Kim Bodnia and Jodie Comer in Killing Eve
US TV

Fourth-episode verdict: Killing Eve (US: BBC America; UK: BBC One/BBC Three)

In the US: Sundays, 9pm, BBC America
In the UK: Acquired by BBC One/BBC Three. Will air in 2018

Spy comedies are hard to pull off. All too often, they end up as spoofs – and not hugely funny ones at that.

But with the first episode of Killing EveFleabag creator Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s adaptation of Luke Jennings’s Villanelle novels, it seemed like we had a rare success. Both stylish and funny, it saw desk-bound MI5 agent Sandra Oh (Grey’s Anatomy) realise that a series of murders were all the work of one female international assassin – Jodie Comer (Doctor Foster). While the nature of Comer’s job meant she went around killing people for most of the episode, it still had plenty of laughs: Comer’s mischievousness and little girl qualities leant itself to some black humour, while Oh’s lack of training meant her strand of humour stemmed from office and everyday mundanities.

What made that all work was it was still noticeably a semi-plausible spy show. Sure, it always had one eye on its locations, designer labels and groovy soundtrack, but it wasn’t outright comedy and it was prone to moments of genuine nastiness and realism. Comer’s chameleonic elusiveness was conceivable, and Oh and colleagues’ efforts to catch her were plausible.

Also written by Waller-Bridge, episode two at least carried on in this vein, with Oh setting up shop with MI6 to continue her hunt, while Comer continues to assassinate people all over Europe in an amusing manner, even while her handler, Kim Bodnia, begins to wonder if he has to start worrying about her as she gets increasingly out of control and cocky. It was a little less fun and stylish than the first episode, a bit more grotty office comedy, but it was still a good watch thanks to its cast.

Killing Eve

Out of control

However, since then, bereft of Waller-Bridge’s scripting, the comedy has continued more or less as before, but the drama has lost much of its plausibility. While a trip to Berlin is normally welcome in a TV show, having Oh’s colleague David Haig stomping around a largely naked gay nightclub in episode 3 in single-handed pursuit of the hugely deadly Comer, while wearing jacket and tweed hat, was nonsensical. Even to have tried to have followed a supposedly top international assassin by himself, let alone dressed like that, is beyond extraordinarily silly. That might work in Austin Powers, but in a supposed proper spy show – and as a deliberate dramatic, rather than comedic choice? It’s fatal.

Similarly, the sheer lack of tradecraft on display is almost suicidal and less than even a normal person would do. For example, Oh turns up to a murder scene straight from the airport, carrying her suitcase with her home address written on it – something even someone with the vaguest sense of self-preservation, let alone MI5/MI6 training, would try to avoid. This kind of daftness overrides its stylishness, making it look plain stupid.

Episode four, however, did at least improve things and Darren Boyd obviously knows how to do spy comedy. Giving Villanelle a bit more backstory and people to interact with also worked and the humour was more subtle (albeit occasionally broad). Comer also got to play up her girlishness and unpredictability, making you remember why she made such an impact in episode one. There was also a return to spy nastiness. It wasn’t as good as Waller-Bridge’s first episode, but it was a decent continuation.

Killing Eve's Jodie Comer

Killing it

When it’s at its best, Killing Eve is both a funny and a stylish spy drama with a great cast. Unfortunately, it’s also very variable and sometimes so silly, it stops being even slightly plausible and becomes an accidental sitcom. Depending on the consistency of the later episodes, it could still be a TV great. Or it could be yet another duff spy comedy.

Barrometer rating: 2

The Barrometer for Killing Eve

Westworld
US TV

What have you been watching? Including Westworld and The Looming Tower

It’s “What have you been watching?”, your chance to recommend anything you’ve been watching this week

This week’s review count has been pretty low, with just a few movies in Movie Monday and the whole of The Terror (US: AMC; UK: AMC UK) to TMINE’s name. Nevertheless, I am a bit behind schedule, after having watched all of that. Still, it could be worse – Harrow is still in the viewing queue, as is Legion, so they’ll have to wait, but I’ll be doing a third-episode verdict on Killing Eve (US: BBC America; UK: BBC One/BBC Three) later in the week and because there haven’t been any other new shows, I’ve caught up with everything else.

So after the jump, with SEAL Team on holiday yet again, a look at an otherwise remarkably full list of the latest episodes of the regulars: The Americans, The Good Fight, Krypton, Silicon Valley and Timeless, as well as the final episode of The Looming Tower. And, oh look – Westworld is back.

Will I ever get round to reviewing Trust? You never know…

Continue reading “What have you been watching? Including Westworld and The Looming Tower”

Killing Eve
US TV

What have you been watching? Including Black Lightning and Killing Eve

It’s “What have you been watching?”, your chance to recommend anything you’ve been watching this week

The flurry of new Spring shows has been dying down of late, but that doesn’t mean I’ve stopped regaling you with reviews of the latest and greatest – or at least freshest – shows. True, Trust and The Terror are still sitting in that viewing queue, looking ever more unappealing, but I’m still going to give them a shot. And elsewhere, I have at least given you reviews of:

As well as a third-episode verdict on The Crossing (US: ABC; UK: Amazon). Incidentally, in case you haven’t visited that The Detail review recently, it turns out that it really is a remake of ITV’s Scott & Bailey. They kept that one quiet (at first).

Being the lazy type, I can’t be bothered to check the worldwide schedules for new shows, so let it all be as much of a surprise to me as it is to you if a new one materialises for me to review – or as if I actually get round to Trust and The Terror.

After the jump, a look at the latest episodes of the regulars: The Americans, Deep State, The Good Fight, Harrow, Killing Eve, Krypton, Legion, The Looming Tower, SEAL Team, Silicon Valley and Timeless. We’ve also had the season finale of Black Lightning, so I’ll be letting you know how that went, too.

Continue reading “What have you been watching? Including Black Lightning and Killing Eve”

Killing Eve
US TV

Review: Killing Eve 1×1 (US: BBC America; UK: BBC One/BBC Three)

In the US: Sundays, 9pm, BBC America
In the UK: Acquired by BBC One/BBC Three. Will air in 2018

These days, it’s perhaps hard to remember that the James Bond books were aspirational pieces of writing. Sure, they were about an MI6 spy – well, assassin really, given his licence to kill – but as well as being a classic example of ‘competence porn‘, their endless lists of foods, designer labels and airports were also windows on a world of luxury and international travel that a post-war generation of readers still on rations could never hope to see for themselves. Small wonder that the movies with their glossy location filming became huge hits for the pre-EasyJet generations, who now know full well that airports are not in the slightest bit glamorous.

Outside the John Le Carré world of spy realism, pretty much every male spy TV and film series has been the same aspirational idea, just redressed for a new generation or slightly different audience: the Bourne movie series is basically Bond again, but for liberal Americans, for example.

Aspirational female spies – and assassins – have been a little harder to find. Sure, there have been attempts, such as the Moneypenny books and Black Widow in comics, but possibly the best attempt so far has been Modesty Blaise, although the movie didn’t really set the world on fire, despite numerous charms.

Sandra Oh in Killing Eve

Jane Bond

One could argue about what an aspirational female spy/assassin would be, but BBC America’s new series, Killing Eve, offers one really good suggestion. Adapted from Luke Jennings’s Villanelle novels by Fleabag creator Phoebe Waller-Bridge, it sees Sandra Oh (Grey’s Anatomy) playing a bored MI5 desk officer who begins to suspect that a series of assassinations around the world are the work of a female assassin. Even though, it’s not her job, she defies orders and investigates, resulting in tragedy – and possibly a new job thanks to MI6’s Fiona Shaw.

Rather brilliantly, even though the books are about Russian orphan-turned-assassin Villanelle – played equally brilliantly here by Jodie Comer (Doctor Foster) – Oh is the clear protagonist of the piece. That means we aren’t asked to identify as much with Villanelle and her job and can instead aspire to her rather wonderful lifestyle. She lives in Paris, speaks multiple languages fluently, and has designer bed linen and clothes.

But rather than be a simple blunt, character-less tool of the state like James Bond, or a seductive femme fatale without any desires of her own, Comer’s Villanelle has fun. She’s also fun herself. When handler Kim Bodnia (Bron/Broen) shows up at her apartment, she’s faked her own suicide – but not too well, as she doesn’t want him to believe too much, since it’s just a joke.

She’s also no mere male spy with the pronouns changed or a male fantasy. She does things that no male spy tends to do: she plays with children, for example. Can you imagine Bond doing that? She’s also more gymnast than ninja or member of the military. She shins up drainpipes like she’s in the circus, and when she’s forced to hide in a room without exits, she literally folds up her diminutive stature inside a suitcase. She listens to cool music, wears cool clothes, zooms around on motorbikes and is a delight to behold, even when she’s stabbing someone in the eye.

Small wonder that Killing Eve is all about the mutual fascination that Oh and Comer end up having for one another, Comer and her fun life being something that Oh could aspire to having.

Kim Bodnia and Jodie Comer in Killing Eve
Kim Bodnia and Jodie Comer in Killing Eve

Spy humour

But Killing Eve is as much a comedy as it is a drama. Nevertheless, unlike most spy comedies, such as Austin Powers, ChuckSpy or In Like Flint, it’s not a spoof. Instead, this is a comedy of everyday life, of the office and of relationships. Oh and work colleague David Haig are annoyed to have to come into work on a Saturday – and are still hung over from Haig’s birthday party from the night before. Oh snacks her way through this important meeting and is worried that she’s not making the right impression with Shaw. Important conversations happen while buying milk at the corner shop, rather than over a shark tank.

I have to admit to really loving Killing Eve, with its mixture of spy glamour and spy mundanity. Despite being made by BBC America, there’s location filming all over Europe and it looks great. Oh’s a great lead and fits in with the British tone and humour. Comer, meanwhile, is a revelation – I don’t remember ever seeing her in anything, but here she dominates every scene when necessary, while disappearing into the background whenever the story demands it.

Even if you didn’t like Fleabag, there’s a good chance you’ll like or even love this. And it might even make you want to become a top female assassin.

Legion season 2
Streaming TV

What have you been watching? Including The Americans and Legion

It’s “What have you been watching?”, your chance to recommend anything you’ve been watching this weekfortnight

TMINE was on holiday last week but fortunately, I’ve now managed to review pretty much all the new shows that have started airing in that time:

I’ll be reviewing Killing Eve (US: BBC America; UK: BBC One/BBC Three) in the next couple of days and seeing as Channel Five have gone and bought CTV (Canada)’s The Detail, I’ll be giving that a whirl, too, with next week’s Boxset Monday set to be Netflix’s Lost in Space.

Regular readers will notice that I’ve not yet reviewed Trust (US: FX; UK: Sky Atlantic) or The Terror (US: AMC; UK: AMC Global). They’re a bit of a ‘work in progress’, with Trust being a bit of a slog so far, but I will get round to them at some point, particularly The Terror since I do love a naval story.

I also gave Amazon’s Dangerous Book for Boys a go, but didn’t even make it through the first episode, since it was a bit too ‘US family comedy’ for me, so I can’t really give it a real review.

Spring is officially here, however, which means that as well as in with the new, it’s out with the old. That means that this week’s WHYBW? is not only chock full of new and returning shows, including The Americans and Legion, it’s also waving goodbye to a few shows that have aired their season finales, namely Counterpart, DC’s Legends of Tomorrow, The Magicians and Will & Grace.

I haven’t had the time (or really the inclination) to watch the new season of Plebs, but after the jump, double-helpings (mostly) for the rest of the regulars: Black Lightning, The Crossing, The Good Fight, Harrow, Krypton, The Looming Tower, SEAL Team, Silicon Valley and Timeless. See you in mo – can you guess which show will be getting a promotion?

Continue reading “What have you been watching? Including The Americans and Legion”