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Monday 27

Q & A (1990)

BBC One, 11.55pm

The veteran campaigning director Sidney Lumet put an energetic new spin on some of his familiar obsessions in this cynical thriller about shady deals and cronyism among New York’s racially divided police and city officials. Based on a novel by Edwin Torres, Manhattan’s first Puerto Rican assistant district attorney, Lumet’s pugnacious legal drama co-stars Armand Assante and Timothy Hutton.

But the main acting honours belong to Nick Nolte, who gained more than 3st (19kg) for his Shakespearean study in evil as a monstrously corrupt Irish-American detective. (137min)

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MultiChannel

NATIONAL LAMPOON’S ANIMAL HOUSE (1978)

Film4, 9pm

Lowbrow college fraternity comedies would later become a Hollywood staple, but this slapstick riot was the first and one of the best. More tender and thoughtful than the genre it spawned, Animal House is a coming-of-age celebration of boozy excess and sexual anarchy at an American university in the early 1960s. John Belushi stars, with Tim Matheson, Kevin Bacon and Tom Hulce as his fellow students. Its director, John Landis, originally planned to shoot at the University of Missouri until the college president read the script and withdrew permission. The University of Oregon was used instead. (109min)

THE PARALLAX VIEW (1974)

ITV4, 11.50pm

A classic of the conspiracy genre, Alan J. Pakula’s paranoid thriller is an unsettling parable that tapped into America’s national unease about the Kennedy assassinations and the Watergate scandal.

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Warren Beatty stars as a small-town news reporter investigating an unsolved political assassination and a mysterious spate of related deaths. Full of creeping menace, The Parallax View is sluggish in places, but builds to a chilling finale. (102min)