BBC America today said it has acquired a pair of new miniseries: ITV Global’s coming-of-age relationship drama White Heat (a six-parter) and the BBC’s heist drama Inside Men (four-parter). The moves come a week after the network came aboard the eight-part period crime drama Ripper Street starring Matthew Macfadyen. The three projects are slated to air this year on BBC’s Dramaville block, home to Luther and Whitechapel among others. Here’s the breakdown of the two new minis:
WHITE HEAT – US PREMIERE
White Heat charts the lives of seven friends from 1965 through to the present day. Their relationships – complex, volatile, life affirming and life changing – start when they come together as a diverse group of young students to live as flatmates in London’s Tufnell Park. They are rebel with a cause Jack played by Sam Claflin (Snow White and the Huntsman), intelligent feminist Charlotte played by Claire Foy (Upstairs Downstairs, Little Dorrit), fragile beauty Lilly played by MyAnna Buring (The Twilight Saga, The Descent), medical student Jay played by Reece Ritchie (The Lovely Bones, Prince of Persia), electronics geek Alan played by Lee Ingleby (Luther, Harry Potter), law student Victor played by David Gyasi (Law and Order: UK)and kind hearted Orla played by Jessica Gunning (Law & Order: UK). The mini-series is written and created by Paula Milne. The executive producers for ITV Studios are Paula Milne and Kate Bartlett and the executive producer for the BBC is Lucy Richer. White Heat premieres Wednesday, May 9, 10:00p.m. ET/PT as part of Dramaville.INSIDE MEN – US PREMIERE
Told entirely from their perspective, Inside Men is the story of three employees of a security depot who plan and execute a multi-million pound cash heist. This new four-part drama stars Steven Mackintosh (Luther, Camelot) as John, manager of the cash counting house, a character too scared to confront the humdrum normality of his life. Joining him in the robbery is depot security guard Chris, played by Ashley Walters (Outcasts, Hustle), and forklift driver Marcus, played by Warren Brown (Luther, Occupation). They are not seasoned criminals. They are everyday, hard-working men who see an opportunity, weigh up the risks, and take a leap. Inside Men is a study of how men behave when they step out of their comfort zones, and cross that moral line, what it means to risk freedom, and the resulting fallout on their own consciences. The series is written by Tony Basgallop and Hilary Salmon is the executive producer. Inside Men premieres Wednesday, June 20, 10:00p.m. ET/PT as part of Dramaville.


Great. We can look forward to BBC America sanitizing them for the consumption for puritans. They’re such a cowardly network.
Maybe BBC America could do what Comedy Central does with some of their programs (mostly the Celebrity Roasts). Air them uncensored after midnight. That way, they could satisfy both the Puritan crowd between 8:00-11:00PM and those of us who enjoy watching things as originally produced.
We already have Breaking Bad so no need to buy Inside Men : same character minus cancer, same story minus talent, a poor adaptation.
How is Inside Men anything like Breaking Bad?
The characters are pretty different and the story line is nothing like that of Breaking Bad.
I agree with Scott. How are either of those shows alike? By your logic, Ben, you’d say Men of a Certain Age was a rip-off of Breaking Bad because it starred three men.
Sounds like the kind of shows we get from 500+ channels of American TV. What’s the point of importing more of the same?
Wow. You guys are jerks.
Are new episodes of the Hour returning to BBC America, and if so, when. Loved that show.