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The series features Aunjanue Ellis as the Director of Quantico Miranda Shaw, and Dougray Scott as her subordinate, FBI Special Agent Liam O'Connor. A diverse group of recruits has arrived at the FBI Quantico Base for training. They are the best, the brightest and the most vetted, so it seems impossible that one of them is suspected of masterminding the biggest attack on New York City since 9/11.
Quantico is so taut and terrifically calibrated that it may out-Shonda ABC treasure Shonda Rhimes, the acknowledged master of sexy, twisty, expertly-paced dramas.
Though Quantico deals with some heavy stuff - the pilot episode alone features suicide, domestic violence and a terrorist attack - at its core, it's a heck of a lot of fun.
TV demands suspension of disbelief, but enough suspension to see Grand Central destroyed in the pilot? New York has suffered enough trauma; it doesn't need any more, especially rendered in the service of prime-time entertainment.
Lack of originality aside, the pilot offers a taut, surprising hour of thrills as it introduces its young characters and plants the seeds of their relationships.
If Grey's Anatomy set at Quantico with a long-term terrorism plot sounds bad to you, proceed no further: This is not your show. If it sounds kind of appealing, as it does to me, Quantico may be your least execrable show of fall.