The season finale of Saint-Pierre airs tonight at 9pm on U&Alibi, bringing the detective duo Arch and Fitz face-to-face with their nemesis, crime boss Sean Gallagher, played by James Purefoy. While the series has remained a generic crime drama, it has sustained itself convincingly across its first season and has been commissioned for a second run. In the finale, the case-of-the-week format finally dovetails with the longer storyline involving Gallagher. Arch and Fitz are not the only people on the island with a grudge against Gallagher, and a series of violent incidents puts them on a collision course.
Other TV Highlights Tonight
The Repair Shop (8pm, BBC One) presents a one-off World Cup special, featuring a soft toy of England's 1966 mascot World Cup Willie. Additionally, a battered old washboard is restored by Pete and Sonnaz, bringing skiffle music back to life.
Location, Location, Location (8pm, Channel 4) catches up with two couples Kirstie and Phil previously helped find homes. In Solihull, Camilla and Liam's move from a rental to their own house led to marriage and a growing family. Meanwhile, the fate of Hayley and James's 'unicorn' house in Wiltshire is revealed.
Legal Drama and Classic Revivals
Matlock (9pm, Sky Witness) concludes its second season with two converging storylines. The merger plans continue, but the team must bring Senior to justice for his role in the cover-up before the case is closed, with plenty of hitches along the way.
Peter Flannery Remembers: Our Friends in the North (10pm, BBC Four) returns to iPlayer. This 1996 drama, which launched the careers of actors including Gina McKee and Daniel Craig, tells a gripping national story of hope and betrayal. Before the first episode, Peter Flannery recalls its creation.
Australian AIDS Drama and Film Choices
In Our Blood (10.15pm, Sky Atlantic) is compared to It's a Sin and offers a stirring representation of Australia's response to AIDS. The opening double bill begins with the 1983 election of Bob Hawke as prime minister, questioning whether change is on the way.
Avatar: Fire and Ash (Disney+), directed by James Cameron, is the third installment of the blue-tinged fantasy epic. It features stupendous aerial and aquatic action, dastardly human behaviour, and warnings about colonisation and exploitation of nature. Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldaña, and Sigourney Weaver return, joined by the Mangkwan clan led by Varang (Oona Chaplin), who collaborates with Earth forces for power.
The Welcome Table (HBO Max), a climate crisis documentary by Josh Fox, includes a trigger warning for its traumatic prognosis. Through testimony from people affected by fires, flooding, and drought in Kenya, Brazil, and the US, it shows devastation, colonial roots, and impending mass migration. The only hope comes from survivors as beacons of community.
Rob Roy (Great! Action) is Michael Caton-Jones's 1995 historical drama about Scotland's folk hero. Liam Neeson stars as the titular clan chief, cheated by John Hurt's Marquess of Montrose and harried by Tim Roth's Archibald Cunningham. The film emphasizes that nobility is not a matter of birth.



