https://www.imdb.com/title/tt24053860/
I think it’s a lot closer to The Day of the Jackal (1973) in spirit. Far far superior to The Jackal (1997 film).
I’m halfway through but still not feeling the romance story of the Jackal and his wife though. Think the show could have done better without it.
It’s pretty much what happens with any show with a little gravity these days. Production value is through the roof, dialog is okay. But the show lacks depth.
So I’d say if you’re looking for a show to watch and this caught your eye, just watch it. But don’t expect it to be the best thing you’ve ever seen. Eddie Redmayne is good in it though.
So should I see it?
I’m through the first 8 episodes. Pretty good.
Yes
I just (spoiler free) wrote about the first two episodes. I am at odds with both camps for the show from seeing talk. I am not into the show but I also don’t think Lashana Lynch is to blame.
I think Lashana Lynch killed her role (positive comment about her acting). I think the story was already facing an impossible climb in being adapted to the modern world.
The original movie showed that aside from the Jackal being better than competent government agents, there were also practical logistical difficulties trying to find one unknown bad guy in a liberal world. And the internet basically solved all of these.
- Magical anonymous internet chat that can be carried around on a USB stick. At a minimum that’s a reboot of the computer to run on the USB stick.
- A wealthy person being traced with publicly available information because I guess they hid their money trail themselves instead of letting a professional handle it. That’s boots on the ground investigative reporters at a minimum looking for a single slip up.
- So many burner phones.
- Forged passports that don’t just trigger an alert when the person doesn’t exist on the passport database.