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The series starts with very interesting events, with Intel reporting from Berlin for serious information, where Intel learned that Villanelle took the order to kill an important member of the British intelligence. Is this member Eve? Will Villanelle succeed in her plan?
[Sandra] Oh brings the same blend of determination and exasperation that made her Dr. Christina Yang the heart and soul of "Grey's." Waller-Bridge's killer dialogue serves Oh and her opponent, Jodie Comer, well.
Sandra Oh and Jodie Comer are both outstanding in this gleefully fun and wonderfully smart series that puts women in roles too often reserved just for men.
Killing Eve is a helluva good time, it's already more interesting than many of its genre peers, and the first season illustrates a self-awareness essential for its survival. The show may follow a formula, but there's nothing routine about it.
Comer and Oh make us believe in their mutual obsession, delighting in the sparks they create at a distance and holding our breath in anticipation of the inevitable conflagration that would result from a meeting of these opposing forces.
Killing Eve has whip-smart performances from its two leads, and evocative location footage from Berlin, Paris, London and elsewhere, and way too many surprises to describe - or to miss.
Killing Eve is a funny, witty, bright show about a hilarious, soulless maniac who waxes people to pop music. It feels like an upper, but somehow, it didn't trigger my conscience.