TV tonight: human remains are found in tense cold case drama Black Snow

4 hours ago 8

Black Snow

9pm, BBC Two
The Queensland-set cold case drama continues. Zoe Jacobs (Jana McKinnon) vanished on her 21st birthday back in 2003, and we have come to know her hopes, fears and love of ecstasy and pop-punk via extended flashbacks. So it’s all the more upsetting that unkempt detective James Cormack (Travis Fimmel) and Zoe’s old bestie turned beat cop Samara Kahlil (Megan Smart) have just recovered submerged human remains near the local dam. Graeme Virtue

Beyond Paradise

8pm, BBC One
The cosy crime drama takes a sharp turn into folk horror. Supernatural menace the Cornman is apparently on the prowl, terrorising locals, spoiling milk and scorching crops. It’s up to Humphrey (Kris Marshall) to separate fact from Cornish folklore. The great Caroline Quentin and Kevin McNally guest star as feuding farmers. GV

Gardeners’ World

8pm, BBC Two

Ron James and Frances Tophill
Charmed … Ron James and Frances Tophill. Photograph: PHOTOGRAPHER:/CREDIT LINE:BBC Studios

With spring in full swing, Monty Don brings colour to the Mound with an array of blue and yellow blooms. Then he gets ready for summer by planting some vegetables to harvest in a couple of months’ time, while Frances Tophill is charmed by wisteria in Surrey. Nicole Vassell

What’s the Big Deal: Britain’s Best Buys?

8pm, Channel 4
Natalie Cassidy concludes her roundup of Britain’s most talked-about products, though surely robot vacuum cleaners’ viral moment has long since passed. Nevertheless, Cassidy employs some crisp-munching children to test three models. Plus, are cheap “dupe” perfumes any good? Jack Seale

Hacks

9pm, Sky Max
The creative death match between old stager Deborah (Jean Smart) and fiery upstart Ava (Hannah Einbinder) worsens as the comedian and the writer use a new talkshow as their latest battleground. Also, every scene with Hassidic Jew turned personal assistant Randi (Robby Hoffman) is a scream. JS

Austin

9.30pm, BBC One
Ben Miller is one of the oldest sitcom archetypes here: the irritating, self-regarding man – smart enough to have delusions of grandeur and stupid enough to believe them. This time, Julian (Miller) has hired an award-winning film-maker to help push his documentary over the line. But will he get cold feet? Phil Harrison

Film choices

Roddy Piper as Nada in They Live
Rowdy … Roddy Piper as Nada in They Live. Photograph: Maximum Film/Alamy

They Live (John Carpenter, 1988), 12.05am, Talking Pictures TV
John Carpenter’s pulpy 1988 sci-fi action flick is a hotbed of anticapitalist sentiment. Itinerant worker Nada (wrestler Roddy Piper, a low-budget Arnie) comes to Los Angeles seeking employment but, after donning a pair of special sunglasses, stumbles on a conspiracy involving hidden messages on billboards and shop fronts and in magazines telling people to “Consume”, “Watch TV” and “Obey” (the banknotes say: “This is your God”). Also, some folk look like warmed-up skeletons. Have aliens invaded? A fun mix of politics and punch-ups. Simon Wardell

Amores Perros (Alejandro González Iñárritu, 2000), 12.25am, Film4
The title translates as “Love’s a bitch” but there is also a lot of dog appreciation in Alejandro González Iñárritu’s intense drama about desire, loss and blood-soaked revenge. Three stories collide in a Mexico City car crash: Octavio (Gael García Bernal) loves his brother’s neglected wife and enters illegal dog fights to fund their escape; model Valeria (Goya Toledo) breaks her leg in the auto accident then her pooch vanishes under the floorboards of her new flat; and the tramp-like El Chivo (Emilio Echevarría) has a cohort of canines but is also a hitman for a cop. SW

Live sport

Premiership Rugby Union: Sale v Saracens 7pm, TNT Sports 1. Coverage of the top-flight clash from the Salford Community Stadium.

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