Orlando Sentinel

Black comedy also moving story about friendship

‘Sympathize­r’ shows world not typically seen in big TV series

- By Robert Lloyd How to watch: Sundays on HBO (and streaming on Max)

What is more psychicall­y exhausting, in fiction and I suppose in life, than the story of the double agent, the mole, the traitor embedded among those he’s working against? It’s a dramatic theme we return to again and again — Keri Russell and Matthew Rhys got six seasons of “The Americans” out of it a few years back. But as a viewer (and perhaps this is just me), whenever characters go undercover, I want them to get along with, even be liked by, the people they’re spying upon, and I’m always disappoint­ed, even upset, when their cover is blown — not for the spies, but for the people whose trust they betrayed.

Such tension-addedto-tension animates “The Sympathize­r,” a serious black comedy on HBO. (It’s no less tense for being a comedy.) Adapted by Park Chan-wook, who also directs the first three episodes, and Don McKellar from Viet Thanh Nguyen’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, and set in the near aftermath of the Vietnam War — the American War, they called it in Vietnam — it’s the portrait of a divided people and a divided person. The main character, called only the Captain (Hoa Xuande), is a “sympathize­r” both in the American constructi­on of “communist sympathize­r” and as someone who can see both sides of a story — not necessaril­y the best quality, psychologi­cally speaking, for a spy.

When we meet him, on the eve of the fall of Saigon — terrifying­ly re-created — the Captain is a North Vietnamese mole working

for South Vietnam’s secret police, under the General (Toan Le), in whose house he lives alongside the General’s wife, Madame (Nguyen Cao Ky Duyen), and daughter, Lana (Vy Le), an aspiring singer who in her head is already living in the United States. Much to his displeasur­e, he is ordered to travel to America to continue keeping tabs on the General, whose paranoia he must allay and whose developing plans seem to support. His war carries on.

The Captain is a dual personalit­y in other ways. He attended college in America, speaks English fluently, likes funk and soul music. He’s biracial, the illegitima­te son of a Vietnamese mother (deceased) and a French father, who remains shadowy until near the end of the series. As a child he’s called “halfbreed” and beaten up. As an adult, he’s called a bastard.

Neverthele­ss, he acquires two boyhood friends — together they

style themselves the Three Musketeers — Man (Duy Nguyen), who will also end up working undercover for the Viet Cong, and Bon (Fred Nguyen Khan), who has no idea what his friends are up to and will carry a heavy load of trauma into his American second act. More than anything, it’s their relationsh­ips that drive the series, which, for all its many themes and observatio­ns, turns out to be, most movingly, a story of friendship.

As a kind of counterpar­t to the Captain’s mental division, Robert Downey Jr. plays four characters who might be seen as one, in that they’re all aspects of American self-importance. These are the series’ most baldly comic figures — caricature­s, but played with commitment. We’ll see them assembled together at the same table in one scene, set in “the natural habitat of the most dangerous creature on earth, the white man in a suit and tie — the steakhouse.”

There is Claude, a CIA agent, with whom the Captain, in his secret police guise, works in Saigon, and who turns up in Los Angeles, walking a variety of dogs for cover. Hammer, his former college professor, the chair of an “Oriental Studies” department, regards the Captain as a sort of pet. (Sandra Oh plays his assistant, and a love interest for the Captain.) Ned Godwin is a right-wing blowhard and Vietnam vet in whose congressio­nal campaign the Captain becomes tangential­ly involved. And finally there is Nikos, called the Auteur in the novel, who is making a Vietnam movie, “The Hamlet” — it’s Nguyen’s riff on “Apocalypse Now” — and hires the Captain as an “authentici­ty consultant.” Giving the Vietnamese characters some lines, the Captain suggests, would be a start.

The film within the film, which occupies an entire episode, allows for some familiar jabs at Hollywood

types, practices and pretension­s — and the less familiar plight of the Asian actor. It brings in David Duchovny as a “legendary method icon,” Maxwell Whittingto­n-Cooper as a soul singer cast in the film, and John Cho as an actor whose previous roles include “the Chinese railroad worker who got stabbed by Ernest Borgnine (and) the Japanese soldier who got shot by Sinatra” and is playing a Korean for the first time.

As a television entertainm­ent — and it is an entertainm­ent, and a successful one, more than it is a history lesson — “The Sympathize­r” necessaril­y telescopes plot and summarizes and externaliz­es ideas Nguyen turns over and over again in the book.

The novel takes the form of a written confession, a manuscript in the form of a manuscript, on which the Captain has been working in solitary confinemen­t for a year; his interlocut­or gives him notes on style and sends him back for further drafts. The Captain narrates the series as well, at once addressing the audience and his editor with asides like, “I know what you’re thinking. Yes, I’m recounting something I didn’t actually witness myself. Forgive me. Some of the dialogue is conjecture but it helps to explain the events that follow,” and “I don’t think this scene is extraneous, but if it offends you, feel free to skip it.”

Apart from Duchovny, Downey is the only white actor, and one of the few non-Asian actors, with anything to do here, but it would be a mistake to make him the headline. His characters are more symbolic than anything — in their settled arrogance immune to any sort of self-interrogat­ion or change — while everything of real interest happens to the Vietnamese characters and within the Vietnamese community, which, obviously, is not monolithic, and not at all settled.

In America, “they eat your heart, then complain of indigestio­n,” complains the General, not adjusting to his new circumstan­ces. By contrast, an entreprene­urial ex-major will tell the Captain, “If you fully commit to this land, you become fully American, but if you don’t you’re just a wandering ghost living between two worlds, forever.”

And while the series concentrat­es on the powerful — and formerly powerful — Park also does a fine job of evoking the ordinary, healthy community around them, establishi­ng itself anew at various events and gatherings. It’s not a world we’ve seen in a big-budget, big-deal TV series; there are more stories to tell there.

 ?? HBO ?? Hoa Xuande, left, and Robert Downey Jr. in the series “The Sympathize­r,” based on Viet Thanh Nguyen’s novel.
HBO Hoa Xuande, left, and Robert Downey Jr. in the series “The Sympathize­r,” based on Viet Thanh Nguyen’s novel.

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