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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > With federal staff below ‘grievous’ risk, CIA workplace drama ‘The Company’ pushes again
With federal staff below ‘grievous’ risk, CIA workplace drama ‘The Company’ pushes again
Entertainment

With federal staff below ‘grievous’ risk, CIA workplace drama ‘The Company’ pushes again

Last updated: June 11, 2025 3:40 pm
Editorial Board Published June 11, 2025
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The spy is essentially the most devoted of staff. His or her line of labor calls for utter dedication, if not lively contempt for the very idea of a “personal life.” Cunningly, Jez and John-Henry Butterworth’s “The Agency” — a remake of the French sequence “Le Bureau des Légendes”— pushes its central character to query that association.

Michael Fassbender stars as Martian, a CIA spy who’s recalled to London after years of dwelling deep undercover in Ethiopia. As soon as a free agent, he’s now constrained by the inflexible bureaucratic machinations of desk work and workplace politics, usually pitting him in opposition to his boss, Henry Ogletree (Jeffrey Wright), and London Station bureau chief James “Bosko” Bradley (Richard Gere).

As escalating geopolitical tensions bubble up round all of them — in Belarus, Sudan and past — Martian wonders what he could be keen to threat when his former lover, Samia Fatima Zahir (Jodie Turner-Smith), reappears in his life. Stoic and self-aware, Fassbender’s Martian is a slippery determine whose sense of self begins to unravel because the present’s thrilling first season unfurls.

“He’s really addicted to the juice of the job,” Fassbender tells The Instances, sitting between Gere and Wright. “That’s where he gets his kicks from. He has this loving relationship that is the only real thing for him that will connect him to his humanity. But he’s great at his job and he’s kind of addicted to it. That’s where I wondered, ‘Does Bosko miss being out in the field?’”

“Oh, yeah,” Gere says, nodding. “He does. He was good at it. It was the trench-warfare mentality of it. The danger. The addiction to the energy and the adrenaline of it. He’s an alcoholic for it. They all are. There’s no one who walks away from this safely.”

The job of the actor is to disclose, that of the spy to withhold. It’s why Gere pushed for Bosko to be much more of a cipher than he was on the web page.

1

2

Richard Gere

3

 Jeffrey Wright

1. Michael Fassbender. 2. Richard Gere. 3. Jeffrey Wright. (Shayan Asgharnia / For The Instances)

“I felt like I instinctively knew this guy,” Gere says, recalling his preliminary conversations with Joe Wright (“Atonement,” “Darkest Hour”), who directed the primary two episodes of the Paramount+ With Showtime sequence. “We weren’t totally on the same wavelength of who this character was. I think I was positing a more unknowable, nuanced character than he was. I even removed mentions of my own home life, of my backstory.

“It’s in here,” he says, gesturing at his temples. “I know it. And that’s enough.”

Because the company struggles to include an more and more risky state of affairs involving a lacking asset on the entrance traces of Russia’s conflict in Ukraine, the previous discipline brokers in London discover that their most popular techniques can create friction in an workplace setting, the place politicking requires a defter contact.

“For Martian, it’s about being the sharp end of the stick and being out there,” Fassbender says. “And being your own boss. Martian has an ego. He has his own set of rules. He does everything his own way.”

Henry, in tweed fits and suitably nebbishy glasses, feels extra like an organization man than his two colleagues. Jeffrey Wright, an Emmy winner for “Angels in America” in 2004, channeled the Washington, D.C., world he grew up in to create a portrait of a dutiful authorities worker.

“I have a great deal of respect for federal employees, particularly more so now in a time when they’re under such grievous and biased attack,” Wright says. “I think we conflate, at times, our criticism of the government with criticism that should be leveled at the politicians. But I have a great deal more respect for the people who go to work every day to be a part of the government than I do for many of the politicians who are playing theatrics in the public eye.”

The London workplace the place a lot of “The Agency” takes place captures the contradictions of this up to date espionage drama. With wall-to-wall home windows that look out over the town — re-created on soundstages with using large LED screens — and a glassed-in convention room on the coronary heart of the ground, the setting itself suggests the potential of omnipresent surveillance.

Fassbender, Gere and Wright at work at "The Agency."

Fassbender, Gere and Wright at work at “The Agency.”

(Luke Varley/Paramount+ with SHOWTIME)

The area reminds viewers and characters alike how treasured and precarious privateness is on this world. Such immersion helped the trio of actors lose themselves in “The Agency’s” high-stakes office drama, the place authorities secrets and techniques and transactional dynamics rule day-to-day operations.

“There’s an argument to be made that the only time that you could unconsciously have an artistic experience with a piece is through architecture,” says Wright, “walking through spaces where we’re taking in this design but where we’re not necessarily conscious of it. I was thinking about it in terms of what we do as actors, that we actually have an opportunity to experience art in a very intimate way, in a way that no other profession does. We get to live inside this literary experience and place ourselves inside of it.”

It’s not arduous to see parallels between what brokers like Martian undergo when going deep undercover and what actors are known as to do. Simply don’t ask Fassbender to be up for the job.

“It is terrifying, pretending to do this,” Fassbender factors out. “Constantly I’m thinking, ‘Jesus, the reality of it is just terrifying.’ And I would be so bad at it.”

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