Black Doves, a quirky spy thriller that avoids tokenism
Noisy Bear, 2024
55 minutes
Creator:
Joe Barton

Reading Time:
7 minutes
📷 : Used with permission, Netflix

Matcha

Mysteries or whodunnits
Ginseng

Suspenseful and intense thrillers
Reba Chaisson
2025-02-10
Black Doves is a quirky six-part series starring Keira Knightley and Sarah Lancashire. Knightley is Helen Webb, a British politician’s wife with young twins, who unbeknownst to her family, is a spy for an independent intelligence organization known as Black Doves. A clandestine “company,” Black Doves makes its services available to the highest international bidder. Lancashire is Reed, Helen’s no-nonsense boss at Black Doves, who rarely smiles, rarely changes her calm demeanor, and is always focused on results.
When Reed pulls Helen away from her Christmas party, she informs Helen that her secret lover, Jason, has been murdered. Helen is momentarily perplexed how Reed knows about him at all since she thought she was being so careful. (Doesn’t everybody?). Emotionally overwhelmed by the news, Helen’s disbelief and hurt become evident, which along with flashbacks, make it clear how much Jason meant to her. Still quite upset, Helen presses Reed for the circumstances surrounding his death.
Though Reed explains that Jason was shot, she continues to convey information to Helen about her next mission. To give her context, she states that Ambassador Chen, China’s ambassador to Britain, was found dead in his residence, and that his 19-year-old daughter Kai-Ming has disappeared. Flabbergasted by both the manner of Jason’s death and Reed’s insensitivity, Helen, still clearly upset, is adamant that she needs to find who killed Jason and to kill them. Reed, on the other hand, is less concerned about who murdered Jason than Helen’s next mission, which is to find Kai Ming.
Later that night, while her husband is out and the kids are asleep, a man with a gun enters her home and accosts her in the kitchen. He asks for a recording, which she knows nothing about. When he threatens the life of her kids a second time, she states “I advise you not to do it a third.” When he does, she attacks him, completely catching the audience off guard. Her fast hands, swift body movements, and deftness at turning kitchen appliances into weapons make for a shocking and entertaining fight scene. This is the most engaging sequence of the series because we are drawn into a significant moment of departure from Helen, the mother and politician’s wife who just hosted a large obligatory Christmas party, to this fighting machine. The physical altercation made for enjoyable action early in the series, portending a fun and dynamic story ahead.
Black Doves’ action, characters, and numerous twists and turns are reminiscent of spy thrillers, particularly those depicted in episodic series like Mr. and Mrs. Smith and The Night Agent. But rather than a dark quality like the latter, Black Doves has the quirkiness quality of Mr. and Mrs. Smith, that aspect of a show that conveys it is neither scary nor should it be taken too seriously. Indeed, Black Doves’ quirkiness contains elements of comedic short films like Drone and Operation: Cavity, which are not satire but take humorous twists on serious topics not to make fun of them, but to have fun with them.
When Helen tells Reed about the encounter in her kitchen and the man’s inquiry regarding a recording, Reed says she knows nothing about the latter nor what prompted the former. However, she decides to call in someone to protect Helen — despite Helen’s insistence that she always works alone. She gives in when Reed tells her that the person is Sam Young. The two are friends, even though they haven’t seen one another since they last worked together. Played by Ben Whishaw, Sam is an early 30-something independent contractor with killer/assassin qualifications.
What is striking about Sam is he is small in frame and stature, so the idea that he can protect Helen is inconceivable. He appears quite unassuming as he frequently walks around with his hands in his jacket pockets and is always dressed too thin for the cool fall temperatures. When other people are donning thick sweaters and coats, he is still wearing the same short, spring jacket, appearing to be cold but never doing anything to address it.
By far, Sam is the most intriguing character in Black Doves. When others around him are talkative, he is self-effacing and contemplative but a bit tense. He is, however, loyal, a man of action, and a person who loves sincerely and deeply. We learn a lot about Sam during a flashback where he is contracted to kill three brothers. Without hesitation, he creates a bloodbath killing two of them. But when he realizes the third is a child, he finds himself unable to finish the job, as if he himself has suddenly learned he has a red line. And now that Reed’s hiring has brought Sam to London years later, his former boss wants him to finish the job she hired him to do before he left – kill the third brother. Accomplishing this while protecting Helen will be a challenge for him.
As Helen and Sam investigate Jason’s death and at a lower priority look for Kai-Ming, they begin to unravel a conspiracy at the highest levels of the British government as the cases converge. Complicating things, China’s Intelligence officers are in-country on a rogue mission, determined to find out who killed Ambassador Chen, and Helen and Sam are getting in the way. Their pursuit of the truth puts their lives and those of the people they care about at grave risk, despite being highly skilled assets themselves. Reed expresses her annoyance not because their lives are at risk, but because by deviating from their very narrow assignment of finding Kai-Ming, they have discovered a recording they shouldn’t have, thus jeopardizing Black Doves’ reliability and credibility with its mysterious client.
Black Doves is a highly entertaining series and one of the most inclusive I have watched in recent decades. It contains a fusion of representation with characters from traditionally underrepresented race, gender, and LGBTQ+ groups. Michael, for example, is a mild-mannered and gay Black male who exhibits traditional feminine traits. During a shootout, he relies on his partner’s protection by hiding behind him and physically holding onto his waist with his eyes closed due to sheer fear. Sam is a quiet, self-effacing White male with a small frame who is a killer for hire and who is also gay.
Helen, who in addition to being a mother and performing the traditional ceremonial obligations and emotional labor of being a political spouse, is also quite deft at hand-to-hand combat. In a scene exemplifying Helen's toughness, she casually slams her dislocated shoulder into a structure to force it back into place. This is reminiscent of an oft repeated technique used by Mel Gibson’s character in the Lethal Weapon franchise for fixing his bad shoulder. Such skills and traits tend to be much more associated with masculinity than femininity.
So, by extension, the show displays the varying manifestations of gender in males and females, and particularly highlights the versatility and adaptability of the latter. All of this demonstrates that people of both sexes cannot simply be confined to the boxes they were assigned to at birth and the keys subsequently thrown away. They present themselves to the world in varied ways. Most interesting about Black Doves is that these characters in the series are not presented as tokens; each has an active role in the show, which lends itself to humanizing people of all types.
Black Doves bears some similarities to Guy Ritchie's 2023 theatrical release, The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare. Let by Henry Cavill from Man of Steel along with Alan Ritchson of Reacher fame, the show presents a racially and ethnically diverse cast, including a gay character who occasionally displays feminine traits. Both movies are spy thrillers with quirky characters and avoid taking on too much of a dark or ominous tone. Ginseng tea is much better suited for these productions than a tea that yields a heavier feel, like Rosemary or Dandelion.