The Jewish Chronicle

Lt’s a cyber war out there

The Undeclared War Channel 4 |

- ★★★✩✩ R eviewed by Josh Howie

WRITING TV reviews for the JC, you’re generally hoping for shows that feature Jews. But when it comes to the work of writer/director Peter Kosminsky, whose The Promise had me shouting with incredulit­y and frustratio­n at the TV screen, I’m relieved to report his new Channel 4 series has nothing to do with us. Unless the ending of The Undeclared War somehow reveals that the real baddie all along was Israel. Mark Rylance’s in it so I wouldn’t be surprised.

After watching the first few episodes what I do know is that this is a cyber-mystery, about the cyberwarri­ors who’re our frontline of cyber-defence and their cybereffor­ts to discover who’s cyberhacki­ng the cyber-dependent UK. Which is to say I know little at all.

Much of the pleasure of this series comes from having your eyes opened to this very real world that keeps the digital world turning. Whenever Hollywood depicts government spies using computers — think the Bourne movies — it throws in as much camera movement as possible, swishing and panning across monitors and keyboards as snatches of informatio­n whizz past. This is exciting! Except of course in reality it’s mostly not. It’s a slog, with the usual grind of office politics and mediocre cafeteria food, and the added bonus of numbly staring at thousands of lines of intricate code.

So instead of resorting to flashy camerawork, Kosminsky deploys a few key elements to engage the audience in his apparently wellresear­ched exploratio­n of this environmen­t. The first is relative newcomer Hannah KhaliqueBr­own’s promising portrayal of Saara Parvin. Saara is our avatar, a hacker who has recently won a year’s work experience at GCHQ. Her excitement at being allowed access behind the veil carries us along, her discoverie­s becoming ours. That she almost immediatel­y spots something her more experience­d peers missed, hidden in a probably Russian virus that’s shutting down the

UK’s infrastruc­ture, invests us in her further success, even as family and personal life intervene.

Overcoming the digital boredom

In reality this work is a slog with the usual grind of office politics and mediocre cafeteria food

barrier is the very clever trick of illustrati­ng the hacking as real world interactio­ns, as Saara makes her way through the 1’s and 0’s in the form of her finding secret entrances in corridors and conjuring up tools to create shortcuts.

Topping the enterprise off is a slow-burning thriller narrative of wanting to discover who the villains are and what their purpose is. Simultaneo­usly releasing all six episodes on All 4 was a good move to this end, as you want to peep ever further through the looking glass.

Less successful is some insanely shoddy acting. Bigger players like ever-frowning Simon Pegg and Adrian Lester get the job done, Rylance is shuffly excllent, but whoever cast the step-on roles must’ve been having an off-day. And, contradict­ing myself, the direction is just a bit too understate­d. Whilst that helped ground Kosminsky’s superlativ­e Wolf Hall, in a space of concrete bunkers and open plan offices it deadens everything. Deliberate maybe, but a bit boring. Not enough to stop me watching, and unlike the Russian bots that ironically seem to have targeted online reviews for this show, I’ll reserve judgement until seeing how and if the entire puzzle fits together. I wouldn’t want to be accused of bias.

 ?? PHOTOS: PLAYGROUND TELEVISION UK ?? Adrian Lester as the Prime Minister
PHOTOS: PLAYGROUND TELEVISION UK Adrian Lester as the Prime Minister
 ?? ?? Hannah KhaliqueBr­own
Tom McKay and Maisie Richardson-Sellers
Hannah KhaliqueBr­own Tom McKay and Maisie Richardson-Sellers
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