© Netflix Every now and again a TV show comes out of the blue with a relatively unknown cast and is a surprise success. ' Stranger Things ' springs to mind. ' Beef ' is another. Now Netflix has done it again with 'Baby Reindeer'. © Netflix Based on its star Richard Gadd's acclaimed autobiographical one man show of the same name , it's a twisted tale about stalking. Constantly bucking expectations, the show strays into territory the viewer might find disturbing and surprising, subverting usual victim narratives. Drawing on his own experience of being hounded in real life, Gadd plays a fictionalised version of himself, Donny Dunn - a struggling stand up comedian who works during the day in a London pub. A wannabe Vic Reeves, he's a reserved guy offstage who is still on good terms with an ex girlfriend, Shalom Brune-Franklin's Keeley's mum. Nina Sosanya's Liz is even his landlady. © Netflix While working on a shift, he takes pity on a distra
© Warner Bros Pictures Just when you thought Denis Villeneuve could not better ' Dune, Part One ,' he comes along and delivers a gobsmacking Part Two. Epic in tone and sweep, the film triggers memories of ' Lawrence of Arabia ,' ' Star Wars ,' ' Persona ' and ' The Last Temptation of Christ '. Huge in a scale and narrative ambition, it somehow avoids veering into the outlandish. In Villeneuve's previous installment, Timothee Chalamet's noble Paul Atreides and his pregnant mother, Rebecca Ferguson's Lady Jessica wound up on Arrakis, a desert planet infamous for its giant sandworms but also coveted because of its production of the valuable commodity, spice. © Warner Bros Pictures In the company of local tribal warriors known as the Fremen, Paul and Lady Jessica are trying to process the wiping out of their noble family, the House of Atreides by the fascistic House of Harkonnen. Those enemies are unaware that Paul and Lady Jessica are al