The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

PEGG GRABS CHANCE TO LEAD CYBER WAR DRAMA

Rooted in reality, Peter Kosminsky’s new series The Undeclared War harbours warnings and an all-star cast, as Danielle de Wolfe discovers

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There’s nothing quite like the prospect of a digital cold war to instigate the return of one of the nation’s bestloved actors. Recent years have seen Simon Pegg become an increasing­ly prominent Hollywood presence. After getting pally with Tom Cruise while playing protagonis­t Benji Dunn in the Mission Impossible franchise, all it seemingly took was a script five years in developmen­t, delving into the nuances of internatio­nal cyber warfare, to lure him back from across the Pond.

“Yes, please. I’d like to come home,” whispers the 52-year-old actor, recreating his acceptance of Bafta Award-winning writer and director Peter Kosminsky’s script. “It just felt like a no-brainer to me… I was extremely flattered to be sent the script, just because it’s not the kind of role people assume that I would be interested in.”

His latest role in Kosminsky’s new sixpart thriller The Undeclared War stands out as one of his grittiest to date. It’s a series that has already garnered the nation’s (and Ofcom’s) attention as part of a controvers­ial, yet highly creative, marketing campaign. The bold stunt saw fake cyberattac­k warnings televised across all Channel 4 channels on the evening of June 10. Direct from a fictionali­sed GCHQ, the fake government message saw actor Adrian Lester deliver a speech as Prime Minister Andrew Makinde.

Set in the year 2024, The Undeclared War is anything but an optimistic, post-pandemic watch. A premise which sees the UK engaged in cyber warfare with Russia, the unfurling events hold the potential to bring the nation to its knees.

“The reason I wanted to make this is the same reason I’ve always wanted to make stuff, really,” says Kosminsky. “If you discover there’s something going on that you didn’t know about – and I’m a reasonably well-read person, so if I don’t know about it, I suppose there’s a fairly safe assumption that a lot of people won’t know about it – then it’s my job to cast a light on it.”

Delving into the bowels of GCHQ – the Government Communicat­ions Headquarte­rs overseeing national intelligen­ce and cyber security – we meet a team of analysts working to ward off an unrelentin­g series of cyber attacks. What appears to be a run-of-themill stress test on the nation’s infrastruc­ture rapidly takes a dark turn, placing the team at the forefront of an internatio­nal cyber war.

It’s a scenario that doesn’t require all that much imaginatio­n, given the current state of internatio­nal relations. Unsettling in the extreme, it’s a premise very much rooted in reality, according to Kosminsky.

“I’m not saying this is the way things will turn out. But I’m saying there’s nothing in this show that either hasn’t happened, or is not being sort of ‘war gamed’ by the people here and in other countries.”

Labelling the series a “hot war going on in cyber space”, the creator says he was “really shocked” by the “fragility” of our heavily internet-dependent society. “I call it a cautionary tale because I think that if we’re not careful, this hot war will escalate to the point where it threatens our civilisati­on. I think it’s as serious as that.”

Noting the best way to tell such a complex tale is through the eyes of a “relatively ordinary” outsider, The Undeclared War sees a 21-year-old intern with little understand­ing of the world she is about to enter at the forefront of events. A tale which also explores the contrastin­g opinions of civil servants and elected politician­s – with the latter having “a very different agenda” according to the writer.

“A populist government is imagined here in this case, which is trying to please a constituen­t base – and obviously, we’re familiar with that phenomenon elsewhere,” says Kosminsky.

“There may be a very real and apparent conflict between what might, to some of these civil servants, seem to be the right thing to do, and what those populist politician­s might feel political necessity dictates.”

The Undeclared War sees emerging star Hannah Khalique-brown take on the role of intern Saara Parvin. A fresh-faced cyber protege, the role saw the actress learn two programmin­g languages and get to grips with basic coding in preparatio­n.

Explaining the show’s unique “Code World” scenes – a “surreal landscape” which allows viewers to see a physical manifestat­ion of everything that’s going on in Saara’s mind – it’s a series which transfers thinking and the inner workings of the brain on to our screens.

The Undeclared War is on Channel 4 on Thursday, June 30.

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