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TODAY The Princess and the Frog (2009) BBC One, 3.30pm Tiana (Anika Noni Rose) dreams of the day she will open a restaurant in New Orleans and serve up her father's signature dish of gumbo. Her dreams are put on hold when she is approached by a smoothtalking frog who claims to be Prince Naveen of Malvonia (Bruno Campos). He asks for one kiss to break the spell that has been placed on him and she obliges, only to be transformed into a frog herself. The Princess and the Frog is classic Disney animated fare, starring the studio's first-ever African-American princess in an enchanting reworking of the Grimm brothers' fairytale. Rose and Campos relish their characters' constant bickering, while Keith David hams it up a treat as the witch doctor who unleashes dark spirits to do his bidding.
The Heat (2013) Channel 4, 9pm. Premiere. Ladies can be every bit as politically incorrect as the lads in Paul Feig's oestrogen-fuelled buddy movie, which pairs Sandra Bullock and Melissa McCarthy as a strait-laced FBI Special Agent and gung-ho Boston police detective who join forces to bring down a criminal mastermind. The lead actresses spark offeach other brilliantly, milking belly laughs from Katie Dippold's script. Every time the pace flags, Bullock and McCarthy crank up the slapstick and verbal one-upwomanship, including a brilliantly simple visual gag with a knife that draws as many winces as guffaws. Feig and McCarthy, who also worked together on Bridesmaids and Spy, have now teamed up again for the forthcoming Ghostbusters reboot.
Jane Eyre (2011) BBC Two, 10pm This adaptation of Charlotte Bronte's classic novel opens in the middle of the action, as Jane (Mia Wasikowska) flees Thornfield Hall, where she has been employed as governess for Adele Varens (Settbon Moore), the young ward of Edward Rochester (Michael Fassbender). Stumbling across the moors, she seeks refuge with clergyman St John Rivers (Jamie Bell) and his sisters at Moor House. As Jane recuperates, she recalls her turbulent past, including her childhood with cruel aunt Mrs Reed (Sally Hawkins) and her employment at Thornfield under the watchful eye of housekeeper Mrs Fairfax (Dame Judi Dench). Elegantly adapted by Moira Buffini, Cary Joji Fukunaga's film condenses the source novel into two hours of yearning...