Review: A TV Spy Thriller About Psychological Consequences of Going Undercover
The Agency depicts the cruelty and dehumanization involved in espionage work.

In The Agency, human lives and personalities are tools to be abused by the state. The Showtime series stars Michael Fassbender, Jeffrey Wright, and Richard Gere as London-based CIA agents running complex undercover operations.
Fassbender's character, Brandon Cunningham, has just returned from a six-year stint in Africa under an assumed identity, where he made personal connections and fell in love. Ordered to return to London and his old identity, he is expected to simply discard those feelings—to compartmentalize in ways that further the spy agency's projects.
Meanwhile, the agency is training a new operative, a young woman named Daniela Morata (Saura Lightfoot-Leon), who they hope can infiltrate Iran through a scientific research program. Much of her training involves figuring out how to connect with people in ways that feel natural and genuine, and then exploit them.
Cunningham's dilemma demonstrates the psychological consequences of long-term undercover work, while Morata's shows the strange coldness required to be good at that work. The espionage game is a cruel and dehumanizing process that makes the individual subservient to a vast and unknowable state. The show seems to suggest that being a spy in service of international geopolitics means throwing away a part of yourself.
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Almost every interaction with other people involves some sort of role playing. That's one advantage to commuting to an office — gives you a way to separate work and home. Which probably explains some of why the woke crowd is so confused, infantalized by COVID lockdowns and spending so much time in classrooms memorizing nonsense they will never use.
But I digress. What I really came to say is, this seems more like one of those cases where the writer just makes shit up, and since most people have no familiarity with real spies, they assume the writer, director, actors, etc all must be telling the truth. Like reading a news article about something unfamiliar subject and assuming the writer and media company must know what the are talking about, yet if the same writer at the same media company writes about something we do know about, his errors makes us laugh or get mad.
I doubt this show's revelations are any more accurate than James Bond or John Wick. They just sound more plausible because they aren't over the top.
Wanna watch a much better show about the CIA? Check out The Lioness created by Taylor Sheridan of Yellowstone fame. The Agency, which I watched, was one of the few shows I gave a thumbs down to. It is the most boring drivel I've ever seen.
Ironically, I then watched The Lioness on Paramount+ (free trial) and was gobsmacked at how good the writing and acting were. The dialogue was gripping, the plotlines intricate and compelling.
The Agency, however, which takes place in the CIA's UK headquarters, is so dull that I was fast-forwarding through scenes and realized I didn't miss anything. It was also a woke mess, filled with all the required DEI roles (so it's eligible to win awards, which is how you end up with a mess like 'Snow Brown'), and the only thing missing was a man in a dress.
The Lioness, which also had its fair share of DEI roles, was at least plausible in its casting. It had action, great locales, and wonderful acting, with Nicole Kidman surprisingly good (and looking great). After two seasons, you'll be hooked. As for The Agency, let's hope this is the last and only season.
Spy Thriller About Psychological Consequences of Going Undercover
I saw this when it was called The Departed .
it was treadmill enjoyable right up until episode 3 when I ran into a paywall.
Look at the damage going undercover to pretend he wasn’t a genocidal zionist in his lead up to the election caused Trump. The man then has a psychotic break gobbling down genocidal zionist ball sacs.
>the cruelty and dehumanization involved in espionage work
Yes, we know this must be true because TV says so. That, and some John le Carre fiction I read once. TV and novels -- the wellsprings of The Truth.