Covert Affairs
I pledge allegiance to the flag, of the United States of
America, and to the republic which is plagued by Russian spies and dangerous assassins,
but protected by our heroic CIA agents who tackle our enemies wearing red high
heels. In the age of patriotism, USA’s Covert Affairs has captured our minds with
high speed car chases, sexy spies, and all in the name of America the beautiful.
The writing may be subpar, the acting mediocre, but Covert Affairs knows how to
entertain.
Covert Affairs Pilot
starring Piper Perabo as the daringly beautiful Annie Walker, first aired July
13, 2010 and will continue with its third season this summer. Annie Walker is a
language genius finishing up her time in CIA training at ‘the farm’ when she is
suddenly and mysteriously summoned to Langley, the CIA head quarters. Annie’s
language expertise is needed to gain intelligence from a Russian contact and
Annie is thrown head first into the world of a spy. As she works her first assignment
she encounters assassins, bureaucratic monsters, friendly blind men, deceiving ex
convicts, and over protective siblings. This special two hour episode has it
all: high speed car chases, hand to hand combat, frightening shoot outs, under
cover call girls, and don’t forget the romance.
Layering selfless
patriotism with straight up badass, Annie Walker is at the crux of Covert
Affairs. Men and women alike can appreciate Perabo’s style. The Pilot is
peppered with scenes for just such an audience: Annie valiantly jumping out of
a plane while her male colleagues look on in fear, Annie seducing her way out
of interrogation with the FB I, Annie catapulting turnstiles in chase of a dangerous
foreigner while wearing five inch heels, Annie driving her red car like a
NASCAR stunt driver in escape of a sketchy black car following her. If Annie
isn’t to your taste then you’re sure to find someone you like. There’s the
loveable techie Auggie, blinded in Iraq, who always has a joke and a piece of
advice, and who is, let’s be frank, pretty darn good looking. There’s Arthur
and Joan, big bosses in the CIA and using their CIA privileges and under cover
knowledge to ensure that they aren’t cheating. There’s the sneaky Liza Hearn, a
journalist leaking intelligence secrets. And of course Annie’s mysterious love
interest who vanishes suddenly from their bed of new and passionate love,
leaving only a note.
The episode starts with
Annie’s polygraph for entry into the CIA and we are introduced through
flashbacks to Annie’s tumultuous love affair in Sri Lanka which, after ending
so abruptly, leaves Annie hardened and ready for a life of secrecy and
dedication to her country. Back in the present Annie is summoned to Langley,
given a fake cell phone enabled to synch with the cell phone of a Russian asset
and a DC call girl outfit. When the operation goes wrong Annie gets in trouble
with her strict boss Joan, and is forced to take initiative to solve the
problem herself.
While we will never know
what truly goes on inside the highly guarded CIA headquarters, we can guess that
undercover missions do not usually unfold with such slow motion glamour, that paper
work is not actually done so infrequently, and the head of the Domestic
Protection Division does not actually get to wear such low cut dresses. Despite
this unreality and the somewhat cheesy writing, Covert Affairs has surely
persuaded numerous budding Americans, that the CIA is a job of intrigue and
excitement again in the name of good ‘ol America.
This high budget, high
profile TV show has action and glamour going for it, and that is the way it is
going to have to continue. To stay successful Covert Affairs will have to
continue wowing us with high speed chases, complex CIA lingo, and the perilous
state of our national security. With the current nuclear mindset, USA network
will have no problem keeping us on our toes and even convincing us to give our
life for our country, or more likely, our life in search of a thrilling spy
lifestyle in which leaping from planes in tight skirts is the norm and there is liberty and justice for all.
you had a great closing sentence. "or more likely, our life in search of a thrilling spy lifestyle in which leaping from planes in tight skirts is the norm and there is liberty and justice for all."
ReplyDeletebig fan of that.
You did a good job of adding your thoughts while telling the reader exactly what it's about.
ReplyDeleteThis piece is very stylistic and you really set a mood that caters to modern American society. Good job.
ReplyDelete