Netflix’s ‘Black Doves’: A Chilling Tale of Espionage for the Holidays

Netflix’s ‘Black Doves’: A Chilling Tale of Espionage for the Holidays

©Courtesy of Netflix 

Christmas isn’t just about pear-tree partridges and turtle doves. It’s also about (ammunition) cartridges and black doves, an image that provides an apt title for this London-based spy thriller that serves up a hearty brew of holiday cheer spiced with intrigue and espionage.

Black Doves made its debut on Netflix in early December, after having been renewed for a second season months beforehand. Based on a script by Joe Barton, the first three of its six episodes were directed by Alex Gabassi and the final three by Lisa Gunning. This intriguing and edge-of-your-seat thriller features a cast led by Keira Knightley, Ben Whishaw, and Sarah Lancashire as they probe the circumstances surrounding the mysterious death of the Chinese ambassador to the UK and the simultaneous disappearance of his daughter, Kai-Ming. Further complicating this situation are allegations that the American CIA was responsible, ratcheting up global tensions.

 

The cast deserves acclaim for playing their roles with just the right dose of dramaturgical and psychological intensity. Though they are dealing with violent emotions, they never succumb to the temptation to over-dramatize or sensationalize their performances. Irony and humor are valued as much as revenge or score-settling.

Black Doves©Courtesy of Netflix 

In this riveting series, Keira Knightley plays the central role of Helen Webb, the wife of the UK’s Secretary of State for Defence. Helen is also a secret agent for a spy-for-hire organization known as the Black Doves, a clandestine group that prides itself on “selling intelligence to the highest bidder.” She learns early on that her secret identity is in danger of being compromised when her lover, Jason Davies, is killed during an affair the two are having. Helen quickly puzzles out the identity of Jason’s killer, a man named Elmore Fitch, who attacks her during a home invasion as she seeks the whereabouts of Kai-Ming, Enraged at his brazenness, Helen shoots him in cold blood in her garden shed.

In the wake of these developments, the Black Doves recruit Helen’s old friend, Sam Young, played by Ben Whishaw, to shield her from harm’s way. Knightley’s character is impressive for her determination and ferocity, while Whishaw’s triggerman character reveals a sensitive side, especially in his relationship with his male lover, played with quiet intensity by Omari Douglas. Also notable here is the performance by Sarah Lancashire, who strikes just the right mix of seriousness and quirkiness in her role as Reed, the no-nonsense enforcer for the Black Doves.



Despite its foreboding title and plenteous scenes of bloodshed and mayhem, Black Doves is decidedly not a ghoulish gorefest that foregrounds violence for its own sake. To the credit of the filmmakers, there are plenty of sugarplummish scenes to balance out the darker ones, ranging from lavish Christmas parties in diplomatic venues to a children’s Nativity pageant and, in the final episode, a congregation singing hymns in an elegant church setting. Kudos also to the cinematographers Giulio Biccari and Mark Patten for their lush visual portrayals of London during the holiday season.

Admittedly, at times it becomes difficult to follow the threads of this intricate and complex plot, which involves flashbacks and backtracks and an embarrassment of details, subplots, and nuances. Still, as Aramide Tinubu points out in her review for Variety, Black Doves is a “twisted thriller of a series” involving a “tense web and intricate web of conspiracies and cover-ups involving multiple governments and organizations”—one that takes viewers on a “fun, poignant and dizzying journey centering on friendship and connection.”

Black Doves

©Courtesy of Netflix 

Rating: A

Check out other articles by Edward.

Here’s the trailer of the film. 

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