BBC
'Silent Witness' Season 29 Hits BritBox in April as Season 30 Filming Begins
The wait for 'Silent Witness' Season 29 won't be nearly as long as usual as the BBC gears up for Season 30.
BBC
The wait for 'Silent Witness' Season 29 won't be nearly as long as usual as the BBC gears up for Season 30.
Acorn TV
Riding the current high of two record-breaking series premiering back-to-back in Art Detectives and Irish Blood, Acorn TV announced it will bring back one of the shows that hasn't yet found an audience, in hopes that the newcomers will start tuning in. Signora Volpe, the lush Italian-set odd-couple
BritBox
Silent Witness may be celebrating 28 years on the air, but the series is not the same show that debuted way back in the mid-1990s. The success of The X-Files led to a new "forensic psychology" subset of crime-of-the-week dramas, and this one was initially designed as a
BritBox
As it has since 1996, Silent Witness will return to the BBC along with the brand new year. (Though the series has shifted around the calendar over the three decades since it launched, it tends to favor debuts in January/February, with the bulk of the seasons debuting in the
BritBox
The BBC became the first company to broadcast television programs regularly in 1936, and like everything else the British do, it made sure to create some heirlooms along the way. The BBC's oldest series, The Lord Mayor's Show, launched less than a year later, and 88
Acorn TV
Signora Volpe returns to Acorn TV for Season 2 at the end of July 2024; with only a couple of weeks until its return, the streaming service has officially released the trailer. The cozy crime series stars Emilia Fox (Silent Witness) as Sylvia Fox, an ex-MI-6 agent failing in her
Acorn TV
At long last, Signora Volpe is finally heading to Acorn TV for Season 2. The series initially premiered in May 2022 on the most popular of the AMC Network niche streaming services, with Emilia Fox (Pride & Prejudice) starring as disillusioned British spy Sylvia Fox, whose retirement to Italy is
BritBox
While Doctor Who may boast it just celebrated its 60th Anniversary, fans know that a good decade and a half of that was spent off the air, in the wilderness of fandom supporter media, including radio dramas, novels, and one 1996 television film that nearly killed the franchise. However, 1996