If you haven't watched "The Americans" before you should. It's the kind of television that never gets old. We are not in the 1980s any more. Or are we?
In the First Episode of Season Five of "The
Americans," there was a new character named Tuan.’
Tuan is a young Vietnamese KGB trainee posted with Soviet spies
Philip and Elizabeth Jennings as their adopted son. He’s hard-core, a blind
believer in the Soviet system, gung-ho to the point that even Elizabeth can
hardly stand his psychotic utterings at the dinner table. One
astonished gaping look from Elizabeth says it all. The kid
is too whacked even by KGB standards.
It’s not as if American espionage agents were playing
softball. The CIA has hired a dissident Russian working for
the U.S. to develop a strain of fungus that will destroy the Soviet
Union’s wheat crop. That’s a bit of overkill. The failure of
the Soviet socialist-communist system is evident in filmed food lines, bare
supermarket shelves, rotting food, tractors mired in mud up to the hubcaps.
The dissident scientist Alexei in “The
Americans” has a great deal of enthusiasm for America, its
freedom and plenty. He criticizes his home country
while unwitting talking to Soviet spy Philip, who is disguised as an airline
pilot.“Good thing you don’t work for Aeroflot. Their planes crash all the time.
They’re dirty. You want food you have to stand in line for hours. In
Russia, you must share toilets, pay bribes. Awful country.”
The Americans is never without humor, though it’s often of the
droll, mordant kind. Stan Beeman is a Steven Martin style ‘lonely guy’ FBI
agent when he pops in on the Jennings with a sixpack of
beer. Neighborly chit-chat.
Stan’s been isolated too long and divorced not long enough. He
bores a wry Phillip (Matthew Rhys, great actor, and real life
husband of Keri Russell) with a non-eventful tale about a woman he’s
seen at the gym. “I met a woman,” he tells Phillip. To ordinary mortals, this
would mean he has possibilities. To nerdish Stan however, it means the woman on
the treadmill next to him smiled at him while walking away.
But the primary concern of the Soviet spies is to get
a sample of a biological warfare agent developed at an FBI lab in
Virginia. The Lassa virus had accidentally killed one of the
embedded Soviet agents and it’s up to Elizabeth and Philip to dig up his body
to get another sample. It’s not going to be
easy. The CIA secretly buried the toxic foreign agent in
a sealed plastic overcoat inside a metal box buried fifteen feet deep in Fort
Dietrich’s back yard.
A team of agents, under the guidance of Philip and Elizabeth,
sap the perimeter of the American compound and beginning digging. And digging.
And still more digging. It’s pretty hard to explain how about 20 minutes of
film digging can make for exciting TV but it does.
You smell the dirt in more ways than one. The KGB team digs up
the stinking body of their dead agent, cuts a chunk of his flesh out for
transport back to Moscow. One of the KGB team members slips off the
ladder and cuts his wrist during the process. This exposes him to the Lassa
virus. He panics,knows he’s going to die. Elizabeth calmly
reassures him that everything’s going to be all right, don’t worry, be
calm. When the man calmsdown, Elizabeth pulls a pistol
and shoots him in the head. Dead fall into the hole.
The ends justify the means. It’s brutal.