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Picture of a TV show: Secret Diary of a Call Girl
Picture of a TV show: A Discovery of Witches
Picture of a TV show: Master of None
Picture of a TV show: High Fidelity
Picture of a TV show: Hollywood
Picture of a TV show: The Hour
Picture of a TV show: Sex Education
Picture of a TV show: Bridgerton
Picture of a TV show: Unbelievable
Picture of a TV show: Mr. Robot
Picture of a TV show: Taboo
Picture of a TV show: The Queen's Gambit
Picture of a TV show: Unorthodox
Picture of a TV show: the stranger
Picture of a TV show: Defending Jacob
Picture of a TV show: In the Dark

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Picture of a TV show: The Virtues
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The Virtues

2019
With no immediate family to live for, Joseph is haunted by a past he has tried, for decades, to forget - if not actively obscure with drink and drugs. Suffering the hangover from hell - the dry spell over - he walks away from his present life and boards a boat bound for Ireland to confront hazy, fear-inducing memories from a childhood spent in the care system that he's had to forget. Emotionally and physically wrecked, Joseph reunites with an incredulous Anna (Helen Behan, This is England '88 and '90), the sister he hasn't seen since childhood. Anna persuades her wary husband Michael (Frank Laverty; Michael Collins) to let Joseph stay and give him work in the family-owned building company. There, Joseph is forced to directly confront the demons of his past when he comes face to face with Craigy (Mark O'Halloran), a shadowy figure who is dogged by dark rumours, and who won't leave Joseph alone. Joseph's precarious family reunion is further complicated when he is immediately drawn to Michael's fiery sister Dinah (Niamh Algar; The Bisexual, Pure). Angry and lost, Dinah is fiercely guarded, and, like Joseph, haunted by a deeply-held secret. The Virtues is a visceral and hauntingly unforgettable paean to the human spirit, shot through with bittersweet tenderness, compassion and unexpected moments of laugh-out-loud humour throughout. Deftly addressing challenging themes of revenge, redemption and repressed memory, Meadows and co-writer, BAFTA-winning Jack Thorne, ask questions of what it really means to be, and have, family.