You're not the only one. After over five hours of the second season of Killing Eve I'd reached the point where there was nothing that could shock me, nothing that could excite me, and nothing that could even particularly interest me. It's sad to say but Killing Eve jumped the shark pretty early on in this series and I doubt I'll be hanging around to watch the already recommissioned third series.
Scenes and episodes appeared to be in competition with each other in an attempt to shock and awe us into submission and what story there was, always (as my friend Michelle says) "silly" to begin with, was left almost threadbare as a succession of special guests lined up to have their moment on this most lauded of shows. What is this? The fucking Muppets?
It started promisingly enough. Kicking off just thirty seconds after the events that brought the first season to a close, it's not long before we hear the familiar strains of Cigarettes After Sex and we're in Paris (Gare du Nord, the Eiffel Tower - a couple of quick signifiers), Villanelle is in hospital and Eve is mistaken for a junkie before slicing up a huge batch of carrots to the sound of Kim Wilde and then lying in a cold bath, ignoring her phone.
It seems like a constant attempt to raise the bar of grossness, and that comedy, and not only does everything else suffer as a consequence but sometimes the comedy, though never the gross out, doesn't pass muster. Exhumed corpses and empty eyeball sockets can't really fail to look disturbing but a basesball cap with LOL emblazoned on the front of it, while surely an attempt to remark on the bizarre assassination of Kim Jong-un's half brother Kim Jong-nam by a woman with the same 'legend' on her top, in Kuala Lumpur airport in February 2017, sadly comes across about as amusingly as, well, a baseball cap with LOL emblazoned on the front of it.
As the action shifts from Calais to Amsterdam, from Rome to Richmond upon Thames, and from, bizarrely, Basildon to (unbelievable this one) the Forest of Dean we get to see Zoe Wanamaker (a perfectly decent actress who nevertheless has turned up for the celebrity guestfest) eating Pringles out of a bin and talking about Torture Garden, we get references to Eric Carle's The Very Hungry Caterpillar, we get to see people beaten to death in car washes, and we get intimations of Zero Dark Thirty style 'enhanced interrogation' techniques in a portacabin.
The scenes in Amsterdam's red light district were noteworthy too. Inventive even. I've certainly never seen an attractive woman in a pig mask getting it on with handcuffs to A Windmill in Old Amsterdam before, that's for sure, and I can assure it's not for lack of trying. That the ensuing carnage looks like something from Hermann Nitsch and the Vienna Actionists is hardly necessary and nor is the half-arsed attempt to make some kind of observation about the ubiquity of Instagram. It comes across like one of those nobs who accuse you of spending your entire holiday on Facebook just because you've uploaded a few photos.
As Villanelle, Jodie Comer gets, as ever, to wear some great outfits. From the sexy to the utterly ludicrous, at one point she looks like Klaus Nomi in a kimono and other pluses include the music (Goldfrapp, Jane Weaver, Blondie, Terry Jacks, Juice Newton, Roxette (!), Fabienne Del Sol (who I used to work with), and, as ever, Unloved) and I'd have to concede some lines of the script bear repeating. Favourites of mine included "you look like someone's stuck a moustache on some fudge", "my brother used to jam his hamsters in an old loo roll", and "why do rich people talk like children?".
But, as the series reaches its denouement, and a knife is held to somebody's head to demand a recipe for shepherd's pie, should I really be wondering what type of font it is they're using for the title sequence? It's one specially created for the show by graphic designer Matt Willey, apparently, but that's not the point. The point is this proves that even, after investing more time than it would take to listen to Wu-Tang Forever twice in its entirety, I'm still not hooked.
The constant fights between men and women start to look desperate, the regular referencing of apples (Eve, geddit?) leads nowhere but up its own arsehole, and, when in Rome, Aaron Peel starts spying on Villanelle it serves only to remind me of the critically maligned 1993 erotic thriller Sliver starring William Baldwin and Sharon Stone. When Peel buys expensive clothes for her and asks to watch her eat gelato before insisting she spit out the orange chocolate it's neither erotic nor thrilling.
It's possible that Phoebe Waller-Bridge's diminished role in the second season was responsible for the downfall in quality, though with guest writers of the calibre of the League of Gentlemen's Jeremy Dyson you'd hope not, but, to me, it seems more likely that Killing Eve has become a very early victim of its own success. In attempting to make the show grosser, funnier, and more violent the creators neglected to give us enough character development or plotline to keep us sufficiently engaged and, by the end, much like Villanelle herself, we felt nothing. A shame.
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