London Spy

London Spy
Series title over a London scene
Genre Drama
Created by Tom Rob Smith
Written by Tom Rob Smith
Directed by Jakob Verbruggen
Starring
Composer(s)
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of episodes 5
Production
Producer(s) Guy Heeley
Running time 58–60 minutes
Production company(s) Working Title Television
BBC America
NBC Universal
BBC
Release
Original network
Picture format 16:9 1080i
Audio format Stereo
Original release 9 November (2015-11-09) – 7 December 2015 (2015-12-07)
External links
Website

London Spy is a British-American five-part drama television serial created and written by Tom Rob Smith that aired on BBC Two from 9 November until 7 December 2015.[1][2]

Plot

London Spy begins as the story of two young men: Danny (Ben Whishaw)—gregarious, hedonistic, and romantic—falls in love with Alex (Edward Holcroft)—asocial, enigmatic, and brilliant. Just as they discover how perfect they are for each other, Alex disappears. Danny then finds Alex's body. They lived very different lives: Danny is from a world of clubbing and youthful excess; Alex, it turns out, works for the Secret Intelligence Service. Danny decides to fight for the truth, utterly ill-equipped to take on the world of espionage.

Cast

Main

Recurring

Production

The series was commissioned by Janice Hadlow and Polly Hill,[3] and produced by Guy Heeley for Working Title Television.[4] The executive producers are Juliette Howell, Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, and Polly Hill.[5] Filming began in 2014 in London [6] and Kent, on the Isle of Grain and at Dartford.[7]

Release

The first episode premiered in the U.K. on BBC Two at 9pm on Monday 9 November 2015, and the serial concluded 7 December 2015. In the U.S., it premiered on BBC America starting 21 January 2016.[8]

Episodes

No. Title Directed by Written by Original air date UK viewers
(millions)[9]
1"Episode One"Jakob VerbruggenTom Rob Smith9 November 2015 (2015-11-09)3.63
Warehouse worker Danny is recovering from a drug-induced haze when he encounters Alex jogging. They connect with one another, and become lovers. Danny introduces Alex to his older friend Scottie, and confesses to Alex about his past. Soon afterwards Alex disappears, and then Danny's flat is ransacked. Danny is mysteriously given the key to Alex's apartment, where he discovers Alex's dead body in a room dedicated to sado-masochism. He telephones the police, but remembering Alex's last words to him, he swallows a code-locked cylinder he finds in the battery compartment of Alex's laptop. The police tell Danny that Alex had lied to him: his name was actually Alistair and he wasn’t an orphan. Scottie collects Danny from the police after supplying him with a solicitor, and tells him that Alex/Alistair was working for MI6. Before he leaves, Scottie tells him that the police were wondering if he had taken anything from Alex/Alistair's apartment. Danny lies and later passes the object he had swallowed.
2"Episode Two"Jakob VerbruggenTom Rob Smith16 November 2015 (2015-11-16)2.64
Convinced that he is being followed, Danny hides the device he discovered. He contacts a newspaper to correct the news coverage about Alex/Alistair and report it was murder; instead it prints a story about his own drug taking, and he loses his job. Scottie tells Danny about his history with MI6 30 years ago and shows him where he attempted suicide at the time. Danny is invited to visit by a couple who claim to be Alex/Alistair's parents and who behave strangely distant. He refuses to believe them and is taken to a mansion belonging to Frances and her husband, where she informs him that Alistair, her son, was neither gay nor a virgin, but very experienced in sexual roleplay. When Danny does not believe her, Frances tells him to stop making a fuss. The next morning, the housekeeper reveals that his real name was Alistair but he preferred the name Alex. Danny returns to London and is approached by an American who tells him to look after his health. He leaves behind a sweet containing a tablet and a business card which Danny rips up.
3"Episode Three"Jakob VerbruggenTom Rob Smith23 November 2015 (2015-11-23)2.31
Danny is arrested by the police, and admits to having experimented with auto-asphyxiation. They play a tape of him telling Alex/Alistair about his sexual history in a supposed telephone call, but he knows it to be a recording of a face-to-face conversation which took place in his room. The interrogators show him the logo of a rent boy agency they say Alex/Alistair used, and suggest he confess that, while high on drugs, he accidentally asphyxiated him. If not, he will be charged if they discover his DNA on the sheets in the attic room. Once released, Danny visits an old acquaintance, a record producer called Rich, and asks for help in contacting the rent boy agency. Rich offers him drugs and says he will help in return for sex, but Danny refuses and is told to leave. Danny's flatmate informs him that the tablet left by the American is anti-HIV medication. Danny is tested, and told that he is HIV positive. Scottie reveals that one of his lovers died from AIDS, and tells Danny that he believes him when he asserts that he has not done anything which could explain the infection. Danny informs Scotty about the code-locked cylinder which he took from Alex/Alistair's flat and Scottie takes him to see an old friend. She is now the President Provost of the University of London, and tells them that she will try to arrange a meeting with Alex’s old professor in the hope that he can make sense of the contents of the cylinder. Later, at Scottie's club, Scottie blackmails one of his former intelligence service colleagues into revealing that, unprecedentedly, every major espionage agency agrees about Alex/Alistair. Later, Danny is walking when a car draws up. Rich is in the back, and gives him a package. Danny subsequently discovers it contains a phone, which then rings.
4"Episode Four"Jakob VerbruggenTom Rob Smith30 November 2015 (2015-11-30)2.15
The phone directs Danny to a meeting with a man who says he is an escort, hired to seduce Alex. Danny was not invited to Alex’s funeral, so goes to a beach, burns what possessions he has of Alex, and scatters the ashes into the sea. He recalls talking there to Alex about being "the one" for each other. He tries "0000001" for the code cylinder and it opens, revealing a USB plug. He and Scottie meet Alex's professor who tells them it contains research on a method of determining if someone is lying from their speech patterns. The police tell Danny he will not be charged with Alex's murder, he responds that "This isn't over". Scottie calls him from a locked cab, telling him "There will be a note". Danny runs to the park they met in earlier and finds Scottie's body hanging from a tree.
5"Episode Five"Jakob VerbruggenTom Rob Smith7 December 2015 (2015-12-07)2.06
Detective Taylor tells Danny that she believes what he has told her but is unable to investigate further because of pressure from her superiors. Danny sends out copies of Alex's research by post and email to newspapers: they are all returned or deleted. Danny’s estranged mother turns up at his home out of the blue saying that his father is dying; at his parents’ house they admit they have been threatened, it was a charade to erase the code cylinder that Danny wears around his neck. Danny visits Frances and learns about Alex/Alistair’s childhood, her own thwarted ambitions in MI5, and how she brought him up to be the spy she couldn’t be. Her part in the events leading to his death is shown – he was killed by MI5 to keep his research secret. Though believing it futile, she joins Danny to try to bring those responsible to justice.

Critical reception

Reviewing Episode One for The Guardian, Lucy Mangan called it "an unutterably delicious, satisfying dish," with "Jim Broadbent, in fully teddy-bear-carrying-a-switchblade mode.." and Whishaw "the most powerful actor ever made out of thistledown and magic."[10] The Daily Telegraph's Jasper Rees was unconvinced: "Whishaw's intense fixity of purpose could do nothing to defibrillate his DOA dialogue..." [11] The same newspaper's Harry Mount gave a critical review of episode 3 which he regarded as "wearily unconvincing" with "long spells of ennui."[12] In the Daily Mail, Christopher Stevens wrote: "Believe it or not, BBC execs reckon there is not enough gay drama on the Beeb [...] You might think that it's become impossible to switch the telly on without seeing two men locked in a naked clinch, or in drag, or snogging." The Huffington Post UK reported that Stevens' review had inspired a reader backlash, with online comments noting, "It's not a gay spy drama, it's a spy drama and some of the characters happen to be gay."[13]

After Episode 4 had screened, several prominent critics agreed that, whatever they thought of its story, the series possessed a haunting quality. Gabriel Tate of the Daily Telegraph wrote: "London Spy, has been adored and abhorred. Its ambition has delighted and infuriated, its obfuscation has intrigued and frustrated. It is, if nothing else, a singular vision..."[14] A.A. Gill of The Sunday Times wrote: "This is a strange, inexplicably compelling story. There are vast lacunas in the plot, filled with the unblinking performance of Ben Whishaw, made more memorable because most of it is done without words. Everyone else revolves around him, but he remains essentially a hole at the centre of the doughnut. It is a characterisation of great depth, in a plot that is nothing more than a series of enigmas, presented enigmatically."[15]

Jack Searle in The Guardian called it an "intoxicating series" with "a beguiling emotional aesthetic." "It was inevitable that, when prosaic explanation finally had to intrude on all this elliptical artistry, the spell was partly broken. A thriller hasn't so boldly made the genre beautiful since The Shadow Line. London Spy has lived in the gap between plot and subtext – between what it's about, and what it's really about. It's really about self-knowledge, and how lovers try to know each other while lying about themselves."[16]

Following the screening of the final episode, Gabriel Tate wrote in The Guardian that the series had "a somewhat daft and implausible ending, but there was still much to enjoy, mostly from the brilliant Ben Whishaw." [17] Benji Wilson in the The Daily Telegraph called it "wonderful and infuriating in equal measure..Has there ever been a television series that's frustrated as much as London Spy (BBC 2)? Over five weeks this contemporary thriller has scaled giddy heights and then plumbed ludicrous depths, gone from being completely gripping to turgid as hell, thrown up single scenes of startling brilliance then followed them with some preposterous self-indulgence... London Spy's potentially great script was in desperate need of some doughty editing." [18]

The Guardian's Mark Lawson named the series one of the best shows of 2015.[19]

References

  1. "BBC Two announces brand-new five-part drama series London Spy". BBC. 14 February 2014. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  2. Morgan, Joe (14 February 2014). "Gay writer to pen new gay spy drama for BBC". Gay Star News. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  3. Kanter, Jake (14 February 2014). "Acclaimed author pens BBC2 gay spy drama". Broadcast Now. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  4. Eames, Tom (14 February 2014). "BBC Two announces new drama series London Spy from Child 44 writer". Digital Spy. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  5. Barraclough, Leo (14 February 2014). "Working Title Teams with ‘Child 44′ Author Tom Rob Smith on BBC’s ‘London Spy’". Variety. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  6. Creamer, Jon (14 February 2014). "BBC2 orders Working Title drama from Child 44 author". Televisual. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  7. Kent Film Office. "Kent Film Office London Spy Article".
  8. "London Spy". BBC America. Retrieved 1 January 2016.
  9. "Weekly Viewing Summary (see relevant week)". BARB.
  10. Mangan, Lucy (10 November 2015). "London Spy review: compelling new thriller with a love story at its handsome heart". The Guardian (London). Retrieved 16 November 2015.
  11. Rees, Jasper (9 November 2015). "London Spy, episode one, review: 'unconvincing'". The Daily Telegraph (London). Retrieved 16 November 2015.
  12. Harry Mount (23 November 2015). "London Spy, episode three, review: 'a poor man's Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy'". Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 24 December 2015.
  13. Allegretti, Aubrey (10 November 2015). "Daily Mail TV Review Of 'London Spy' Laments The Number Of BBC 'Gay Dramas', Sparks Reader Backlash". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  14. "London Spy, Wolf Hall, The Honourable Woman... The three things in a TV drama that divide viewers". Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 7 December 2015.
  15. Gill, A.A. (6 December 2015). "Frank's patter does little to flatter him". The Sunday Times. News Ltd.
  16. Seale, Jack. "Is the final episode of London Spy doomed to let us down?". the Guardian. Retrieved 7 December 2015.
  17. Tate, Gabriel. "London Spy recap: episode five – the end of lying". the Guardian. Retrieved 2015-12-13.
  18. "London Spy, episode 5, review: 'frustrating'". Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 2015-12-08.
  19. Mark Lawson. "Best TV of 2015: No 5 – London Spy". the Guardian. Retrieved 24 December 2015.

External links

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