The Veil

The Veil

By

6.8/10
6.8
From 77 Ratings

Description

Two women play a deadly game of truth and lies on the road from Istanbul to Paris and London. One woman has a secret, the other a mission to reveal it before thousands of lives are lost. In the shadows, mission controllers at the CIA and French DGSE must put differences aside and work together to avert potential disaster.

Season for this TV show

  • Miniseries Poster

    Rating: 7.2

    Name: Miniseries

    Episode Count: 6

    Release Date: 2024-04-30

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Trailer

Reviews

  • MovieGuys

    4
    Reviewed by MovieGuys
    Pretentiously self indulgent and on a certain level disingenuous, if not delusional, The Veil, is well named. The opening see's our heroine, armed with a truly God awful, fake English, accent, (not so well received pronunciation anyone?) engineer the arrest of a villain. It doesn't get any better from there I'm afraid, with an almost lynching at a refugee camp, on the Syrian border the next "fun experience", for the unfortunate viewer. The overriding feeling this series gives off is the by now impossible to sustain fiction, that the West are the "good guys. " Sorry but that ain't the case, the veil has been well and truly lifted on that one. The US and UK establishments, in particular, can only be described as warmongers on the world stage but well, you know, lets try to "pull the wool", anyway. Putting aside the by now thoroughly jaded plug for ersatz Western virtue and female empowerment, is a rather trite, pretentious, self important series that tries on a Jane Blonde (yes that's a bad James Bond joke) and fails spectacularly. There's nothing new or even terribly intelligent on offer here. Its a formulaic spy knock off that wants you to take it more seriously, than it actually deserves. Padded out by exposition, we have all seen a thousand times before. Any upside? Acting is alright, I don't mind Elizabeth Moss and cinematography is competent. Choice of music is a bit cliched but then cliches are really all we have here, for the most part. So no surprises really. In summary, yet another "deeply shallow" experience, from the Western entertainment industry.One that increasingly gives the impression it thinks the box, is more important, than whats inside.

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