Series 5 Episode 2 (Spooks)
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Spooks episode Series 5, Episode 2 |
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Writer | Ben Richards |
Director | Omar Madha |
Executive producer(s) | Jane Featherstone |
Series | Five |
Episode | Two |
Length | approximately 58 mins |
Preceded by | Series 5, Episode 1 |
Followed by | Series 5, Episode 3 |
IMDb profile |
[edit] Plot
Continuing from episode 1, Zaf gains access to an Air Traffic Control centre, where the team know that several of Myers' men are planning to crash two planes over London, causing mass civilian casualties and pushing the public to ask for special measures, thereby putting Myers in control of a puppet government.
Zaf fights with Robert Jensen, one of Myers' henchmen, before he is captured by security staff. Myers is told to kill him, upon which he dismisses the security and attacks Zaf again. Zaf knocks him behind a desk, but security staff burst in. Zaf convinces them to declare a 'Code 7', and move Air Traffic Control to another region. They discover the diversion, and with seconds to spare divert both flights, avoiding the mid-air collision.
Meanwhile, Juliet is recovering in hospital, with the likelihood she will never walk again, and Harry has been apprehended under a 'temporary detention order,' which allows Myers to put anyone he wishes in a detention centre run by the army.
One of Ruth's contacts at GCHQ passes an intercept to MI5, detaling how a journalist on one of Millington's papers has discovered a CD with the plane crash headline of his paper, and left it in a locker at a sports centre. Adam rushes there, only to be beaten to the locker by two of Myers' men. However, when the locker is opened, it is empty.
A meeting is being held between those colluding in the coup, in which Collingwood tells how the police have been briefed the march is a cover for suicide bombers and that they will incite the march into a riot if necessary, to gain public support for the special measures. The team at the Grid use a photogenic operative to film footage of a protester being beaten, which is then transmitted on national television.
The protest march grows, to unexpected proportions, and police are deployed in massive numbers. Rowan, the prime minister's son, makes a broadcast on national television asking for his father, the PM, not to sign in the special measures bill.
Ros is confronted by Adam, and is convinced that her father played a part in this coup. She talks to her father, convicing him that Millington planned the plane crash. He calls the PM, telling him that there are provacateurs on the march who plan to force the police to open fire. He advises him that these special measures may not be the best way to keep the country under control.
However, the police open fire on the crowd, killing one protester. At the detention centre, Zaf turns on the sprinklers, saving Harry in the nick of time (after Collingwood had planned a Valhalla by letting the detention centre burn. Harry allows Collingwood to keep his belt. He commits suicide by hanging himself from the top of his cell.
Adam talks to Ros, offering her a position in the team. She accepts, convinced by Adam that her father won't become 'the fall guy'.
Millington is not prosecuted, as he is useful in the future for control of the press. Taylor, the PM's cabinet secretary, is sent to NI, and Myers, will be prosecuted mercilessly, as asked for by Juliet Shaw, now paralysed for life. He is served a 15 year jail sentence later in the series.
[edit] Trivia
- The scene in which Jo uses mace spray on an attacker while protecting the Prime Minister's son was filmed in Hedgerley, Buckinghamshire.
- The protest scenes intercut footage from actual recent London protests (including "Hands off Venezuela and Cuba" and "Don't Attack Iran" placards) with staged footage.
- The opening two-parter of series 5 as a whole referenced recent events in the UK (including the Buncefield oil depot fire, the shooting of an unarmed man - as with Jean Charles de Menezes - and placing tanks around British airports) and unexpectedly kills off a major cast member as was done in Episode 2 of Series 1.
- The fictional civil liberties campaigner may also be a reference to Shami Chakrabarti, leader of Liberty, who is similarly active in the British media.
- The reading that Malcolm selects for Harry to read at Colin's memorial service is an excerpt from "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd", from Walt Whitman's work Leaves of Grass, book XXII.