
Who you gonna call? Time for the Midwife Cinematic Universe to shine
Since 2012, when they made their screen debut, they have been drawn into frequent races against time in which the stakes are all too clear. They don't always wear capes, but they often have one on standby.
Look, the
Marvel Cinematic Universe
(MCU) has had a good run, but we have the (Call the) Midwife Cinematic Universe now. Who needs Iron Man when there's Sister Monica Joan? She's much more fun.
That's possibly not the rationale behind the
BBC's
decision, announced this week, to commission both a Call the Midwife feature film and a spin-off prequel series set during the second World War.
READ MORE
Still, these baby steps towards transforming a television ratings magnet into a midwifery-based franchise – a new MCU – are intriguing. Has the series up to the end of the 15th season, spanning the years 1957 to 1971, which will be shown in 2026, merely been Phase One in the Maternity Saga? I think we need to be told.
There are a few unknowns here and a few misconceptions. I groan when I recall the continuity announcer who introduced one episode with the words 'and now for something more sedate'. The process of bringing this hit Sunday-night period drama to the big screen will inevitably be compared to the journey made by Downton Abbey, but Call the Midwife is a very different beast.
RTÉ One
is still on the 13th season, with next week's episode serving up a fairly typical mix of tetanus, slum landlords and destabilising grief. The 14th run, which aired on BBC One earlier this year, was notable for the loss of Nigel the beloved cat, which admittedly sounds like the ultimate teatime plot until you learn he has succumbed to Weil's disease, an infection spread by rat urine, and that Nurse Rosalind is also starting to feel a touch unwell.
Call the Midwife surfaces the miseries and outrages of the 20th century in a way few other programmes do. I'm still getting over a fifth-season episode that featured both a string of vicious street attacks on women and a kitchen-floor uterine inversion that really should have been avoided, even in 1961.
The first episode of series nine, which aired in the innocent month of January 2020, was another roller coaster. It gave us bed bugs, diphtheria, a callous priest, a baby found in a dustbin and, for light relief, the death of Winston Churchill.
In the 12th season, set in 1968, handyman Fred and haberdashery owner Violet argue about a tin of bright purple paint, which seems innocuous, yet before the end credits it has been used to daub xenophobic signs on a racist march stoked by Enoch Powell's Rivers of Blood speech.
A Call The Midwife film and prequel TV series set during the second World War are being made, the BBC has announced. Photograph: BBC
But the Christmas specials, those will be all heartwarming carols and uplifting festive births, right? Not quite. The 2021 edition, for instance, found space for intrapartum haemorrhage, infant heroin withdrawal and the treatment of a swollen eye with leeches. This episode was swiftly followed by one in which Nurse Nancy, played by the Irish actor Megan Cusack, has a surprise encounter with a gangrenous leg.
None of this is to say that Call the Midwife isn't heartwarming and uplifting. Nor does it undercut its achievement to conclude that however stark and grim its depictions of societal problems, the reality of mid-century life in Poplar, in east London, was almost certainly less kind.
But the secret of its enduring popularity isn't complicated. It's set in a world of disease, deprivation and rampant property development in which women work with other women, and some men, to make things just a little better. And, despite its many traumas, the show isn't visually graphic. It doesn't need to be – it's all there in the writing.
Heidi Thomas, who created it, doesn't seem to be short of ideas about how to extend its life, notwithstanding the fact that the order of nuns at its heart no longer practised midwifery in that part of London after 1976.
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The regular series – which will have a 16th season 'in due course' – is already a powerful reminder that even in the most chaotic of circumstances, amid the most indifferent of external forces, babies continue to be born.
A wartime prequel, with bombs raining down, can reinforce that theme. It is, after all, one that remains dismally relevant today.
Meanwhile, the cast will be hotfooting it out of Poplar for their big feature debut. If I had to guess, I'd say it will lure an audience to cinemas at least as fast as a guest character with the line 'I'm not having the baby in the lift' will have her baby in the lift.
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The Irish Sun
6 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
From Love Island to BGT and Clarkson's Farm, we reveal the top 25 TV shows of the last 25 years – but do you agree?
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RM The Other Side Of Jimmy Savile, 2012 25 The Other Side Of Jimmy Savile exploded the myth of the once-adored presenter Credit: PA:Press Association ARGUABLY one of the biggest landmark documentaries of the century, in 50 minutes this show exploded the myth of the once-adored presenter. Advertisement It sparked a wider police probe revealing Savile to be a predatory paedophile whose decades of sex attacks were facilitated by him being one of the BBC's biggest stars. RM Peaky Blinders 2013-2022 Trailer for the first series of Peaky Blinders 25 Peaky Blinders blew audiences away and sparked its own cultural phenomenon Credit: Alamy WHEN this new breed of period drama arrived, it blew audiences away and sparked its own cultural phenomenon. From copycat shows to inspiring a generation of hipsters, the working class folk at the centre of this story about Brummie gangsters were smarter, sexier and better- dressed than any previous TV series had portrayed. 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Extra.ie
12 hours ago
- Extra.ie
Strictly fans 'disgusted' by controversial lineup addition
Strictly Come Dancing fans have been left 'disgusted' after a 'known bigot' was confirmed for this year's lineup. Thomas Skinner, who is best known for appearing on The Apprentice, was revealed as one of the new contestants on Thursday but fans are not happy due to his recent social media posts. Skinner has gained fame among right-wing followers for his 'anti-woke' rhetoric and the large paragraphs he has been regularly posting on his Twitter/X account about being 'a normal bloke'. Thomas Skinner on The Apprentice. Pic: Ray Burmiston/BBC Recently, the 34-year-old spent a night out with US Vice-President JD Vance with a barbecue in England. Strictly fans have voiced their complaints on social media in response to Skinner earning a place on the hit BBC show. One user wrote: 'Disgusted that grifter Tom Skinner has got the #Strictly gig. Have the BBC not looked at his social media output?' Here is a pic of Me and Vice President @JDVance towards the end of the night after a few beers🍻 I'm overdressed in my suit, but when the VP invites you to a BBQ, you don't risk turning up in shorts an flip-flops😂 Cracking night in the beautiful English countryside with JD, his… — Thomas Skinner ⚒ (@iamtomskinner) August 12, 2025 Another said: 'Oh dear God no. You really think platforming a known bigot is the right way to go for a show which has already had more than its share of troubles?' A third added: 'Platforming this bloke – who is in the middle of a pivot to right-wing mouthpiece like RIGHT NOW – in the current political climate is absurdly stupid.' Yet another shared: 'The BBC and ITV's obsession with platforming right wing grifters (never left wing) plays a major role in the current political landscape. They know exactly what they're doing.' Plenty of other fans labelled the addition as 'shameful', 'disgusting' and 'sickening'. Skinner's political views have earned him hundreds of thousands of followers online as well as the unlikely friendship with JD Vance. Last week, he tweeted: 'Here is a pic of Me and Vice President @JDVance towards the end of the night after a few beers I'm overdressed in my suit, but when the VP invites you to a BBQ, you don't risk turning up in shorts an flip-flops Cracking night in the beautiful English countryside with JD, his friends and family. Once in a lifetime. Bosh!' In a second tweet, he added: 'When the Vice President of the USA invites ya for a BBQ an beers, you say yes. Unreal night with JD and his friends n family. He was a proper gent. Lots of laughs and some fantastic food. A brilliant night, one to tell the grand kids about mate. Bosh!' Skinner will join the likes of Game of Thrones star Kristian Nairn, former footballer Karen Carney, Geordie Shore star Vicky Pattison, Neighbours actor Stefan Dennis and TikToker George Clarke on the show. Strictly, hosted by Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly, will return to BBC One and BBC iPlayer in September, with Craig Revel Horwood, Motsi Mabuse, Anton Du Beke and Shirley Ballas as judges.


Irish Times
12 hours ago
- Irish Times
Terence Stamp, star of Superman films, dies aged 87
Terence Stamp, who made his name as an actor in 1960s London and went on to play the arch-villain General Zod in the Hollywood hits Superman and Superman II, has died aged 87, his family said on Sunday. The Oscar-nominated actor starred in films ranging from Pier Paolo Pasolini's Theorem in 1968 and A Season in Hell in 1971 to The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert in 1994 in which he played a transgender woman. The family said that Stamp died on Sunday morning. 'He leaves behind an extraordinary body of work, both as an actor and as a writer that will continue to touch and inspire people for years to come,' the family said. 'We ask for privacy at this sad time.' READ MORE Born in London's East End in 1938, the son of a tugboat stoker, he endured the bombing of the city during the second World War before leaving school to work initially in advertising, eventually winning a scholarship to go to drama school. Famous for his good looks and impeccable dress sense, he formed one of Britain's most glamorous couples with Julie Christie, with whom he starred in Far From the Madding Crowd in 1967. He also dated the model Jean Shrimpton and was chosen as a muse by photographer David Bailey. After failing to land the role of James Bond to succeed Sean Connery, he appeared in Italian films and worked with Federico Fellini in the late 1960s. He dropped out of the limelight and studied yoga in India before landing his most high-profile role – as General Zod, the megalomaniacal leader of the Kryptonians, in Superman in 1978 and its sequel in 1980. He went on to appear in a string of other films, including Valkyrie with Tom Cruise in 2008, The Adjustment Bureau with Matt Damon in 2011 and movies directed by Tim Burton. – Reuters