The Game

The Game

2014
The Game
The Game

The Game

7.7 | TV-14 | en | Drama

"The Game" is a 1970s Cold War spy thriller set in the world of espionage. It tells the story of the invisible war fought by MI5 as it battles to protect the nation from the threats of the Cold War.

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Seasons & Episodes

1
EP6  Episode 6
Dec. 10,2014
Episode 6

The team is reeling from a KGB bombing and the mole’s confession, but with Operation Glass hurtling towards a shocking climax, MI5 is running out of time to piece the puzzle together and avert disaster. Bobby and Wendy make a crucial discovery which could have implications at the highest levels of government.

EP5  Episode 5
Dec. 03,2014
Episode 5

The team is reeling from the shocking discovery of a mole among them, and as the Soviet plot continues unabated, it is up to Wendy to give the team the break they need. Meanwhile, when Sarah finds herself in danger, Alan is forced to make a decision that can make or break their relationship. Joe has trouble of his own when leaked information threatens the investigation and the lives of the team.

EP4  Episode 4
Nov. 26,2014
Episode 4

Discovering the KGB is one step ahead, Joe tries to convince the team to run a double agent scheme – a perilous game that understandably makes his colleagues uneasy. But with dangerous assassin Odin at large, the team is unsure KGB defector, Arkady, would risk his life to help them. Meanwhile, Alan grapples with a shocking discovery that could jeopardize his marriage to fellow agent and wife, Sarah. Bobby’s world begins to unravel when Daddy thwarts his attempts at ascendance and raises questions that threaten to destroy his career.

EP3  Episode 3
Nov. 19,2014
Episode 3

The team discovers a sleeper agent with terrifying connections in the US military. Faced with a formidable foe who not only appears to be a traitor, but a trained spy with access to US bases, MI5 may be out of its league. Meanwhile, Daddy is on a mission of his own to secure the safe defection of his favorite Chinese dancer. But when his assistant, Wendy, goes to carry out the admin, Bobby Waterhouse catches wind and manipulates plans to gain information about Daddy’s secret life for his own personal gain.

EP2  Episode 2
Nov. 12,2014
Episode 2

The next agent on the Soviet list, Tom Mallory, is a brutal man currently in prison for assault. Without his freedom, he can’t perform his task and bring MI5 one step closer to thwarting Operation Glass – leaving Daddy with a terrible choice. Joe, haunted by events in his past, continues to struggle with his lover’s killer’s role in the plot. But when it’s revealed that a possible nuclear strike is imminent, Joe makes a deadly decision to stop the information from falling into enemy hands.

EP1  Episode 1
Nov. 05,2014
Episode 1

London: 1972. When a defecting KGB officer, Arkady Malinov, reveals Operation Glass, a devastating Soviet plot that could change the course of the cold war, Daddy, the head of MI5, assembles a secret team to investigate. As the Soviets awaken a list of sleeper agents all over Britain, Daddy’s team must move swiftly to gain information about the plot. But when Joe Lambe, Daddy’s prized agent, becomes obsessed with the reappearance of a dangerous nemesis, a Soviet agent codenamed ‘Odin’, he risks letting his personal vendetta jeopardize the operation.

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7.7 | TV-14 | en | Drama , Comedy , Crime | More Info
Released: 2014-11-05 | Released Producted By: BBC Cymru Wales , BBC Drama Productions Country: United Kingdom Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website: http://bbcamerica.com/shows/the-game/
Synopsis

"The Game" is a 1970s Cold War spy thriller set in the world of espionage. It tells the story of the invisible war fought by MI5 as it battles to protect the nation from the threats of the Cold War.

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Cast

Tom Hughes , Jonathan Aris , Victoria Hamilton

Director

Michael Howells

Producted By

BBC Cymru Wales , BBC Drama Productions

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Trailers

Reviews

dawnraids Call it a Le Carré light. MI5, spies and Cold War. Toby Whithouse, Sarah Dollard and Debbie O'Malley deliver 6 episodes of good fun and high entertainment full of suspense and surprise. Excellent mood and camera play, the viewer is convincingly cast back to a London of the 70's.A tremendous performance from the entire cast especially Paul Ritter playing the hypocritical British public school creep! Worth watching if only for his performance and the exquisite interaction with his assistant the superb Chloé Pirrie (a touch naive, upright, loyal researcher).The suspension of disbelief is perhaps called for to draw maximum enjoyment. The strength of the production rests chiefly on the convincing relationships fleshed out.Why oh Why does the BBC have to nip above average productions in the bud. Xen is another example. It seems that the minute a viewer's brain is in any way engaged the Corporation pulls the plug out on it! Let's have some more please!
Paul Evans What a welcome return to television for this genre, cold war spy thriller, so popular back in the 1980's and for many years criminally absent. The Game was an awesome five part series, incredibly written and scripted, it was dark, pacey, loaded with intrigue and thoroughly engaging.Superbly acted, I've been a little critical of Tom Hughes in the past, a guy that looks like a model I found a little one dimensional, but he silenced me in this, he was outstanding. Brian Cox, Paul Ritter, Judy Parfitt etc all fantastic, but Victoria Hamilton was on another level, always been a fan but here she was unbelievable, an awesome actress.Part 4 was without a doubt one of the best hours of television I have ever watched, outstanding.Utterly devastating that a second series wasn't commissioned, the BBC missed a golden opportunity with both this and Banished. Nevertheless The Game was a magnificent piece of drama, 10/10
lewilewis1997 I'm a Cold War spy thriller fan, so I might as well say John Le Carre fan as he was and is the master of all that he surveys. So imagine my excitement that this was coming to my screen courtesy of the delectable Auntie Beeb? I hoped that it was 'in the style of...' and immediately hoped for a Smiley or two and I'm not talking about emoticons at the end of an email. It has all of the classic ingredients and some very canny actors. There is intrigue, cross and double cross, moles, double agents, mysterious and deadly bad guys, vulnerable good guys who actually believe in 'Queen And Country' blah, blah, blah. The look and feel are excellent, the attention to detail and resurrecting the crazy strike happy hyper inflationary IRA infested 70's is spot on. BUT ONE THING IS BUGGING ME MORE AND MORE AND IS MAKING THIS UNWATCHABLE...The terrible trade craft. What a bunch of amateurs! If you, like me, have devoured pretty much every Le Carre book going you will know a few tricks of the trade as well. My biggest bug bear is that the defector's handlers are also used for covert and mobile surveillance - this would never happen. Not then, not now. 'Watchers' are specially trained experts and would never be known to the 'target'. It doesn't seem to matter in this. Despite the high risk of discovery and blowing the operation they follow a defecting KGB double agent on more than one occasion. They don't even change their appearance like doff/remove a hat/glasses or change a jacket or the way they walk. Come on guys?! You get it so right, then blow it on minor details like this? Was it budgetary constraints? Not enough money for the extra's? You can fill the streets of London with a myriad of period dressed extra's and rare cars in mint condition but can't afford a few nefarious looking types like ex-safe crackers, burglars and pick pockets or plain Janes as MI5 did for these kind of jobs?Which brings me on to the question of the KGB Colonel, defecting for love, and to save the world. The KGB were very good at what they did. They knew how to dodge, dive, duck and disappear. This guy doesn't have a clue despite having a lot to hide. On a long drive through the country on a minor 'A' road he doesn't once double back, fake a breakdown to force followers to pass by or notice his own handler following 100 yards behind him in his own car with none in between?! Don't you at least change your number plates? Not in this apparently. And the Special Met Police fire arms guys? Hanging out of open windows in plain sight with Lee Enfield rifles despite the surveillance on this occasion being aimed at trapping the main bad guy; a top KGB assassin? Surely the first thing he would do is turn up early and check for traps and anything untoward on a chilly day. Wide open windows when it's cold would stand out a mile. How do we know it's a wee bit chilly? Extras dressed for an autumn day in macs and scarves are a clue. Shouldn't they have been a bit more professional and left the windows shut to hide behind the reflections and blend in with the others closed against the cold? Bullets take no notice of a flimsy glass barrier, so why open the windows and telegraph your positions?ENOUGH! Despite this being quite a classy production with actors that are definitely a cut above, these stupid mistakes are making it unwatchable. I will keep trying, but I think my neighbours are getting hacked off with me shouting at the telly in an angry fashion every Thursday night.This review will self destruct in five, four, three, two.............
pmendham The Game is an absolutely first rate Cold War mini-series from the BBC set in the 1970's. The 70's feel is palpably conveyed through the authentic use of the fashions, hairstyles, vehicles and music from that decade. The plot is complex and intelligent with lots of twists and turns and will appeal to Le Carré fans. The acting is absolutely superb all round. The scenes inside the Security Service show that most of the people working there are paper shufflers rather than James Bond action types which is probably a more realistic portrayal. My only gripe is that it was only 6 episodes but as is often the case with the BBC, quality trumps quantity. If I could only have one station on my pay TV service it would definitely be the BBC. The quality of British productions in recent times, both on the big screen (e.g. Tinker Tailor, The Imitation Game, The Theory of Everything) and small screen (The Game, Peaky Blinders, The Honourable Woman), has been absolutely outstanding.

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