Slow Horses season five review not even Gary Oldman can salvage this TV mess
Briefly

Slow Horses season five review  not even Gary Oldman can salvage this TV mess
"Rightwing politics is an area that Apple TV+'s spy drama has tackled before; back in season one, a British-Pakistani student was memorably taken on a joyride by a nationalist group named Sons of Albion, who threatened to behead him on a live stream. However, like many things in the Slow Horses universe based on Mick Herron's bestselling novels about a group of MI5 rejects the opening proves something of a red herring."
"Worse still, people-pleasing agent River Cartwright (Jack Lowden) has undergone a personality bypass, and spends much of the series acting in a way that can only be described as unnervingly dickish. (Lowden pulls it off, but it does feel rather unbecoming for the show's unofficial hero.) Still, it figures: as well as observing his grandfather David's rapid descent into dementia, last season saw River discover that his real dad was an ex-CIA agent turned cult"
The fifth season of Slow Horses opens with a gun attack by a follower of a far-right politician and briefly shows St George's crosses. The series uses a misleading opening that shifts focus away from any single antagonist; white nationalists, environmental activists and hostile foreign actors all feature but none dominate. The season feels overstuffed and lacking in substance. River Cartwright undergoes a stark personality change, behaving unnervingly dickish despite a capable performance by Jack Lowden. River's recent traumatic backstory includes his grandfather's dementia and the revelation that his biological father was an ex-CIA agent turned cult leader. A separate subplot involves Roddy Ho's new girlfriend and the possibility she is using him to access classified intelligence.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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