme. 4616 5.00 Golden Balls. 2529 6.00 North East Tonight.* 180 10.40 UEFA Champions League. 375242 11.40 Police, Camera, Action. 702242 FIVE 6.00 Milkshake!* 5388345 9.00 The Wright Stuff.* 9156109 10.30 Trisha Goddard.* 4304242 11.30 The Hotel Inspector.* (R) 2833258 12.30 Five News.* 29498819 12.45 Law & Order.* Briscoe and Green investigate the shooting of a singer’s wife, questioning his manager – who proves to have formerly owned the murder weapon. (R) 9361136 1.45 Neighbours.* 7059971 2.15 Home And Away.* Rory and Tony conspire to make sure Martha and Jack do not end up getting back together. Matilda finds out about Ric’s onenight stand with Viv. 1165161 2.50 Animal Rescue Squad.* Highlights from the series in which Michaela Strachan and Matt Baker meet the people who are working to protect animals. 4538703 3.05 FILM A Perry Mason Mystery: The Case Of The Wicked Wives (1993).* Lawyer Anthony Caruso steps into Perry’s shoes to investigate a murder in the glamorous world of fashion photography. Drama with Paul Sorvino. 71039432 5.00 Richard & Judy.* 3141 5.00 5.30 Five News.* 7301722 Neighbours.* Steph walks in on Toadie having another panic attack and tries to get him to open up about his fears. (R) 7494797 6.00 The Simpsons.* Homer has hallucinatory visions. (R) 722 Hollyoaks.* Frankie is shocked to see the state Jake has been reduced to. 154 6.00 Home And Away.* Matilda finds out about Ric’s onenight stand. (R) 7597838 Animal Rescue Squad.* A bald eagle is in need of flying lessons. 7571890 6.30 6.30 7.00 7.55 Channel 4 News.* 841987 The Political Slot.* Boris Johnson on inner-city youths. 760722 7.00 7.30 Five News.* 7398258 Extraordinary Animals.* The unique abilities of Rio the sea lion. Reared in captivity in California, the animal perfomed better in a series of logical tests than some humans. (R) 7577074 8.00 Supersize Vs Superskinny.* Kevin, an 8st 5lb Brighton man who now wishes to reject his lifestyle of coffee and cigarettes, swaps diets with 26st Julie. 1635 8.00 The Bearman.* Debunking myths about animal unsociability. 5897600 9.00 The Girl with 8 Limbs: A Bodyshock Special.* The story of Lakshmi Tatma, the Indian girl born with one of the world’s rarest conditions — the arms and legs of a half-formed conjoined twin — as preparations are made to operate. 8971 9.00 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.* The team investigate when a girl plunges to her death from her university dorm. 5980364 10.00 CHOICE Shameless.* Lillian finds it hard to stay incognito as part of a witness protection programme. See Pick of the Day. 1155838 10.00 CSI: Miami.* A daredevil driver is decapitated while performing a dangerous stunt, and the team come to suspect there could be a sinister explanation for the incident. (R) 5983451 Tyne Tees PM 10 PM 6.30-7.00 Newsline. 8.00 Holby City. 9.0010.00 Hotel Babylon. 10.25 Newsline. 10.35 Spotlight. 11.05 Imagine. 11.55 Film 2008. 12.25 Secret Gardens. 12.35-1.15 Sign Zone: Wonderland: The End Of The World Bus Tour. N East Of England: 6.30-7.00 Look North. 8.00 Holby City. 9.0010.00 Hotel Babylon. 10.25 Regional News. 10.35 Imagine. 11.25 Film 2008. 11.55-1.15 FILM: Steal. The Five Thirty Show.* 567 PM 6.30 BBC1 Northern Ireland CHANNEL FOUR 11.05 Baby Bible Bashers.* (R) 163884 12.10 Late Night Poker. 3963759 1.10 Barcelona World Race. (R) 2069049 1.35 World Cup Skiing. 501643 3.35 KOTV.* 58959339 4.00 Red Bull Air Race 2007.* (R) 52943 5.00 Richard & Judy. (R) 23575 Extraordinary Animals, five, 7.30pm 11.00 Law & Order: Criminal Intent.* More sordid secrets about the Garretts emerge. 1215068 12.00 FBI Files.* (R) 6801484 1.00 NBA Basketball. 2113778 3.30 Football Italiano. 3444594 5.10 Neighbours.* (R) 59881681 5.35 House Doctor.* (R) 19532198 REVIEW 29 SCOTLANDonSUNDAY February 17, 2008 PICK OF THE DAY SATELLITE, CABLE & DIGITAL FILM SKY MOVIES PREMIERE UEFA Champions League Live STV, 7.30pm Steve Rider presents live footie action as Liverpool meet Inter Milan. After recent disappointments the Kop will be hoping to regain some credibility but victory is far from assured. 10.00 Sci-fi & Horror Close Up. 96906 10.30 Comedy Close Up. 39971 11.00 Jumper Special. 64635 11.30 Drama Close Up. 65364 12.00 Luna: Spirit Of The Whale. 557703 1.50 Save The Last Dance 2: Stepping Up. 44237838 3.40 Barnyard. 215635 5.30 Action & Thriller Close Up. 5258 6.00 Arthur And The Invisibles. 85616 8.00 The Pursuit Of Happyness. Drama starring Will Smith. 80161 10.00 The Last King Of Scotland. 35418161 12.10 Gone. 207469 2.00 Close. SKY MOVIES DRAMA 7.20 West Side Story. 76259906 10.05 Oscar Fever. 1721093 10.25 Top Gun. 90509258 12.25 Saving Private Ryan. 41426345 3.25 The Sea Inside. 57037345 5.40 Oscar Fever. 2936703 6.00 Top Gun. 5428797 8.00 Saving Private Ryan. Drama starring Tom Hanks and Matt Damon. 55006987 10.50 West Side Story. 42544109 1.25 The Sea Inside. 71541204 3.30 Midnight Express. 37993440 5.35 The Sea Inside. 29864001 SKY MOVIES CLASSICS Shameless Channel 4, 10pm More drama with the chaos magnets of the Gallagher clan. En route to a re-start course Frank is smitten with a beautiful stranger, but has he really found the love of his life? Lily Allen And Friends BBC3, 10.30pm Social networking chanteuse Lily Allen continues her winning mix of music, chat and internet japery by adding Office star Martin Freeman to her list of friends. RADIO 6.55 Gypsy. 39537635 9.20 Steptoe And Son. 78253364 11.10 Indiscreet. 60531141 1.10 A Foreign Affair. 19975074 3.10 Gypsy. 11727548 5.35 The Palm Beach Story. 12080180 7.15 Indiscreet. 52211797 9.00 Monkey Business. 28292819 10.40 I Was A Male War Bride. 89670093 12.30 Frenzy. 68843952 2.35 The Naked City. 9999376 4.20 A Foreign Affair. 29926198 BOX OFFICE DIGITAL Every 15 mins from 6.00am: The Simpsons Movie. Every 150 mins from 6.00am: Goodbye Bafana. Every 30 mins from 6.00am: Knocked Up, Surf’s Up, The Bourne Ultimatum. Every 90 mins from 6.00am: Die Hard 4.0, La Vie En Rose. Every hour from 6.00am: Bratz, Ocean’s Thirteen, Shrek The Third, The Hoax, Transformers. Every 2 hours from 6.30am to 9.30pm: The Good German. Every hour from 6.30am to 9.30pm: Fantastic Four: Rise Of The Silver Surfer, Hostel: Part II, Vacancy. Every hour from 6.30am: Evan Almighty, Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix, Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World’s End, This Is England. ENTERTAINMENT SKY ONE 6.00 Dream Team. 28616 7.00 Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? 12600 8.00 Brainiac: Science Abuse. 93529 9.00 Cold Case. 73600 10.00 Stargate SG-1. 66567 12.00 Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? 63426 1.00 Cold Case. 45074 2.00 Las Vegas. 87187 3.00 Stargate SG-1. 41277 5.00 Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? 6664 6.00 Futurama. 2161 6.30 Malcolm In The Middle. 5123 7.00 The Simpsons. 84987 8.00 Stargate Atlantis. 93635 9.00 Lost. 27281 10.00 Cold Case. 83258 11.00 Ross Kemp In Afghanistan. 39109 12.00 Road Wars. 13914 1.00 FREEVIEW BBC 3 13366267 8.30 Friends. 73160664 9.00 Big Brother US. 62662548 10.00 Reaper. 62665635 11.00 Shameless. 12319364 12.05 Scrubs. 12411001 12.35 Scrubs. 29572407 1.05 The Simple Life. 71097575 1.30 The Simple Life. 55898391 1.50 Shameless. 23879117 2.50 Style Her Famous. 68806952 3.10 Desperate Housewives. 21578223 3.55 One Tree Hill. 11554372 4.35 Switched. 60710440 5.00 Switched. 45294556 5.20 Switched. 49111466 7.00 Dog Borstal. 8.00 Find Me The Face. 9.00 The Real Hustle Las Vegas. 9.30 Bizarre ER. 10.00 EastEnders. 10.30 Lily Allen And Friends. 11.15 Family Guy. 12.00 Find Me The Face. 1.00 The Real Hustle Las Vegas. 1.30 Lily Allen And Friends. See Pick of the Day. 2.15 Bizarre ER. 2.45 Dog Borstal. 3.45 Close. BBC 4 7.00 World News Today. 2813971 7.30 Pop Go The Sixties. 7349722 7.35 Batman. 9782513 8.00 Around The World In 80 Treasures. 4561155 9.00 Goodness Gracious Me. Meera Syal stars. 1601703 9.30 The Armstrong & Miller Show. 7929180 10.00 Citizen Smith. 7784600 10.30 Very Russian Geniuses: Storyville. 5430432 12.00 BBC 4 World Cinema Awards 2008. 7410285 1.00 Citizen Smith. 1929759 1.30 Proms On Four 2007. 10815391 4.05 Close. MORE4 About Schmidt, Film4, 9pm 1.30 Heartbeat. 2.40 The Wonder Years. 3.40 Cagney And Lacey. 4.45 Pie In The Sky. 5.50 Heartbeat. 6.55 The Wonder Years. 8.00 Pie In The Sky. 9.00 Clocking Off. 10.00 Lewis. 12.05 Clocking Off. 1.10 Tales Of The Unexpected. 2.10 The Rockford Files. 3.00 Bramwell. 3.50 Film File. 4.00 Teleshopping. ITV2 9.25 Smallville. 10.15 Judge Judy. 11.35 Airline. 12.00 Coronation Street. 1.00 Emmerdale. 1.30 The Jeremy Kyle Show. 3.45 Ricki Lake. 4.30 Sally Jessy Raphael. 5.20 The Montel Williams Show. 6.05 Judge Judy. 7.00 Smallville. 8.00 No Place Like Home? 9.00 FILM: Along Came Polly. 10.45 FILM: The Truth About Charlie. 12.40 The Office: An American Workplace. 1.10 Harry Hill’s TV Burp. 1.40 Teleshopping. 4.40 ITV2 Nightscreen. 6.00 Close. E4 6.00 Anything Goes. 64973722 8.00 E4’s Got The Feeling. 22755838 9.00 Nothing But Naughty Boys. 87301722 10.00 Like Nu-Rave? You’ll Love This. 40496600 11.00 Fresh Albums. 31696426 12.10 Scrubs. 94691600 12.40 Scrubs. 44001726 1.05 The Simple Life. 34750600 1.35 The Simple Life. 91514971 2.05 Style Her Famous. 61316722 2.35 Desperate Housewives. 99454548 3.30 One Tree Hill. 19676161 4.25 Hollyoaks. 79238451 4.55 Friends. 83556884 5.30 Friends. 10052093 6.00 Scrubs. 10059906 6.30 Scrubs. 10040258 7.00 Hollyoaks. 29661659 7.30 The Class. 10966242 8.00 Friends. ITV3 6.00 Only When I Laugh. 6.25 Upstairs, Downstairs. 7.25 The Rockford Files. 8.25 Ironside. 10.25 The Magnificent Seven. 11.25 Quincy ME. 12.25 Lovejoy. Tenerife Uncovered. 6217681 1.50 The Villa. 9859310 2.40 Mile High. 3380310 3.30 Las Vegas. 2374925 4.20 Dream Team. 6928223 5.10 Guilty! 8237391 FILM4 1.00 A Man Betrayed. 67030548 2.35 You Can’t Take It With You. 22391726 5.00 The Four Feathers. 54156118 7.20 The Brady Bunch Movie. 95569451 9.00 About Schmidt. Drama starring Jack Nicholson. 52068600 11.25 Rush Hour 2. 4503838 1.10 The Last Mitterrand. 26768952 3.30 Close. North Mission Road. 9227117 12.30 Body Of Evidence. 8816420 1.00 Suburban Secrets. 4269198 1.30 Missing Persons Unit. 9738827 2.00 Forensic Detectives. 2433310 3.00 World’s Lost Tribes: The New Adventures Of Mark And Olly. 4016223 3.50 Deadliest Climb — Everest. 9755198 4.40 Dirty Jobs. 7811440 5.30 How It’s Made. 9228846 DISCOVERY 6.00 Born Survivor: Bear Grylls. 1462744 7.00 UK’s Toughest Jobs. 4152838 8.00 Deadliest Catch. 4153567 9.00 Future Weapons. 9343109 10.00 Mythbusters. 6597426 11.00 American Chopper. 6673890 12.00 Survivorman. 3674797 1.00 Deadliest Catch. 3756345 2.00 Forensic Detectives. 7358432 3.00 North Mission Road. 7509093 3.30 Body Of Evidence. 2539971 4.00 World’s Lost Tribes: The New Adventures Of Mark And Olly. 9388513 5.00 How It’s Made. 7511838 5.30 How Do They Do It? 2538242 6.00 Mythbusters. 3776109 7.00 Deadliest Catch. 1659068 8.00 Born Survivor: Bear Grylls. 1731616 9.00 World’s Lost Tribes: The New Adventures Of Mark And Olly. 1744180 10.00 Deadliest Climb — Everest. 1754567 11.00 Most Evil. 6598155 12.00 9.00 Deal Or No Deal. 74506432 9.45 How Clean Is Your House? 13567616 10.15 You Are What You Eat. 13486797 10.45 Location, Location, Location. 13485068 11.15 FILM: Storm Over The Nile. 34663093 1.15 Deal Or No Deal. 25246068 2.00 ER. 52039451 3.00 Hill Street Blues. 35572161 4.00 A Place In The Sun. 36317488 5.05 Grand Designs. 42769258 6.05 Deal Or No Deal. 78767890 7.00 Relocation, Relocation. 17060971 8.00 More4 News. 61447074 8.30 The Daily Show With Jon Stewart. 61466109 9.00 Location, Location, Location. 17066155 10.00 True Stories: Derek. 10978884 11.40 FILM: Blue. 26310703 1.10 The Sopranos. 19117469 2.25 True Stories: Derek. 42668846 4.05 Close. SPORT SKY SPORTS 1 6.00 Live International Cricket. India v Sri Lanka. 2798242 11.30 Sky Sports Classics. 22708 12.00 Big League Weekend. 74819 1.30 International Cricket. 69155 3.30 Wild Spirits. 5277 4.00 Big League Weekend. 84242 5.30 International Cricket. 65426 7.30 Soccer Special. 418285 10.00 Live International Cricket. 8281426 SKY SPORTS 2 Bratz, Box Office Digital 6.00 Good Morning Sports Fans. 9739797 9.00 Big League Weekend. 8527838 10.30 Radio Scotland FM 92.4-94.7; AM 810kHz,Radio 4 FM 92.4-95.8; LW 198kHz, Radio 3 FM 90.2-92.4, Radio 1 FM 98-99.5, Radio 2 FM 88-90.2, Radio 5 Live AM 693 and 909kHz, Classic FM FM 100-102, Radio Nan Gaidheal FM 103.5-105 FM, Virgin AM 1215kHz, Talksport AM 1053/1089kHz, World Service FM 92.4-94.7; LW 198kHz and MW 810kHz Radio Scotland 6.00 Good Morning Scotland. 8.50 Morning Extra With Gary Robertson. 9.30 MacAulay & Co. 11.00 Women On Top. 11.30 Past Lives. 12.00 Scotland Live. 1.00 News. 1.15 The Radio Café. 2.00 News. 2.05 Tom Morton. 4.00 Newsdrive. 4.00 Weather. 6.00 News. 6.05 Get It On With Bryan Burnett. 7.00 News. 7.12 Outdoor Conditions. 7.15 FM: The Radio Café. Arts review. 7.15 MW: Sportsound. 8.00 FM: News. 8.05 FM: Mary Ann Kennedy’s Global Gathering. 9.58 FM: Weather. 10.00 Scotland At Ten. 10.30 The Iain Anderson Show. 12.30 Past Lives. 1.00 FM: As Radio 5 Live. 1.00 MW: Nightshift. Radio 4 5.30 News Briefing. 5.43 Prayer For The Day. 5.45 Farming Today. 6.00 Today. 8.31 LW: Yesterday In Parliament. 8.58 LW: Weather. 9.00 Simpson Returns To China. John Simpson recalls the Tiananmen Square massacre. 9.30 A Dollar A Day. The price of education in the developing world. 9.45 LW: Daily Service. 9.45 FM: Book of the Week: Trust Me I’m A (Junior) Doctor. 10.00 Woman’s Hour. 11.00 World On The Move: Great Animal Migrations. 11.30 Billy Bunter’s Birthday Bash. The literary and socialhistoric power of Frank Richards’ writing. 12.00 News. 12.01 LW: Shipping Forecast. 12.04 Call You And Yours. 12.57 Weather. 1.00 The World At One. 1.30 The Nun Who Nurtured Reggae. 2.00 The Archers. 2.15 Afternoon Play: Pavement Stars. By Gillian and Catrin Clarke. 3.00 Home Planet. 3.30 Creating Writing Groups 2008. 3.45 Giving It All Away. 4.00 Law In Action. 4.30 A Good Read. 5.00 PM. 5.54 LW: Shipping Forecast. 5.57 Weather. 6.00 News. 6.30 The Lawrence Sweeney Mix. Improvised sketch show. Last in series. 7.00 The Archers. 7.15 Front Row. Experimental artists Duchamp, Man Ray and Picabia. 7.45 Faust. 8.00 File On 4. Examining local authority pay inequality. 8.40 In Touch. Presented by Peter White. 9.00 Case Notes. Dr Mark Porter discusses liver disease. 9.30 Simpson Returns To China. John Simpson recalls the Tiananmen Square massacre. 9.59 Weather. 10.00 LW: Live International One-Day Cricket. 10.00 FM: The World Tonight. 10.45 FM: Book at Bedtime: A Room With A View. 11.00 FM: Laurence And Gus: Hearts And Minds. 11.30 FM: Today In Parliament. 12.00 FM: News; Weather. 12.30 FM: Book of the Week: Trust Me I’m A (Junior) Doctor. 12.48 Shipping Forecast. 1.00 LW: Live International One-Day Cricket. 1.00 FM: World Service. 5.20 Shipping Forecast. Radio 3 7.00 Rob Cowan. 10.00 Classical Collection. 12.00 Composer Of The Week: Giuseppe Verdi. 12.00 News. 1.00 Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert. Britten, Debussy, Alberga. 2.00 The Czech Philharmonic Orchestra And Friends. 5.00 In Tune. 7.00 Performance On 3. Mozart, Schubert, Chopin. 8.45 Composer Of The Week: Giuseppe Verdi. 9.45 Night Waves. Exhibition of work by Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray. 10.30 Artist Focus. 11.00 The Essay. The longevity of ideas. 11.15 Late Junction. 1.00 Through The Night. Radio 1 6.30 The Chris Moyles Show. 10.00 Jo Whiley. 12.45 Newsbeat. 1.00 Edith Bowman. 4.00 Scott Mills. 7.00 Zane Lowe. 9.00 In New Music We Trust. 10.00 Colin Murray. 12.00 Bobby Friction & Nihal. 2.00 Mary Anne Hobbs. 4.00 Dick And Dom. Radio 2 6.00 Sarah Kennedy: The Dawn Patrol. 7.30 Johnie Walker. 9.30 Stuart Maconie. 12.00 Jeremy Vine. 2.00 Steve Wright In The Afternoon. 5.00 Chris Evans. 7.00 Desmond Carrington: The Music Goes Round. 8.00 Mark Radcliffe. 10.00 Nigel Ogden: The Organist Entertains. 10.30 Theme Time Radio Hour With Bob Dylan. 11.30 Jason And Iyare’s A-Z Of Street Music. 12.30 Janice Long. 3.00 Alex Lester. News. 1.00 Simon Mayo. 4.00 Drive. 7.00 5 Live Sport. Liverpool v Inter Milan (Kick-off 7.45pm). 10.00 6-0-6. 11.00 Richard Bacon. 1.00 Up All Night. Classic FM 6.00 Easier Breakfast. 8.00 Simon Bates. 12.00 The Classic FM Most Wanted. 1.00 Classic FM Requests. 4.00 Drivetime. 6.30 Classic Newsnight. 7.00 Smooth Classics At Seven. 9.00 Evening Concert. Ravel, Parry, Rossini, Schubert, Cherubini, Donizetti, Liszt,. 12.00 Lisa Duncombe. 2.00 Mark Griffiths. Radio Nan Gaidheal 7.30 Aithris Na Maidne. 9.03 Coinneach Maclomhair. 10.03 Mire Ri Mòir. 11.30 Eadar Dà Fhadhall. 2.03 Caithream Ciùil. 4.03 Sruth Na Maoile. 5.00 Aithris An Fheasgair. 5.30 Siubhal Gu Seachd. 7.00 Rapal. 9.00 Coinneach Maclomhair. 10.00 Eadar Dà Fhadhall. 10.30 Sruth Na Maoile. 11.30 Mar Radio Alba. Virgin 6.00 Christian O’Connell’s Breakfast Show. 10.00 Russ Williams. 1.00 Leona Graham. 4.00 Nick Jackson. 7.00 Ben Jones. 10.00 The Geoff Show. 1.00 Tim Lichfield. 4.00 Robin Burke. Radio 5 Live Talksport 5.00 Morning Reports. 5.30 Wake Up To Money. 6.00 Breakfast. 9.00 Victoria Derbyshire. 12.00 The Midday 5.00 Ian Collins With The Moose. 6.00 Alan Brazil And Ronnie Irani. 10.00 Jon Gaunt. 1.00 Danny Kelly. 4.00 Ian Wright And Adrian Durham. 7.00 Champions League Live. 11.00 James Whale. 1.00 Ian Collins. World Service 5.00 World Briefing. 5.20 World Business Report. 5.30 World Briefing. 5.41 Analysis. 5.50 Sports Round-up. 6.00 The World Today. 8.30 Business Daily. 8.50 Analysis. 9.00 World News. 9.06 Global Business. 9.30 The Word. 10.00 World News. 10.06 Outlook. 11.00 World Briefing. 11.20 World Business Report. 11.30 World Briefing. 11.41 Analysis. 11.50 Sports Roundup. 12.00 World News. 12.06 Global Business. 12.30 Digital Planet. 1.00 World Briefing. 1.30 Outlook In Brief. 2.00 Newshour. 3.00 World Briefing. 3.30 The Word. 4.00 World Briefing. 4.20 World Business Report. 4.30 Digital Planet. 5.00 Europe Today. 6.00 World News. 6.06 World, Have Your Say. 7.00 World Briefing. 7.20 World Business Report. 7.30 The Word. 8.00 World News. 8.06 Global Business. 8.30 Digital Planet. 9.00 Newshour. 10.00 World Briefing. 10.20 Analysis. 10.30 Business Daily. 10.50 Sports Round-up. 11.00 The World Today. 11.30 The Word. 12.00 World News. 12.06 Global Business. 12.30 Digital Planet. 1.00 World Briefing. 1.20 World Business Report. 1.30 World Briefing. 1.41 Analysis. 1.50 Sports Round-up. 2.00 World Briefing. 2.20 Analysis. 2.30 The Word. 3.00 World News. 3.06 Outlook. 4.00 The World Today. Roma v Real Madrid, Sky Sports 2, 7pm World Motor Sport. 8253109 1.00 Soccer AM: The Best Bits. 1894703 2.00 UEFA Champions League. 9449451 5.00 UEFA Champions League. 5893635 6.00 Revista De La Liga. 1814567 7.00 Live UEFA Champions League. AS Roma v Real Madrid (Kick-off 7.45pm). 30727548 10.15 Revista De La Liga. 2964567 11.15 ALeague. 5008105 11.45 Sports Unlimited. 2952722 12.45 Revista De La Liga. 2808608 1.45 A-League. 8126372 2.15 Sky Sports Classics. 80936339 2.30 Close. SKY SPORTS 3 6.00 Aerobics Oz Style. 17884659 6.30 Snow Adventures. 92941109 7.00 Aerobics Oz Style. 76344797 7.30 Snow Adventures. 76429432 8.00 Wild Spirits. 46427726 8.30 Sports Adventure. 47877267 9.00 Bass Fishing. 41614557 10.00 Thinking Tackle. 76425616 11.00 Racing News. 91269136 11.30 Sports Adventure. 90819695 12.00 Show Jumping. 43277203 12.30 Wild Spirits. 34660513 1.00 NFL: Total Access. 69323345 1.55 U Can Do It. 16815258 2.00 World Motor Sport. 75517797 4.30 Show Jumping. 45128513 5.00 NFL: Total Access. 61499987 5.55 U Can Do It. 34132277 6.00 Sports Unlimited. 34741432 7.00 Pool. 87899242 8.00 International Cricket. 87982906 10.00 Poker. 97669172 12.00 NFL: Total Access. 78761049 12.55 U Can Do It. 18533074 1.00 Pool. 46143556 2.00 Close. BRITISH EUROSPORT 7.30 Road To Euro 2008. 70426 8.00 UEFA Champions League. 37987 9.00 WATTS. 2424277 9.15 UEFA Champions League. 4325180 10.30 WATTS. 7664695 10.45 UEFA Champions League. 982364 11.45 Eurogoals. 4189838 12.30 Live WTA Tennis. The Qatar Total Open. 4007703 5.00 Eurogoals. 6255161 5.15 Live WTA Tennis. 1973109 6.00 WATTS. 117161 6.15 Eurogoals. 895548 7.00 Boxing. 46797 8.00 Live Boxing. Ismael El Massoudi v Abdoulaye Soukouna. 22161 10.00 World Touring Car Championship. 84155 10.30 MotoGP. 66703 11.00 GP2 Racing. 73567 12.00 EuroCRASH! 34310 12.30 Close. READER OFFER Luxurious Shawl Wrap Only £29.95 Wonderfully flattering, this elegant shawl wrap hangs beautifully and adds an extremely warm and versatile extra layer to any outfit on chilly days. Flip one end over your shoulder or let it hang loose. It’ll add great pizzaz! Made from 30% Wool, 70% Acrylic, choose from A (black) B (red) C (taupe). Hand wash. Measures L193cm W47cm with centre split of 114cm. www.shop.scotsman.com/E547 To order by telephone call now: 0845 121 8043 Open 24 hour a day, 7 days a week. Please ensure you have your credit/ debit card to hand and quote JP1.E547 Knitted Shawl Wrap £29.95 30 REVIEW WEDNESDAY 20.02.08 DAYTIME BBC ONE BBC TWO February 17, 2008 SCOTLANDonSUNDAY STV REGION 6.00 Breakfast.* 76170440 9.15 Animal 24:7.* 8186594 10.00 Homes Under The Hammer.* Properties in Essex, Stoke and Aldershot. 80440 11.00 To Buy Or Not To Buy.* House-hunting in Bedfordshire. 3204 11.30 Cash In The Attic.* A cooking enthusiast attempts to raise money. (R) 4216223 12.15 Bargain Hunt.* 6991730 1.00 BBC News.* 60420 1.30 Reporting Scotland.* 58733264 1.45 Doctors.* Daniel has an appointment at an escort agency. 525440 2.15 Diagnosis Murder.* Part one of two. Sloan’s friend Dr Travis gets a little help from ace attorney Ben Matlock. (R) 9368001 3.00 BBC News; Weather; Reporting Scotland.* 8523933 3.05 CBeebies: Mister Maker.* (R) 1588402 3.25 CBBC: Take A Bow.* (R) 8502440 3.30 What’s New Scooby-Doo?* (R) 4167875 3.50 Shaun The Sheep.* (R) 6354223 4.05 Thumb Wrestling Federation: TWF.* (R) 5108407 4.10 Whizz Whizz Bang Bang.* (R) 6711223 4.35 Blue Peter. 8490204 6.00 CBeebies: Tikkabilla.* (R) 34372 6.30 Teletubbies;* (R) Tweenies Songtime.* (R) 86136 7.00 Me Too!* (R) 3805204 7.20 Charlie And Lola.* (R) 5765136 7.30 Na Daoine Beaga (The Little People).* 6328575 7.50 Blarag A’ Bho (Connie The Cow). (R) 3459204 8.00 CBBC: Wild Tales.* 22827 8.30 Arthur.* (R) 5405952 8.45 Dennis The Menace.* (R) 5491759 9.05 The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.* (R) 1385594 9.35 What’s New Scooby-Doo?* (R) 6985372 9.55 Thumb Wrestling Federation: TWF.* (R) 7963484 10.00 Even Stevens;* (R) Diddy Dick & Dom.* (R) 77488 10.30 Beat The Boss.* (R) 34662 11.00 Animal Park.* 1846 11.30 The Daily Politics.* 75440 1.00 See Hear.* 60402 1.30 Working Lunch.* 54914 2.00 Animal Park.* Behind the scenes at Longleat. 4339 2.30 Holyrood Live.* 3214136 3.35 Lifeline.* (R) 6340020 3.45 Flog It! From Chelmsford. 3945001 4.30 Ready, Steady, Cook.* With Rav Wilding and Lisa Maxwell. 1460846 6.00 GMTV.* 8697778 9.25 The Jeremy Kyle Show.* 5769407 10.30 This Morning.* Another celebrity attempts to Beat the Stylist, and Dr Chris Steele rounds up the latest health headlines. 89865 12.30 Loose Women.* Topical debate from a female perspective. 37488 1.30 ITV Lunchtime News.* 41440 2.00 Doc Martin.* Martin suspects the local water supply is to blame for a nasty stomach bug sweeping through Portwenn, and takes to the airwaves in a bid to warn everyone. (R) 65643 3.00 The Alan Titchmarsh Show.* Live chat show hosted by the television gardener. Featuring celebrity guests and lifestyle features. 3907 4.00 The Royal Today.* Adam performs a delicate procedure on the bully who made his schooldays a living hell, while man-hungry medics Alana, Isla and Pamela trawl the Internet for suitable dates; What’s Your Business Idea.* 662 4.30 Golden Balls.* Game show hosted by Jasper Carrott; What’s Your Business Idea.* 57933 5.00 5.15 Newsround.* 6003353 Weakest Link.* (R) 7391407 5.15 Britain’s Dream Homes.* Finding the UK’s best cottages. 7399049 5.30 The Five Thirty Show.* 198 6.00 6.30 BBC News.* 643 Reporting Scotland.* 223 6.00 6.30 Eggheads.* 285 Ben Fogle’s Extreme Dreams. Tempers flare between two tent-mates. 865 6.00 Scotland Today;* What’s Your Business Idea. 339 ITV Evening News.* 391 Search For Mountain Lions.* Gordon Buchanan attempts to spot the big cats. (R) 5827 Wainwright Walks.* Julia Bradbury aims to reach the summits of Crinkle Crags and Bowfell in the footsteps of Alfred Wainwright. 579 7.00 Bill Oddie’s Wild Side.* The presenter observes corncrakes and learns how efforts are being made to secure the bird’s future. 4575 MasterChef.* Four semifinalists compete. 6310 8.00 5 PM 6 PM 7.00 7.30 The ONE Show.* 7285 My Family.* Susan stands for the council. (R) 407 7.30 7 PM 8.00 8 Sky Cops.* South Yorkshire police target teenage motorcyclists. (R) 6643 PM 8.00 8.30 9.00 9 7.00 Crimewatch.* The murder of Shafilea Ahmed. Plus, the latest on the Millie Dowler investigation. 6407 9.00 9.50 PM 10 PM 11 PM ONWARD 6.30 7.30 Emmerdale.* Bob stands up to Viv by refusing to work on his day off and telling her to hire Mel. 5681 CHOICE Coronation Street.* Carla refrains from telling Liam she is back with Tony. See Pick of the Day. 575 The Brit Awards 2008.* Presented live from London by the Osbourne family. 2827 BBC1 Northern Ireland 10.50 Ships That Changed The World.* 11.30 Inside Sport Beijing Special.* 12.15 News 24.* 12.45 Sign Zone.* 1.45-2.45 Sign Zone.* BBC2 Northern Ireland 7.20 Get Squiggling.* 7.35 Charlie And Lola.* 7.50-8.00 Take A Bow.* 11.30 Northern Ireland Question Time.* 12.051.00 Daily Politics.* 2.00 The People Watchers.* 2.45 Lifeline.* 2.55 Coast.* 3.00-3.45 Escape To The Country.* 7.008.00 Around The World In 80 Gardens.* 9.0010.00 Irish Film And Television Awards. N East Of England: 7.20 Get Squiggling.* 7.35 Charlie And Lola.* 7.50-8.00 Take A Bow.* 2.00 The People Watchers.* 2.45 Lifeline.* 2.55 Coast.* 3.00-3.45 Escape To The Country.* 7.00-8.00 Around The World In 80 Gardens.* Border 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal.* 1865 2.30 The Alan Titchmarsh Show.* 50533 3.30 The Royal Today.* 827 4.00 Rosemary & Thyme.* 2952 5.00 Golden Balls.* 4952 6.00 Lookaround.* 339 11.35 Soccer Night. 863933 12.05 Nightwatch with Steve Scott: Crime.* 743792 CHANNEL FOUR 6.00 Making It. (R) 4184759 6.05 The Hoobs.* (R) 7274933 6.30 The Hoobs.* (R) 4884285 6.55 Freshly Squeezed. 4887372 7.25 Everybody Loves Raymond.* (R) 7332117 7.50 Everybody Loves Raymond.* (R) 8162759 8.20 Just Shoot Me.* (R) 9840730 8.45 Frasier.* The shrink pretends to be Jewish. (R) 281594 9.15 Will & Grace.* (R) 288407 9.45 Will & Grace.* Jack donates Karen’s favourite shoes to charity. (R) 287778 10.15 Without A Trace.* (R) 7480049 11.05 ER.* Kovac spreads Christmas spirit. (R) 6748914 12.00 News At Noon.* 43310 12.30 A Place In Greece.* Brian looks for a new job. (R) 80339 1.00 FILM First Men In The Moon (1964).* Fantasy about a Victorian inventor who discovers a material that defies gravity and uses it to build the world’s first spaceship. Edward Judd and Martha Hyer star. 73077372 2.55 Come Dine With Me.* (R) 2038204 3.25 Countdown.* 2892198 4.15 Deal Or No Deal.* 2446914 6.00 Milkshake! Tickle, Patch And Friends.* 75603407 6.25 Thomas & Friends.* (R) 62619049 6.35 Rupert Bear.* (R) 90682827 6.45 Animal Families.* 90695391 7.00 Miss Spider’s Sunny Patch Friends.* (R) 3801778 7.15 Harry And His Bucket Full Of Dinosaurs.* (R) 7208001 7.30 The Adventures Of Bottle Top Bill And His Best Friend Corky.* 6582407 7.40 Roobarb And Custard Too.* (R) 3851020 7.50 Make Way For Noddy.* (R) 6586223 8.05 Fifi And The Flowertots.* (R) 4637372 8.20 Big School.* (R) 1269020 8.30 Peppa Pig.* (R) 7690914 8.35 Thomas & Friends.* (R) 1700339 8.45 Funky Town.* (R) 7695469 8.50 Pocoyo.* 1781204 9.00 The Wright Stuff.* 9043681 10.30 Trisha Goddard.* (R) 4371914 11.30 The Hotel Inspector.* (R) 2720730 12.30 Five News.* 29385391 12.45 Law & Order.* (R) 8610448 1.45 Neighbours.* 7026643 2.15 Home And Away.* 1069933 2.50 Animal Rescue Squad.* 4441223 3.00 FILM To Live For (1999).* 1974136 5.00 Richard & Judy.* 2594 5.00 5.30 Five News.* 7205594 Neighbours.* Carmella confronts Marco. (R) 7461469 6.00 6.00 6.30 The Simpsons.* With the voices of David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson. (R) 681 Hollyoaks.* Katy finds that concentrating on the fashion show leaves her less time to spend with Justin. 933 6.30 Home And Away.* Matilda and Cassie are involved in a car accident. (R) 7484310 Animal Rescue Squad.* Helping opossums and raccoons re-adjust to the wild. 7475662 7.00 7.55 Channel 4 News.* 821759 The Political Slot.* 740594 7.00 7.30 Five News.* 7285730 It Pays To Watch.* Colin McAllister and Justin Ryan guest. 7471846 8.00 Relocation, Relocation.* Kirstie Allsopp and Phil Spencer revisit a couple who swapped the buzz of Brighton for the peace of the French countryside. 2681 8.00 Ice Road Truckers.* Todd White faces a ban for speeding. 5864372 9.00 Grand Designs.* A couple build a modernist home a mile from Bath. 9117 9.00 Extraordinary People: The Boys Joined At The Head.* New series. The story of a pair of conjoined twins from Cairo who were sent to a hospital in Dallas to separate them in 2003. 5884136 10.00 FILM Bloodsport (1988).* Jean-Claude Van Damme takes part in a deadly fighting tournament, where the last man standing wins the day. Leah Ayres also stars. 8753643 Tyne Tees 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal.* 1865 2.30 The Alan Titchmarsh Show.* 50533 3.30 The Royal Today.* 827 4.00 Rosemary & Thyme.* 2952 5.00 Golden Balls.* 4952 6.00 North East Tonight.* 339 11.35 Soccer Night. 863933 12.05 Nightwatch with Steve Scott: Crime.* 743792 CHOICE Torchwood.* Jack enlists the help of Martha Jones. See Pick of the Day. 454223 Torchwood Declassified.* With Freema Agyeman and Burn Gorman. 698933 10.00 BBC News. 958827 10.25 Reporting Scotland. 475204 10.35 Crimewatch.* 637310 10.45 The National Lottery Draws.* 982372 10.50 Inside Sport Beijing Special;* National Lottery Update.* 875933 10.00 CHOICE Freezing.* New comedy series starring Hugh Bonneville and Elizabeth McGovern. Continues tomorrow. See Pick of the Day. 26643 10.30 Newsnight.* 35391 10.00 News At Ten.* 368933 10.35 Real Crime: The Caroline Dickinson Murder.* How the schoolgirl’s killer was caught. (R) 429643 10.00 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA.* The chef comes to the aid of Lela’s, a California restaurant that is on the brink of closure thanks to an inexperienced owner and arrogant chef. 1042310 11.35 FILM A Night On The Town (1987).* Drama with Elisabeth Shue. 179952 1.15 Sign Zone: Antiques Roadshow.* (R) 102889 2.15 Sign Zone: Britain’s Favourite Fakes.* (R) 28599 2.45 Sign Zone: Wanted Down Under.* (R) 5957315 3.30 BBC News 24. 470131 11.00 Newsnight Scotland.* 374339 11.20 Desi DNA.* 179579 11.50 Indian School: BBC 4 on Two.* 865391 12.20 BBC News 24.* 563709 2.00 BBC Learning Zone.* 4714334 11.35 Barail Bhoireannach.* 863933 12.05 UEFA Champions League Highlights. 8375402 12.55 Nightwatch With Steve Scott: Emergency.* 5452841 1.50 Loose Women.* (R) 9410624 2.35 The Jeremy Kyle Show.* (R) 4351315 3.35 ITV Nightscreen. 175570 5.30 ITV Morning News.* 49889 11.05 Shameless.* (R) 227407 12.05 Modern Toss.* 5418112 12.35 Love Trap.* (R) 5080266 1.35 The Kidnapping Of Elizabeth Smart.* (R) 7277082 3.05 Flood.* (R) 56381808 3.20 Our Big Fairtrade Adventure.* (R) 3610112 4.20 Richard & Judy. (R) 4797841 5.20 Countdown.* (R) 4654841 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA, Channel 4, 10pm FIVE 11.55 Poker Den: The Big Game II. 5192681 1.25 NHL Ice Hockey. 52277179 4.00 Supercross. 76499006 4.20 Dubai X Games. 2300421 5.10 Neighbours.* (R) 59858353 5.35 House Doctor.* (R) 19592570 REVIEW 31 SCOTLANDonSUNDAY February 17, 2008 PICK OF THE DAY SATELLITE, CABLE & DIGITAL FILM SKY MOVIES PREMIERE Coronation Street STV, 7.30pm More sudsy chicanery and soapy subterfuge as Paul reverts to his old tricks, Jamie and Violet begin planning for the future and Liam and Maria return from their honeymoon. 10.00 Modern Greats & Classics Close Up. 88876 10.30 Action & Thriller Close Up. 61730 11.00 Sci-fi & Horror Close Up. 23594 11.30 Premiere Close Up. 24223 12.00 Luna: Spirit Of The Whale. 544865 1.50 Save The Last Dance 2: Stepping Up. 44124310 3.40 Barnyard. 295407 5.30 Family Close Up. 6420 6.00 The Pursuit Of Happyness. 52594 8.00 Arthur And The Invisibles. 64339 10.00 The Last King Of Scotland. 35312933 12.10 Gone. 350131 2.00 Close. SKY MOVIES DRAMA 7.55 Breakfast At Tiffany’s. 20809643 9.55 Marie Antoinette. 74993865 12.15 Drama Close Up. 3827730 12.45 Tsotsi. 77750223 2.35 Breakfast At Tiffany’s. 52291865 4.40 Oscar Nominations Special. 6510594 5.10 Marie Antoinette. 55557730 7.30 Oscar Nominations Special. 9896488 8.00 Rocky. 5490914 10.00 The Departed. 46851204 12.35 Tsotsi. 7197995 2.20 The Departed. 59515841 5.00 The Top 10 Show. 20605711 5.20 Rocky. 41191599 SKY MOVIES CLASSICS Torchwood BBC2, 9pm More sci-fi weirdness from Cardiff’s Twilight Zone. With mysterious deaths at a medical lab tweaking Torchwood’s interest, Captain Jack sends Martha Jones on an undercover mission. Freezing BBC2, 10pm Fading Hollywood actress Elizabeth McGovern headlines as in a sophisticated rom-com as Elizabeth – a fading Hollywood actress trapped in her London home with her similarly underemployed husband. 6.25 Saturday Night And Sunday Morning. 17318778 8.00 12 Angry Men. 88552594 9.40 The Edge Of Heaven Special. 1646198 10.00 The Pawnbroker. 3611543 12.00 The Barbarian And The Geisha. 7456204 1.55 The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. 59753285 4.00 12 Angry Men. 78737827 5.40 Island In The Sky. 74633914 7.35 Forty Guns. 3439933 9.00 The Bible. 23610681 11.55 The Barbarian And The Geisha. 6510662 1.45 The Pawnbroker. 45641604 3.50 Forty Guns. 59740537 5.20 The Bible. 34545518 BOX OFFICE DIGITAL Every 15 mins from 6.00am: The Simpsons Movie. Every 150 mins from 6.00am: Goodbye Bafana. Every 30 mins from 6.00am: Knocked Up, Surf’s Up, The Bourne Ultimatum. Every 90 mins from 6.00am: Die Hard 4.0, La Vie En Rose. Every hour from 6.00am: Bratz, Ocean’s Thirteen, Shrek The Third, The Hoax, Transformers. Every 2 hours from 6.30am to 9.30pm: The Good German. Every hour from 6.30am to 9.30pm: Fantastic Four: Rise Of The Silver Surfer, Hostel: Part II, Vacancy. Every hour from 6.30am: Evan Almighty, Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix, Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World’s End, This Is England. ENTERTAINMENT SKY ONE 6.00 Dream Team. 69594 7.00 Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? 33778 8.00 Brainiac. 34407 9.00 Cold Case. 94778 10.00 Stargate SG-1. 15049 12.00 Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? 18136 1.00 Cold Case. 94556 2.00 Las Vegas. 12575 3.00 Stargate SG-1. 51285 5.00 Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? 2136 6.00 Futurama. 4223 6.30 Malcolm In The Middle. 5575 7.00 Simpsons. 3865 7.30 RADIO FREEVIEW BBC 3 10933914 8.00 Friends. 62546556 9.00 Reaper. 62559020 10.00 The Big Bang Theory. 98988575 10.30 Skins. 72289594 11.35 Fonejacker. 50940020 12.05 Scrubs. 89740889 1.05 The Simple Life. 22056286 1.50 Skins. 23846889 2.50 Style Her Famous. 68873624 3.10 Desperate Housewives. 21545995 3.55 One Tree Hill. 11521044 4.35 Switched. 27400537 7.00 Find Me The Face. 8.00 Don’t Tell The Bride. 9.00 Freaky Eaters. 10.00 Torchwood. 10.50 Being Human. 11.50 Family Guy. 12.15 Family Guy. 12.35 Two Pints Of Lager And A Packet Of Crisps. 1.05 Freaky Eaters. 2.00 Being Human. 3.00 Find Me The Face. 3.55 Don’t Tell The Bride. 4.55 Close. BBC 4 7.00 News. 2880643 7.30 Pop Go The Sixties. 7243594 7.35 Batman. 9759285 8.00 The Royal Family At Work. 7077285 9.30 The Jet Stream And Us. 4624643 10.30 The Late Edition Live. 7760020 11.00 Art Of Spain. 3300846 12.00 Mark Lawson Talks To Russell T Davies. 7487957 1.00 The Late Edition. 1989131 1.30 Art Of Spain. 6367353 2.30 The Jet Stream And Us. 7070995 3.30 The Late Edition. 1040650 4.00 Close. MORE4 Wonder Years, ITV3, 2.40pm 11.25 Quincy ME. 12.25 Lovejoy. 1.30 Heartbeat. 2.40 Wonder Years. 3.40 Cagney And Lacey. 4.40 Jeeves And Wooster. 5.50 Heartbeat. 6.55 Wonder Years. 8.00 Agatha Christie’s Poirot. 9.00 The Lakes. 10.00 Cider With Rosie. 12.15 The Lakes. 1.20 Quincy ME. 2.05 Rockford Files. 2.55 Bramwell. 3.50 Movies Now. 4.00 Teleshopping. ITV2 9.25 Smallville. 10.15 Judge Judy. 11.35 Airline. 12.00 Emmerdale. 12.30 The Planet’s Funniest Animals. 1.00 Airline USA. 1.30 Jeremy Kyle. 3.45 Ricki Lake. 4.30 Sally Jessy Raphael. 5.20 Montel Williams. 6.05 Judge Judy. 7.00 Brits Red Carpet 2008. 8.00 Coleen’s Real Women. 9.00 Supernatural. 10.00 Brits Encore 2008. 11.00 Kylie Show. 12.05 Coronation Street. 12.35 Ghosthunting With Coronation Street. 2.25 Teleshopping. 5.25 ITV2 Nightscreen. 6.00 Close. E4 6.00 Anything Goes. 64877594 8.00 This Is Your Westlife. 22642310 9.00 Nothing But Naughty Girls. 87205594 10.00 Like Dance? You’ll Love This. 40463372 11.00 Fresh Stuff. 64544469 12.05 Scrubs. 14880204 1.05 The Simple Life. 85438407 2.05 Style Her Famous. 61210594 2.35 Desperate Housewives. 99341020 3.30 One Tree Hill. 19570933 4.25 Hollyoaks. 35323759 5.00 Friends. 92742152 6.00 Scrubs. 65702339 7.00 Hollyoaks. 58386541 7.30 The Class. ITV3 6.00 Only When I Laugh. 6.25 Upstairs, Downstairs. 7.25 Rockford Files. 8.25 Ironside. 10.25 Magnificent Seven. DISCOVERY 6.00 Good Morning Scotland. 8.50 Morning Extra With Gary Robertson. 9.30 MacAulay & Co. 11.00 Without A Trace. 11.30 Medical Matters. The nation’s health. Last in series. 12.00 Scotland Live. 1.00 News. 1.15 The Radio Café. 2.00 News. 2.05 Tom Morton. 4.00 Newsdrive. 4.00 Weather. 6.00 News. 6.05 Get It On With Bryan Burnett. 7.00 News. 7.12 Outdoor Conditions. 7.15 FM: The Radio Café. 7.15 MW: Sportsound. 8.00 FM: News. 8.05 FM: The Jazz House. 9.58 FM: Weather. 10.00 Scotland At Ten. 10.30 The Iain Anderson Show. 12.30 Medical Matters. Last in series. 1.00 FM: As Radio 5 Live. 1.00 MW: Nightshift. Radio 4 5.30 LW: Live International One-Day Cricket. 5.30 FM: News Briefing. 5.43 FM: Prayer For The Day. 5.45 FM: Farming Today. 6.00 Today. 8.31 LW: Yesterday In Parliament. 8.58 LW: Weather. 9.00 Midweek. 9.45 LW: Daily Service. 9.45 FM: Book of the Week: Trust Me I’m A (Junior) Doctor. By Max Pemberton. 10.00 Woman’s Hour. 11.00 Secrets Of Stonehenge. New theories about the prehistoric monument. 11.30 Clare In The Community. Colleagues celebrate Ray’s civil partnership. Last in series. 12.00 News. 12.01 LW: Shipping Forecast. 12.04 You And Yours. 12.57 Weather. 1.00 The World At One. 1.30 Quote — Unquote. 2.00 The Archers. 2.15 Afternoon Play: Cobwebs. David Hodgson’s drama about a man who is beginning to get his life back together after the death of his wife, but is distraught when his house his broken into. Kevin Doyle stars. 3.00 Gardeners’ Question Time. 3.30 Creating Writing Groups 2008. 3.45 Giving It All Away. 4.00 Thinking Allowed. 4.30 Case Notes. 5.00 PM. 5.54 LW: Shipping Forecast. 5.57 Weather. 6.00 News. 6.30 The Museum Of Curiosity. New series. Panel show, hosted by Bill Bailey and John Lloyd. 7.00 The Archers. 7.15 Front Row. 7.45 Faust. 8.00 The Moral Maze. 8.45 Lent Talks. 9.00 World On The Move: Great Animal Migrations. 9.30 Midweek. 9.59 Weather. 10.00 The World Tonight. 10.45 Book at Bedtime: A Room With A View. By EM Forster. 11.00 The Eliza Stories. By Barry Pain. Last in series. 11.30 Today In Parliament. 12.00 News; Weather. 12.30 Book of the Week: Trust Me I’m A (Junior) Doctor. 12.48 Shipping Forecast. 1.00 World Service. 5.20 Shipping Forecast. Radio 3 7.00 Rob Cowan. 10.00 Classical Collection. 12.00 Composer Of The Week: Giuseppe Verdi. 12.00 News. 1.00 Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert. Stuart Macrae: Unity. Messiaen: Vingt Regards sur l’Enfant-Jésus (excerpts). Franck: Cello Sonata in A. 2.00 The Czech Philharmonic Orchestra And Friends. 5.00 In Tune. 7.00 Performance On 3. Ravel: La Valse. Unsuk Chin: snagS and Snarls. Ravel: Une Barque sur l’Océan. Rachmaninov: Symphonic Dances. 8.45 Composer Of The Week: Giuseppe Verdi. 9.45 Night Waves. Culture and arts. 10.30 Artist Focus. 11.00 The Essay. 11.15 Late Junction. 1.00 Through The Night. Radio 1 6.30 The Chris Moyles Show. 10.00 Jo Whiley. 12.45 Newsbeat. 1.00 Edith Bowman. 4.00 Scott Mills. 7.00 Zane Lowe. 9.00 In New Music We Trust. 10.00 Colin Murray. 12.00 BBC Introducing. 2.00 Gilles Peterson. 4.00 Dick And Dom. Radio 2 6.00 Sarah Kennedy: The Dawn Patrol. 7.30 Johnnie Walker. 9.30 Stuart Maconie. 12.00 Jeremy Vine. 2.00 Steve Wright In The Afternoon. 5.00 Chris Evans. 7.00 Mike Harding. 8.00 Mark Lamarr’s Alternative Sixties. 9.00 Radio 2 Music Club Special: Backstage At The Brits. 10.00 Radio 2 Music Club Special: The Brit Awards 2008. 11.30 Steve Lamacq. 12.30 Janice Long. 3.00 Alex Lester. Radio 5 Live 5.00 Morning Reports. 5.30 Wake Up To Money. 6.00 Breakfast. 9.00 Victoria Derbyshire. 11.55 Prime Minister’s Questions. 12.30 The Midday News. 1.00 Simon Mayo. 4.00 Drive. 7.00 5 Live Sport. Arsenal v AC Milan (Kick-off 1.00 Gentleman’s Agreement. 82110223 3.15 The One That Got Away. 28441285 5.20 Lady From Louisiana. 90435223 7.00 Love Story. 9953730 9.00 Rush Hour 2. 65918469 10.45 Fever Pitch. 3360865 12.45 Tell Me Something. 33948860 3.20 Close. SPORT The Simpsons, Box Office Digital 7.45pm). 10.00 6-0-6. Football phonein. 11.00 Richard Bacon. 1.00 Up All Night. Classic FM 6.00 Easier Breakfast. 8.00 Simon Bates. 12.00 The Classic FM Most Wanted. 1.00 Classic FM Requests. 4.00 Drivetime. 6.30 Classic Newsnight. 7.00 Smooth Classics At Seven. 9.00 Evening Concert. 12.00 Lisa Duncombe. 2.00 Mark Griffiths. Radio Nan Gaidheal 7.30 Aithris Na Maidne. 9.03 Coinneach Maclomhair. 10.03 Mire Ri Mòir. 11.30 Dìleab A’ Bhàrd Bhochd. 2.03 Caithream Ciùil. 4.03 Fonn Is Aria. 5.00 Aithris An Fheasgair. 5.30 Siubhal Gu Seachd. 7.00 Rapal. 9.00 Coinneach Maclomhair. 10.00 Dìleab A’ Bhàrd Bhochd. 10.30 Fonn Is Aria. 11.30 Mar Radio Alba. Virgin 6.00 Christian O’Connell’s Breakfast Show. 10.00 Russ Williams. 1.00 Leona Graham. 4.00 Nick Jackson. 7.00 Sarah Champion. 10.00 The Geoff Show. 1.00 Tim Lichfield. 4.00 Robin Burke. Talksport 5.00 Ian Collins With The Moose. 6.00 Alan Brazil And Ronnie Irani. 10.00 Jon Gaunt. 1.00 Danny Kelly. 4.00 Ian Wright And Adrian Durham. 7.00 Champions League Live. 11.00 James Whale. 1.00 Ian Collins. World Service 5.00 World Briefing. 5.20 World Business Report. 5.30 World Briefing. 5.41 Analysis. 5.50 Sports Round-up. 6.00 The World Today. 8.30 Business Daily. 8.50 Analysis. 9.00 World News. 9.06 The Kremlin And The World. 9.30 On Screen. 10.00 World News. 10.06 Outlook. 11.00 World Briefing. 11.20 World Business Report. 11.30 World Briefing. 11.41 Analysis. 11.50 Sports Round-up. 12.00 World News. 12.06 The Kremlin And The World. 12.30 Discovery. 1.00 World Briefing. 1.30 Outlook In Brief. 2.00 Newshour. 3.00 World Briefing. 3.30 On Screen. 4.00 World Briefing. 4.20 World Business Report. 4.30 Discovery. 5.00 Europe Today. 6.00 World News. 6.06 World — Have Your Say. 7.00 World Briefing. 7.20 World Business Report. 7.30 On Screen. 8.00 World News. 8.06 The Kremlin And The World. Part two of four. Today’s conflicts in Russia. 8.30 Discovery. 9.00 Newshour. 10.00 World Briefing. 10.20 Analysis. 10.30 Business Daily. 10.50 Sports Round-up. 11.00 The World Today. 11.30 On Screen. 12.00 World News. 12.06 The Kremlin And The World. 12.30 Discovery. 1.00 World Briefing. 1.20 World Business Report. 1.30 World Briefing. 1.41 Analysis. 1.50 Sports Round-up. 2.00 World Briefing. 2.20 Analysis. 2.30 On Screen. 3.00 World News. 3.06 Outlook. 4.00 The World Today. Figure skating, British Eurosport, 7pm SKY SPORTS 2 6.00 Good Morning Sports Fans. 9706469 9.00 Snow Adventures. 9195681 9.30 360 Series. 1799204 10.00 Pool. 3758933 11.00 Snow Adventures. 6488662 11.30 ALeague. 6489391 12.00 Poker. 8589198 2.00 UEFA Champions League. 1253865 6.00 Boots ’n’ All. 1718339 7.00 Total Rugby. 5798136 7.30 Live UEFA Champions League. 1107488 10.00 International Cricket. 2680778 2.00 European Tour Weekly. 2864976 3.00 Boots ’n’ All. 4235624 4.00 Close. SKY SPORTS 3 6.00 Aerobics. 90638371 6.30 Snow Adventures. 92838681 7.00 Aerobics. 76311469 7.30 Snow Adventures. 76323204 8.00 Sports Unlimited. 64706681 9.00 A-League. 36926371 9.30 Show Jumping. 34633469 10.00 Revista De La Liga. 76329488 11.00 Racing News. 60518448 11.30 Aerobics. 69168907 12.00 Sports Unlimited. 34649020 1.00 NFL. 69227117 1.55 U Can Do It. 16702730 2.00 Snow Adventures. 27589488 2.30 360 Series. 45115049 3.00 Sports Unlimited. 65568943 4.00 Pool. 80318240 5.00 NFL. 61393759 5.55 U Can Do It. 34036049 6.00 A-League. 45116778 6.30 Futbol Mundial. 45190730 7.00 Live World Golf Championship. 15830402 11.00 NFL. 17009223 11.55 U Can Do It. 45181865 12.00 Ten Pin Bowling. 64752860 1.00 European Tour Weekly. 95230421 1.30 Total Rugby. 94544191 2.00 NFL. 89822781 2.55 U Can Do It. 73121266 3.00 Watersports World. 46240353 4.00 Futbol Mundial. 52554044 4.30 Close. BRITISH EUROSPORT SKY SPORTS 1 Radio Scotland FM 92.4-94.7; AM 810kHz,Radio 4 FM 92.4-95.8; LW 198kHz, Radio 3 FM 90.2-92.4, Radio 1 FM 98-99.5, Radio 2 FM 88-90.2, Radio 5 Live AM 693 and 909kHz, Classic FM FM 100-102, Radio Nan Gaidheal FM 103.5-105 FM, Virgin AM 1215kHz, Talksport AM 1053/1089kHz, World Service FM 92.4-94.7; LW 198kHz and MW 810kHz Radio Scotland FILM4 Road. 9294889 12.30 Body Of Evidence. 2111632 1.00 Suburban Secrets. 4229570 1.30 Missing Persons Unit. 9705599 2.00 Forensic Detectives. 2400082 3.00 Monarchy By David Starkey. 4083995 3.50 The Da Vinci Detective. 9715570 4.40 Dirty Jobs. 7888112 5.30 How It’s Made. 9295518 Live UEFA Champions League. 453117 10.00 Nothing But The Truth. 50136 11.00 Law & Order. 30469 12.00 Road Wars. 10402 1.00 Caribbean Uncovered. 6284353 1.50 The Villa. 9826082 2.40 Mile High. 3357082 3.30 Las Vegas. 6679137 4.20 Dream Team. 6995995 5.10 Guilty! 8204063 6.00 Blitz: London’s Firestorm. 1730376 7.00 Dolly: The First Cloned Sheep. 4049310 8.00 Deadliest Catch. 4057339 9.00 Future Weapons. 9230681 10.00 Mythbusters. 6564198 11.00 American Chopper. 6577662 12.00 Survivorman. 3641469 1.00 Deadliest Catch. 3650117 2.00 Forensic Detectives. 7252204 3.00 North Mission Road. 7403865 3.30 Body Of Evidence. 2506643 4.00 Monarchy By David Starkey. 9355285 5.00 How It’s Made. 7408310 5.30 How Do They Do It? 2505914 6.00 Mythbusters. 3663681 7.00 Deadliest Catch. 1619440 8.00 Blitz: London’s Firestorm. 1635488 9.00 Monarchy By David Starkey. 1648952 10.00 The Da Vinci Detective. 1658339 11.00 Most Evil. 6565827 12.00 North Mission 9.00 Deal Or No Deal. 74400204 9.45 How Clean Is Your House? 13461488 10.15 You Are What You Eat. 13453469 10.45 Location, Location. 13445440 11.15 FILM: Crash Dive. 25772353 1.10 Deal Or No Deal. 25238049 2.00 ER. 52933223 3.00 Hill Street Blues. 35476933 4.00 Place In The Sun. 41467240 5.05 Grand Designs. 42656730 6.05 Deal Or No Deal. 78661662 7.00 Relocation, Relocation. 17037643 8.00 News. 61341846 8.30 Daily Show. 61353681 9.00 Dispatches. 17033827 10.00 Grand Designs: Trade Secrets. 31988933 10.35 Hypochondriacs. 91590488 11.35 FILM: Sebastiane. 29690933 1.20 The Sopranos. 72630044 2.25 Location, Location, Location. 15922260 3.25 Countdown. 96105266 4.10 Close. 6.00 Live International Cricket. The Duleep Trophy Final. 1742223 11.00 International Cricket. 30117 1.00 A-League. 88020 1.30 Wild Spirits. 17556 2.00 International Cricket. 81020 4.00 International Cricket. 8952 6.00 Live UEFA Champions League. Lyon v Manchester United (Kick-off 7.45pm). 33151556 10.15 You’re On Sky Sports! 513285 11.45 Futbol Mundial. 148440 12.15 Boots ’n’ All. 380605 1.15 Poker. 756179 3.15 360 Series. 137315 3.45 Sky Sports Classics. 98582247 4.00 Live International Cricket. The Duleep Trophy Final. 59537 7.30 French Rugby. 93952 8.00 Biathlon. 45827 10.00 Ski Jumping. 99136 11.00 Biathlon. 79372 12.00 Live Biathlon. 93575 1.30 Live WTA Tennis. 9340662 5.00 Eurogoals. 6159933 5.15 Live WTA Tennis. 1860681 6.00 Biathlon. 11372 7.00 Figure Skating. 71575 8.30 Adventure. 9440 9.00 Wednesday Selection. 869335 9.05 Riders Club. 219876 9.10 US Tour Golf. 544310 10.10 European Tour Golf. 116914 10.40 Golf Club. 183049 10.45 Yacht Club. 175020 10.50 Sailing. 257223 10.55 Wednesday Selection. 256594 11.00 Adventure. 59933 11.30 Biathlon. 93285 12.30 Close. EW website N y e a h d t o t T i s Vis n Photo Scotsma Award Winning Prints from Our eye-catching photographs would make a wonderful and unique gift for family, friends or colleagues. You also have the opportunity to purchase a beautiful print to send overseas to remind someone of their home. To view our award winning photography please visit www.photogallery.scotsman.com To order by Telephone call 0131 (lines open 9am - 5pm Mon-Fri). 620 8278 32 REVIEW THURSDAY 21.02.08 DAYTIME BBC ONE BBC TWO 6.00 Breakfast.* 76147112 9.15 Animal 24:7.* The RSPCA help a dog whose owner is in prison. 8153266 10.00 Homes Under The Hammer.* Properties in Cornwall, Kent and Derby. 10266 11.00 To Buy Or Not To Buy.* House-hunting on Staffordshire Moors. 5063 11.30 Cash In The Attic.* A couple raise money for a business venture. (R) 4283995 12.15 Bargain Hunt.* Tim Wonnacott visits Builth Wells. (R) 6968402 1.00 BBC News.* 11678 1.30 Reporting Scotland.* 39140696 1.45 Doctors.* Eva begins to show the first signs of recovery. 692792 2.15 Diagnosis Murder.* Part two of two. Ben defends a man framed for murder. (R) 9335773 3.00 BBC News; Weather; Reporting Scotland.* 8590605 3.05 CBeebies: Mister Maker.* (R) 5883614 3.25 CBBC: Take A Bow.* (R) 8579112 3.30 Shaun The Sheep.* (R) 3491781 3.35 Prank Patrol.* (R) 4949889 4.05 Best Of Friends.* (R) 9277976 4.35 The Smoke House.* 8467976 6.00 CBeebies: Tikkabilla.* (R) 48150 6.30 Teletubbies;* (R) Tweenies Songtime.* (R) 76334 7.00 Me Too!* (R) 3872976 7.20 Charlie And Lola.* (R) 5732808 7.30 Na Daoine Beaga (The Little People).* 6395247 7.50 Blarag A’ Bho (Connie The Cow).* (R) 3426976 8.00 CBBC: Wild Tales.* 36605 8.30 Arthur.* (R) 5472624 8.45 Dennis The Menace.* (R) 5451131 9.05 The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.* (R) 1352266 9.35 What’s New Scooby-Doo?* (R) 6952044 9.55 Thumb Wrestling Federation: TWF.* (R) 1268696 10.00 Even Stevens;* (R) Diddy Dick & Dom.* (R) 67686 10.30 Beat The Boss.* (R) 15112 11.00 Animal Park: Wild On The West Coast.* (R) 98044 12.00 Holyrood Live.* 39792 12.30 Working Lunch.* 52131 1.00 Open Gardens.* (R) 92860 1.30 The People Watchers.* 3474112 2.15 Don’t Get Done, Get Dom.* (R) 9333315 3.00 Escape To The Country.* (R) 2882711 3.45 Flog It!* 3912773 4.30 Ben Fogle’s Extreme Dreams.* 179 5.00 5.15 Newsround.* 3256215 Weakest Link.* 7368179 5.00 6.00 6.30 BBC News.* 402 Reporting Scotland.* 222 5 PM Sportscene. Panathinaikos v Rangers (Kick-off 5pm). Live coverage of the second leg of the UEFA Cup last-32 tie at the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium. 27957 6 PM February 17, 2008 SCOTLANDonSUNDAY 6.00 GMTV.* 8657150 9.25 The Jeremy Kyle Show.* 5736179 10.30 This Morning.* Phil Vickery creates treats in Pudding Club and agony aunt Denise Robertson offers advice. Fern Britton and Eamonn Homes present. 79063 12.30 Loose Women.* 34976 1.30 ITV Lunchtime News.* 55228 2.00 Doc Martin.* Louisa invites Mark to the Portwenn Players’ dance, prompting him to approach Martin for advice on dealing with the opposite sex. Drama series starring Martin Clunes. (R) 55841 3.00 The Alan Titchmarsh Show.* 2976 4.00 The Royal Today.* A woman suffers complications after having an abortion, telling her fiancé it’s appendicitis instead of the truth, but when her condition takes a turn for the worse, Woods is forced to perform a hysterectomy. A gymnast’s illness perplexes Ormerod and Pearl gives Norman food for thought about his home situation; What’s Your Business Idea. 421 4.30 Golden Balls;* What’s Your Business Idea. 54421 5.30 The Five Thirty Show.* 957 6.00 Scotland Today; Weather;* What’s Your Business Idea. 570 ITV Evening News.* 150 6.30 7.00 7.30 7 The ONE Show.* 1131 EastEnders.* Max manipulates the situation to ensure Tanya’s party ends in disaster. 266 7.00 7.30 Rapal.* With Glasgow band the Hussy’s. 9773 Eòrpa (Europe).* A report on the increasing trade between Finland and Russia. 808 REGION STV 7.00 PM Emmerdale: Heartbreak.* Laurel and Ashley’s world falls apart as baby Daniel’s distraught mother discovers him lying motionless in his cot. 3063 BBC1 Northern Ireland 10.35 Let’s Talk. 11.35 Hearts And Minds. 12.05 This Week. 12.55-1.25 Sign Zone: Britain’s Favourite Fakes. BBC2 Northern Ireland 7.20 Get Squiggling. 7.35 Charlie And Lola. 7.50-8.00 Take A Bow. 12.00-12.30 Daily Politics. 4.30 Ready, Steady, Cook. 5.15 Britain’s Dream Homes. 6.00 Eggheads. 6.30 Extreme Dreams. 7.00 More Than Meets The Eye. 7.30-8.00 Hearts And Minds. 9.00 Torchwood. 9.50 Torchwood Declassified. 10.0010.30 Imeall Geal. 11.20 Freezing. 11.50 Mitchell And Webb. 12.20 Tropic Of Capricorn.1.20-2.00 News 24.* N East Of England: 7.20 Get Squiggling. 7.35 Charlie And Lola. 7.50-8.00 Take A Bow. 12.00-12.30 Daily Politics. 4.30 Ready, Steady, Cook. 5.15 Britain’s Dream Homes. 6.00 Eggheads. 6.30 Extreme Dreams. 7.00 Torchwood. 7.50-8.00 Torchwood Declassified. 11.20 Tropic Of Capricorn. 12.20-2.00 News 24.* CHANNEL FOUR FIVE 6.05 The Hoobs.* (R) 7241605 6.30 The Hoobs.* (R) 4851957 6.55 Freshly Squeezed. 4854044 7.25 Everybody Loves Raymond.* (R) 7309889 7.50 Everybody Loves Raymond.* (R) 8122131 8.20 Just Shoot Me.* (R) 9817402 8.45 Frasier.* (R) 325518 9.15 Will & Grace.* (R) 315131 9.45 Will & Grace.* (R) 314402 10.15 Without A Trace.* A murder trial juror vanishes. (R) 7440421 11.05 ER.* Abby struggles to decide whether to keep her baby. (R) 6715686 12.00 News At Noon.* 24860 12.30 A Place In Greece.* Andrew and Brian are forced to ask Pete and Les for money. (R) 54599 1.00 The Midland: Checking Into History.* The Midland Hotel in Manchester. (R) 12887518 1.20 FILM The Scarlet Blade (1963).* Adventure starring Lionel Jeffries and Jack Hedley. 58131150 2.55 Come Dine With Me.* Erotic dance teacher Michele Cooper hosts the next party. (R) 2005976 3.25 Countdown.* 2852570 4.15 Deal Or No Deal.* (R) 2413686 6.00 Milkshake! Tickle, Patch And Friends.* 75670179 6.25 Thomas & Friends.* (R) 62679421 6.35 Rupert Bear.* (R) 90659599 6.45 Animal Families.* 90662063 7.00 Miss Spider’s Sunny Patch Friends.* (R) 3861150 7.15 Harry And His Bucket Full Of Dinosaurs.* (R) 7275773 7.30 The Adventures Of Bottle Top Bill And His Best Friend Corky.* (R) 2769841 7.50 Make Way For Noddy.* (R) 6553995 8.05 Fifi And The Flowertots.* (R) 1222599 8.15 Big School.* (R) 1244711 8.25 Peppa Pig.* (R) 6266518 8.30 Thomas & Friends.* (R) 3566173 8.45 Funky Town.* (R) 7655841 8.50 Pocoyo.* 1758976 9.00 The Wright Stuff.* 9010353 10.30 Trisha Goddard.* 4348686 11.30 The Hotel Inspector.* (R) 2797402 12.30 Five News.* 29352063 12.45 Law & Order.* (R) 6410060 1.45 Neighbours.* 7093315 2.15 Home And Away.* 1036605 2.50 Animal Rescue Squad.* 4409247 3.05 FILM Columbo: Sex And The Married Detective (1989).* 71900976 5.00 Richard & Judy.* 3112 5.00 5.30 Five News.* 7272266 Neighbours.* Toadie manages to keep his cool in court. (R) 7421841 6.00 The Simpsons.* Marge starts her own business. (R) 112 Hollyoaks.* Carl and Anthony lay siege to The Dog. 792 6.00 6.30 Home And Away.* Cassie finds herself in serious trouble. (R) 7451082 Animal Rescue Squad.* The unsung heroes of animal protection. (R) 7442334 7.00 7.55 Channel 4 News.* 974421 The Political Slot.* 893266 7.00 7.30 Five News.* 7252402 Live UEFA Cup Football.* Everton v SK Brann (Kick-off 8pm). Colin Murray introduces coverage of the second leg of this evening’s last-32 encounter at Goodison Park. 11560150 8.00 CHOICE Jamie At Home.* Jamie Oliver demonstrates recipes using strawberries. See Pick of the Day. 1119 Jamie At Home.* Preparing dishes using fresh peas and broad beans. 2624 10.10 FILM Red Water (2003).* A freshwater shark appears in a Louisiana river, spelling trouble for a nearby group of people. Horror starring Lou Diamond Phillips. 5137402 6.30 Border 8.00 8 PM 9.00 9 PM 10 PM 11 PM ONWARD Waterloo Road.* Rachel hatches a plan to stop Eddie from resigning as deputy-head, and Mika and Brett take their eco-warrior plans to the next level. 4315 8.00 CHOICE Ashes To Ashes.* An alleged sexual assault requires delicate handling when it is revealed the boat where the attack took place belongs to a friend of the commissioner. See Pick of the Day. 4179 9.00 9.30 MasterChef.* The four semifinalists fine-tune their skills. John Torode and Gregg Wallace present. 2957 That Mitchell And Webb Look.* New series of the comedy sketch show. 3841 The Catherine Tate Show.* Comedy sketches. (R) 72995 8.00 9.00 The Bill.* Ben is incensed to find his protege Liam Harvey badly beaten after CCTV cameras reveal the lad was responsible for ditching bags of cocaine in the street. 2711 Trial & Retribution.* Part two of two. As the hunt for Nick Fisher’s murderer continues, Satch coaxes the victim’s widow into identifying Dyer as a suspect. Walker investigates a piece of old evidence. 9247 10.00 BBC News.* 559792 10.25 Reporting Scotland; Weather.* 619808 10.35 Question Time.* Topical debate from Portsmouth. David Dimbleby hosts. 594537 10.00 Freezing.* Matt and Elizabeth try to impress a television historian. 30421 10.30 Newsnight.* 16841 10.00 News At Ten.* 428995 10.35 Moving Wallpaper.* Mel lands a star name for the show. (R) 792131 11.35 This Week.* 423860 12.25 Sign Zone: Panorama.* (R) 5415025 12.55 Sign Zone: Edwardians In Colour: The Wonderful World Of Albert Kahn.* (R) 2076938 1.25 Sign Zone: Lark Rise To Candleford.* (R) 5803193 2.25 Sign Zone: Wanted Down Under.* (R) 8395984 3.10 BBC News 24.* 62895006 11.00 Newsnight Scotland.* 418353 11.20 Sportscene.* The weekend’s SPL fixtures. 130063 11.50 Tropic Of Capricorn.* (R) 144841 12.50 BBC News 24.* 4225025 2.00 BBC Learning Zone.* 4781006 11.05 Echo Beach.* Dan loses a night’s sleep waiting for Abi to return from a date with Jimmy. (R) 143537 11.35 Politics Now.* 273402 12.00 Nightwatch With Steve Scott: Emergency.* 880803 1.45 Loose Women.* (R) 5647071 2.35 The Jeremy Kyle Show.* (R) 4330822 3.30 ITV Nightscreen. 49551 5.30 ITV Morning News.* 46377 Emmerdale: Heartbreak, STV, 7pm 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal. 5711 2.30 The Alan Titchmarsh Show. 49421 3.30 The Royal Today. 686 4.00 Rosemary & Thyme. 4711 5.00 Golden Balls. 5570 6.00 Lookaround. 570 11.35 Nick Hancock’s Fishing School. 273402 Tyne Tees 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal. 5711 2.30 The Alan Titchmarsh Show. 49421 3.30 The Royal Today. 686 4.00 Rosemary & Thyme. 4711 5.00 Golden Balls. 5570 6.00 North East Tonight.* 570 11.35 Around The House. 273402 8.30 9.00 My Street.* The Cutting Edge series continues with a glimpse into the lives of film-maker Sue Bourne’s neighbours, revealing the rich tapestry of life that exists beyond four walls. 7889 10.00 The Big Bang Theory.* Sheldon tries to do Penny a favour by tidying her room. Jim Parsons stars. 32889 10.30 Skins.* Maxxie has a creepy feeling someone is watching him. 5926976 11.35 The Sopranos.* Johnny Sack deals with devastating news. 173518 12.45 Autopsy: Emergency Room.* (R) 267396 1.45 FILM Heaven (1998).* Thriller starring Martin Donovan. 215716 3.25 Transworld Sport.* (R) 7839613 4.15 Richard & Judy. (R) 513087 5.15 Countdown.* (R) 4515006 12.00 Quiz Call. 1592919 4.00 Football Argentina. 2268483 4.30 Dutch Football. 5461358 5.10 Neighbours.* (R) 59825025 5.35 House Doctor.* (R) 19496342 REVIEW 33 SCOTLANDonSUNDAY February 17, 2008 PICK OF THE DAY SATELLITE, CABLE & DIGITAL FILM SKY MOVIES PREMIERE Ashes To Ashes BBC1, 9pm A grimmer than usual episode of the Eighties-set Life On Mars sequel as Alex and Gene try to snare a dangerous rapist and Ray tries to articulate his sensitive side. Jonathan Meades: Magnetic North BBC4, 9pm Adorably gloomy cultural critic Jonathan Meades finds his compass pointing to gothic spires, gloomy skylines and dark primordial forests as he ventures into Europe’s weirder northern climes. Jamie at Home Channel 4, 8pm Jamie Oliver rummages around his vegetable patch and performs more alchemy in his kitchen as he extols the divine pleasures of the simple strawberry. 10.00 Indie Close Up. 39024 10.30 Drama Close Up. 59570 11.00 Sci-fi & Horror Close Up. 42042 11.30 Premiere Close Up. 92501 12.00 Luna: Spirit Of The Whale. 680247 1.50 Save The Last Dance 2: Stepping Up. 79169150 3.30 Arthur And The Invisibles. 331889 5.20 Comedy Close Up. 5195570 5.50 The Last King Of Scotland. 50111537 8.00 Barnyard. 38599 10.00 The Pursuit Of Happyness. Drama starring Will Smith. 35398353 12.05 Gone. 338990 2.00 Close. BBC 3 BBC 4 7.35 The Apartment. 76948501 9.45 All About My Mother. 20376179 11.40 Brokeback Mountain. 95482421 2.05 Lawrence Of Arabia. 35339537 5.40 The Fugitive. Drama with Harrison Ford. 92796150 8.00 Brokeback Mountain. 73184957 10.20 Lawrence Of Arabia. 48014889 1.55 All About My Mother. 36063209 4.00 Cyrano De Bergerac. 50969532 SKY MOVIES CLASSICS ITV2 8.20 Modern Greats & Classics Close Up. 9638112 8.50 Kes. 55534044 10.50 The Men. 15646773 12.30 Father Goose. 95731860 2.40 Modern Greats & Classics Close Up. 1259247 3.10 Requiem For A Heavyweight. 47806711 4.40 Kes. 21927518 6.45 Operation Petticoat. 77840402 9.00 Father Goose. 6642150 11.00 Requiem For A Heavyweight. 6327228 12.30 The Edge Of Heaven Special. 5256396 12.50 O Lucky Man! 20858648 3.45 The Kiss Of The Vampire. 5564025 5.15 Operation Petticoat. 64011545 9.25 Smallville. 10.15 Judge Judy. 11.35 Airline. 12.00 Coronation Street. 12.30 Emmerdale. 1.00 Airline USA. 1.30 The Jeremy Kyle Show. 3.45 Ricki Lake. 4.30 Sally Jessy Raphael. 5.20 The Montel Williams Show. 6.05 Judge Judy. 7.00 Smallville. 8.00 American Idol. 9.00 Coleen’s Real Women. 10.00 American Idol. 11.00 Supernatural. 12.00 Entourage. 12.35 The Office: An American Workplace. 1.05 Coleen’s Real Women. 2.00 Entourage. 2.30 The Office: An American Workplace. 3.00 Teleshopping. 6.00 Close. BOX OFFICE DIGITAL ITV3 Every 15 mins from 6.00am: The Simpsons Movie. Every 150 mins from 6.00am: Goodbye Bafana. Every 30 mins from 6.00am: Knocked Up, Surf’s Up, The Bourne Ultimatum. Every 90 mins from 6.00am: Die Hard 4.0, La Vie En Rose. Every hour from 6.00am: Bratz, Ocean’s Thirteen, Shrek The Third, The Hoax, Transformers. Every 2 hours from 6.30am to 9.30pm: The Good German. Every hour from 6.30am to 9.30pm: Fantastic Four: Rise Of The Silver Surfer, Hostel: Part II, Vacancy. Every hour from 6.30am: Evan Almighty, Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix, Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World’s End, This Is England. ENTERTAINMENT 6.00 Dream Team. 66082 7.00 Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? 30266 8.00 Brainiac: Science Abuse. 31995 9.00 Cold Case. 75228 10.00 Stargate SG-1. 96599 12.00 Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? 99686 1.00 Cold Case. 24614 2.00 Las Vegas. 19063 3.00 Stargate SG-1. 25537 4.00 Stargate SG-1. 42024 5.00 Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? 2402 6.00 10904402 7.00 Hollyoaks. 36710583 7.30 The Class. 10900686 8.00 Friends. 20415191 8.30 Friends. 31760088 9.00 Big Brother US. 62526792 10.00 Big Brother US. 62536179 11.00 Russell Brand’s Ponderland. 20230334 11.35 The Russell Brand Show. 83885792 12.25 Scrubs. 89705716 1.25 The Simple Life. 55574261 2.10 The Russell Brand Show. 95005700 2.55 Style Her Famous. 22451209 3.20 Desperate Housewives. 17332464 4.00 One Tree Hill. 18760377 4.45 Switched. 76756629 5.55 Close. 7.00 Spendaholics. 8.00 Freaky Eaters. 9.00 Dawn Goes Lesbian. 10.00 EastEnders. 10.30 Bizarre ER. 11.00 The Real Hustle Las Vegas. 11.30 Family Guy. 11.55 Family Guy. 12.15 Dawn Goes Lesbian. 1.15 Bizarre ER. 1.45 The Real Hustle Las Vegas. 2.15 Freaky Eaters. 3.10 Spendaholics. 4.10 Close. 7.00 World News Today. 2857315 7.30 Masterpieces Of The East. 7894082 8.00 Michael Wood: The Story Of India. 4505599 9.00 Jonathan Meades: Magnetic North. See Pick of the Day. 4518063 10.00 Ashes To Ashes. 4511150 11.00 Pop Britannia. 3377518 12.00 Pop! What Is It Good For? 7454629 1.00 Jonathan Meades: Magnetic North. 3471087 2.00 Pop Britannia. 4670822 3.00 Jonathan Meades: Magnetic North. 6324648 4.00 Close. SKY MOVIES DRAMA SKY ONE RADIO FREEVIEW 6.00 Only When I Laugh. 6.25 Upstairs, Downstairs. 7.25 The Rockford Files. 8.25 Ironside. 10.25 The Magnificent Seven. 11.25 Quincy ME. 12.25 Lovejoy. MORE4 Sally Jessy Raphael, ITV2, 4.30pm 1.30 Heartbeat. 2.40 The Wonder Years. 3.40 Cagney And Lacey. 4.40 The Return Of Sherlock Holmes. 5.50 Heartbeat. 6.55 The Wonder Years. 7.30 The Wonder Years. 8.00 The Return Of Sherlock Holmes. 9.00 Numb3rs. 10.00 Doc Martin. 11.00 Murder In Mind. 12.10 The Return Of Sherlock Holmes. 1.15 Quincy ME. 2.05 The Rockford Files. 2.55 Bramwell. 3.50 Film File. 4.00 Teleshopping. E4 6.00 Anything Goes. 64844266 8.00 E4 Loves Skins. 58934792 11.00 Fresh Gigs. 64504841 12.05 Scrubs. 66346808 12.40 Scrubs. 51150650 1.05 The Simple Life. 34794044 1.35 The Simple Life. 91558315 2.05 Style Her Famous. 23118131 2.40 Desperate Housewives. 19482131 3.35 One Tree Hill. 49819334 4.25 Hollyoaks. 35383131 5.00 Friends. 12310727 5.30 Friends. 22553402 5.55 Scrubs. 48420537 6.30 Scrubs. Futurama. 8179 6.30 Malcolm In The Middle. 2131 7.00 The Simpsons. 3131 7.30 The Simpsons. 8315 8.00 The Simpsons. 9179 8.30 The Simpsons. 8686 9.00 Bones. 54537 10.00 Cold Case. 57624 11.00 Prison Break. 44247 12.00 Ross Kemp In Afghanistan. 35342 1.00 Caribbean Uncovered. 6251025 1.50 The Villa. 9893754 2.40 Mile High. 3324754 3.30 Las Vegas. 1336409 4.20 Dream Team. 6962667 5.10 Guilty! 8271735 FILM4 1.00 Long Day’s Journey Into Night. 72663112 4.15 Red River. Western starring John Wayne. 63648353 6.50 Life Is Beautiful. 18067599 9.00 Wedding Crashers. 91966402 11.20 Primal Fear. 95446995 1.50 La Veuve De Saint-Pierre. 23734939 4.00 Close. Mythbusters. 3630353 7.00 Deadliest Catch. 6536315 9.00 Seven Days That Shook The Weathermen. 1615624 10.00 New Face Of Marlie: Shocking Story. 1618711 11.00 Most Evil. 6532599 12.00 North Mission Road. 9254261 12.30 Body Of Evidence. 6416844 1.00 Suburban Secrets. 4123342 1.30 Missing Persons Unit. 9692071 2.00 Forensic Detectives. 2477754 3.00 Seven Days That Shook The Weathermen. 4050667 3.50 New Face Of Marlie: Shocking Story. 9619342 4.40 Dirty Jobs. 7782984 5.30 How It’s Made. 9255990 DISCOVERY 6.00 Deadliest Catch. 4016268 7.00 Rogue Predators. 4016082 8.00 Deadliest Catch. 4017711 9.00 Future Weapons. 9207353 10.00 Mythbusters. 6524570 11.00 American Chopper. 6544334 12.00 Survivorman. 3601841 1.00 Deadliest Catch. 3627889 2.00 Forensic Detectives. 7229976 3.00 North Mission Road. 7470537 3.30 Body Of Evidence. 2573315 4.00 World Without Water. 8416024 5.30 How Do They Do It? 2572686 6.00 9.00 Deal Or No Deal. 74477976 9.45 How Clean Is Your House? 13421860 10.15 You Are What You Eat. 13413841 10.45 Location, Location, Location. 13412112 11.15 FILM: The Last Command. 34534537 1.15 Deal Or No Deal. 25273112 2.00 ER. 52900995 3.00 Hill Street Blues. 35443605 4.00 A Place In The Sun. 92509222 4.35 A Place In The Sun. 77053889 5.05 Grand Designs. 42623402 6.05 Deal Or No Deal. 78638334 7.00 Relocation, Relocation. 17004315 8.00 More4 News. 61318518 8.30 The Daily Show With Jon Stewart. 61320353 9.00 Relocation, Relocation. 17000599 10.00 ER. 17003686 11.00 Without A Trace. 57735334 12.00 The Sopranos. 94741483 1.10 ER. 80089767 2.10 Without A Trace. 17694280 2.55 Countdown. 85486551 3.40 Close. SPORT SKY SPORTS 1 Ocean’s Thirteen, Box Office Digital 6.00 Live International Cricket. 1719995 11.00 Futbol Mundial. 62082 11.30 Boots ’n’ All. 19518 12.30 Transworld Sport. 11773 1.30 Total Rugby. 21334 2.00 Futbol Mundial. 1315 2.30 Wild Spirits. 2150 3.00 Live World Golf, Sky Sports 2, 7pm Live Winning Post Special. The latest meeting of the Dubai International Racing Carnival. 9841773 7.00 Premier League World. 5131 7.30 Live Premier League Darts. From the Ricoh Arena in Coventry. 5412402 11.00 Premier League World. 54063 11.30 The Rugby Club. 40889 1.00 Premier League World. 85984 1.30 Race World. 26754 2.30 Premier League World. 55396 3.00 Live International Cricket. 7012919 SKY SPORTS 2 6.00 Good Morning Sports Fans. 9766841 9.00 World Golf Championship. 5911179 12.30 Total Rugby. 1760792 1.00 Thinking Tackle. 1765247 2.00 World Golf Championship. 8269112 5.30 The Rugby Club. 6100976 7.00 Live World Golf Championship. The Accenture Match Play Championship from Tucson, Arizona. 4164228 11.00 NFL: Total Access. 8942957 11.55 U Can Do It. 8028808 12.00 Triathlon. 3135828 1.00 The Dogs. 1918613 1.30 The Rugby Club. 4283261 3.00 Close. SKY SPORTS 3 8.00 Transworld Sport. 64773353 9.00 Aerobics. 60221583 9.30 A-League. 34693841 10.00 Boots ’n’ All. 76389860 11.00 Racing News. 44416260 11.30 Aerobics. 93463119 12.00 Watersports World. 34616792 1.00 NFL: Total Access. 69294889 1.55 U Can Do It. 16779402 2.00 International Cricket. 87821841 4.00 Ten Pin Bowling. 14613452 5.00 NFL: Total Access. 61353131 5.55 U Can Do It. 34096421 6.00 The Dogs. 45176150 6.30 ATP Tennis. 45167402 7.00 Race World. 87833686 8.00 The Rugby Club. 26446315 9.30 WWE: Late Night — Raw. 64779537 11.30 Extreme Championship Wrestling. 85099286 12.30 ATP Tennis. 26426551 1.00 Premier League Darts. 99698667 4.30 Close. BRITISH EUROSPORT 7.30 Adventure. 74402 8.00 Road To Euro 2008. 91605 8.30 UEFA Cup Football. 1089570 9.15 Biathlon. 4296624 10.30 Biathlon. 2057599 11.45 UEFA Cup Football. 4043082 12.30 Live WTA Tennis. 4978247 5.00 Eurogoals. 6126605 5.15 Live WTA Tennis. The Qatar Total Open. 936773 5.45 Ski Jumping. 169334 6.45 Live Alpine Skiing. 312624 8.15 Boxing. 68869063 10.00 UEFA Cup Football. 77402 11.00 UEFA Champions League. 311957 12.45 Close. Radio Scotland FM 92.4-94.7; AM 810kHz,Radio 4 FM 92.4-95.8; LW 198kHz, Radio 3 FM 90.2-92.4, Radio 1 FM 98-99.5, Radio 2 FM 88-90.2, Radio 5 Live AM 693 and 909kHz, Classic FM FM 100-102, Radio Nan Gaidheal FM 103.5-105 FM, Virgin AM 1215kHz, Talksport AM 1053/1089kHz, World Service FM 92.4-94.7; LW 198kHz and MW 810kHz Radio Scotland 6.00 Good Morning Scotland. 8.50 Morning Extra With Gary Robertson. 9.30 MacAulay & Co. 11.00 Bedside Manners. New series. The lives of doctors in Scotland. 11.30 When Pop And Politics Meet. The story of the Free Nelson Mandela concert. 12.00 Scotland Live. 1.00 News. 1.15 The Movie Café. 2.00 News. 2.05 Tom Morton. 4.00 Newsdrive. 4.00 Weather. 5.00 MW: Sportsound. 6.00 FM: News. 6.05 FM: Get It On With Bryan Burnett. 7.00 FM: News. 7.12 FM: Outdoor Conditions. 7.15 FM: The Movie Café. 8.00 FM: News. 8.05 FM: Bruce MacGregor’s Strings And Things. New series in which artists discuss their taste in music. 9.58 FM: Weather. 10.00 Scotland At Ten. 10.30 The Iain Anderson Show. 12.30 When Pop And Politics Meet. 1.00 FM: As Radio 5 Live. 1.00 MW: Nightshift. Radio 4 5.30 News Briefing. 5.43 Prayer For The Day. 5.45 Farming Today. 6.00 Today. 8.31 LW: Yesterday In Parliament. 8.58 LW: Weather. 9.00 In Our Time. 9.45 LW: Daily Service. 9.45 FM: Book of the Week: Trust Me I’m A (Junior) Doctor. 10.00 Woman’s Hour. 11.00 From Our Own Correspondent. 11.30 With Great Pleasure. 12.00 News. 12.01 LW: Shipping Forecast. 12.04 You And Yours. 12.57 Weather. 1.00 The World At One. 1.30 Open Country. 2.00 The Archers. 2.15 Afternoon Play: When To Run. By Sophie Woolley. 3.00 Traveller’s Tree. 3.27 Radio 4 Appeal. 3.30 Creating Writing Groups 2008. 3.45 Giving It All Away. 4.00 Open Book. 4.30 The Material World. 5.00 PM. 5.54 LW: Shipping Forecast. 5.57 Weather. 6.00 News. 6.30 Chain Reaction. New series. Catherine Tate talks to David Tennant. 7.00 The Archers. 7.15 Front Row. A reflection on the career of artist and film-maker Derek Jarman. 7.45 Faust. 8.00 Sovereign Funds: The New Wealth Of Nations. First of two programmes exploring the shift in the balance of global economic power. 8.30 Analysis. New series. Frances Stonor Saunders examines the use of storytelling in politics. With contributions by Bryan Gould, Robert McKee, Professor Drew Westen and Mark Easton. 9.00 Leading Edge. A report from the American Association of the Advancement of Science. 9.30 In Our Time. The theory of multiple universes. 9.59 Weather. 10.00 The World Tonight. 10.45 Book at Bedtime: A Room With A View. By EM Forster. 11.00 One. New series. Sketch show with David Quantick. 11.15 All Bar Luke. Drama by Tim Key. 11.30 Today In Parliament. Presented by David Wilby. 12.00 News; Weather. 12.30 Book of the Week: Trust Me I’m A (Junior) Doctor. By Max Pemberton. 12.48 Shipping Forecast. 1.00 World Service. 5.20 Shipping Forecast. Radio 3 7.00 Rob Cowan. 10.00 Classical Collection. 12.00 Composer Of The Week: Verdi. 12.00 News. 1.00 Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert. Webern, Deirdre Gribbin, Ravel. 2.00 The Czech Philharmonic Orchestra And Friends. 5.00 In Tune. 7.00 Performance On 3. 8.45 Composer Of The Week: Giuseppe Verdi. 9.45 Night Waves. Literary critics of the 20th century. 10.30 Artist Focus. Berg’s Seven Early Songs. 11.00 The Essay. 11.15 Late Junction. 1.00 Through The Night. Radio 1 6.30 The Chris Moyles Show. 10.00 Jo Whiley. 12.45 Newsbeat. 1.00 Edith Bowman. 4.00 Scott Mills. 7.00 Zane Lowe. 9.00 Pete Tong’s In New Music We Trust. 10.00 Colin Murray. 12.00 Eddie Halliwell. 2.00 In New DJs We Trust. 4.00 Dick And Dom. Radio 2 6.00 Sarah Kennedy: The Dawn Patrol. 7.30 Johnie Walker. 9.30 Stuart Maconie. 12.00 Jeremy Vine. 2.00 Steve Wright In The Afternoon. 5.00 Chris Evans. 7.00 Bob Harris Country. 8.00 Mark Radcliffe. 10.00 Rockin’ With Suzi Q. 11.00 The Radio 2 Music Club Presents. 11.30 Jammin’. 12.00 Steve Harley’s Sounds Of The Seventies. 12.30 Janice Long. 3.00 Alex Lester. Radio 5 Live 5.00 Morning Reports. 5.30 Wake Up To Money. 6.00 Breakfast. 9.00 Victoria Derbyshire. 12.00 The Midday News. 1.00 Simon Mayo. 4.00 Drive. 7.00 5 Live Sport. This evening’s UEFA Cup last-32 second-leg ties, including Bayern Munich v Aberdeen. 10.00 Richard Bacon. 1.00 Up All Night. Classic FM 6.00 Easier Breakfast. 8.00 Simon Bates. 12.00 The Classic FM Most Wanted. 1.00 Classic FM Requests. 4.00 Drivetime. 6.30 Classic Newsnight. 7.00 Smooth Classics At Seven. 9.00 Evening Concert. 12.00 Lisa Duncombe. 2.00 Mark Griffiths. Radio Nan Gaidheal 7.30 Aithris Na Maidne. 9.03 Coinneach Maclomhair. 10.03 Mire Ri Mòir. 11.30 Sgàilean. 2.03 Caithream Ciùil. 4.03 Crùnluath. 5.00 Aithris An Fheasgair. 5.30 Siubhal Gu Seachd. 7.00 Rapal. 9.02 Coinneach Maclomhair. 10.00 Sgàilean. 10.30 Crùnluath. 11.30 Mar Radio Alba. Virgin 6.00 Christian O’Connell’s Breakfast Show. 10.00 Russ Williams. 1.00 Leona Graham. 4.00 Nick Jackson. 7.00 Ben Jones. 10.00 The Geoff Show. 1.00 John Osborne. 4.00 Robin Burke. Talksport 5.00 Ian Collins With The Moose. 6.00 Alan Brazil And Ronnie Irani. 10.00 Jon Gaunt. 1.00 Danny Kelly. 4.00 Ian Wright And Adrian Durham. 7.00 Kick Off. 10.00 James Whale. 1.00 Ian Collins. World Service 5.00 World Briefing. 5.20 World Business Report. 5.30 World Briefing. 5.41 Analysis. 5.50 Sports Round-up. 6.00 The World Today. 8.30 Business Daily. 8.50 Analysis. 9.00 World News. 9.06 Assignment. 9.30 The Beat. 10.00 World News. 10.06 Outlook. 11.00 World Briefing. 11.20 World Business Report. 11.30 World Briefing. 11.41 Analysis. 11.50 Sports Round-up. 12.00 World News. 12.06 Assignment. 12.30 One Planet. 1.00 World Briefing. 1.30 Outlook In Brief. 2.00 Newshour. 3.00 World Briefing. 3.30 The Beat. 4.00 World Briefing. 4.20 World Business Report. 4.30 One Planet. 5.00 Europe Today. 6.00 World News. 6.06 World, Have Your Say. 7.00 World Briefing. 7.20 World Business Report. 7.30 The Beat. 8.00 World News. 8.06 Assignment. 8.30 One Planet. 9.00 Newshour. 10.00 World Briefing. 10.20 Analysis. 10.30 Business Daily. 10.50 Sports Round-up. 11.00 The World Today. 11.30 The Beat. 12.00 World News. 12.06 Assignment. 12.30 One Planet. 1.00 World Briefing. 1.20 World Business Report. 1.30 World Briefing. 1.41 Analysis. 1.50 Sports Round-up. 2.00 World Briefing. 2.20 Analysis. 2.30 The Beat. 3.00 World News. 3.06 Outlook. 4.00 The World Today. Connoisseur River Cruise Selection - 2008 A river cruise is perhaps one of the very best ways to discover this mysterious and magical country. It offers both, comfort, safety and avoids constant packing and unpacking. Explore the world from her great rivers and journey through stunning landscapes, past grand cities, charming villages, fairytale castles and lush vineyards whilst meeting new friends and enjoying the comfort and personal service of your floating 3+, 4 or 5 star hotel. CRUISING THE RUSSIAN WATERWAYS A Cruise on MV Maxim Rylskiy along the “Waterways of the Tsars” May - Sept ‘08 10 or 11 nts from only £1349 Itinerary: Moscow - Uglich - Yarosavl - Goritsy - Kizhi Island - Mandrogi - St Petersburg Reader Holiday Included in the price:• Return flights from Aberdeen, Edinburgh & Glasgow (as applicable) • Accommodation for duration of cruise, full board • All overseas transfers • Port and air taxes. Organised by Connoisseur Travel Services Ltd ABTA V8720 ATOL 2954 For a brochure call 0845 1300 788 Monday - Friday 9am - 5.30pm & Saturday 9am - 12pm Email: enquiries@connoisseur-cruising.co.uk www.holidays.scotsman.com 34 REVIEW FRIDAY 22.02.08 DAYTIME BBC ONE BBC TWO 6.00 CBeebies: Tikkabilla* 52938 6.30 Teletubbies* (R) 84984 7.00 Me Too!* (R) 3849648 7.20 Charlie And Lola.* (R) 5792280 7.30 Ag Ionnsachadh Le Blarag (Learning With Connie). (R) 3304700 7.35 Calum Clachair (Bob The Builder). 6354990 7.55 Ag Ionnsachadh Le Blarag (Learning With Connie). (R) 3421272 8.00 CBBC: Wild Tales.* 46613 8.30 Arthur.* (R) 5449396 8.45 Dennis The Menace.* (R) 5428803 9.05 The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.* (R) 1329938 9.35 What’s New Scooby-Doo?* (R) 6929716 9.55 Thumb Wrestling Federation: TWF.* (R) 5563808 10.00 Even Stevens;* (R) Diddy Dick & Dom.* (R) 71464 10.30 Beat The Boss.* (R) 38648 11.00 Animal Park: Wild On The West Coast.* (R) 62862 12.00 The Daily Politics.* 49700 12.30 Working Lunch.* 10957 1.30 The People Watchers.* 3378984 2.15 Don’t Get Done, Get Dom.* (R) 9300087 3.00 Escape To The Country.* 2859483 3.45 Flog It!* 3989445 4.30 Ready, Steady, Cook.* 1497990 6.00 GMTV.* 8624822 9.25 The Jeremy Kyle Show.* 5796551 10.30 This Morning.* Sharon Marshall rounds up the gossip from the soaps and there’s more inspiration in the Friday cookery slot. Ruth Langsford and Eamonn Holmes present. 40342 12.30 Loose Women.* Topical debate from a female perspective. 94193 1.30 ITV Lunchtime News.* 52716 2.00 Doc Martin.* A schoolgirl develops a crush on the irascible doctor, while one of Joan’s old flames comes back into her life, but Martin discovers he is seriously ill. (R) 76919 3.00 The Alan Titchmarsh Show.* Live chat show hosted by the television gardener. Featuring unsung heroes, celebrity guests and lifestyle features. 7803 4.00 The Royal Today.* A patient reveals a fear that he may be suffering from motor neurone disease, which killed his father a year ago, but his problem turns out to be much more straightforward; What’s Your Business Idea.* (R) 280 4.30 Golden Balls.* (R) 62071 5.00 5.15 5.15 5.30 Newsround.* 4603777 Weakest Link.* 7328551 BBC News.* 261 Reporting Scotland.* 613 6.00 6.30 6 PM 7.00 7.30 7 PM 8.30 PM 9.00 10 PM 11 PM ONWARD The ONE Show.* 4735 That Was the Team That Was.* The history of Scottish football. 975 7.00 7.30 8.00 9 Britain’s Dream Homes.* The country’s finest riverside properties. 7326193 The Five Thirty Show.* 716 BBC1 Northern Ireland 1.30-1.45 BBC Newsline.* 3.00-3.05 BBC Newsline.* 6.307.00 BBC Newsline.* 7.30-8.00 Our Wee World.* 9.00 The Tractor Show.* 9.3010.00 Anderson In.* (R) 10.25-10.35 BBC Newsline.* 12.25 New Tricks.* (R) 1.25 BBC News 24.* 1.50-2.20 Sign Zone: Panorama.* (R) N East Of England: 1.30-1.45 Regional News.* 3.00-3.05 Regional News.* 6.307.00 Look North.* 7.30-8.00 Inside Out.* 9.00-10.00 New Tricks.* (R) 10.25-10.35 Regional News.* CHANNEL FOUR FIVE 6.00 Making It. (R) 4111803 6.05 The Hoobs.* (R) 7218377 6.30 The Hoobs.* (R) 4828629 6.55 Freshly Squeezed.* 4821716 7.25 Everybody Loves Raymond.* (R) 7369261 7.50 Everybody Loves Raymond.* (R) 8199803 8.20 Just Shoot Me.* (R) 9884174 8.45 Frasier.* Roz helps Frasier arrange a date. (R) 381700 9.15 Will & Grace.* (R) 388613 9.45 Will & Grace.* (R) 387984 10.15 Without A Trace.* (R) 7417193 11.05 ER.* Dr Dubenko faces a tough shift. (R) 6782358 12.00 News At Noon.* 47396 12.30 A Place In Greece.* (R) 51087 1.00 FILM Angel And The Badman (1947).* Wounded gunslinger John Wayne is nursed back to health by a Quaker girl whose peaceful faith prompts him to renounce violence. Western with Gail Russell. 73011716 2.55 Come Dine With Me.* Web designer Danny makes a culinary faux pas. (R) 2072648 3.25 Countdown.* With John Inverdale in Dictionary Corner. 2756342 4.15 Deal Or No Deal.* 2480358 6.00 Milkshake! Tickle, Patch And Friends.* 75630551 6.25 Thomas & Friends.* (R) 62646193 6.35 Rupert Bear.* (R) 90546071 6.45 Animal Families.* (R) 90639735 7.00 Miss Spider’s Sunny Patch Friends.* (R) 3838822 7.15 Harry And His Bucket Full Of Dinosaurs.* (R) 7242445 7.30 The Adventures Of Bottle Top Bill And His Best Friend Corky.* (R) 2663613 7.50 Make Way For Noddy.* (R) 6520667 8.05 Fifi And The Flowertots.* (R) 1119071 8.15 Big School.* (R) 1211483 8.25 Peppa Pig.* (R) 6226990 8.30 Thomas & Friends.* (R) 7861385 8.45 Funky Town.* (R) 7559613 8.50 Pocoyo.* 1725648 9.00 The Wright Stuff.* 9087025 10.30 Trisha Goddard.* (R) 4315358 11.30 The Hotel Inspector.* (R) 2764174 12.30 Five News.* 29329735 12.45 Law & Order.* (R) 7758712 1.45 Neighbours.* 7060087 2.15 Home And Away.* 1003377 2.50 Animal Rescue Squad.* 4485667 3.00 FILM Mercy Mission: The Rescue Of Flight 771 (1993).* 1901280 5.00 Richard & Judy.* 6716 5.00 5.30 Five News.* 7249938 Neighbours.* Bridget recalls the accident being her fault. (R) 7325613 6.00 The Simpsons.* An avalanche buries Homer and Mr Burns. (R) 241 Hollyoaks.* OB makes a huge decision. 551 6.00 Home And Away.* Cassie faces up to the possibility of a jail sentence. (R) 7428754 Animal Rescue Squad.* A new home must be found for a dog. 7419006 BBC2 Northern Ireland 6.00 6.30 PM REGION STV 6.00 Breakfast.* 76041984 9.15 Animal 24:7.* The RSPCA try to save two groups of horses. 8120938 10.00 Homes Under The Hammer.* Properties in south London, Reading and Telford. (R) 91716 11.00 To Buy Or Not To Buy.* Searching for properties in Sutton Coldfield. 1590 11.30 Cash In The Attic.* Raising money for some new furniture. (R) 4250667 12.15 Bargain Hunt.* Searching for antiques in Barnsley. 6935174 1.00 BBC News.* 15396 1.30 Reporting Scotland.* 63445808 1.45 Doctors.* Jimmi helps an abused teacher. 738174 2.15 Diagnosis Murder.* Old friends reunite on a corruption case. (R) 9302445 3.00 BBC News; Weather; Reporting Scotland.* 8567377 3.05 CBeebies: Mister Maker.* (R) 9188826 3.25 CBBC: Take A Bow.* (R) 8473984 3.30 Shaun The Sheep;* (R) Thumb Wrestling Federation: TWF.* (R) 6387551 3.40 Basil’s Game Show.* 4908532 4.10 Freefonix.* 6755667 4.35 The Smoke House.* 8434648 5 PM 8 February 17, 2008 SCOTLANDonSUNDAY EastEnders.* Tanya’s distraught as Max takes the upper hand. 3483 A Question Of Sport.* With Mark Butcher and Glenn Hoddle. 2990 8.00 CHOICE Hotel Babylon.* New series of the drama starring Max Beesley as recently promoted general manager Charlie, who is about to discover it can be lonely at the top. See Pick of the Day. 1975 9.00 8.50 Eggheads.* 803 De A-nis (What Now?). Eilidh heads to Aviemore to participate in the annual Sled Dog Rally. 483 6.00 Plane Crazy: The Transatlantic Price War?* The deregulation of transatlantic flights. 2377 An Island Parish.* Bishop Bill’s advice lifts Father Guy’s spirits. (R) 667 7.00 Natural World.* The first animal to survive a trip into space. 662261 The Great British Parakeet Invasion.* Wild parakeets in Britain. 498358 8.00 The Choir — Boys Don’t Sing.* Gareth Malone’s charges prepare for a performance at the Royal Albert Hall, but a throat infection afflicting the star soloist threatens to ruin their big day. Last in series. 8667 9.00 6.30 7.30 8.30 9.30 Scotland Today;* What’s Your Business Idea.* (R) 629 ITV Evening News.* 209 Emmerdale.* Laurel struggles to cope with Daniel’s death. 9803 Coronation Street.* Violet goes into labour and staggers into the pub for help. 193 Fuel’s Gold: Tonight.* How to save money on petrol. 8551 Coronation Street.* Sean and Violet’s son is born at the Rovers. 4358 Moving Wallpaper.* The Christian Viewers’ Association complain. 5822 Echo Beach.* Abi prepares for a romantic evening. 73209 7.20 Get Squiggling.* 7.35 Charlie And Lola.* (R) 7.50 Take A Bow.* (R) 8.00-11.00 CBBC. 6.30-7.00 Ben Fogle’s Extreme Dreams.* N East Of England: 7.20 Get Squiggling.* 7.35 Charlie And Lola.* (R) 7.50 Take A Bow.* (R) 8.00-11.00 CBBC. 6.30-7.00 Ben Fogle’s Extreme Dreams.* Border 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal.* (R) 5087 2.30 The Alan Titchmarsh Show.* 96311 3.30 The Royal Today.* 445 4.00 Rosemary & Thyme.* (R) 6938 5.00 Golden Balls.* 8174 6.00 Lookaround.* 629 Tyne Tees 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal.* (R) 5087 2.30 The Alan Titchmarsh Show.* 96311 3.30 The Royal Today.* 445 4.00 Rosemary & Thyme.* (R) 6938 5.00 Golden Balls.* 8174 6.00 North East Tonight.* 629 6.30 7.00 7.35 Channel 4 News.* 763483 Unreported World.* Kate Seelye investigates the rise in the number of backstreet abortions. 930464 7.00 7.30 Five News.* 7229174 Massive Speed.* Chris Barrie explores the world of armoured vehicles. 7408990 8.00 A Place In The Sun: Home Or Away.* Jonnie Irwin and Jasmine Harman help a couple hoping to relocate to France while maintaining a house in Ashford. 5311 8.00 Ice Road Truckers.* A lorry goes through the ice and the emergency services spring into action. Jay transports the heaviest piece of equipment this season, and TJ is investigated. 5808716 9.00 Ricky Gervais: New Hero Of Comedy.* New series profiling British comedians, beginning with an insight into the life and career of Ricky Gervais. 3735 9.00 NCIS.* The discovery of a dead Marine intelligence officer in a motel room prompts the team to hunt for his killer in an investigation which could lead to a terrorist cell. 5811280 10.00 BBC News.* 170209 10.25 Reporting Scotland.* 671648 10.35 CHOICE Friday Night With Jonathan Ross.* Forest Whitaker and Bruce Forsyth guest. See Pick of the Day. 647209 10.00 Freezing.* Elizabeth decides to switch agents. Last in series. 20629 10.30 Newsnight.* 39377 10.00 Al Murray’s Happy Hour.* Journalist and television presenter Piers Morgan and Coronation Street actress Kym Ryder join the Pub Landlord for banter and no-nonsense chat. 8280 10.00 Alan Carr’s Celebrity Ding Dong.* With Paul O’Grady and Peter Andre. 108735 10.50 The Law Of The Playground.* With Vic Reeves and Myleene Klass. 427667 11.35 The National Lottery EuroMillions Draw.* 840464 11.40 Damages.* (R) 658735 12.25 FILM Revelation (2001).* Thriller with Terence Stamp. 770588 2.20 Sign Zone: Horizon.* (R) 3307052 3.10 Sign Zone: What Britain Earns.* (R) 7752439 4.40 BBC News 24.* 9957014 11.00 Newsnight Review.* 126551 11.35 Later With Jools Holland.* 222209 12.35 Star Trek: The Next Generation.* (R) 6459014 1.20 Star Trek: The Next Generation.* (R) 8160651 2.05 FILM The Atomic Submarine (1959).* Drama with Arthur Franz. 7783217 3.20 BBC News 24.* 1331762 11.00 The Late News; Weather.* 111629 11.40 The Brits Backstage.* 569218 12.10 Heist.* 1627453 12.55 Nightwatch With Steve Scott: Emergency.* 903014 2.40 FILM Instinct (1999).* Drama starring Anthony Hopkins. 41658014 4.45 Nightscreen. 1581781 5.30 ITV Morning News.* 70965 11.25 The Big Bang Theory.* (R) 286822 11.55 TV Heaven, Telly Hell.* (R) 615236 12.30 4Music: The Album Chart Show.* 37762 1.00 4Music: JD Set Presents the Courteeners.* 5328120 1.15 4Music: Beat Stevie.* (R) 1944491 1.25 Goalissimo. 3495385 2.15 World Cup Snowboard. 695101 4.15 Richard & Judy.* (R) 500149 5.15 Countdown.* (R) 4419878 Ricky Gervais, Channel 4, 9pm 6.30 10.00 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.* The team investigate the rape of a woman in a coma. The trail leads them to a doctor whose stem cell research is funded by a billionaire. (R) 5821667 11.00 Law & Order: Criminal Intent.* (R) 1146984 12.00 Quiz Call. 32898743 5.10 Neighbours.* (R) 59729897 5.35 House Doctor.* (R) 19463014 REVIEW 35 SCOTLANDonSUNDAY February 17, 2008 PICK OF THE DAY SATELLITE, CABLE & DIGITAL FILM SKY MOVIES PREMIERE Hotel Babylon BBC1, 9pm Tom has a soul-searching, eyewandering mid-life crisis, while Anna is horrified by the exploitative antics of a fashion house as the five-star hotel drama checks in for another season. 10.00 Comedy Close Up. 80272 10.30 Indie Close Up. 89396 11.00 Drama Close Up. 21342 11.30 Sci-fi & Horror Close Up. 22071 12.00 Luna: Spirit Of The Whale. 733919 1.50 Save The Last Dance 2: Stepping Up. 44168754 3.40 Barnyard. 475803 5.30 Premiere Close Up. 3990 6.00 Arthur And The Invisibles. 50342 8.00 The Last King Of Scotland. Thriller starring Forest Whitaker. 85267006 10.05 The Pursuit Of Happyness. 35364396 12.10 Gone. 490965 2.00 Close. SKY MOVIES DRAMA 6.35 Some Like It Hot. 97338464 8.45 The Lost Weekend. 85263261 10.40 The Sea Inside. 53345280 12.50 The English Patient. 10535498 3.35 Oscar Fever. 3873629 3.55 The Lost Weekend. 6750498 5.50 Some Like It Hot. 25503025 8.00 The English Patient. Drama with Ralph Fiennes. 55946551 10.45 Unforgiven. 86385759 1.05 The Sea Inside. 16349830 3.25 The Bishop’s Wife. 49324410 5.30 Drama Close Up. 6284217 SKY MOVIES CLASSICS Legends: Jacques Brel BBC4, 7.30pm Though he’s a pop icon in the French-speaking world, Belgian singer-songwriter the late Jacques Brel is still an obscure cult figure in Britain. Here family, friends and fans pay tribute to his dark genius. Friday Night With Jonathan Ross BBC1, 10.35pm Singer Lenny Kravitz, Oscar winner Forest Whitaker, supermodel Agyness Deyn and, yes, Bruce Forsyth, plonk themselves on Rossy’s sofa for another celebrity chinwag. RADIO 7.25 Indie Close Up. 2332648 7.55 Limelight. 73491483 10.20 The Glenn Miller Story. 42423822 12.20 The Circus. 98257209 1.45 Look Back In Anger. 2547290 3.45 The Greatest Story Ever Told. 48758209 7.00 The Snows Of Kilimanjaro. 3676464 9.00 The Glenn Miller Story. 46561377 10.55 The Far Country. 84921087 12.40 Limelight. 82346781 3.10 The Greatest Story Ever Told. 40354859 BOX OFFICE DIGITAL Every 15 mins from 6.00am: The Simpsons Movie. Every 150 mins from 6.00am: Goodbye Bafana. Every 30 mins from 6.00am: Knocked Up, Surf’s Up, The Bourne Ultimatum. Every hour from 6.00am: Bratz, Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix, Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World’s End, Shrek The Third, The Edge Of Heaven, The Hoax, Transformers. Every 90 mins from 6.30am to 9.30pm: Die Hard 4.0, La Vie En Rose, Vacancy. Every hour from 6.30am to 9.30pm: Fantastic Four: Rise Of The Silver Surfer. Every hour from 6.30am: Evan Almighty, Hairspray, Ocean’s Thirteen, This Is England. ENTERTAINMENT SKY ONE 6.00 Dream Team. 56280 7.00 Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? 28006 8.00 Brainiac: Science Abuse. 29735 9.00 Cold Case. 98754 10.00 Stargate SG-1. 33716 11.00 Stargate SG-1. 46280 12.00 Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? 16984 1.00 Cold Case. 98532 2.00 Las Vegas. 16551 3.00 Stargate SG-1. 13377 4.00 Stargate SG-1. 29984 5.00 Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? 5006 6.00 Futurama. 7193 6.30 Malcolm In The Middle. 8445 7.00 The Simpsons. 6735 7.30 The Simpsons. 4629 8.00 Brainiac: Science Abuse. 31261 9.00 FILM: Star FREEVIEW BBC 3 10990209 6.00 Scrubs. 10980822 6.30 Scrubs. 10971174 7.00 Hollyoaks. 60015795 7.30 The Class. 10977358 8.00 Friends. 54710303 8.30 Friends. 14514700 9.00 Wife Swap. 62593464 10.00 FILM: Sudden Death. 74698377 12.10 Scrubs. 26659781 12.35 Scrubs. 29403323 1.05 The Simple Life 2: Road Trip. 13046052 1.35 The Simple Life 2: Road Trip. 86359878 2.05 FILM: Sudden Death. 23543033 3.50 One Tree Hill. 11493217 4.30 Switched. 63244897 7.00 Top Gear. 8.00 The Most Annoying People Of The Year 2007. 9.00 Lily Allen And Friends. 9.45 The Real Hustle. 10.00 EastEnders. 10.30 Two Pints Of Lager And A Packet Of Crisps. 11.00 Marc Wootton Exposed. 11.30 Family Guy. 12.15 Two Pints Of Lager And A Packet Of Crisps. 12.45 Lily Allen And Friends. 1.30 The Most Annoying People Of The Year 2007. 2.25 The Real Hustle. 2.40 Marc Wootton Exposed. Comedy show. Last in series. 3.10 Bizarre ER. 3.40 Dawn Goes Lesbian. 4.40 Close. MORE4 BBC 4 7.00 World News Today. 2824087 7.30 Legends: Jacques Brel — Ne Me Quitte Pas. See Pick of the Day. 6325377 8.30 Brecon Jazz Festival 2007. 2749342 9.00 Whatever Happened To Radio 2? 4585735 10.00 Caledonia Dreamin’. 4588822 11.00 Edwyn Collins: Home Again. 8891919 11.35 Batman. 6326700 12.00 Batman. 8369897 12.25 Brecon Jazz Festival 2007. 8339656 12.55 Caledonia Dreamin’. 1115149 1.55 Legends: Jacques Brel — Ne Me Quitte Pas. 2291120 2.55 Caledonia Dreamin’. 5831507 3.55 Close. ITV2 9.25 Smallville. 10.15 Judge Judy. 11.35 Airline. 12.00 Emmerdale: Heartbreak. 1.00 Harry Hill’s TV Burp. 1.30 The Jeremy Kyle Show. 3.45 Ricki Lake. 4.30 Sally Jessy Raphael. 5.20 The Montel Williams Show. 6.05 Judge Judy. 7.00 Smallville. 8.00 Trinny And Susannah Undress The Nation. 9.00 American Idol. 11.50 Hey Paula! 12.20 Coronation Street. 1.15 Coleen’s Real Women. 2.05 Teleshopping. 5.05 ITV2 Nightscreen. 6.00 Close. ITV3 6.00 Only When I Laugh. 6.25 Upstairs, Hey Paula!, ITV2, 11.50pm Downstairs. 7.25 The Rockford Files. 8.25 Ironside. 10.25 The Magnificent Seven. 11.25 Quincy ME. 12.25 Lovejoy. 1.30 Heartbeat. 2.40 The Wonder Years. 3.40 Cagney And Lacey. 4.40 Agatha Christie’s Poirot. 5.50 Heartbeat. 6.55 The Wonder Years. 8.00 Wycliffe. 9.00 Agatha Christie’s Poirot. 10.00 Murder In Mind. 11.15 FILM: Foul Play. 1.30 Quincy ME. 2.20 The Rockford Files. 3.10 Ironside. 4.00 Teleshopping. E4 6.00 Anything Goes. 64811938 8.00 Hayden Christensen And Rachel Bilson. 22686754 9.00 Nothing But Party Tunes. 87249938 10.00 Like Chilling? You’ll Love This. 40407716 11.00 Fresh Films. 64408613 12.05 Scrubs. 94603445 12.35 Scrubs. 91750254 1.05 The Simple Life 2: Road Trip. 34761716 1.35 The Simple Life 2: Road Trip. 91525087 2.05 Style Her Famous. 23185803 2.40 Desperate Housewives. 19459803 3.35 One Tree Hill. 49886006 4.25 Hollyoaks. 35350803 5.00 Friends. 46615939 5.30 Friends. Trek: First Contact. Adventure with Patrick Stewart. 50581754 11.05 Ross Kemp In Afghanistan. 712713 12.05 Road Wars. 7767694 1.05 Weeds. 6950878 1.40 Weeds. 8557746 2.10 Caribbean Uncovered. 8274743 3.05 Mile High. 4890156 4.00 Dream Team. 8881323 4.55 Bite Size Brainiac. 72488584 5.10 Guilty! 2102304 FILM4 1.00 You Can’t Take It With You. 27141377 3.35 A Man Betrayed. 4978464 5.10 Cattle Empire. 25316700 6.45 Daniel Day-Lewis Interview. 2925716 6.55 That Thing You Do! 58467261 9.00 Austin Powers: The Spy Who S****** Me. 65872613 10.45 Black Book. 61254532 1.30 Disco Pigs. 9710168 3.25 Close. Do They Do It? 2549358 6.00 Mythbusters. 3607025 7.00 Deadliest Catch. 1580984 8.00 Born Survivor: Bear Grylls. 1662532 9.00 Future Weapons. 1682396 10.00 Fight Quest. 1685483 11.00 Most Evil. 6429071 12.00 North Mission Road. 9158033 12.30 Body Of Evidence. 5765156 1.00 Suburban Secrets. 4190014 1.30 Missing Persons Unit. 9669743 2.00 Forensic Detectives. 2371526 3.00 Future Weapons. 4954439 3.50 Fight Quest. 9686014 4.40 Dirty Jobs. Documentary. 7759656 5.30 How It’s Made. 9159762 DISCOVERY 6.00 Born Survivor: Bear Grylls. 2816880 7.00 World’s Toughest Tribes. 4083754 8.00 Deadliest Catch. 4084483 9.00 Future Weapons. 9274025 10.00 Mythbusters. 6428342 11.00 American Chopper. 6511006 12.00 Survivorman. 3505613 1.00 Deadliest Catch. 3687261 2.00 Forensic Detectives. 7296648 3.00 North Mission Road. 7447209 3.30 Body Of Evidence. 2540087 4.00 Future Weapons. 9399629 5.00 How It’s Made. 7442754 5.30 How 9.00 Deal Or No Deal. 74444648 9.45 How Clean Is Your House? 13498532 10.15 You Are What You Eat. 83112464 10.50 FILM: The Sons Of Katie Elder. 11991006 1.00 3 Minute Wonder: Can You Believe Your Eyes? 92841629 1.05 3 Minute Wonder: Can You Believe Your Eyes? 92760700 1.10 Deal Or No Deal. 25265193 2.00 ER. 52977667 3.00 Hill Street Blues. 35410377 4.00 A Place In The Sun. 26804434 4.35 A Place In The Sun. 77013261 5.05 Grand Designs. 42690174 6.05 Deal Or No Deal. 78605006 7.00 Relocation, Relocation. 17071087 8.00 More4 News. 61378990 8.30 The Daily Show With Jon Stewart. 61397025 9.00 FILM: Meet Joe Black. 57420648 12.15 FILM: Caravaggio. 84118014 2.00 The Sopranos. 15146101 3.10 Countdown. 98861491 3.55 Close. SPORT SKY SPORTS 1 La Vie En Rose, Box Office Digital 6.00 Live International Cricket. 2709358 11.30 Premier League World. 44261 12.00 The Rugby Club. 86445 1.30 Premier League World. 11532 2.00 Race World. 49803 3.00 Live Winning Post Special. Live skiing, Eurosport, 6.45pm 9818445 7.00 Premier League Preview. 8735 7.30 Live Super League. 15700 9.30 Live Friday Fight Night. 76667 11.30 Premier League Preview. 44358 12.00 Big League Weekend. 64728 1.00 Super League. 35052 3.00 Friday Fight Night. 55859 5.00 Premier League Preview. 83588 5.30 World Sport. 52507 SKY SPORTS 2 6.00 Good Morning Sports Fans. 9660613 9.00 World Golf Championship. 1120667 12.00 Transworld Sport. 1643071 1.00 NFL: Total Access. 5540731 1.55 U Can Do It. 60974377 2.00 The Dogs. 5721464 2.30 World Golf Championship. 9388396 5.30 Premier League World. 6977358 6.00 Big League Weekend. 1745483 7.00 Live World Golf Championship. 4051700 11.00 NFL: Total Access. 8919629 11.55 U Can Do It. 8088280 12.00 World Sport. 3901217 12.30 Live International Cricket. 9092633 SKY SPORTS 3 6.00 Aerobics Oz Style. 58238795 6.30 Snow Adventures. 92872025 7.00 WWE: Raw. 76377025 9.00 Race World. 42933303 10.00 Premier League World. 92863377 10.30 ATP Tennis. 98126759 11.00 Racing News. 32613272 11.30 Aerobics Oz Style. 31263731 12.00 Live Tennis. 50700629 4.00 ATP Tennis. 45133445 4.30 WWE: Raw. 17572938 6.30 Live Tennis. 97635993 10.00 Big League Weekend. 87809629 11.00 Live Cricket. 35350445 2.00 UEFA Champions League. 15304052 4.00 British Ice Hockey. 52414472 BRITISH EUROSPORT 7.30 Ski Jumping. 88280 8.00 Live Biathlon. 67532 9.30 UEFA Champions League. 3260006 10.45 Ski Jumping. 1465667 11.30 Live Biathlon. 21984 12.30 Live WTA Tennis. 4171261 4.00 Biathlon. 52280 5.00 Eurogoals. 3667 5.30 Ski Jumping. 5506822 6.45 Live Alpine Skiing. 6369984 8.00 World Superbikes. 864667 8.50 Trial Bikes. 552445 9.50 EuroCRASH! 542377 10.15 World Superbikes. 389648 11.05 Yoz Magazine. 433803 11.35 EuroCRASH! 508716 12.00 Eurogoals. 46946 12.30 Close. Radio Scotland FM 92.4-94.7; AM 810kHz,Radio 4 FM 92.4-95.8; LW 198kHz, Radio 3 FM 90.2-92.4, Radio 1 FM 98-99.5, Radio 2 FM 88-90.2, Radio 5 Live AM 693 and 909kHz, Classic FM FM 100-102, Radio Nan Gaidheal FM 103.5-105 FM, Virgin AM 1215kHz, Talksport AM 1053/1089kHz, World Service FM 92.4-94.7; LW 198kHz and MW 810kHz Radio Scotland 6.00 Good Morning Scotland. 8.50 Morning Extra With Gary Robertson. 9.30 MacAulay & Co. 11.00 Never Say Die. 11.30 Let’s Do The Show Right Here. 12.00 Scotland Live. 1.00 News. 1.15 Riddoch Questions. 2.00 News. 2.05 Tom Morton. 4.00 Newsdrive. 4.00 Weather. 6.00 News. 6.05 Watson’s Wind Up. 6.30 Vic’s Most Wanted. 7.00 News. 7.12 Outdoor Conditions. 7.15 MW: Sportsound. 8.00 FM: News. 8.05 FM: Brand New Country. 9.58 FM: Weather. 10.00 Scotland At Ten. 10.30 The Iain Anderson Show. 12.30 Let’s Do The Show Right Here. 1.00 FM: As Radio 5 Live. 1.00 MW: Nightshift. Radio 4 5.30 News Briefing. 5.43 Prayer For The Day. 5.45 Farming Today. 6.00 Today. 8.31 LW: Yesterday In Parliament. 8.58 LW: Weather. 9.00 Desert Island Discs. 9.45 LW: Act Of Worship. 9.45 FM: Book of the Week: Trust Me I’m A (Junior) Doctor. 10.00 Woman’s Hour. 11.00 It’s My Story: White Girl Running — Melanie Verwoerd. The path to activism of a white Afrikaaner mother. 11.30 Crooked House. Mystery by Agatha Christie. 12.00 News. 12.01 LW: Shipping Forecast. 12.04 You And Yours. 12.57 Weather. 1.00 The World At One. 1.30 Feedback. 2.00 The Archers. 2.15 Afternoon Play: Have Your Cake. 3.00 Shared Earth. 3.30 Creating Writing Groups 2008. 3.45 Giving It All Away. 4.00 Last Word. 4.30 The Film Programme. A review of Gerard Depardieu in The Singer. 5.00 PM. 5.54 LW: Shipping Forecast. 5.57 Weather. 6.00 News. 6.30 The News Quiz. With Armando Iannucci. 7.00 The Archers. 7.15 Front Row. 7.45 Faust. Broadcast earlier. 8.00 Any Questions? From the Bath Literature Festival, featuring panellists including Ziauddin Sardar. Hosted by Jonathan Dimbleby. 8.50 A Point Of View. Reflections on a topical issue. 9.00 The Friday Play: The Heroic Pursuits Of Darleen Fyles. By Esther Wilson. The story of a woman with learning disabilities, struggling to come to terms with life in sheltered accommodation away from her mother. Donna Lavin stars. 9.59 Weather. 10.00 The World Tonight. 10.45 Book at Bedtime: A Room With A View. By EM Forster. Lucy participates in a candid and life-changing conversation. Read by Juliet Stephenson. 11.00 A Good Read. Jazz singer Jacqui Dankworth and former culture secretary Chris Smith join Kate Mosse to discuss books including Gilead, by Marilynne Robinson. 11.30 Today In Parliament. 12.00 News. 12.30 Book of the Week: Trust Me I’m A (Junior) Doctor. 12.48 Shipping Forecast. 1.00 LW: Live International One-Day Cricket. 1.00 FM: World Service. 5.20 Shipping Forecast. Radio 3 7.00 Rob Cowan. 10.00 Classical Collection. 12.00 Composer Of The Week: Giuseppe Verdi. 1.00 Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert. Poulenc: Flute Sonata. Hersant: In Black. Phibbs: Flex Ravel: Tzigane. 2.00 The Czech Philharmonic Orchestra And Friends. 5.00 In Tune. 7.00 Performance On 3. 8.45 Composer Of The Week: Giuseppe Verdi. 9.45 The Verb. 10.30 Jazz Library. Recordings by Abdullah Ibrahim. 11.30 Jazz On 3. 1.00 Through The Night. Radio 1 6.30 The Chris Moyles Show. 10.00 Jo Whiley. 12.45 Newsbeat. 1.00 Edith Bowman. 4.00 Scott Mills. 6.00 Scott Mills’ Friday Floor Fillers. 7.00 Pete Tong. 9.00 Annie Mac’s Mash Up. 11.00 Radio 1’s Dance Anthems With Dave Pearce. 1.00 Judge Jules. 3.00 Radio 1’s Essential Mix. Radio 2 6.00 Sarah Kennedy: The Dawn Patrol. 7.30 Johnnie Walker. 9.30 Stuart Maconie. 12.00 Jeremy Vine. 2.00 Steve Wright In The Afternoon. 5.00 Chris Evans. 7.00 The Bob Hope Trail. 7.30 Friday Night Is Music Night. 9.15 Adolf Hitler: My Part In His Downfall. 9.30 Listen To The Band. 10.00 The Weekender. 12.00 Mark Lamarr. 3.00 Pete Mitchell. Radio 5 Live 5.00 Morning Reports. 5.30 Wake Up To Money. 6.00 Breakfast. 9.00 Victoria Derbyshire. 12.00 The Midday News. 1.00 Simon Mayo. 4.00 Drive. 7.00 5 Live Sport. 10.00 Stephen Nolan. 1.00 Up All Night. Classic FM 6.00 Easier Breakfast. 8.00 Simon Bates. 12.00 The Classic FM Most Wanted. 1.00 Classic FM Requests. 4.00 Drivetime. 6.30 Classic Newsnight. 7.00 Smooth Classics At Seven. Relaxing sounds. 9.00 Evening Concert. Schubert, Rossini, Grieg, Beethoven, Verdi, Wagner. 11.00 Classic FM Magazine. 12.00 Chill On Classic FM. 4.00 Nicola Bonn. Radio Nan Gaidheal 7.30 Aithris Na Maidne. 9.03 Coinneach Maclomhair. 10.03 Mire Ri Mòir. 11.35 Eisteachd Is Labhairt. 11.50 Ceud Bliadhna. 11.55 Litir Do Luchd-ionnsachaidh. 2.03 Caithream Ciùil. 4.03 Aileag. 5.00 Aithris An Fheasgair. 5.30 Rogha Is Tagha. 6.03 Dùrachdan. 8.00 Tiompan. 9.00 Mac Ille Mhicheil. 11.00 Mar Radio Alba. Virgin 6.00 Breakfast Show. 10.00 Russ Williams. 1.00 Leona Graham. 4.00 Nick Jackson. 6.00 Party Classics With Tony Hadley. 10.00 Tim Lichfield. 2.00 John Osborne. Talksport 5.00 Ian Collins With The Moose. 6.00 Alan Brazil And Ronnie Irani. 10.00 Jon Gaunt. 1.00 Danny Kelly. 4.00 Andy Townsend And Mike Parry. 7.00 Match Day Live Preview. 10.00 George Galloway. 1.00 Mike Mendoza. World Service 5.00 World Briefing. 5.20 World Business Report. 5.30 World Briefing. 5.41 Analysis. 5.50 Sports Round-up. 6.00 The World Today. 8.30 Business Daily. 8.50 Analysis. 9.00 World News. 9.06 After The KGB. 9.30 Close Up. 10.00 World News. 10.06 Outlook. 11.00 World Briefing. 11.20 World Business Report. 11.30 World Briefing. 11.41 Analysis. 11.50 Sports Roundup. 12.00 World News. 12.06 After The KGB. 12.30 Science In Action. 1.00 World Briefing. 1.30 Outlook In Brief. 2.00 Newshour. 3.00 World Briefing. 3.30 Close Up. 4.00 World Briefing. 4.20 World Business Report. 4.30 Science In Action. 5.00 Europe Today. 6.00 World News. 6.06 World — Have Your Say. 7.00 World Briefing. 7.20 World Business Report. 7.30 Close Up. 8.00 World News. 8.06 After The KGB. 8.30 Science In Action. 9.00 Newshour. 10.00 World Briefing. 10.20 Analysis. 10.30 Business Daily. 10.50 Sports Round-up. 11.00 The World Today. 11.30 Close Up. 12.00 World News. 12.06 After The KGB. 12.30 Science In Action. 1.00 World Briefing. 1.20 Sports Round-up. 1.30 Politics UK. 2.00 World News. 2.06 From Our Own Correspondent. 2.30 Close Up. 3.00 World News. 3.06 Outlook. 4.00 World Briefing. 4.20 Sports Round-up. 4.30 World Football. READER OFFER Amazing body fat scales Only £29.95 Too much fat can lead to heart and obesity problems and too little fat can cause osteoporosis, especially in women. However, through exercise and a contained diet you can control your body fat count. Our new body fat scales are ideal for keeping check of not only your weight (you choose kgs, lbs or stones) but also for monitoring the percentage of fat (4.0-45%) and water (37.8-66%) in your body. Takes one 9V battery (not supplied). H4.5cm W29cm D31cm. Not to be used with pacemakers. www.shop.scotsman.com/E583 To order by telephone call now: 0845 121 8043 Open 24 hour a day, 7 days a week. Please ensure you have your credit/ debit card to hand and quote JP1.E583 Body fat scales £29.95 36 REVIEW SATURDAY 23.02.08 DAYTIME BBC ONE 6.00 Breakfast.* 2577014 10.00 Saturday Kitchen.* 25014 11.30 Take On The Takeaway.* Paul Rankin cooks a Greek meal of sheftalia for a London man in an attempt to encourage the takeaway lover to embrace home cooking. (R) 4033 12.00 BBC News.* 7367656 12.10 Football Focus.* Manish Bhasin looks back at last week’s FA Cup fifth-round matches and previews this weekend’s fixtures in the Premier League, including Newcastle United v Manchester United. 5888548 1.10 Inside Sport.* 3513236 2.00 Live Six Nations Rugby Union.* Wales v Italy (Kick-off 3.00pm). Jill Douglas presents the first game of a marathon day of Six Nations rugby. 86860439 CHOICE 4.50 Live Six Nations Rugby Union.* Ireland v Scotland (Kick-off 5.00pm). Gabby Logan is joined by Andy Nicol and Keith Wood for the second of today’s games, as Eddie O’Sullivan’s men host the Scots at Croke Park. See Pick of the Day. 35989101 BBC TWO 6.00 CBeebies.* (R) 46410 7.00 CBBC: Watch My Chops.* (R) 7938014 7.10 Watch My Chops.* (R) 7958878 7.25 Arthur.* (R) 7946033 7.40 Mortified.* (R) 6240743 8.00 Krypto The Superdog.* (R) 7979762 8.15 Zombie Hotel.* (R) 9796965 8.40 Dinosapien.* (R) 5323304 9.00 Basil’s Swap Shop.* 62946 10.00 Prank Patrol.* (R) 77772 10.30 What’s New Scooby-Doo?* (R) 4347149 10.50 Best Of Friends;* (R) Diddy Dick & Dom.* (R) 2852061 11.20 Animalia.* (R) 3549762 11.45 Sportsround.* 5497149 12.00 BBC Switch: Sound.* 7542830 12.35 BBC Switch: Them.* (R) 23041946 12.50 BBC Switch: Falcon Beach.* 6242255 1.35 Eggheads .* 29988156 2.05 Ben Fogle’s Extreme Dreams.* 56278994 2.35 FILM Swiss Family Robinson (1960).* Adventure based on the classic story of an 18th-century family shipwrecked on an island off the coast of New Guinea. John Mills stars. 42499743 4.35 Sportscene Results.* 9572410 5.30 5.40 5 PM 7 PM BBC News.* 494491 Out-Take TV.* (R) 328859 Live Six Nations Rugby Union.* France v England (Kick-off 8.00pm). John Inverdale introduces coverage from the Stade de France. 99996697 6.00 GMTV. 8528694 9.25 CITV: Supernormal. 1625217 9.40 Tricky Quickies. 7876236 9.45 Dancing On Ice.* (R) 8666830 11.05 Dancing On Ice: The Skate Off.* The two lowestscoring couples compete. (R) 5904120 11.35 Coronation Street.* Omnibus. As Carla struggles to hide her anguish, Tony turns up and secretly takes her flat keys from her handbag. Alex’s presence continues to divide Michelle and her family. 83788859 1.50 ITV News; Weather.* 15586694 1.55 Scotland Today/North Today.* 15585965 2.00 Primeval.* Cutter sets out to unmask the ARC traitor, but his plans are interrupted when an angry mammoth appears on a busy motorway — and to make matters worse, Stephen’s nowhere to be found. (R) 58697 3.00 FILM Thunderball (1965).* James Bond adventure starring Sean Connery. 72410 4.30 Scotland Today/North Today.* 3746410 4.45 ITV News; Weather.* 9830781 4.55 FILM Thunderball (1965).* Concluded. 3875217 What The Papers Say.* With Sharon Hendry. 200236 Natural World.* The first hominid to survive a trip into space. (R) 911149 BBC2 Northern Ireland 1.35 Film 2008 With Jonathan Ross.* (R) 2.05-2.35 Animal Park.* 4.40-5.05 Final Score.* N East Of England: 1.35 Film 2008 With Jonathan Ross.* (R) 2.05-2.35 Animal Park.* 4.405.30 Final Score.* Border 1.55 Border News; Weather.* 15585965 4.30 Border News And Sport.* 3746410 11.04 Border Weather.* 955101 Tyne Tees 1.55 North East News.* 15585965 4.30 North East News.* 3746410 11.04 North East Weather.* 955101 CHANNEL FOUR 6.00 Cubeez.* (R) 2469675 6.10 The Hoobs.* (R) 7102762 6.35 The Hoobs.* (R) 4714472 7.00 Goalissimo.* (R) 53142 8.00 The Morning Line.* 1034472 8.50 T4: Friends.* (R) 5839410 9.20 T4: Jumper: T4 Movie Special. (R) 1652014 9.50 T4: Kaiser Chief’s NME Awards: Best International Band. 7854014 10.00 T4: Freshly Squeezed. Music by Duffy. 5455762 10.35 T4: Peaches Geldof’s NME Awards: Best Solo Artist. 1933491 10.45 T4: The Hills.* Lauren and Jason fall out. (R) 445588 11.15 T4: Kimberly Stewart’s NME Awards: Sexiest Man/Woman. 3584781 11.30 T4: Friends.* Chandler falls asleep at Joey’s film première. (R) 7743 12.00 T4: Vanity Lair.* (R) 80120 1.00 T4: Age Of Love.* Three of the women go surfing. 93728 2.00 Channel 4 Racing From Kempton Park And Newcastle.* Alice Plunkett and Derek Thompson present live coverage of six races. 12087033 4.10 Deal Or No Deal.* Game show with Noel Edmonds. 1195878 6.00 Sunrise. 3388507 7.00 Milkshake! Hi5.* (R) 6617781 7.45 The Beeps.* (R) 6492830 8.00 Rupert Bear.* (R) 4576217 8.15 Little Princess.* (R) 8509520 8.35 Hana’s Helpline.* (R) 7560138 8.50 Roary The Racing Car.* (R) 1603472 9.05 Gerald McBoing Boing.* (R) 3312912 9.30 Jane And The Dragon.* (R) 5013946 10.00 Football Italiano Highlights.* Action from last weekend’s fixtures in Serie A. 8436694 10.30 Fifth Gear.* The team test the best small offroaders. (R) 4202830 11.30 Flying Snake: Austin Stevens’ Adventures.* Photographing serpents in Vietnam and Cambodia. (R) 87708033 12.35 Animal Rescue Squad. Highlights from the series. 29222878 12.50 Neighbours.* Omnibus. Toadie feels the pressure over Susan’s trial. 97006697 3.00 FILM Beaches (1988).* Drama about a singer who visits her terminally ill friend and looks back over the highs and lows of their relationship. Bette Midler stars. 29126491 5.00 Jamie At Home.* The chef turns his attention to dishes using eggs collected from his free-range hens. (R) 3323 Wife Swap USA. Two wives exchange families. 34472 5.10 FILM Sabrina The Teenage Witch (1996).* Comedy with Melissa Joan Hart. 16470694 5.30 Harry Hill’s TV Burp.* 588 CHOICE Primeval.* The team battle an entire menagerie of future predators. Last in series. See Pick of the Day. 30168 6.30 Channel 4 News.* 410 6.50 Five News; Sport.* 2315491 7.10 The Culture Show.* Cellist Josephine Knight talks about her forthcoming performance of John Tavener’s new piece Requiem at Liverpool’s Metropolitan Cathedral and music is provided by Duffy. 376507 7.30 Ant & Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway.* With guests Uma Thurman and David Dickinson. 267743 7.00 ER.* The hospital in inundated with elderly patients as the result of a city-wide blackout, and Moretti meets his ex-wife to discuss their son’s wellbeing. 4633 7.05 Ice Road Truckers.* A fuel tanker overturns. (R) 6983859 8.00 Coast.* The shoreline of the United Kingdom. (R) 1675 8.45 Duel.* Quiz hosted by Nick Hancock. 397762 8.00 Grand Designs.* A couple build a modernist home a mile from Bath, opting for an environmentally friendly German prefabricated kit house — but first they have to prepare the site. (R) 6743 8.05 NCIS.* The team deal with the puzzling case of a petty officer who has been sent a parcel containing a pair of human eyeballs. (R) 4492762 9.00 Have I Got Old News For You.* (R) 4410 FILM The Ladykillers (2004).* Première. A criminal gang come up with a scheme to gain a fortune — but an unsuspecting old lady looks set to ruin their plan. Comedy starring Tom Hanks. 695743 9.45 FILM The Bourne Identity (2002). An amnesiac man is plucked from the sea, only to be targeted by international assassins as he tries to discover his identity. Thriller with Matt Damon. Continues after the news. 3043859 9.00 FILM Clear And Present Danger (1994).* Harrison Ford returns as CIA analyst Jack Ryan, this time trying to track down terrorists responsible for murdering a senator. Thriller starring Willem Dafoe. 43698174 9.00 CSI: NY.* The team discover the seemingly unrelated murders of a billionaire’s son and a woman found dead outside a museum have something in common. Drama starring Gary Sinise. 5715052 8 PM 9.30 9 PM 10 PM 11 PM ONWARD 10.00 BBC News.* 293385 10.20 The National Lottery Draws.* 652149 10.30 Match Of The Day.* Highlights of today’s Premiership matches, including Birmingham City v Arsenal. 5888762 11.40 FILM Highlander: Endgame (2000).* Adventure starring Christopher Lambert and Adrian Paul. 413781 1.15 Friday Night With Jonathan Ross.* (R) 7101095 2.20 BBC News 24.* 43256502 FIVE 6.00 6.30 6.40 7.00 7.20 7.50 REGION STV The Great British Parakeet Invasion.* Wild parakeets in Britain. (R) 134651 Wild Scilly: Britain’s Island Paradise.* A portrait of the Isles of Scilly through the eyes of its residents. 558878 6.30 6 PM February 17, 2008 SCOTLANDonSUNDAY 10.00 Law & Order.* Briscoe and Green are called to investigate a case of suspected identity fraud when an executive is found shot dead in his plush apartment. 5725439 10.45 ITV News; Weather.* 182472 11.10 FILM Carry On Again, Doctor (1969).* Comedy starring Sid James and and Kenneth Williams. 986491 12.35 FILM Felicia’s Journey (1999).* Drama starring Bob Hoskins. 794434 2.25 The Culture Show. (R) 3371637 3.15 FILM La Nouvelle Eve (1999). Drama starring Karin Viard. 511521 11.05 FILM The Bourne Identity (2002).* Concluded. 324762 12.20 The Brits Backstage. (R) 6202989 12.45 Nightwatch With Steve Scott: Mystery.* 708750 2.30 FILM The Testimony Of Taliesin Jones (2000).* Drama starring John-Paul Macleod. 898811 4.05 ITV Nightscreen. 9380415 5.30 ITV Morning News.* 60163 The Ladykillers, BBC2, 9.30pm 11.40 Wife Swap.* (R) 578781 12.45 Kaiser Chief’s NME Awards: Best International Band. (R) 3837095 1.00 Peaches Geldof’s NME Awards: Best Solo Artist. (R) 5395892 1.15 FILM The Big Lebowski (1998).* Comedy starring Jeff Bridges and John Goodman. 764811 3.15 FILM The Destructors (1967).* Spy thriller starring Richard Egan. 86063182 5.00 Supporting Acts.* (R) 5771144 5.25 Countdown.* (R) 3636989 11.00 True CSI.* (R) 1113656 12.00 Quiz Call. 32865415 5.10 Wildlife SOS.* (R) 59796569 5.35 Wildlife SOS.* (R) 19430786 REVIEW 37 SCOTLANDonSUNDAY February 17, 2008 PICK OF THE DAY SATELLITE, CABLE & DIGITAL FILM SKY MOVIES PREMIERE 10.00 Modern Greats & Classics Close Up. 32120 10.30 Drama Close Up. 80656 11.00 Action & Thriller Close Up. 51168 11.30 Premiere Close Up. 52897 12.00 Arthur And The Invisibles. 713781 1.50 Barnyard. 44062526 3.40 RL Stine’s The Haunting Hour: Don’t Think About It. 455675 5.30 Sci-fi & Horror Close Up. 3694 6.00 Because I Said So. 64120 8.00 The Number 23. 76965 10.00 Catch A Fire. 22656 12.00 Clerks II. 37960 2.00 Close. Rugby Union Six Nations: Ireland v Scotland BBC1, 4.50pm A clash of the Celts here as Gabby Logan joins Andy Nicol and Keith Wood for live coverage of Scotland’s clash with Ireland at Croke Park. SKY MOVIES DRAMA 6.00 Sabrina. 4487014 8.00 Oscar Winners Season. 3931052 8.20 Rocky. 60167507 10.25 Walk The Line. 43901675 12.45 Saving Private Ryan. 78003675 3.40 Sabrina. 6063762 5.40 Walk The Line. 92667694 8.00 Philadelphia. Drama starring Tom Hanks. 55608061 10.10 Saving Private Ryan. 46681410 1.00 The Usual Suspects. 2844927 2.50 Philadelphia. 51657778 5.00 Rocky. 80726415 SKY MOVIES CLASSICS 6.30 The Lady Eve. 42401965 8.10 Funny Face. 58574830 10.05 Gypsy. 25883439 12.30 Niagara. 38732410 2.05 Funny Face. 9449385 3.50 Doctor Dolittle. 52242255 6.15 Gypsy. 30371965 8.40 The Edge Of Heaven Special. 8037439 9.00 Niagara. 5891472 10.30 North To Alaska. 35305149 12.35 The Lady Eve. 2706188 2.20 Once Upon A Time In The West. 60681618 5.05 The Incredible Shrinking Man. 79112182 Pride And Prejudice Revisited BBC4, 9pm TV scribe Andrew Davies, Bride & Prejudice director Gurinder Chadha and a host of Mr Darcy fanatics discuss the enduring appeal of Jane Austen’s classic novel. Primeval STV, 6.30pm Monsters and technobabble aplenty as the Saturday tea-time sci-fi show comes to the end of another season. With nasty mutant scorpions on the prowl can the team still save humanity from extinction? RADIO BOX OFFICE DIGITAL Every 15 mins from 6.00am: The Simpsons Movie. Every 150 mins from 6.00am: Goodbye Bafana. Every 30 mins from 6.00am: Knocked Up, Surf’s Up, The Bourne Ultimatum. Every hour from 6.00am: Bratz, Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix, Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World’s End, Shrek The Third, The Edge Of Heaven, The Hoax, Transformers. Every 90 mins from 6.30am to 9.30pm: Die Hard 4.0, La Vie En Rose, Vacancy. Every hour from 6.30am to 9.30pm: Fantastic Four: Rise Of The Silver Surfer. Every hour from 6.30am: Evan Almighty, Hairspray, Ocean’s Thirteen, This Is England. ENTERTAINMENT SKY ONE 6.00 Pokémon Advanced. 13584 6.30 Pokémon Advanced. 25830 7.00 America’s Dumbest Criminals. 73965 7.30 The Book Show. 52472 8.00 Football Icon. 46033 9.00 Soccer AM. 291472 12.00 Brainiac: Science Abuse. 20762 1.00 FILM: Star Trek: First Contact. Patrick Stewart stars. 37675 3.00 When Sharks Attack. 30675 4.00 Brainiac: Science Abuse. 42410 5.00 Malcolm In The Middle. 9385 5.30 Futurama. 7656 6.00 Futurama. 7897 6.30 Futurama. 8149 7.00 Futurama. 9149 7.30 Futurama. 7033 8.00 The Girl Who Never Ate. 89439 9.00 Road Wars. 69675 10.00 Ross Kemp In Afghanistan. 62762 11.00 FREEVIEW BBC 3 7.00 Sound. 7.30 Top Gear. 8.30 The Real Hustle Las Vegas. 9.00 FILM: The Girl Next Door. 10.45 Two Pints Of Lager And A Packet Of Crisps. 11.15 Family Guy. 11.40 Lily Allen And Friends. 12.45 The Real Hustle Las Vegas. 1.15 Dawn Gets Naked. 2.10 Freaky Eaters. 3.10 Lily Allen And Friends. 3.55 Dawn Gets Naked. 4.50 Close. BBC 4 7.00 The Diary Of A Nobody. 2608255 7.10 The Diary Of A Nobody. 2699507 7.20 Pride And Prejudice. 2013507 8.10 Pride And Prejudice. 3783410 9.00 Pride And Prejudice Revisited. 1436491 9.30 Savile Row. 4562859 10.30 FILM: How To Murder Your Wife. 99756965 12.25 The Jet Stream And Us. 2318502 1.25 Citizen Smith. 4577124 1.55 Brecon Jazz Festival 2007. 44611095 2.25 Savile Row. 1342873 3.25 Citizen Smith. 63262347 3.55 Brecon Jazz Festival 2007. 44089182 4.25 Close. ITV2 9.25 Emmerdale. 11.15 American Idol. 1.00 American Idol. 2.50 American Idol. 3.50 Emmerdale. 4.50 Ant & Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway. 6.05 Hey Paula! 6.30 Coleen’s Real Women. 7.30 American Princess. 8.30 The Planet’s Funniest Animals. 8.45 FILM: Peter Pan. Adventure starring Jason Isaacs. 10.45 Al Murray’s Happy Hour. 11.50 FILM: Ali G Indahouse. 1.30 Entourage. 2.00 The Office: An American Workplace. 2.30 American Princess. 3.30 Emmerdale. 6.00 Close. Peter Pan, ITV2, 8.45pm MORE4 ITV3 6.00 Savage Planet. 6.25 Film File. 6.35 The Rockford Files. 7.25 The Rockford Files. 8.25 Ironside. 9.30 Ironside. 10.30 Home To Roost. 11.00 Robin Of Sherwood. 12.10 Agatha Christie’s Poirot. 1.20 Cadfael. 3.00 Robin Of Sherwood. 4.05 The Wonder Years. 4.35 The Wonder Years. 5.05 Home To Roost. 5.35 Inspector Morse. 7.40 Pam And Felicity: Being Rosemary And Thyme. 7.45 Rosemary & Thyme. 8.45 Inspector Wexford. 10.20 Inspector Wexford. 11.55 Cracker. 1.00 Home To Roost. 1.30 Cribb. 2.25 Where The Heart Is. 3.25 Savage Planet. 3.45 Film File. 4.00 Teleshopping. E4 6.00 Anything Goes. 64708410 8.00 Our Showbiz Mates. 22580526 9.00 E4 Music Awards. 19172679 12.00 Girls DISCOVERY 6.00 Without A Trace. 6.30 Grassroots. 6.58 Outdoor Conditions. 7.00 News. 7.05 The Adventure Show. 7.58 Weather. 8.00 Newsweek Scotland. 9.00 News. 9.05 Sports Weekly. 10.00 News. 10.05 Janice Forsyth Show. 12.30 Off The Ball. 2.00 Sportsound. Including Ireland v Scotland (Kick-off 5.00pm). 5.15 FM: Your Call With Jim Traynor. 7.30 Take The Floor. 8.30 Bedside Manners. The lives of doctors in Scotland. 9.00 News. 9.05 Pipeline. 9.58 Weather. 10.00 News. 10.05 Bruce MacGregor’s Strings And Things. 12.00 As Radio 5 Live. Radio 4 5.30 LW: Live International One-Day Cricket. 5.30 FM: News Briefing. 5.43 FM: Prayer For The Day. 5.45 FM: The Preposterous Files. 6.00 FM: News And Papers. 6.07 FM: Open Country. 6.35 FM: Farming Today This Week. 6.57 FM: Weather. 7.00 FM: Today. 8.51 LW: Yesterday In Parliament. 8.58 LW: Weather. 9.00 Saturday Live. 10.00 Excess Baggage. 10.30 And The Academy Award Goes To. The success of The English Patient. Last in series. 11.00 Week In Westminster. 11.30 From Our Own Correspondent. 12.00 News. 12.01 LW: Shipping Forecast. 12.04 Money Box. 12.30 The News Quiz. With Armando Iannucci. 12.57 Weather. 1.00 News. 1.10 Any Questions? 2.00 Any Answers? 2.30 The Saturday Play: The Voyage Of The Demeter. By Robert Forrest. It is 1897 and a schooner is sailing from Bulgaria to the east coast of England. However, something nasty is lurking in the dark corners of the ship. 3.30 The King Of Light Music. 4.00 Weekend Woman’s Hour. 5.00 Saturday PM. 5.30 The Bottom Line. 5.54 Shipping Forecast. 5.57 Weather. 6.00 News. 6.15 Loose Ends. 7.00 Profile. 7.15 Saturday Review. Presented by Tom Sutcliffe. 8.00 The Archive Hour: Putting It Simply. The way science is portrayed on radio and television. 9.00 The Classic Serial: Fortunes Of War. By Olivia Manning, dramatised by Jonathan Holloway. Harriet waits in Athens for news of Guy. Starring Joanna Lumley and Honeysuckle Weeks. 10.00 News; Weather. 10.15 The Moral Maze. 11.00 The Garden Quiz. 11.30 Poetry Please. Last in series. 12.00 News; Weather. 12.30 Manchester Crime Wave. 12.48 Shipping Forecast. 1.00 World Service. 5.20 Shipping Forecast. Radio 3 7.00 Martin Handley. 9.00 News; CD Review. 12.15 The Segovia Legacy. 12.15 News. 1.00 The Early Music Show. 2.00 Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert. Cédric Tiberghien (piano). Beethoven: Sonata in C minor, Op 111. Chopin: Four Ballades. 3.00 World Routes. 4.00 Jazz Line-Up. 5.30 Jazz Record Requests. 6.30 Opera On 3: Live From The Met. Margaret Juntwait presents a performance of Bizet’s Carmen, direct from New York. Emmanuel Villaume conducts the Chorus and Orchestra of the New York Metropolitan Opera. 10.15 Pre-Hear. Jennifer Martin: Hearing Pictures. 10.30 Hear And Now. 12.00 The Early Music Show. 1.00 Through The Night. Radio 1 5.00 Annie Nightingale. 7.00 Nihal. 10.00 Vernon Kay. 1.00 Annie Mac. 4.00 Fearne And Reggie’s Request Show. 7.00 Trevor Nelson. 9.00 Westwood. 12.00 Radio 1’s Reggae Dancehall With Goldfinger. 2.00 Fabio And Grooverider. 4.00 The 1Xtra Takeover. Radio 2 6.00 Mo Dutta. 8.00 Sounds Of The 60s. 10.00 Mark Lamarr And Jo Brand. 1.00 The Smith Lectures. 1.30 Jammin’. 2.00 Stuart Maconie. 4.30 Dermot O’Leary. 6.30 Paul Gambaccini With America’s Greatest Hits. 8.00 Mark Lamarr’s Redneck Music. 9.00 Russell Brand. 11.00 Bob Harris. 2.00 Pete Mitchell. 4.00 Mo Dutta. Radio 5 Live 5.00 Morning Reports. 6.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Eamonn Holmes. 11.00 Fighting Talk. 12.00 5 Live Sport. Birmingham City v Arsenal (Kick-off 12.45pm) and Newcastle United v Manchester United (Kick-off 5.15pm). Commentary on the Premier League Tom Hanks stars in Saving Private Ryan, Sky Movies Drama, 10.10pm VIII. 1566304 9.00 The Da Vinci Detective. 1586168 10.00 Born Survivor: Bear Grylls. 1589255 11.00 Deadliest Catch. 6496743 12.00 North Mission Road. 9125705 12.30 Classic FM 7.00 Myleene Klass Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 The Classic FM Chart Show. 12.00 Classic FM Requests. 2.00 Natalie Wheen. 4.00 At The Movies. 6.00 Countdown To The Hall Of Fame. 7.00 Smooth Classics At Seven. 9.00 The New CD Show. 10.00 The Opera Show. 11.00 Classic FM New Releases Chart. 12.00 Chill On Classic FM. 4.00 Nicola Bonn. Radio Nan Gaidheal 9.03 Aithris Na Seachdain. 9.30 Spòrs Na Seachdain. 10.03 Rogha Is Tagha. 10.30 Eisteachd Is Labhairt. 10.50 Ceud Bliadhna. 10.55 Litir Do Luchdionnsachaidh. 11.03 Tiompan. 12.03 Aileag. 1.00 Mar Radio Alba. Virgin 6.00 Nick Jackson. 10.00 JK And Joel. 1.00 Christian O’Connell Uncut. 3.00 Rock ’n’ Roll Football With Russ Williams. 6.00 Party Classics With Tony Hadley. 10.00 Sarah Champion. 2.00 Tim Lichfield. 6.00 Fisherman’s Blues. 8.00 Andy Townsend And Mike Parry. 12.00 Match Day Live. 5.35 Final Whistle. 8.00 Football Quiz. 10.00 George Galloway. 1.00 Mike Mendoza. 1.00 The Four Feathers. 82034859 3.10 Catch That Kid. 44019694 4.50 The Hunters. 32626859 6.55 Timeline. 58361033 9.00 John Q. Drama starring Denzel Washington. 83244033 11.10 The Cell. 1354675 1.10 Those Glory, Glory Days. 7945250 3.00 Close. SKY SPORTS 1 matches at St Andrews and St James’ Park respectively. 7.15 6-0-6. 7.55 Six Nations Rugby. 10.00 Rugby 6-0-6. 11.00 Stephen Nolan. 1.00 Up All Night. Talksport FILM4 SPORT Radio Scotland FM 92.4-94.7; AM 810kHz,Radio 4 FM 92.4-95.8; LW 198kHz, Radio 3 FM 90.2-92.4, Radio 1 FM 98-99.5, Radio 2 FM 88-90.2, Radio 5 Live AM 693 and 909kHz, Classic FM FM 100-102, Radio Nan Gaidheal FM 103.5-105 FM, Virgin AM 1215kHz, Talksport AM 1053/1089kHz, World Service FM 92.4-94.7; LW 198kHz and MW 810kHz Radio Scotland 9.00 Time Team. 91847830 10.00 Time Team. 57605149 11.00 Time Team. 57685385 12.00 Time Team. 32237217 1.05 3 Minute Wonder: Mesh. 67502694 1.20 FILM: Escape To Athena. 62817743 3.35 Relocation, Relocation. 35777830 5.45 Relocation, Relocation. 37602656 7.55 Relocation, Relocation. 45662014 9.00 The West Wing. 17964743 10.00 The Day of the Kamikaze. 70288174 11.35 The Closer. 44047743 12.35 Deal Or No Deal. 14189892 1.20 The Day of the Kamikaze. 30159273 2.55 The West Wing. 22101786 3.55 Close. Suburban Secrets. 9060368 1.00 Body Of Evidence. 4167786 1.30 North Mission Road. 9636415 2.00 Forensic Detectives. 2348298 3.00 The Da Vinci Detective. 4914811 3.50 Deadliest Catch. 9653786 4.40 Mythbusters. 7726328 5.30 How It’s Made. 9126434 Street Wars. 59385 12.00 Road Wars. 55366 1.00 Caribbean Uncovered. 6122569 1.50 Road Wars. 9764298 2.40 Road Wars. 3295298 3.30 Vroom Vroom. 7023273 4.20 Brainiac: Science Abuse. 6826811 5.10 Guilty! 8142279 6.00 How Do They Do It? 9169149 6.30 How Do They Do It? 7108439 7.00 How Do They Do It? 6410323 7.30 How Do They Do It? 6499830 8.00 How It’s Made. 7290120 8.30 How It’s Made. 7299491 9.00 How It’s Made. 7280743 9.30 How It’s Made. 3582762 10.00 Mythbusters. 6495014 11.00 Mythbusters. 6415878 12.00 Deadliest Catch. 3572385 1.00 Deadliest Catch. 3581033 2.00 Deadliest Catch. 7183120 3.00 Half Man Half Tree: Shocking Story. 9207694 4.00 World’s Smallest Kids: Shocking Story. 9286101 5.00 World’s Fattest Kids: Shocking Story. 7325033 6.00 My Big Foot: Shocking Story. 3501897 7.00 The Man With No Face: Shocking Story. 1557656 8.00 Monarchy By David Starkey. The reign of King Henry Aloud: Off The Record. 98818762 12.30 High School Dance. 50715743 1.30 Young, Sexy And Rockin’. 50716472 2.30 Hollyoaks. 14470656 5.00 Friends. 29469651 5.30 Friends. 10887781 6.00 Joan Of Arcadia. 65633255 7.00 Ugly Betty. 62491052 8.00 Friends. 23069615 8.30 Friends. 48819912 9.00 The World’s Greatest Comedy Characters. 34978052 12.05 Comedy Live Presents. 71033163 1.10 Ugly Betty. 19513231 2.05 Joan Of Arcadia. 95042231 2.50 High School Dance. 18593502 3.50 Young, Sexy And Rockin’. 11460989 4.30 Switched. 60626057 4.55 Switched. 75332144 5.15 Switched. 69592106 5.40 Close. World Service 5.00 World Briefing. 5.30 World Business Review. 6.00 The World Today. 6.30 World Football. 7.00 The World Today. 7.30 The Interview. 8.00 The World Today. 8.30 World Business Review. 9.00 World News. 9.06 The Kremlin And The World. 9.30 Charlie Gillett’s World Of Music. 10.00 World Briefing. 10.20 Sports Round-up. 10.30 Discovery. 11.00 World Briefing. 11.30 World Football. 12.00 Newshour. 1.00 World News. 1.06 The Kremlin And The World. 1.30 Charlie Gillett’s World Of Music. 2.00 World News. 2.06 Sportsworld. 3.00 World News. 3.06 Sportsworld. 4.00 World News. 4.06 Sportsworld. 5.00 World Briefing. 5.30 Sportsworld Extra. 6.00 World News. 6.06 From Our Own Correspondent. 6.30 The Instant Guide. 6.41 Over To You. 7.00 World News. 7.06 The Ticket. 8.00 News Summary. 8.06 BBC World Drama: Birthing Stories. 9.00 Newshour. 10.00 World News. 10.06 The Word. 10.30 Close Up. 11.00 The World Today. 11.30 Reporting Religion. 12.00 World News. 12.06 From Our Own Correspondent. 12.30 World Business Review. 1.00 World News. 1.06 The Word. 1.30 Close Up. 2.00 News Summary. 2.06 BBC World Drama: Birthing Stories. 3.00 The World Today. 3.30 Discovery. 4.00 World Briefing. 4.20 Sports Round-up. 4.30 Politics UK. 6.00 Aerobics Oz Style. 55694 6.30 Premier League Preview. 81410 7.00 Big League Weekend. 87304 8.00 Champions League Weekly. 94453 8.30 Premier League Preview. 44994 9.00 Soccer AM. 840762 12.00 Soccer Saturday. 44930 12.30 Live Football Special. Birmingham City v Arsenal (Kick-off 12.45pm). 610323 3.00 Soccer Saturday. 534304 5.30 Live Super League. Harlequins v Wakefield Trinity Wildcats (Kick-off 5.30pm). 66156 7.30 You’re On Sky Sports! 968323 8.25 Football First. 38706588 10.15 Football First. 706781 11.45 Football First. 701236 1.15 Sky Sports Classics. 6594366 1.30 Live Big Fight Special. Wladimir Klitschko v Sultan Live football: Birmingham City v Arsenal, Sky Sports 1, 12.30pm Ibragimov. 117927 4.00 Snow Adventures. 96057 5.00 World Sport. 82434 5.30 Champions League Weekly. 33057 SKY SPORTS 2 6.00 Live International Cricket. New Zealand v England. 2806174 10.00 Stanford Twenty20 Cricket. 1617656 12.00 Snow Adventures. 9013033 12.30 World Sport. 1631236 1.00 International Cricket. 8411743 3.00 Live World Golf Championship. The Accenture Match Play Championship. 7184675 11.00 Live Stanford Twenty20 Cricket. The second semi-final. 4897120 2.00 Cricket Classics. 3781786 2.30 Cricket Classics. 3793521 3.00 Live International Cricket. Australia v India. 2781124 SKY SPORTS 3 6.00 Tight Lines. 26331439 7.00 Friday Fight Night. 76271897 9.00 World Golf Championship. 26086878 12.00 Live A1 Grand Prix. 92747385 2.00 WWE: Bottom Line. 92768878 3.00 WWE: Smackdown. 10148930 5.00 WWE: Bottom Line. 27413491 6.00 A1 Grand Prix. 87712149 8.00 International Cricket. 87717694 10.00 Extreme Championship Wrestling. 87796101 11.00 NFL: Total Access. 17947439 11.55 U Can Do It. 45012781 12.00 Rugby Union. 64689960 2.00 Rugby Union. 15371724 4.00 World Sport. 52485960 4.30 Spanish Football. 79387751 BRITISH EUROSPORT 7.30 EuroCRASH! 6444977 7.40 World Superbikes. 8333101 8.30 Live World Superbikes. 2602491 2.00 World Touring Car Championship. 5101 2.30 Nordic Combined Skiing. 3236 3.00 Live WTA Tennis. The Qatar Total Open semi-finals. 47897 5.00 Ski Jumping. 5588 6.00 Live Alpine Skiing. The World Cup meeting from Whistler, Canada. 56236 7.00 Biathlon. 6803323 8.15 Cross-Country Skiing. 190120 9.00 Live Alpine Skiing. World Cup coverage from Whistler. 142859 9.45 World Superbikes. 716168 11.15 MotoGP. 627694 12.00 Luge. 91182 1.00 Close. READER OFFER Three pairs of beautiful genuine cultured pearls stud earrings Only £24.95 The natural, iridescent beauty of freshwater, cultured pearls is captured in this set of three pairs of stud earrings. An elegant and timeless choice for any woman of style, the set features a pair of classic white pearl; mysterious black pearl and exotic mauve-pink pearl studs. Each Ø5-5.5mm oriental pearl is painstakingly chosen for its lustre and symmetry. With 9ct gold posts and butterflies, presented in an attractive gift box. www.shop.scotsman.com/J832 To order by telephone call now: 0845 121 8043 Open 24 hour a day, 7 days a week. 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