Drama
War & Politics
In the midst of an international crisis, a career diplomat lands in a high-profile job she’s unsuited for, with tectonic implications for her marriage and her political future.
Top-rated
Thu,
31 Oct, 2024
S2.E6Dreadnought
Kate puts her best foot forward after pillow talk with Hal forces her to face hard truths, and Vice President Penn offers a blunt lesson in geopolitics.
Top-rated
Thu,
20 Apr, 2023
S1.E3Lambs in the Dark
At Winfield, President Rayburn's plans in the Gulf have the staff on edge as tensions between a determined Hal and a strong-willed Kate come to a head.
Keri Russell
Ambassador Kate Wyler
Rufus Sewell
Hal Wyler
David Gyasi
Foreign Secretary Austin Dennison
Ali Ahn
Eidra Park
Rory Kinnear
Prime Minister Nicol Trowbridge
Ato Essandoh
Stuart Hayford
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User reviews2
Review
Featured review
**Watch it now**
"The Diplomat" is the best thing to watch in April 2023; and I'm being specific about the when, because this is one of the very rare cases in which the political situation _today_ is both correctly presented and an important part of the plot.
An ambassador couple for arabic-and-middle-east-fuss is pulled in to current dramatic developments, and must do their best, and then some, to keep the situation from escalating even further.
The mix of real-life politics, power dynamics, couple dynamics, quick dialogues, cunning trickery and intrigues, psychological games and the instable balances of everything in between work really well. I have rarely seen an couple like the Wylers since the Powell/Loy 1930's Thin Man movies. And should there be a second season, I'm very curious about Hal's dark secret.
Yes, it is a fantasy; but the real-world context adds a lot of spice.
The serious topics are peppered with dry humour, wrangling, moments of vivid characterizations; and most of all: it is quick. It moves fast, as the real actors in real life must do in crises. You don't have time for perfection, but you must achieve success, or else lots of people die. The tone keeps the balance between the pressure, and the human side.
I strongly recommend this series, with two caveats.
One, the core character is annoying and highly unrealistic, but that is the setup of the entire thing: she is a misfit in this environment.
Two, "diversity".
Ronnie is a pleasant part of the cast, and although I'm afraid someone did a "representation casting" here - the character and performance work really well.
But when it came to colour of skin, the casting department was overzealous, and that bothers.
It makes perfect sense individually - siblings having the same colour of skin, and the Park/Hayford couple is a nice counter to the Wyler couple. A black Foreign Secretary, any time - David Gyasi brings all the right bearing and demeanor, it is entirely convincing. But a PoC running for PM in the UK? Which party? With ~3% of population, that's not "representation"; it sticks out, and would've been a bigger issue than the series allows it to be. And the moment the core characters are together in the same room, half of them are black. That's not representation, far from it - that is a visualization of the right-wing fears of being overrun. Not helpful.
(Asians? Indian heritage? UK got many qualified people of those ethnicities. If "diversity" is to be achieved by colour of skin, there was a solid alternative.)
The small bit of PC nonsense aside, this is a good series. It is intelligent, well-written, contemporary, dramatic, with some realism to it, beautiful locations, nimble and clever dialogue.
Watch it while it's fresh!
jw25 Apr, 2023
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