TV tonight: will the robots finally take over in Westworld?

Westworld
9pm, Sky Atlantic

Since this dystopian series was first broadcast in 2016, theme parks haven’t looked quite the same. With mass uprisings from the once-abused-and-now-sentient robot avatars to contend with, how will the hosts manage their ever-worsening relationships with the guests? After season two ended on a bombshell, we open with the outside world’s very existence fundamentally threatened – and the introduction of new characters played by Aaron Paul (pictured) and Vincent Cassel. Ammar Kalia

Don’t Tell the Bride
8pm, E4

A new series of the reality show in which inept grooms (men, eh, what are they like?) are ordered to arrange every aspect of their wedding, without “telling the bride”. This week, laid-back Leon plans to get hitched to Kirsty on a beach in the Dorset town of Weymouth. Kirsty, however, has her heart set on a more romantic venue. Oh dear. Ali Catterall

Miss World 1970: Beauty Queens and Bedlam
9pm, BBC Two

Covering the 1970 protests at the Miss World final in London, this documentary combines archive footage with testimony from the competitors, as well as presenter Michael Aspel, to show how the demonstrations galvanised the women’s liberation movement. AK

Age of the Image
9pm, BBC Four

The art historian James Fox expertly analyses how visuals have changed our world, from Madonna to Dalí. In this penultimate episode, he assesses how images became more seductive as the 20th century unfurled, from the freedom of Hockney’s swimming pools to the aspirational pull of the Marlboro Man. Hannah J Davies

Sunnyside
9pm, Sky Comedy

A breezy new sitcom with a serious underpinning. Kal Penn stars as Garrett Modi, a mildly disgraced ex-councilman in New York who finds himself working with a group of immigrants. They range from the unfeasibly rich to those on the minimum wage, but they are all battling with the harsh US asylum system. Phil Harrison

On the Edge
10pm, Channel 4

Channel 4’s new-writers anthology kicks off its second season, showcasing diverse and up-and-coming talent in a series of 30-minute pilots. There is Yolanda Mercy’s BBW, a tale of plus-size life; JC Servante’s mental health narrative For You; and Adulting, Chinonyerem Odimba’s story of neurodiversity. AK

Film choice

Sicario (Denis Villeneuve, 2015), 9pm, Film4
The gruesome opening, in which the FBI uncovers a literal house of the dead, flags up the brutal nature of Denis Villeneuve’s ferocious thriller about the US “war on drugs”. One of the FBI team, Emily Blunt’s tenacious Kate, is drafted into a murky covert operation in Mexico, led by the brash Josh Brolin and the haunted Benicio del Toro. Paul Howlett