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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
Phil Harrison, Graeme Virtue, Jack Seale and Simon Wardell

TV tonight: a sobering film about the rise of extreme weather

The aftermath in Valencia … Why Cities Flood: Spain's Deadly Disaster.
The aftermath in Valencia … Why Cities Flood: Spain's Deadly Disaster. Photograph: BBC/Windfall Films/Pond 5

Why Cities Flood: Spain’s Deadly Disaster

9pm, BBC One
The anatomy of a modern climate catastrophe is revealed in this sobering documentary about the appalling floods that hit Valencia in October 2024. The first part of the film deals with the events as they were experienced by the citizens, 228 of whom didn’t live to tell the tale. But there’s also an insight into how humanity will have to adapt to increasingly volatile weather as failures in forecasting and preparation are laid bare. Phil Harrison

Bake Off: The Professionals

8pm, Channel 4
S’mores the merrier: this week the remaining pastry chef duos must come up with their own spin on the gooey US campfire treat while also rustling up a batch of creamy framboisier slices. If all that weren’t stress-inducing enough, the showpiece challenge requires them to evoke their favourite visual artists – in spectacular fashion. Graeme Virtue

What It Feels Like for a Girl

9pm, BBC Three
Byron (Ellis Howard) hits rock bottom as the bracing dramatisation of Paris Lees’ memoir delivers a punchy final double bill. A scary stint in prison features a nice guest role for Rhys Connah (Ryan in Happy Valley) as a bully with hidden vulnerabilities. Then Byron emerges – with nowhere to go but up. Jack Seale

In the Footsteps of Killers

10pm, Channel 4
Another cold case reopened by criminologist David Wilson, detective Graham Hill and moonlighting actor Emilia Fox. This time, it’s the unexplained 2018 disappearance of Georgina Gharsallah, whose mother, Andrea, has campaigned to uncover the truth about her daughter’s fate. Was she abducted? PH

Storyville: The Wolves Always Come at Night

10pm, BBC Four
A gently lyrical film following Mongolian farmers Davaa and Zaya, who are forced to move to the city after a sandstorm (arguably caused by climate breakdown) kills their flock of sheep. It’s not a straight narrative – the tale is told in an often dreamlike style, emphasising the connection between the people and their land. PH

Transaction

10.05pm, ITV2
A fun new sitcom by Jordan Gray, Transaction makes salient points about inclusion while remaining enjoyably snarky. Gray is Olivia, a transgender woman and happily jobless slacker who is persuaded to do a few shifts at a supermarket because its boss, Simon (Nick Frost), is under fire for an (accidentally) transphobic advertising campaign. PH

Film choice

Creed (Ryan Coogler, 2015), 9pm, ITV4
This limber 2015 film is the second in a string of fruitful collaborations between director Ryan Coogler and actor Michael B Jordan – it set in train a new run of boxing dramas set in Rocky World. Jordan plays Adonis Johnson, the unknown son of Rocky Balboa’s opponent turned friend Apollo Creed. Adonis has the fight gene, too, so he turns up in Philadelphia to get Rocky (a convincingly weary Sylvester Stallone) to train him. There’s enough ring work for the action fan, but it’s also an exploration of family ties and the meaning of legacy. Simon Wardell

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