Continuing our guide to the very best of 2023’s small-screen entertainment.

By Morgan Jeffery

Published: Wednesday, 27 December 2023 at 08:00 AM


While the Christmas festivities have concluded, there’s no need to succumb to the January gloom.

This week, RadioTimes.com invites you to reminisce and celebrate the highlights of 2023’s television. We’re rolling out our yearly tradition of counting down the top TV series of the year, showcasing the best and brightest that graced our screens.

Over the next five days, we’ll be revealing our top 50 shows, as selected by our team of editorial experts. Today (27th December), we continue our countdown with 40-31 – expect time travel thrillers, obsessive fans and maverick spies…

Be sure to join us again tomorrow and throughout the week as we disclose our full list, including the show that’s landed this year’s much-coveted No. 1 spot.

40. Beckham

David Beckham on Netflix's Beckham documentary
Netflix

Available on Netflix

Netflix has become known for its flashy documentaries, and they don’t get more flashy than Beckham. Charting the former England captain’s rise from Leytonstone to global icon, there are photoshoots with popstars, questionable fashion choices and chats around the fire in the 48-year-old’s ridiculously classy mansion, all wrapped into three fast-paced hours of entertainment.

It’s slick, stylish and sentimental, and David’s executive producer influence is clear throughout – with beats of humour and suggestions of a down-to-earth family dynamic, the Beckhams come out of this very well. 

Yet director Fisher Stevens consistently aims to dig deeper, exploring the mental impact that becoming a superstar, and having the weight of an entire country on your shoulders, can have on an ordinary man who one suspects still can’t quite believe his life has panned out the way it has. It’s fun but thought-provoking, and with Spice Girls, Eric Cantona and a Britpop-infused soundtrack all present throughout, it provides a solid dose of ‘90s nostalgia. A must watch. – George White, Sub-Editor

39. The Lazarus Project

Charly Clive as Sarah, Caroline Quentin as Wes and Paapa Essiedu as George in The Lazarus Project looking up at something.
Sky

Available on Sky

It’s been a brutal wait for The Lazarus Project season 2 after that season 1 finale, but finally we got to find out how the story continued. While season 1 saw Paapa Essiedu’s George attempt to end the world in a bid to bring his girlfriend, Charly Clive’s Sarah, back to life, season 2 saw his quest for redemption.

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The stakes are higher than ever before, with a mind-bending second run proving the show has longevity. There’s just as much action, potentially even more twists and turns, and another major cliffhanger to see us out. 

It might not have been renewed for season 3 just yet, but we’re going to need to see how this one plays out. Louise Griffin, Sci-Fi & Fantasy Editor

38. Blue Lights

Sian Brooke as PC Grace Ellis in Blue Lights.
BBC/Gallagher Films/Two Cities Television

Available on BBC iPlayer

From Happy Valley and Unforgotten to Endeavour, there has been no shortage of police procedurals this year.

But it was Blue Lights that really stood out from the crowd. Set in Belfast, the BBC drama followed three probationary officers in the police service of Northern Ireland – Grace Ellis (Siân Brooke), Annie Conlon (Katherine Devlin) and Tommy Forster (Nathan Braniff) – as they were thrown in at the deep end, and offered a refreshing take on the genre. 

Sure, there were all the police procedural staples – car chases, MI5 operations and gang violence – but it was the show’s rounded and instantly likeable characters that really made the series shine, and that made it so gripping when the characters put their lives at risk. 

This was a tense and nuanced examination of courage, loyalty and morality, with standout performances from Braniff as the nervous Tommy and Richard Dormer as his obstinate, hardened partner, Gerry. – Molly Moss, Trends Writer

37. Slow Horses