LONDON: It’s not uncommon to see Keira Knightley on TV around the festive period — usually in reruns of “Love Actually” or the “Pirates of the Caribbean” movies. But “Black Doves” – a new six-part Netflix series from writer/creator Joe Barton – sees Knightley in an altogether different Christmas setting.
On the streets of festive London, Knightley’s Helen is swept up in a world of snipers and espionage after the death of a civil servant forces her everyday life as a devoted wife and mother to overlap with her secret career as a Black Dove — a spy who has been passing secrets from her politician husband to a shadowy organization run by spymaster Reed (Sarah Lancashire, devouring every single scene she’s in). With Helen now a target, her friend and master assassin Sam (Ben Whishaw) sweeps in to help her get to the bottom of the threat.
What follows is a fast-paced caper that’s equal parts whodunnit, violent gangster flick and British character drama. Knightley’s Helen is all polished calm with simmering rage, Whishaw’s Sam is an amiable, charming man with a terrifying aptitude for violence. Together, the two form one of the most dynamic on-screen partnerships of recent years. Each part of their history — some hinted at, some told via flashbacks — feels captivatingly real and relatable, despite the fact that both have more spy skills than Bond and Bourne combined.
At times, it’s super-tropey — characters write important names and events on notepads, or whispered flashbacks are used to remind us that what’s happening is Very Important Because of That Thing That Guy Said Last Episode. But where such heavy-handedness is usually an irritation, “Black Doves” leans into its pulpy tendencies, and is actually all the better for it. Because it’s that combination of highly implausible spy thriller and decidedly British sensibilities that makes this show fizz. It’s great to see Helen battle a knife-wielding assassin in her kitchen, or to see Sam decimate attackers in his pajamas (it remains, though, very disconcerting to hear the voice of Paddington Bear discussing a shootout), but it’s also great to hear them bicker about their personal lives in between set pieces.
“Black Doves” is a wonderful, festive surprise — a show that’s as good as the sum of its impressive parts, and then some.