*** DEBUG START ***
*** DEBUG END ***

TV review: A Taste for Murder, and World’s Tallest Man: The next chapter

05 May 2026

Jayne Manfredi on a new cosy crime series set in sun-soaked Capri, and the ongoing story of Sultan Kösen

(C) Eagle Eye

DCI Joe Mottram (Warren Brown) in A Taste for Murder (ITV1, Wednesdays)

DCI Joe Mottram (Warren Brown) in A Taste for Murder (ITV1, Wednesdays)

I FELT more than a touch of weary cynicism when I saw yet another so-called cosy crime series was coming to our screens (A Taste for Murder, ITV1, Wednesdays). It’s a genre that has been flogged to death, including by myself in this column. However! The setting for this six-part series (featuring a new suspicious death each episode) is a restaurant on sun-soaked Capri.

The aesthetic is everything you would hope for: a surfeit of lemons, Italian café music, glorious cobalt blue skies, and impossibly glamorous people. There is also a culinary theme as the background to every episode, riffing on the glories of Italian food. They do miss a trick by not including the Barese classic Spaghetti all’Assassina — quite literally, killer spaghetti — but at least Uovo in Purgatorio makes the cut.

Warren Brown (you may remember him from Line of Duty) stars as DCI Joe Mottram, a police detective and grieving widower, who arrives on the island with his teenage daughter to visit his in-laws. They run a restaurant, and I did have to smile at this family of feeders, who reminded me strongly of my own Italian in-laws.

The family drama, centred around Joe’s struggling relationship with his daughter, is almost secondary to the horrific hammer murder which happens at the start. A less than cosy beginning, but one which our hero Joe is determined to help solve, by assisting the Italian police inspector Lara Sarrancino, who is as beautiful as the sublime surroundings. Enjoyable and diverting — although it did make me exceptionally hungry.

World’s Tallest Man: The next chapter (Channel 4, 27 April) is the ongoing story of Sultan Kösen. At 8 feet 3 inches tall, and weighing 26 stone, he’s the current holder of the Guinness World Record, since 2009. This documentary provides an insight into how he has fared since then, and it is a sad story of deteriorating physical health and personal loss.

The tumour that caused his gigantism was treated in 2010, but he still struggles with multiple health issues, and is blighted by debilitating knee pain. “Only me and God know what I’ve suffered,” he says.

While the insight into his world is fascinating, I have ethical concerns about how his life has been made a spectacle, as if he were a P. T. Barnum exhibit. On the other hand, Mr Kösen himself feels grateful for the opportunities that his condition has given him. For much of his early life he was ostracised and shamed, whereas now he has status.

He is the tallest man in the world, and yet, “People looked down on me.” As the programme shows, the cost of holding the record is a heavy burden to bear.

Browse Church and Charity jobs on the Church Times jobsite

Church Times Bookshop

Save money on books reviewed or featured in the Church Times. To get your reader discount:

> Click on the “Church Times Bookshop” link at the end of the review.

> Call 01603 785905 (Mon-Fri, 10am-4pm).

The reader discount is valid for two months after the review publication date. E&OE

Forthcoming Events

Church Times Festival of Preaching 2026

13 - 15 September 2026

An event to inspire, nurture, and celebrate all who are called to proclaim the gospel today.

tickets available now

English Mystics Series course

26 January - 25 May 2026

A short course at Sarum College.

tickets available now

 

This year, the Church Times is also delighted to sponsor two events: 

National Cathedrals Conference  Bristol, 18 to 21 May 2026

An event aimed at developing cathedrals as important places of prayer, inspiration, education, challenge, and debate. Find out more at nationalcathedralsconference.org

Public Faith Common Good  a day symposium at St John’s College Cambridge, Tuesday 21 July 2026

Speakers to include the former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Williams; the Bishop of Chelmsford, Dr Guli Francis-Deqhani, Nick Spencer, and Anna Rowlands.

This event is free, but booking is required. Find out more at elydatabase.org/events

 

Visit our Events page for upcoming and past events

The Church Times Archive

Read reports from issues stretching back to 1863, search for your parish or see if any of the clergy you know get a mention.

FREE for Church Times subscribers.

Explore the archive

Welcome to the Church Times

To explore the Church Times website fully, please sign in or subscribe.

New to us? Non-subscribers can read up to four free articles a month. Simply sign up for a free account to receive the Church Times newsletter, plus exclusive offers and events, straight to your inbox. As a thank you for joining us, we are also currently offering a £5 discount for the Church House Bookshop online (valid for one order of £30 or more). See your welcome email for details.