The Veil review – Elisabeth Moss muddles through creaky spy series

The actor struggles with a distractingly unbelievable British accent in Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight’s tiresome espionage drama

The intimidating glut of prestige shows rushed to air before the end of the Emmys eligibility period makes it harder than ever to know how one should portion out viewing time. Recent weeks have seen new projects from big names like Park Chan-Wook with stars such as Ewan McGregor, Michael Douglas and Julianne Moore while the remaining days see actors like André Holland and Benedict Cumberbatch premiere dramas alongside the return of awards magnet Hacks.

There’s an inevitable impossibility for the average viewer, and voter, trying to schedule it all in and so certain shows will, and must, be sacrificed. The Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight’s globe-trotting spy drama The Veil is the perfect lamb for the job, a bafflingly bad time-waster that can be easily excised and promptly forgotten. It’s a hodgepodge of shows we’ve seen before – a bit of Killing Eve, a touch of Homeland – but it’s mostly reminiscent of a junky Netflix action movie only stretched over six episodes and with a laughably straight face. Perhaps if it had been told in less than two hours with more light-footed action to distract us, it might not have been such a slog.

One can see why an actor like Elisabeth Moss would find it an appealing prospect on paper, allowing her the opportunity to do something she’s never done before, a far freer and frothier role away from the relentless cycle of torture that is The Handmaid’s Tale. Even outside of the show, she’s kept herself in the wringer in punishing films like The Invisible Man, Shirley and Her Smell and shows like Top of the Lake and Shining Girls. One hopes she had more fun than we did here, a deserved break from the murk. Because as undercover MI6 agent Imogen Salter, she’s glumly unconvincing, a fault of Knight’s thin, dated Strong Female Lead characterisation (“Fuck the past, I need a martini!”) but also of an even more jarring affliction, a clanging British accent that she spends the majority of her energy wrestling with. It’s a hugely uncomfortable effort for her and for us and as wonderful as Moss so often is, this feels like a rare misstep.

Her character is forced into an unusual partnership with a suspected IS terrorist (the far more effective Yumna Marwan), who could either be predator or prey. Their dynamic, which twists and turns on a journey from Istanbul to Paris to London, is entirely juiceless, the idea of these two women trying to figure the other one out more compelling than what we’re lumped with, their banter often sounding closest to that of Knight’s worst film work, the Anne Hathaway stinkers Locked Down and Serenity. They bond over their shared love of Shakespeare (!) allowing for some clumsily inserted quotes and both hint at gradually revealed backstories, neither of which prove all that interesting.

Knight is insistent that we be absolutely astonished by his radical, rulebook-ravaging heroine – smoking, drinking, shagging and quipping her way across the world – in a way that feels so embarrassingly forced (as well as being a decade or two too late), we can never see past how he’s telling us to think about her to see her as a real or even interesting person. Every time she says something irreverent or does something unconventional, it’s never quite as sly or as surprising as Knight seems to believe it is, a character with an “obsession with annihilation” who’s awfully hard to get obsessed with. The show too is never as sleek or as smart as it wants to be, slowly, boringly unfolding with a creak, like a Gal Gadot action movie that thinks it’s a John Le Carre novel.

The Veil might just be a limited series, in more ways than one, but Imogen is clearly being positioned as a character who can be transplanted into new situations with new missions for her to take on, a pick up and drop game piece to be reused for endless seasons to come. But there’s nothing here that deserves expansion in a series that is already at breaking point. We’re led through the at times punishingly dull, four-and-a half-hour runtime with the promise of surprise but it never really comes. The only real shock is why, at a time of far too much TV, anyone would waste their time watching this.

  • The Veil starts on 30 April on Hulu in the US and on Disney+ in Australia, and will air in UK at a later date

Contributor

Benjamin Lee

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Shining Girls review – Elisabeth Moss is perfect for this time-hopping thriller
Ferociously intense, remarkably nuanced and completely unflinching, Moss excels as a traumatised, time-slipping newspaper worker on the trail of a serial killer

Lucy Mangan

29, Apr, 2022 @9:29 AM

Article image
Phil Hogan interviews Elisabeth Moss, star of The West Wing and Mad Men

Audiences and critics loved her as the enigmatic 1960s secretary Peggy in Mad Men. As the show returns to BBC4, she tells Phil Hogan why US TV drama is on a winning streak.

Phil Hogan

25, Jan, 2009 @12:01 AM

Article image
Top of the Lake: China Girl review – Elisabeth Moss is totally mesmerising, again
Season two sees Jane Campion wring cinematic beauty from a seedy Sydney cityscape, with Nicole Kidman joining Moss’s Detective Robin Griffin

Sam Wollaston

28, Jul, 2017 @5:00 AM

Article image
Elisabeth Moss: 'How I found my inner tough guy'

The Top of the Lake star has played intense and clever women in Mad Men and The West Wing – but when Jane Campion asked her to show her hard side, it was time to channel Jodie Foster

Lizzy Goodman

02, Jul, 2013 @5:12 PM

Article image
The Nevers review – Joss Whedon’s messy supernatural Victorian series
The compelling leads of HBO’s drama about women afflicted with special gifts can’t charm past an overstuffed plot and the shadow of its creator

Adrian Horton

08, Apr, 2021 @2:12 PM

Article image
‘I don't take acting that seriously. I'm a Valley girl’: Elisabeth Moss on life after Mad Men
From Mad Men to Top Of The Lake, the High-Rise star has made her mark playing earnest, tightly wound women. So how come she’s known as the class clown?

Tom Shone

12, Mar, 2016 @9:00 AM

Article image
The Handmaid's Tale review – timely adaptation scares with dystopian dread
Elisabeth Moss makes a mighty impression in a 10-part take on Margaret Atwood’s prescient and fiercely feminist horror

Rebecca Nicholson

26, Apr, 2017 @11:00 AM

Article image
The Handmaid’s Tale season four review – hope at last in the most harrowing show on TV
Elisabeth Moss has always made this impressive if horrifying TV. But as the new series turns June into queen of the rebels, it has a shot of new life

Rebecca Nicholson

20, Jun, 2021 @9:10 PM

Article image
Soulmates review: Black Mirror-esque series is intriguing but hollow
An anthology series from a writer of the hit dystopian show explores the dark implications of a soulmate test in a show that favors ambition over intimacy

Adrian Horton

05, Oct, 2020 @8:12 PM

Article image
Treadstone review – fast-paced Bourne series is a surprise success
Deftly avoiding franchise fatigue, this globe-hopping action caper ambitiously expands Robert Ludlum’s canvas for a fun, if functionally made, show

Benjamin Lee

15, Oct, 2019 @6:00 AM