David Jason Reflects on 50 Years of Open All Hours in TV Special
David Jason Looks Back at 50 Years of Open All Hours

Top of the shops … David Jason in Open All Hours. Photograph: Andy Heathcote/UKTV

TV tonight: David Jason looks back at 50 years of Open All Hours

Sir David is joined by celebrity fans and cast members to give the much-loved sitcom a proper send-off. Plus: suspicion falls on a bride-to-be in Bergerac.

Open All Hours: Inside Out

8pm, U&Gold. The shop doorbell tinkles as David Jason steps on to the set of Open All Hours a whopping 50 years after the sitcom first aired. Diane Morgan narrates this two-hour special that looks back at the show with Jason, along with fans such as Johnny Vegas and cast members including Maggie Ollerenshaw. There’s also a new concluding scene that has been recorded to give the show a proper send-off. Hollie Richardson

Wide Pickt banner — collaborative shopping lists app for Telegram, phone mockup with grocery list

Classic Movies: The Story of Great Expectations

8pm, Sky Arts. There has never been a more perfect marriage of director and material than David Lean’s 1946 adaptation of Great Expectations, says host Ian Nathan in this week’s deep dive into great films. He speaks with fellow experts and critics about the “visual novelist” and his work’s legacy. HR

The Neighbourhood

9pm, ITV1. Graham Norton is back to host more of this part reality show, part communal living experiment. This week, he throws a lovely cocktail party purely to help the contestants relax, with no ulterior motive … except for it being secretly observed by a new family who are about to join the contest. Alexi Duggins

Taskmaster

9pm, Channel 4. From a candid conversation about guinea pigs between Joanna Page and Alex Horne, to Joel Dommett having far too much fun with pots and pans – and Armando Iannucci causing complete outrage with an ostrich – it can only be the halfway point of Greg Davies’s bananas gameshow. HR

Prisoner

9pm, Sky Atlantic. Something funky is going down … Izuka Hoyle as Amber, and Tahar Rahim as Tibor in Prisoner. Photograph: Sanne Gault/Sky UK. The pace and implausibility of this thriller remain at optimum levels in episode two. Prison transport officer Amber (Izuka Hoyle) and stone-cold killer Tibor (Tahar Rahim) must escape from the villains’ dramatically lit lair, where something funky is going down involving 3D printers. They’ll have to punch their way out, which is tricky since they’re handcuffed together at the wrist. Jack Seale

Bergerac

9pm, U&Drama. After spectacularly falling off the wagon, Jim’s trouble isn’t letting up: he’s on the outs with his daughter and CCTV footage suggests he’s more intertwined with the murder case than he’d like to be. Meanwhile, suspicion falls on bride-to-be Monica (Lesley Sharp), whose first husband’s suicide might have been staged. Priya Elan

Film choice

‘Achingly vulnerable’ … Mia McKenna-Bruce in How to Have Sex. Photograph: Landmark Media/Alamy.

How to Have Sex (Molly Manning Walker, 2023)

9pm, Film4. The fraught territory of sex and consent among young people gets a working-over in Molly Manning Walker’s bruising, disquieting debut feature. Mia McKenna-Bruce stars as the achingly vulnerable 16-year-old Tara who, along with her best mates Skye (Lara Peake) and Em (Enva Lewis), goes on holiday to Malia in Crete. It’s party central for the teenage trio in a cycle of drink, dance, eat chips, sleep and repeat. But teaming up with older hotel neighbours Paddy and Badger (Ladhood’s Samuel Bottomley and Shaun Thomas) – and Tara’s uncertainty about losing her virginity amid the “anything goes” atmosphere at the resort – lead to jealousy, peer pressure and worse. Simon Wardell

Live sport

Europa League football: Aston Villa v Nottingham Forest 7pm, TNT Sports 1. The semi-final, second-leg tie.

Pickt after-article banner — collaborative shopping lists app with family illustration