The Night Agent

2023 - 3 - 23

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Image courtesy of "Los Angeles Times"

'The Night Agent' and 'Agent Elvis': A double dose of spies (Los Angeles Times)

A woman, left, and a man holding binoculars are lying on the ground in. Rose Larkin (Luciane Buchanan) and Peter Sutherland (Gabriel Basso) in a scene from ...

I saw movies, and I was the hero in the movie.” And here he is, the hero of a comic book TV show, albeit the sort often sold behind a curtain. I read comic books, and I was the hero of the comic book. He famously offered himself to Richard Nixon as an agent in the war on drugs and communism, and when he picked up an award from the Junior Chamber of Commerce, he declared, “When I was a child … From my perch, “Agent Elvis” succeeds more as a curiosity than a comedy, which is to say, I found it only occasionally funny — blood splatter doesn’t do it for me, I confess — but generally interesting, if only to see what scenes and references might turn up next. Set in the early years of the King’s comeback period — it begins with the 1968 Christmas special — it finds Elvis (Matthew McConaughey) being drafted into a mysterious organization, TCB, which has regulated human affairs for generations. Among the guests are Simon Pegg as a hallucinated Paul McCartney, Fred Armisen as Charles Manson, Christina Hendricks, Kieran Culkin, Craig Robinson and Baz Luhrmann, the director of the film “Elvis.” Given the job of filling a series the length of four already-overlong modern Bond movies, this all can start to feel repetitive, and when the dark plot at the back of everything was finally revealed, it seemed to me that the villains expended a lot of energy and spilled a lot of blood for pretty meh reasons. (“Archer” writer Mike Arnold is the showrunner; the series was co-created by Elvis’ widow, Priscilla Presley, who also plays herself, and the musician John Eddie.) Before long, Peter and Rose become a Hitchcockian couple on the run, though with less romantic banter, as if levity would somehow insult the grimness; but what banter there is doesn’t argue for more of the same. Apart from drudge paperwork, Peter’s job is to answer a phone that “never rings” — except it does, and it’s Rose. It’s nothing special, nothing awful and exactly what many want from television, with action for its own sake — twists and turns and sundry threads tangled, untangled and finally tied in a bow. No,” spies have rarely been far from the big or little screen, coming in all shapes and sexes, served straight or as spoofs.

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Image courtesy of "Radio Times"

Meet the cast of The Night Agent (Radio Times)

Netflix thriller The Night Agent stars Gabriel Basso as FBI agent Peter Sutherland, but who else appears in the series and who do they play?

For more from the biggest stars in TV, listen to [The Radio Times Podcast](https://www.radiotimes.com/audio/podcasts/). Who is Ben Almora? Who is Dale? Who is Maddie Redfield? This is a modal window. [Netflix](https://www.netflix.com/gb/title/81450827) today. Who is Erik Monks? Who is Diane Farr? Who is Rose Larkin? Diane is chief of staff at the White House. Who is Peter Sutherland? Rose is a tech entrepreneur who has fallen on hard times.

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Image courtesy of "Collider.com"

'The Night Agent' Review: Netflix's Latest Spy Series Is Simple Yet ... (Collider.com)

A little over three months ago, Netflix released The Recruit, an action-thriller series starring Noah Centineo as a young employee at the CIA who gets in ...

In the pantheon of action-thrillers on streaming, The Night Agent is definitely one of the more memorable ones. Those who fell in love with The Recruit will feel right at home with the new series, and those in need of another action title as they await the return of Reacher will also be more than satisfied. One might be quick to consider The Night Agent to be yet another conspiracy thriller series full of the same clichés and contrivances that you'd expect. You can't really fault either series or make the claim that The Night Agent is a ripoff of The Recruit, as these were both likely shot during the same timeframe. The Night Agent, which is based on the novel of the same name by Matthew Quirk, centers on Peter Sutherland (Basso), a young FBI employee who works in the basement of The White House during a graveyard shift where his main job is to answer an emergency line that rarely rings. Hitting the streamer this week is The Night Agent, an action-thriller series starring Gabriel Basso as a young employee at the FBI who gets in over his head when he's involuntarily thrust into an international conspiracy.

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Image courtesy of "Netflix Life"

Who plays Chelsea Arrington in The Night Agent? (Where have you ... (Netflix Life)

Thankfully, The Night Agent character Maddie Redfield has a Secret Service agent up to the task. Chelsea Arrington, played by Fola Evans-Akingbola, is one of ...

She also appeared in the “Striking Vipers” episode of Later, she was cast as one of Khal Moro’s wives in the sixth season of Game of Thrones. A series regular on Siren, if you go to Evans-Akingbola’s social media, you’ll notice that many of her comments and likes are from fans of the show, some who even hope they’ll one day do a reboot! Chelsea Arrington, played by Fola Evans-Akingbola, is one of the main characters in the new But when her boss assigns a new member to her team who comes with a lot of baggage, Chelsea must rise to the challenge of this new obstacle and ensure he doesn’t ruin her potential future career promotion. Thankfully, The Night Agent character Maddie Redfield has a Secret Service agent up to the task.

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Image courtesy of "Daily Beast"

'The Night Agent' Review: Netflix Political Thriller Is a Slog (Daily Beast)

What is often an engaging political spy thriller takes far too many detours to stay consistently enjoyable. Plus, you should see Hong Chau's wig.

It may not have the efficiency of the most memorable political mysteries, but The Night Agent is still a solid return to a genre that seems to be dying out of cinemas. That still doesn’t excuse poor dialogue (“It crashed and burned, and when I looked around, I was the only one not wearing a parachute”)—or some glaring plot holes and intentional vagueness that allow the show to avoid explaining itself. Even when The Night Agent rambled, I was eventually involved again when the pacing picked back up or a new, outrageous twist revealed itself. But even a fabulously studied actor like Chau can’t quite hold The Night Agent together, especially when she’s offscreen. A year prior to the events of the series, Peter—forever the standup do-gooder—spots a bomb being planted on a Washington, D.C., metro train, and halts the metro to get everybody off before it detonates. After that point, an invisible time clock starts ticking, and Peter, Rose, and Diane have to figure out how to stop an intricate series of national attacks, somehow connected to the metro bombing. Rose’s call to Night Action unravels a wealth of government conspiracies, terrorist threats, and national security cover-ups that, at the very least, should be enough to get poor Peter a hefty raise and a better schedule. Diane believes in Peter’s integrity, and a year later, is seemingly the only person that he can trust when Rose calls into the Night Action line. But the titular night agent in Netflix’s The Night Agent is an agent, who works at night, and—get this—is waiting for a phone call! And to be fair, it is named after Matthew Quirk’s 2019 novel of the same name; one of those giant-cover-font, John Grisham-esque novels that jump out at you from the Barnes & Noble sale rack. But one night, a call comes through the Night Action line from Rose Larkin (Luciane Buchanan), an oblivious tech guru who has just witnessed her aunt and uncle being murdered in their own home. In case you might have been unable to ascertain from its title, The Night Agent is about an agent.

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Image courtesy of "Roger Ebert"

Netflix Taps into Old-Fashioned Spy Drama with Confidence in Fun ... (Roger Ebert)

Netflix's newest spy thriller “The Night Agent” reminded me of '90s and '00s projects like “In the Line of Fire” and the Bourne movies. That's a compliment.

How does Sutherland get to the bottom of something fishy at the top level of world government and keep Rose alive at the same time? On the other end of the line is a former CEO named Rose Larkin (Luciane Buchanan), who was given the number and a code to activate Sutherland by her aunt and uncle, who Rose thought were just a pair of ordinary suburbanites. Her security detail is run by a tough agent named Chelsea Arrington (the engaging Fola Evans-Akingbola) and a new addition in Agent Erik Monks (D.B. Netflix’s newest spy thriller “The Night Agent” reminded me of ‘90s and ‘00s projects like “In the Line of Fire” and the Bourne movies. Peter is assigned the Night Action desk, which means he sits in front of a phone for hours every night and then goes home again. For his trouble, he’s basically branded a suspect in the bombing and demoted to a thankless desk job manning a phone that never rings.

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Image courtesy of "Variety"

'The Night Agent' Review: Netflix's Exciting Political Thriller (Variety)

Hong Chau and Gabriel Basso stand out on "The Night Agent," a Shawn Ryan thriller based on Matthew Quirk's novel.

Still, it’s a pleasure to see a show better than it might have been, when so often the opposite is true: “The Night Agent” sparks with curiosity and intrigue, a richly detailed show that propels viewers forward with a relentless pace. So it is with “The Night Agent,” created by Shawn Ryan of “The Shield,” and based on a novel by Matthew Quirk. [Hong Chau](https://variety.com/t/hong-chau/) — the Oscar-nominated actor, who’s appeared in “The Whale,” “The Menu,” and “Downsizing” — is an interesting element on [Netflix](https://variety.com/t/netflix/)’s new series “ [The Night Agent](https://variety.com/t/the-night-agent/),” and a revealing one.

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Image courtesy of "CNN"

'The Night Agent' works as a '24'-like thriller, while 'Rabbit Hole ... (CNN)

In one of those odd juxtapositions that come with the streaming age, a new Netflix drama about an FBI agent in the White House, "The Night Agent," has a ...

Charles Dance (“Game of Thrones”) also enters the chat in the later episodes, but by then, “Rabbit Hole” is already confusing enough that it’s barely worth the effort to try sorting things out. Netflix courts various audience niches, but this more closely approximates the meat-and-potatoes fare that has found success on more traditional platforms. That includes warnings from the President’s chief of staff, Diane Farr (Hong Chau, fresh off her Crisply told and smartly cast, the adaptation of Matthew Quirk’s novel issues a call worth answering. Perhaps inevitably, there are some clunkier aspects. [ “24”-like franchise](https://www.cnn.com/2017/02/01/entertainment/24-legacy-review/index.html) with “The Night Agent,” a twisty thriller with high-stakes corruption reaching deep into the corridors of Washington and a stalwart FBI agent who suffers for our sins.

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Image courtesy of "Netflix Life"

Who plays Rose in The Night Agent? (Luciane Buchanan age ... (Netflix Life)

The Night Agent star Luciane Buchanan was born on July 16, 1993, in New Zealand. Here's everything to know about the Netflix star!

Luciane also has a few new titles on the way, too! One of these actresses is Luciane Buchanan, who plays Rose in the series. You’ll learn more about Rose when you stream every episode of the Netflix original series.

Netflix's political thriller 'The Night Agent' sticks to the formula (WNIJ and WNIU)

TERRY GROSS, HOST: This is FRESH AIR. In the new Netflix series "The Night Agent," Gabriel Basso plays a young FBI agent stuck in a dead-end job who ...

And this "The Night Agent" does provide. And if you want to learn more about how we put the show together and learn more about our producers and what they're paying attention to, subscribe to our free newsletter. You can tell the upbeat tale of reporters exposing the truth about Watergate in "All The President's Men." GROSS: John Powers reviewed "The Night Agent," the new series streaming on Netflix. I got a kick out of the toxic relationship between the spineless Veep and the daughter who despises him. In the new Netflix series "The Night Agent," Gabriel Basso plays a young FBI agent stuck in a dead-end job who suddenly finds himself in the middle of a huge conspiracy. Alas, like most so-called political thrillers - the recent Apple TV+ series "Liaison" is another example - "The Night Agent" never rises above formula. Are you ready to do whatever it takes to get to the bottom of this muck, to keep Rose Larkin safe? And that was enough to keep me watching happily until the very end. It was Rose who made that late-night call to the night action desk as assassins were murdering her secret agent aunt and uncle. You can spoof it the way "The Manchurian Candidate" sent up anti-communist frenzy. Me, I'm hooked on thrillers whose heroes get caught up in treacherous political shenanigans - you know, the attempted military coup in "Seven Days In May," the assassination corporation in the "Parallax View" or the many delirious intrigues that fueled "Homeland."

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Image courtesy of "Decider"

'The Night Agent' Review: Netflix Raises The Stakes With New ... (Decider)

If you liked Netflix's 'The Recruit' starring Noah Centineo, you'll love Shawn Ryan's 'The Night Agent,' starring Gabriel Basso, Luciane Buchanan, and Hong ...

Ryan’s series raises the stakes of The Recruit, feels more rooted in reality, and takes itself more seriously, giving it a clear upper hand. When evidence points towards the Oval Office, The Night Agent‘s characters and viewers alike will question who can be trusted. Coming off of The Whale, The Menu, and Poker Face, Chau slips on a gray wig and brings the star power as a complex, buttoned-up problem solver whose even-tempered, empathetic falters under mounting pressure. Hendricks pivots from vetting a stack of largely laughable letters to dodging bullets alongside Max Meladze (Laura Haddock), a former CIA asset arrested for murder, while Sutherland goes from manning the phones to evading a manhunt. When the president’s chief of staff, Diane Farr (Hong Chau), extends an olive branch by assigning Sutherland to doldrum desk duty in the White House basement, he answers a distressing night action call and winds up on the run with Rose Larkin (Luciane Buchanan), a terrified cybersecurity expert whose aunt and uncle were mysteriously assassinated. As the duo fights to stay alive, ever-changing narratives involving the president (Kari Matchett), vice president (Christopher Shyer), his daughter Maddie (Sarah Desjardins), and other FBI staffers unfold in a gripping, fast-paced action-thriller.

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Image courtesy of "digitalspy.com"

The Night Agent season 2 potential release date, cast, plot and ... (digitalspy.com)

The Night Agent season 2 potential release date, cast, plot and everything you need to know. Will FBI agent Peter get another mission?

Until The Night Agent gets renewed for a second season, we won't get to see any new footage. In the final episode, having saved the day (and the President) from VP Redfield and Diane Farr's assassination plans, Peter and Rose have a romantic goodbye as Peter prepares to take on his first secret mission as a Night Agent. Other characters from the show could return, too. The Night Agent season 2 plot: What will happen? The Night Agent season 2 cast: Who will be in it? The Night Agent season 2 potential release date: When will it air on Netflix?

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Image courtesy of "Decider"

Stream It Or Skip It: 'The Night Agent' On Netflix, About An FBI Agent ... (Decider)

Gabriel Basso, Luciane Buchanan, D.B. Woodside and Hong Chau star in Shawn Ryan's adaptation of Matthew Quirk's novel.

But the first episode established that it’s a show with a lot of stock characters and a conspiracy that doesn’t start in a particularly interesting way. The biggest intrigue might be with Ellen (Eve Harlow) and Dale (Phoenix Raei), whom we see executing someone in Racine, WI at the end of the first episode. His writing has appeared in the New York Times, Slate, Salon, RollingStone.com, VanityFair.com, Fast Company and elsewhere. Our Take: There’s a certain amount of lunkheadedness that envelops the first episode of The Night Agent, more than you’d expect from a show written by Ryan. Maybe that’ll inject some personality into the series, but in the run up to that, all we see are flat line readings and action scenes. He does keep her safe, but not before dealing with conspiracy theorists outside his apartment and a car chase going the wrong way down a local highway. He also seems to be in a loyalty tug-of-war between White House chief of staff Diane Farr (Hong Chau) and his FBI boss, Deputy Director Jamie Hawkins (Robert Patrick). She is staying with her aunt and uncle, who just came back from a business trip. Peter answers and talks her through hiding from the gunmen until law enforcement gets there. As he’s getting treated for his injuries, he spots the man who left the bomb, chases him into an alley, but loses him when a car slams into him. [The Shield](https://decider.com/show/the-shield/), is now adapting [Matthew Quirk’s novel The Night Agent](https://www.amazon.com/Night-Agent-Novel-Matthew-Quirk/dp/0062875469?tag=decider08-20&asc_refurl=https://decider.com/2023/03/23/the-night-agent-netflix-review/&asc_source=web) for Netflix. The Gist: On the Metro train, one of the passengers, FBI agent Peter Sutherland (Gabriel Basso) notices a man leave a backpack and get off the train.

Netflix's political thriller 'The Night Agent' sticks to the formula (Valley Public Radio)

An FBI agent in a dead-end job suddenly finds himself in the middle of a huge conspiracy. This new 10-part series is a cross between a paranoid thriller ...

And this "The Night Agent" does provide. And if you want to learn more about how we put the show together and learn more about our producers and what they're paying attention to, subscribe to our free newsletter. You can tell the upbeat tale of reporters exposing the truth about Watergate in "All The President's Men." GROSS: John Powers reviewed "The Night Agent," the new series streaming on Netflix. I got a kick out of the toxic relationship between the spineless Veep and the daughter who despises him. In the new Netflix series "The Night Agent," Gabriel Basso plays a young FBI agent stuck in a dead-end job who suddenly finds himself in the middle of a huge conspiracy. Alas, like most so-called political thrillers - the recent Apple TV+ series "Liaison" is another example - "The Night Agent" never rises above formula. Are you ready to do whatever it takes to get to the bottom of this muck, to keep Rose Larkin safe? And that was enough to keep me watching happily until the very end. It was Rose who made that late-night call to the night action desk as assassins were murdering her secret agent aunt and uncle. You can spoof it the way "The Manchurian Candidate" sent up anti-communist frenzy. Me, I'm hooked on thrillers whose heroes get caught up in treacherous political shenanigans - you know, the attempted military coup in "Seven Days In May," the assassination corporation in the "Parallax View" or the many delirious intrigues that fueled "Homeland."

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Image courtesy of "Deadline"

'The Night Agent' Creator Shawn Ryan Interview: Plot Twists ... (Deadline)

SPOILER ALERT: The series includes details about new Netflix series The Night Agent, based on the bestselling novel by Matthew Quirk. Gabriel Basso in 'The ...

RYAN: I really don’t want to say too much because I do occupy a somewhat unique position in that I’ve been part of the previous five negotiations, and the last time I was around, I was co-chair of the negotiating committee so I do know that my words carry extra weight. I think these are all questions that we almost certainly would love to answer in a potential Season 2, and I certainly hope we get the opportunity to do that. But one of the things that happens in thriller movies when they try to forge a romance is they usually seem rushed, and it to me doesn’t seem earned. I don’t want to tell this specific story over five seasons, I want to tell this specific story in one season and give some satisfaction to the audience that they see how things turn out. What I will tell you is that the initial pitch for this show that we sold to Netflix was that each season would tell its own, mostly self-enclosed, a beginning, middle and end story, and any future seasons would include a few but not most of the characters that we saw in the previous season. But that was the story we set out to tell, and we told it. If it was confusing to you as a viewer, then I have to re-examine that, but that’s the rationale for why she did what she did. She was very young, and she was worried that maybe she, as a person, was a little young for the role, especially playing a contemporary of the President. As it relates to the President, again, I had the story in mind about the Vice President and his daughter in college. In the book, the mole in the White House is Russian, and so is the assassin, which is not the case in the series. In a book, you can put the readers into the heads of the characters and you understand what they’re thinking, why they’re behaving. I told Sony, I want this to be a project I do, and then I said, I really don’t want to pitch this.

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Image courtesy of "Hollywood Reporter"

Shawn Ryan on Night Agent, WGA Negotiations, Mini-Rooms and a ... (Hollywood Reporter)

During this week's 'TV's Top 5' podcast, the five-time member of the WGA's negotiating committee opens up about the dangers of mini-rooms, not investing in ...

I always believe that investing in writers and investing in writers through production is one of the best investments you can make it a TV show. I believe that a major reason the strike happened in 2007 was that the companies couldn’t agree among themselves what to do about the internet and future streaming. I insist on it for all of my shows because I know that whatever money we’re spending on a writer, that writer is going to save multiples of that in efficiencies. One of the reasons why I left and went to Sony in the first place was it appealed to me that I can approach the creative first and then work to figure out where the best place to sell it rather than being pressured to service an in-house buyer. We were trying to make a deal with the AMPTP but they represent different companies that may have different priorities and different instincts about how the negotiations can go. We know the time is beneficial to the creative but is there an economic impact for writers when it takes this long to get a show on the air? I never thought it belonged there but I had a sister studio that was insisting that it that it be first presented to its sister network, the sister network wanted it. I did a Beverly Hills Cop [pilot for CBS](https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/shawn-ryan-beverly-hills-cop-589340/) that that wasn’t picked up for political reasons — not for quality reasons — by a guy who has now been [thoroughly exposed](https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/general-news/les-moonves-accused-sex-crimes-violence-by-more-women-1141436/) to the industry. We raise a lot of questions in the first couple episodes of The Night Agent and we will give you the answers to those questions. Maybe this is my broadcast upbringing, but I think you can make things that are really good and that appeal to a lot of people. I don’t eat cheeseburgers in real life — I eat cheese, I eat meat, but I don’t eat them together — so for me, we tried to make it a really good show. The thing that made it personal for me was that I love the idea that Peter was a man who had unanswered questions about his deceased father.

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Image courtesy of "Collider.com"

'The Night Agent' Season 1 Ending Explained: Peter's New Beginning (Collider.com)

The first season of Netflix's 'The Night Agent' comes to an explosive end. Literally. Gabriel Basso as Peter Sutherland in The Night Agent Image via Netflix.

Before the president boards, Peter shoots the inside man in the head and holds the president at gunpoint as he tries to explain the situation to her and her remaining security. Redfield tells Maddie the president would like to speak with her alone, though he leads her to a protected underground bunker with a Secret Service agent, where he plans to stay with Maddie until the attack is over, and he can rise from the ashes as the new president. Peter is taken into custody, while Chelsea and Maddie arrive just in time to explain everything to President Travers about the conspiracy and clear Peter’s name. Back at the White House, Peter and Rose have a private meeting with President Travers. Elsewhere, Chelsea has located a bomb in the lodge, evacuating the building, while Maddie orders her father to let her out of the bunker. With Diane on their side, at least for the time being, Peter and Rose demand that she uses her power to get them into Camp David to stop Redfield and Wick (Ben Cotton) from killing both Zadar and Travers, as Redfield’s ultimate goal has shifted to taking her place as President of the United States. As Rose attempts to fix communications, Peter sets off to find the president and stop the attack. As Diane drives them to Camp David, she finally enlightens Peter on the metro bombing. But, an unexpected trip to Camp David puts her plan on hold, as the team has figured out that Zadar will be at Camp David and another attack is in the works. The finale of The Night Agent begins with a flashback to a pivotal moment in Peter’s life. Meanwhile, Peter and Rose confront Diane about the Camp David attack, Diane is stunned to learn about this, saying she would never do anything to hurt President Michelle Travers (Kari Matchett). But, an unexpected ally in Chelsea Arrington (Fola Evans-Akingbola), a member of the Secret Service assigned to protect the Vice President’s daughter Maddie (Sarah Desjardins), has provided them with a life vest.

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Image courtesy of "cosmopolitan.com"

The Night Agent season 2: Potential cast, story and more (cosmopolitan.com)

The series, based on Matthew Quirk's bestselling book, follows FBI agent Peter Sunderland (played by Gabriel Basso) who is plunged into a deep, political ...

Who might star in The Night agent season 2? What might be the storyline on The Night Agent season 2? What is The Night Agent about?

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Image courtesy of "cosmopolitan.com"

The Night Agent, ending explained (cosmopolitan.com)

So, Maddie, Chelsea, Peter and Rose Larkin work together to prevent the attack. They learn that the attack with be at Camp David, and that Omar isn't the only ...

They learn that the attack with be at Camp David, and that Omar isn’t the only target – so is US President Travers. So, Maddie, Chelsea, Peter and Rose Larkin work together to prevent the attack. The action series is based on Matthew Quirk’s bestselling book and follows a low-level FBI agent Peter Sunderland (played by Gabriel Basso) who works nights manning a phone in the basement of the White House in case it rings, and one night, it does.

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Image courtesy of "ComingSoon.net"

The Night Agent Stars Gabriel Basso & Luciane Buchanan Talk ... (ComingSoon.net)

ComingSoon Editor-in-Chief Tyler Treese spoke to The Night Agent stars Gabriel Basso and Luciane Buchanan about Netflix's political thriller series, which is ...

All the stuff sort of came together and obviously, I’m written that way where I know it’s written in this scene direction what I’m supposed to be looking for, but I think the intangibles that the audience like you might be picking up on are that I know how to do the things in real life. One of my favorite sequences was episode three when with the hard drive, because I wasn’t there when you guys, you and Diane. Basso: I think it was sort of a situation of art imitating life because I’m the kind of like how I was raised and the kind of person I am. So yeah, that was really cool to have that perspective and I didn’t have to have any White House scenes, which is great because they looked very long. I love the fight scenes, but what impressed me the most was the confidence you’re always conveying in this show. So I think it’s having the confidence, like if Peter, instead of looking outward for the approbation and the validation, that little girl knows that he saved her life.

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Image courtesy of "Decider"

'The Night Agent' Ending Explained: Do Peter And Rose Save The ... (Decider)

Wondering how 'The Night Agent' Season 1, Episode 10, "Fathers" ends? Decider's Season 1 finale recap unpacks 'The Night Agent's action-packed ending.

Travers offers Sutherland a spot in the night action program as a night agent. Just when he’s about to lose all hope for his father’s innocence, Travers informs Sutherland his dad agreed to become a double agent to assist the White House and was being prepped for deployment when a foreign assassin killed him. Sutherland and Maddie finally have clarity on their “Fathers,” and Arrington has a new job on the president’s detail. When Sutherland learns the president is at Air Force 1, he sprints to stop her from boarding, shoots a compromised agent, and takes Travers at gunpoint.“There’s a bomb on Marine 1 rigged to go off on liftoff,” he says, threatening not to let POTUS go until they kill the engine and conduct a search. And later at the White House, Sutherland and Larkin meet with Travers and learn Gordon Wick evaded capture. Farr runs inside a cabin to warn Almora about the bomb, but Agent Briggs (Toby Levins) shoots them both then sets his watch timer for 10 minutes and prepares the bomb. Unaware that an explosion is imminent, Maddie begs her dad to release her from the bunker. Peter and Rose also uncover evidence that links Diane Farr (Hong Chau) to the murder of Rose’s aunt and uncle. I’ll tell everyone everything and I’ll fucking tear you down.” With a cold look in his eyes, the VP — fully aware that his only living daughter would die in an explosion should she leave — says, “Let her out.” Maddie goes free, and thanks to another last-minute save from Arrington, they both escape before the building is blown to bits. When Chelsea and Maddie arrive on site, communications are down, so can’t warn Almora (Enrique Murciano) about the explosives. As the two forage for answers and fight to stay safe, they uncover concerning evidence that leads to the White House and forces them to question everything and everyone around them. Buckle up for The Night Agent ending explained, and be mindful that spoilers lie ahead.

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