I'm not much of a TV watcher, but this is one I'm really looking forward to. Anyone with Shetland sheep, cattle, ducks, dogs, ponies will surely want to see it, just in case their favored animal is somewhere in there

I've been reading the Anne Cleeves books anyway, so this is a bonus for me. Enjoy
Shetland is coming to you on BBC One
The long-awaited BBC One television drama Shetland will be broadcast at
9pm on Sunday 10th March.
Shetland, which is adapted from the Ann Cleeves novel
Red Bones, stars Douglas Henshall as detective inspector Jimmy Perez. Shetlanders Steven Robertson and Sandra Voe also have key parts.
Hundreds of people in Shetland turned out for a re-enactment of Up-Helly-Aa during filming in July last year. It was the biggest drama production filmed in the isles.
Senior producers say the two-parter requires a UK-wide audience of five million for a series to be commissioned so remember to tell your family and friends to watch, and get them to tell brothers and sisters and aunties and uncles too! The second episode will be shown the next night, Monday 11th March, at the same time.
In a BBC publicity interview for
Shetland, Dougie Henshall said: "It's such a beautiful place, so stark and unique - the sky is huge, the air is fresh, the sea is clear... it's a lovely place. I'd never been before but I'd love to go back. Everyone worried about the weather but we really didn't have it that bad - it was lovely actually."
"Everybody was incredibly helpful and they honestly couldn't do enough for us.
Shetland was the biggest film production to ever be shot on the islands so I think everyone was really excited about us being there."
He added: "I always thought of Shetland as being a place that was so remote it was always in a wee box during the weather. Sometimes I wonder if people really know where it is or what it's like, what the people are like and what goes on there. As a curiosity it's worth taking a look at Shetland and you'll discover it's a truly beautiful place. But, above all else,
Shetland is a really good crime story."
For the full BBC interview with Douglas Henshall, plus interviews with Ann Cleeves and scriptwriter David Kane,
click here.