Chandler Danier
Source material seems great. Oldman is a wonderful piece of work. Twisty spy craft with good humour. Bureaucratic nonsense and secret dealings.

In season five, everyone is suspicious when resident tech nerd Roddy Ho has a glamorous new girlfriend. When a series of increasingly bizarre events occur across the city, it falls to the Slow Horses to work out how everything is connected. After all, Lamb knows that in the world of espionage, the London Rules — cover your back — always apply.
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Community reviews for Slow Horses, shown here with its season details.
Source material seems great. Oldman is a wonderful piece of work. Twisty spy craft with good humour. Bureaucratic nonsense and secret dealings.
## **Slow Horses: A Gloriously Grubby Masterclass in Spycraft** Forget the slick, high-tech world of James Bond. In the shadowy corners of London, there’s a crumbling, foul-smelling building on Slough House where failed MI5 agents are sent to rot. They are the "Slow Horses," and their story is the best spy thriller on television. A potent cocktail of whip-smart writing, flawless performances, and unapologetic grit, *Slow Horses* is a near-perfect series that consistently exceeds expectations. ### The Misfits and the Misanthrop The show’s engine, and its greatest triumph, is the dynamic between the disgraced agents and their gloriously offensive boss, Jackson Lamb. Played with sublime, slovenly brilliance by Gary Oldman, Lamb is a masterpiece of character creation. He’s a tactical genius hiding behind a facade of laziness, flatulence, and relentless verbal abuse. Oldman chews the scenery, delivering insults with the precision of a sniper, yet somehow, through the cynicism, you never doubt his razor-sharp intellect or his deeply buried, almost accidental, sense of duty. Opposite him is River Cartwright, the promising agent whose one big mistake landed him in purgatory. Jack Lowden is the show's emotional anchor, perfectly capturing the frantic energy of a racehorse trapped in a stable, all simmering frustration and desperate ambition to prove himself. The surrounding ensemble—from the brilliant but troubled Sidonie (Olivia Cooke) to the shambolic tech wiz Roddy (Christopher Chung)—is equally superb. Each Slow Horse is given room to breathe and develop, making you deeply invested in this band of losers. ### A Relentless, Twisting Plot Where many thrillers stretch a thin premise over a season, *Slow Horses* operates with the pace and density of a great novel (because it is based on Mick Herron's superb book series). The plots are fiendishly clever, layering espionage, political conspiracy, and dry British humour into a relentlessly engaging narrative. The stakes feel real and immediate, often involving threats that are terrifyingly plausible. The show isn’t afraid to get its hands dirty, and no character, no matter how beloved, is ever truly safe. This genuine sense of peril elevates every car chase, every quiet surveillance scene, and every tense confrontation. ### Tone: The Secret Weapon The show’s masterstroke is its tone. It seamlessly blends the grimy realism of a John le Carré novel with the punchy, accessible energy of a modern political thriller. The dialogue crackles with wit, and the humour, often pitch-black and deriving from the sheer absurdity of their situation, provides a brilliant counterbalance to the life-and-death stakes. It’s a show that can have you laughing at Lamb’s latest vulgarity one moment and on the edge of your seat the next. ### The Verdict: 9/10 - Essential Viewing *Slow Horses* is a triumph. It’s intelligently written, superbly acted, and utterly compelling from start to finish. Gary Oldman gives one of the most captivating performances of his career, and the series around him is every bit his equal. It’s a refreshing, cynical, and deeply human take on the spy genre that respects its audience's intelligence while delivering top-tier entertainment. **Watch it if:** You love smart, character-driven thrillers; appreciate brilliant dialogue and performances; and are tired of glamorized spy fiction. **Skip it if:** You require a pristine, high-gloss aesthetic or are easily offended by crude humor and language. In a crowded television landscape, *Slow Horses* isn't just a standout; it's a champion. Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to go watch it all again.
A little late to this site, and certainly wish I knew about it sooner. This is a fantastic show with a awesome cast with each filling their role incredibly. Gary Oldman is by far a most underrated actor. The plots, dialog, settingsare wonderful. Do not ignore this show.

Episode 1
A mass shooting rocks London, intensifying a testy mayoral race. Shirley believes one of the Slow Horses was the target of an attempted hit.

Episode 2
Lamb intercepts an assassin. Taverner receives a key piece of intel about the Abbotsfield shooting.

Episode 3
An act of sabotage grinds London to a halt. Taverner interrogates Roddy. Coe is convinced a destabilization strategy is at play.

Episode 4
Flyte sets out to find Roddy's girlfriend. The gang is dispatched to two different campaign events to prevent another attack.

Episode 5
Lamb debriefs River and Coe. Roddy is pulled in to help decipher a piece of code as the destabilization strategy nears its final stage.

Episode 6
It's up to the Slow Horses to stop Farouk's team from completing its mission in a final act of mass carnage.