This could be TV3's most galling move yet. Just when we all thought it was safe to write the channel off as a John Campbell-less wasteland of mindless reality shows, they turn around and bring us one of the year's most highly acclaimed new shows - a legitimate, quality British
Sci-fi show ominous but oh so human

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Will Tudor stars in Humans, which will have viewers hooked from the first episode.

What sets out threatening to turn into a needlessly elaborate supermarket ad quickly gets interesting when we discover he's not talking about popping down to the Tesco for a pork pie and a packet of Hobnobs. He's got his heart set on a lovely synth to pick up all the shoes for him. Activating his family's new domestic slave by pressing under her chin and "bonding" her to him with a few simple steps is eerily similar to the way you would set up your new phone or computer. His youngest daughter chooses her name: Anita.
But the Hawkins family are late, reluctant adopters - "we don't need one", the synth-skeptic Laura admonishes him when she gets back from Leeds to a sparkling clean house. Synths have already been on the market for years by this stage, and widowed doctor George Millican (William Hurt), who played a part in their invention, has developed an attachment to his glitching, obsolete early model - his only remaining link to his old life - which he treats like his own son. In a sad role reversal, he has wound up caring for the device that is meant to be caring for him, resisting a newer, better government-issue appliance.
Grounding the show in these relatable domestic settings serves as a nice counterweight to the show's dark and mysterious science fiction element, which is revealed over the course of the first episode. You know you're hooked when a rogue scientist's big expository explanation of the theory of "the singularity" - the hypothetical point in time when artificial intelligence attains consciousness and becomes able to reproduce and improve itself - has you hanging on every word.
While it's a co-production between Channel 4 and US cable channel AMC, Humans is a British show in every perceptible way. And at a decidedly British eight episodes in length it would seem guaranteed to unfold at a satisfying pace with little time for mucking around. By the first episode's quietly chilling final scene, the table has been irresistibly laid out for an intriguing, must-see series.
• Calum Henderson is a TV writer for nzherald.co.nz