The British Academy Film Awards 2020
9pm, BBC One
Graham Norton returns as our sardonic guide to this year’s film Baftas. Todd Phillips’s Joker leads the pack with 11 nominations and Martin Scorsese’s The Irishman follows with 10 potential gongs, but there is a worrying lack of diversity among the nominations, leading to Baftas’ film head positing a rethinking of the voting process. This year’s attendees will nonetheless be in for an evening of graceful losses and lengthy acceptance speeches. Ammar Kalia
Sir David Jason at 80: A Lovely Jubbly Celebration
5.10pm, BBC One
This short but sweet birthday tribute rifles through the BBC archives to retell the story of how David Jason became the UK’s most beloved comic actor. Presented by his Still Open All Hours co-star Johnny Vegas, it promises Only Fools rarities among some more familiar clips. Graeme Virtue
Top Gear
8pm, BBC Two
Freddie Flintoff, Paddy McGuinness and Chris Harris embark upon another series of carbon emissions-spewing races. This week sees comedian Romesh Ranganathan as the studio guest, while Harris (inexplicably) races a fighter jet in a McLaren and McGuinness pooters around in a four-by-four. AK
SAS: Who Dares Wins
9pm, Channel 4
With the end in sight, the 10 recruits face the dreaded Escape and Evasion phase of the process, which neatly combines profound physical hardship with extreme psychological torment. Fighting exhaustion, cold and hunger, who will withstand sustained interrogation? As guiltily compelling as ever. Phil Harrison
Art on the BBC: The Story of the Nude
9pm, BBC Four
Art historian Kate Bryan takes a fascinating dive into the BBC archives to look at how the broadcaster’s depiction of art has evolved over the years. Beginning with the nude, Bray deftly explores how the (usually female) body has been used to break convention. AK
Saturday Night Live
9pm, Sky Comedy
For the first time in 14 years, the US’s veteran topical sketch spectacular is shown here in full, airing on a one-night delay. But British viewers might find this week’s guest host off-puttingly obscure: you are in the sturdy hands of American football star, the Houston Texans defensive end JJ Watt. Jack Seale
Film choice
Prisoners, 11pm, Channel 4
Denis Villeneuve’s at times overwrought but horribly gripping drama stars Hugh Jackman and Terrence Howard as fathers of kidnapped girls who, when prime suspect Paul Dano is released, take the law violently into their own hands. Jake Gyllenhaal is the detective trying to unravel an exceedingly grim case. Paul Howlett
Live sport
Tennis: Australian Open 8.30am, Eurosport 1. The men’s singles final from Melbourne Park.
Six Nations Rugby Union: France v England 2.30pm, BBC One. The final fixture of the opening weekend, at the Stade de France.
NFL: Super Bowl – Kansas City Chiefs v San Francisco 49ers 11.25pm, BBC One. At Hard Rock Stadium in Miami.