Counterpart

Counterpart

TV-MA

Crazily complex and thrilling, Counterpart is a dense dystopia with a stunning performance by J.K. Simmons.

8.6

TV Show

Germany, United States of America
English, German, Italian
Drama, Mystery, Science Fiction, Thriller
2017
ALIK SAKHAROV, FEMALE DIRECTOR
Betty Gabriel, Harry Lloyd, J.K. Simmons
988 min

What it's about

Howard Silk, a gentle, quiet office worker, has been working for a Berlin-based United Nations agency, the Office of Interchange (OI), for thirty years. His position is too low for him to be told what his work—exchanging apparently nonsensical messages—really involves. The OI oversees a checkpoint below its headquarters between parallel Earths (the "Alpha" and "Prime" worlds). The parallel Earths were created in 1987 during an experiment by East Germany when only a scientist named Yanek was on-site. The "Alpha world" Yanek met his "Prime world" counterpart, and they soon began studying how the initially identical Earths diverge.

The take

While the dual lead performance concept can easily be a recipe for disaster at times (cf. Gemini Man), the always amazing J.K. Simmons (Whiplash) shows everybody how it's done in this tense sci-fi thriller. When the risk pays off, it pays off big time! Set in a counterfactual 1980s East Berlin, Counterpart unfolds in two parallel worlds that were bridged by East German scientists. When a flu pandemic kills millions in the first world, the two worlds enter a Cold War-like state. Both Simmons' characters (Simmonses?) work in the institution (“interface”) that oversee this bridge between earths: Howard Silk, a low-level employee who transmits messages he doesn't understand, and Howard Silk Prime, a clandestine agent working for the parallel world's interface institution. While this may seem like an overly complicated plot, don't fret. To be sure, Counterpart is complex, twisted, and raises some big questions, but it's also a gripping political thriller where everyone tries to kill somebody somewhere, like Bourne. It's the best of both worlds – pun intended. But if you're into the philosophical aspects of sci-fi, screenwriter Justin Marks does not disappoint, offering some new answers to the age-old question of what makes us who we are: nature or nurture.

Comments

Add a comment

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

The Sympathizer

Park Chan-wook and Robert Downey Jr. team up in this riveting satirical spy thriller set at the end of the Vietnam War

8.0

Baby Reindeer

Comedian Richard Gadd gets deeply personal in this deeply troubling, but incredibly honest miniseries

8.5

Renegade Nell

A mesmerizing live action fairytale for period film buffs and casuals alike

8.0

Ethos

A level of attention to aesthetics usually reserved for the most elaborate films, mixed with a complex and relevant story, make this series from Turkey unmatched in its quality

9.9

Caliphate

A psychological thriller that provides insight on what drove so many young people to ISIS.

8.9

BARTENDER Glass of God

Cocktails and life stories are mixed in this level headed, slice of life anime

7.6

RIPLEY

A psychological thriller rich in tension and pristine camera work

9.0

Sugar

Though it lacks genuine thrills, this old-fashioned noir starring a debonair Colin Farrell delights through style and nostalgia

7.2

Occupied

Norway's most expensive show ever is a timely thrill ride with a grim geopolitical premise.

8.7

Unorthodox

A well-acted fact-based thriller about untangling the grip of a close-knit community

8.5

Curated by humans, not algorithms.

agmtw logo

© 2024 agoodmovietowatch, all rights reserved.