Saturday, 31 December 2022

Treason | Official Trailer | Netflix


REVIEW

Treason, Netflix, review: rollicking spy drama doesn't stop to check if it makes sense

   

3/5

Russian spies, double-crossing British spooks, a baby-faced head of MI6 - this 100mph thriller is loopy, self-serious and a lot of fun

 

By

Jasper Rees

22 December 2022 • 6:00am

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/tv/2022/12/22/treason-netflix-review-rollicking-spy-drama-doesnt-stop-check/

 

In recent years, thrillers about the British state have asked us to swallow some totteringly tall stories. The Home Secretary who has a hot affair with her bodyguard. The secret agency that frames its victims with faked-up video footage. How about this from Treason (Netflix): the newly installed head of MI6, the one in charge of that big ugly building by Vauxhall Bridge in London, is a double agent working for the Russians and nobody seems to have noticed.

 

Too far-fetched? What makes Adam Lawrence (Charlie Cox) even more wildly implausible is his über-youth. The nation’s new chief spy is easily young enough to be his own protégé. He’s also handsome in a stubbly yet somehow clean-cut way. You can see him as one of a superannuated boyband, reuniting in their late 30s to rake it on the road. The Spooky Boys, perhaps. It’s easy to imagine him at a photoshoot. A shoot-out, less so.

 

Anyway, Lawrence has been elevated to his new role after his boss, Sir Martin Angelis (Ciarán Hinds in full dastard mode), is poisoned at his club by a rogue Russian operative, Kara Yerzov (Olga Kurylenko, who first did this sort of thing wearing a gown in Quantum of Solace). Sir Martin is a dealer in kompromat, a bulging cache of intel on the peccadilloes of the higher-ups that enables him to bend them to his will: a Supreme Court judge here, a Foreign Secretary (Alex Kingston) there. So we know he’s a rotten apple from the off. But who else is?

 

Lawrence has his own skeletons which date back 15 years to five deaths in Baku. Before you can blurt “why on earth are the Russians and, hello, the Americans so interested in, if you will, his Baku story?”, that’s exactly what is playing out. No one on screen seems to believe anyone else: friendships and marriages and political alliances are all part of a complex and shifting cat’s cradle of every-which-way distrust.

 

This isn’t good news on the domestic front. Lawrence’s teenage daughter, Ella (Beau Gadsdon), manages to slip away from her (evidently crap) security detail and soon finds herself kidnapped. “Everything is alright,” Lawrence keeps reassuring his second wife, Mattie (Oona Chaplin). Fortunately his missus is a veteran of Afghanistan, which may just come in handy a few episodes down the pipe.

 

The script, which plays out in five craftily plotted episodes, is by Matt Charman. You may recall him as the young playwright who was edging into TV before a screenplay of his about swapping spies in the Cold War reached Steven Spielberg, who asked the Coen brothers to sprinkle further fairy dust on it. In this, Charman’s first significant work since Bridge of Spies, it’s possible to guess what the Coens may have brought to the party: an indefinable charm, a seductive wit that, on his own among spies, Charman has no time for.

 

Instead he has plenty to say about Russian meddling in the British body politic – in particular a Lebedev-like figure who is bankrolling a would-be prime minister. This would have looked more searingly up-to-date before the invasion of Ukraine, mention of which has been parachuted into the script.

 

But the business of making this story look like it belongs in the here and now on the whole plays second fiddle to pace. Nor does the story hang around worrying about drag-anchor stuff like feelings. People look scared or worried or brave as and when required. But never for long. When a big death happens, there isn’t even time to mourn. This is a plot in a hurry to deliver, which – if you can accept a Pop Idol contestant as head of MI6 – it pretty much does.

 

Treason is available to watch on Netflix from Boxing Day

 



Review

Treason review – say hello to TV’s cuddliest spy

 

Gripping as this fun, frenetic espionage thriller is, its lead isn’t exactly a hard nut. Think cheerful lectures to schoolkids and channelling the personality of a lovely labrador …

 

Stuart Heritage

@stuheritage

Mon 26 Dec 2022 06.00 GMT

https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2022/dec/26/treason-review-netflix-charlie-cox-spy-show#:~:text=It's%20a%20pretty%20good%20ride,the%20air%20of%20unfulfilled%20promise.

 

Although just about every actor on the face of the Earth has enjoyed a stint as the frontrunner to play the next Bond, Charlie Cox seems to be the sole exception.

 

Despite sharing an age, a gender and a race with every screen Bond so far – not to mention a handy sideline as a superhero given that he plays Daredevil in the Marvel cinematic universe – for some reason he hasn’t quite made the cut.

 

The reason, it seems, is Treason (Netflix). A big part of the Potential 007 audition sequence is to play someone slightly Bondy on the small screen, as Tom Hiddleston did with The Night Manager and James Norton did with McMafia.

 

It’s an opportunity for them to dress the part, brood in a variety of opulent locations and occasionally mess around with guns. Treason – a spy thriller written by the Oscar-nominated co-writer of Bridge of Spies – sounds as if it should have been cut from the exact same cloth.

 

And yet our first meaningful introduction to Cox’s spy comes during a scene in a school library where he cheerfully tells a bunch of primary-age kids what it’s like to be a spy. Which, however you cut it, isn’t something you can imagine Daniel Craig doing.

 

Indeed, throughout the course of Treason, Cox is less an international man of mystery and more a lovely labrador who has somehow gained the skill to operate a humanoid robot.

 

But Cox is no mere spy. Despite looking like a particularly meek supply teacher, he is in fact second in command at MI6. And when his boss (Ciarán Hinds, thankfully given slightly more to do than he was in The English) is incapacitated during an errant whisky-poisoning accident, it falls to Cox to run the ship. This is plainly ridiculous, since the man looks like his natural calling is to host a CBeebies series about the importance of cuddles, but let’s go with it.

 

 

It is extremely difficult to mention anything specific about the plot from this point onwards because that would unravel the entire series, but it is safe to say that things don’t go well. Hinds’s poisoner is Olga Kurylenko, who has a past with Cox, and things get knottier and knottier until his whole family ends up involved in the mess.

 

I can tell you that the plot involves a full English of contemporary references – kompromat, shady Russian lords, a Conservative leadership campaign – and that the show is set in London, because this is one of those shows where scenes don’t count unless there is an immediately recognisable central London landmark in the middle of the screen. Any more than that would destroy the ride.

 

It’s a pretty good ride, too. Treason manages that brilliant television trick of sucking you in with its labyrinthine plot so effectively that you don’t realise quite how stupid it is until long after the credits roll, at which point it hits you like a ton of bricks. But, still, it has the air of unfulfilled promise.

 

It’s weird, in this age of Far Too Much Television, to wish that a show went on for longer, but this is the case with Treason. It’s a five-part, fairly finite limited series, but it feels as if it was set up to be something far more substantial.

 

What it feels like, in fact, is one of those big old-fashioned American network shows that ran for half a year at a time. One of those pacy, inexplicable spy thrillers like 24 or Homeland that never managed to run out of complicated conspiracies that went all ... the … way … to … the … top.

 

I dare say I would have enjoyed Treason a lot more if this had been the case. Instead, with less than four hours total running time, Treason hits all of its requisite beats in nothing less than a blind panic.

 

Someone gets abducted, but then they’re found before anyone has the chance to start worrying. There’s a government mole, but that’s all sorted out with the wave of a hand. If anyone seems in any way suspicious or mysterious, their true motives are usually explained within a scene or two, so that the show doesn’t have to drop its mad clatter to the finish line.

 

It’s fun, but frustrating. A few more episodes spent with Labrador Bond and all his stupid problems, and Treason could have been a belter.


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