Slow Horses Season 2 Ups the Stakes and Becomes Even More Enjoyable in the Process
Photo Courtesy of Apple TV+
Apple’s darkly funny and thrilling spy saga Slow Horses, based on Mick Herron’s Slough House series of novels, enjoyed a relatively quiet debut earlier this year, which is to say that it arrived like the majority of the streaming service’s shows. But unlike those that are best forgotten, the British drama fully deserves to break through the noise when Season 2 premieres Friday with two new episodes.
If there was one issue plaguing Slow Horses’ first season, it was a lackluster kidnapping case that eventually mired the otherwise engaging series and its cast of lovable misfits in the resulting mess. The show’s six-episode second season seeks to make us forget that predictable first season with a twisty, Russian-themed narrative in which Jackson Lamb (a superb Gary Oldman) and the rest of Slough House—MI5 agents who’ve all been exiled to a kind of purgatory after screwing up on the job—must dig into long-buried Cold War secrets to prevent a potentially catastrophic attack on London.
Season 2 is based on the novel Dead Lions, and without having read it, I cannot say for sure how closely the new season sticks to its source material. But in some ways it feels like the show’s writers heard the faint criticism of the first season, attempted to course correct, and ended up with a narrative that tries to be sneaky and comes up just short. And yet, it does little to take away from the show’s innate charms.
When a former agent dismissed from the service after going AWOL before the fall of Berlin Wall is found dead on a bus in the season premiere, Lamb suspects his death wasn’t simple heart failure like it says on paper. Upon investigation, he discovers a coded, one-word message left on the man’s cell phone—cicada—referencing a former KGB operation involving sleeper agents embedded in British society that was discovered to be a hoax once the spymaster believed to be controlling them was revealed to be nothing more than smoke and mirrors.