Plus, the newest scripted drama from Queer as Folk creator Russell T Davies and a killer movie you can only catch on streaming.Here's what we're watching this month.What's it about? You know how the old story goes: boy meets girl, they fall in love, get married, go away for a romantic weekend, create elaborate plots to murder each other Thirty-seven years in the future, history seems to be repeating itself with a series of eerily similar murders, forcing Cooke (played in the 2020s by Heather Mitchell) out of a mental institution and back on the case.Some of Jenkins's wry satire peeks through Parrish Station (shout-out the Crime Sluts podcast) but, by and large, the comedian has crafted a tight and stylish mystery with just enough of a supernatural lilt to justify composer Michael Yezerski's enthralling soundscape.Perfect for: Filling an X-Files-shaped hole in your heart.Where to watch: The Killings at Parrish Station premieres on June 24 on Stan.What's it about? At the turn of the 20th century, Russell T Davies broke ground with his series Queer as Folk, which gave audiences a semi-realistic peek into the lives of the LGBTQ+ community in the UK.Now, after 30 years, in which the Welsh writer became one of the most admired voices in TV drama — thanks to his work with Dr Who as well as miniseries Years and Years and It's a Sin — Davies delivers Tip Toe, a layered, tense look at societal intersectionality.The story revolves around Leo (Alan Cumming), the owner of a gay pub who is nearing 60 but still suffering from the intolerance he experienced as a young gay man