
After a catastrophic war, imprisonment, and months of rehabilitation and medication, hoards of brain-craving undead have returned to a lucid state. In the Flesh is a unique take on a zombie apocalypse: what happens when humanity survives the uprising and so do the zombies? When 18-year-old Kieren Walker (Luke Newberry, Anna Karenina, Quartet) committed suicide four years ago, his friends and family thought they’d never see him again that is, until the dead began to rise. The following are expected to street on October 8th. All I’ve done is ask a valid question on the nature of collective grief.BBC is going to drop two titles on DVD in time for the Halloween season. I haven’t tweeted anything about the Queen, and nor did I say anything about her husband when he died. Enjoy your retirement." And he denied he was being disrespectful, saying: "I’ve been very respectful.

He said: "It’s not nasty or vile, and I’m not undermining anyone. Why undermine what they are doing."īut Douglas was not backing down, replying to some of those who were furious about his musings. Malcolm Hill kicked right off on Twitter, replying: "What a nasty tweet Why do people like you decide to tweet vile remarks particularly at a time when thousands of people are queuing for hours to pay their respect to the Queen. Honestly such a brilliant actor and yet completely devoid of basic respect." Claire L Hart added: "Do you think you could just wind your neck in for a while and respect people’s grief and the grief of a family and acknowledge that no one is queuing to see a body or a coffin. Read more: Strictly star John Waite says he turned to alcohol after winning Great British Bake Off as his life 'derailed' People accused him of being 'unkind' while others went stronger with their words and told the actor to 'wind his neck in.'Īngela Langley replied: "A lot of people are very upset our Queen has died. "Do you think the queue would be so long if people knew that the Queen isn’t in that coffin ? Or do they know and it’s just symbolic?" asked the star, who is leaving his role on the BBC detective drama after seven series, this year.


The Scottish actor mused on Twitter that the coffin might be empty and people did not like it. Douglas Henshall, the outgoing star of BBC drama Shetland, has come under fire for sharing his thoughts on those who queued to witness Queen Elizabeth II's coffin lying in state at Westminster Abbey.
