9pm, Channel 4Every day, thousands of people get into their cars with minimal understanding of the risks they’re taking. This documentary is a spectacular corrective to that, staging a multi-car pile-up and enlisting four drivers to remotely control real cars. The results are striking and the aftermath is fascinating as the crash scene is pored over and the extent of the (thankfully hypothetical) injuries is assessed.Phil Harrison
6pm, ITV1Previous highlights of the ever entertaining charity kickabout include Woody Harrelson smashing a penalty past a visibly annoyed Jamie Theakston, so this year’s match has plenty to live up to. On the team sheet are Tyson Fury, Vicky McClure, Mo Farah and Denise Lewis.PH
8.15pm, BBC OneDon’t sleep on this detective comedy-drama: unlike most cosy crime shows it is properly funny, all the more so this week as retired actor John (Timothy Spall) helps heroically awkward cop Janie (Gwyneth Keyworth) investigate a low-quality local theatre company. The gags about thespian pretensions are delicious.Jack Seale
9pm, BBC One
The second series of the enjoyable drama about the Brink’s-Mat robbery continues. The clock is ticking as the gold is processed and starts to disappear around the world. But the police, led by Hugh Bonneville’s dogged Brian Boyce, have some promising leads.PH
9pm, Sky CrimeIt’s the mystery that gripped New Zealand: in 2021, Pauline Hanna was found dead at home in an affluent Auckland suburb. Was it suicide? Or had the scene been staged? This documentary features an exclusive interview with the only man who knows for sure – Hanna’s husband Dr Philip “Polk” Polkinghorne.Ellen E Jones
10.20pm, ITV1The so-called War on Terror feels as if it has receded into history. But for many of the combatants, it’s still agonisingly real. Deeyah Khan’s documentary travels through the US exploring the psychological aftermath and meeting veterans of combat in Iraq and Afghanistan. “I lost humanity, I lost empathy, I lost compassion,” says one.PH
28 Days Later (Danny Boyle, 2002), 10.30pm, BBC One
Next week sees the cinema release of the third in the dystopian horror series, with the first film’s director and writer, Danny Boyle and Alex Garland, reuniting for a new trilogy. Before the franchise runs away with itself, here’s the 2002 original to enjoy relatively unsullied. Cillian Murphy plays hospitalised bicycle courier Jim, who wakes up to find London deserted – apart from a host of rabid, rapid people infected by a virus. His flight through dystopian Britain, alongside Naomie Harris and Brendan Gleeson’s survivors, is a masterclass in tension and a study of the worst in human nature.Simon Wardell
Super League Rugby: Wakefield v Leigh, 2.15pm, BBC TwoAt the DIY Kitchens Stadium.
Uefa European Under-21 Championship Football: Slovenia v England, 4.30pm, Channel 4From Nitra, Slovakia. England v Germany is on Wed at 7.30pm.