Spooks | |
---|---|
Season 4 | |
No. of episodes | 10 |
Release | |
Original network | BBC One |
Original release | 12 September – 10 November 2005 |
Series chronology | |
The fourth series of the BBC espionage television series Spooks began broadcasting on 12 September 2005 before ending on 10 November 2005. The series consists of ten episodes.
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [1] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
27 | 1 | "The Special (Part 1)" [2] | Antonia Bird | Ben Richards | 12 September 2005 (BBC One) | 6.63 | |
A bomb detonates near to Danny's funeral. Section D's investigation leads to an American-based eco-terrorist group called Shining Dawn, which believes that the human race ought to be culled; they demand the release of their leader from British custody, threatening to detonate a bomb in public places every ten hours. Ruth visits a sympathiser having doubts, Curtis, who is targeted, while Adam and Zaf follow leads. They discover there is a mole in MI5, as both suspects end up dead. They do eventually find the next bomb in a mainline railway station and defuse it. Adam also tracks down a witness, Natasha Scott. Zaf is captured by Shining Dawn members. | |||||||
28 | 2 | "The Special (Part 2)" [3] | Antonia Bird | Ben Richards | 13 September 2005 (BBC One) | 6.84 | |
Adam locates and frees Zaf also learning the location of the next bomb, which they defuse. In response Shining Dawn sets the next bomb to only be deactivated with a code. Newcomer Juliet Shaw plays politics by blackmailing Harry, who comes clean about it to the Home Secretary. The mole is identified by Shaw as American liaison to MI5 Richard Boyd. He is soon captured, which leads to the capture of the bomb maker, although Boyd is killed by the American secret service. The bomb is found at a nearby hospital, and Natasha has been captured and strapped to it, forming part of the circuit. After evacuating the hospital, Adam remains behind with Natasha until Curtis assists MI5 by profiling the bomb maker and successfully guessing the deactivation code, ending the threat. | |||||||
29 | 3 | "Divided They Fall" [4] | Alrick Riley | Ben Richards | 15 September 2005 (BBC Three) [n 1] | 6.50 | |
Far right political party "The British Way", who are connected to a number of attacks against minority groups, worries the government when they gain support and publicity. Section D is tasked in bring down the party from the inside. Adam poses as a convict to deal with party leader James Moran, while Harry and Fiona deal with William Sampson, an MP who has resigned to force a by-election on defecting to the British Way. They record a meeting with Sampson to replace Moran with MP Pergerine Howard-Davies; Ruth provides Moran with the recording. The plan is successful, but Moran becomes aware of Adam's deception, and has him and Ruth captured and used as quarry in a hunt; they manage to stop and arrest him. | |||||||
30 | 4 | "Road Trip" [5] | Alrick Riley | Howard Brenton | 22 September 2005 (BBC Three) | 5.21 | |
Adam goes undercover as a Circassian from Aleppo, Syria in a people-smuggling operation from Istanbul, Turkey to London in an attempt to turn the leader of a terrorist sleeper cell, Mohammed Yazdi and stop a planned terrorist attack against the Houses of Parliament. He seems to have turned Yazdi, when he implicates a Middle-Eastern Prince, Hakim. However, it is revealed that the plan all along was for Yadzi to assassinate the prince, which unfortunately succeeds after they are brought face to face. | |||||||
31 | 5 | "The Book" [6] | Jeremy Lovering | Raymond Khoury | 29 September 2005 (BBC Three) | 5.20 | |
Journalist Gary Hicks witnesses the murder of Clive McTaggart, a high-ranking retired intelligence officer and friend of Harry's who was about to publish his memoirs, which contain government secrets. While MI5 investigate and Hicks attempts to publish the story, a group of people from the government is sent to kill him. Meanwhile, aspiring journalist Jo Portman follows the investigation, and Adam, impressed by her skills that lead to a major break in the case, recruits her by the end of the episode. The finale reveals that Taggart mailed Harry the memoirs in the event of his death. | |||||||
32 | 6 | "The Innocent" [7] | Jeremy Lovering | David Farr | 6 October 2005 (BBC Three) | 5.83 | |
An Algerian army deserter and terror suspect, Nazim Malik is freed after two years in a British prison. Although he is found to be innocent, MI5 follow his activities, where they discover that he is being forced to conduct an assassination of an Algerian banker on British soil to guarantee the safety of his family. The team save his family, who were held hostage, just before Malik could carry out the assassination and surrenders. By the end of the episode he and his family have been granted asylum in Ireland. | |||||||
33 | 7 | "Syria" [8] | Omar Madha | Raymond Khoury | 13 October 2005 (BBC Three) | 5.74 | |
Fiona takes on a case when the Syrian Foreign Minister, Riyad Barzali, contacts MI5 for help, though his own secret service will kill him if he is to talk with the British. She does so because she learned that Farook Sukkarieh, her first husband who was thought to have been hanged for treason, actually survived. He kills Barzali, and captures Fiona to take back to Syria. Adam desperately tries to find Fiona when he loses track of her. He eventually finds her at a small airport, where Fiona is able to wound Farook and escape, but is shot by Farook before he himself is killed by Adam; Fiona later dies in Adam's arms. | |||||||
34 | 8 | "The Russian" [9] | Omar Madha | Howard Brenton | 20 October 2005 (BBC Three) | 6.34 | |
After the death of Fiona, Adam is taken off the case to investigate a Russian billionaire Oleg Korsakov, who plans to buy the National Health Service, and then dismantle it. Eventually, Adam convinces Harry to be let back in. They use Hugo Ross, a double agent for the Russians during the Cold War and Zaf for an operation to work with him. MI5 is able to work around Oleg's counter-surveillance measures and expose his plans. In the end, Adam comes to terms with his wife's death and finally tells her parents and Wes about it. | |||||||
35 | 9 | "The Sting" [10] | Julian Simpson | Rupert Walters | 27 October 2005 (BBC Three) | 5.98 | |
Juliet dismisses Harry after he stops the CIA from extraditing a British citizen, who turns out to be a terrorist, and is believed to have killed two MI5 officers. While Harry is under surveillance, the rest of the team work to stop the terrorist, where it is revealed that Nick Pollard, an American with counter surveillance skills may actually be involved. In fact, he arranges for the released terrorist to take part in an attack, which is revealed to be a surface-to-air missile against a flight heading for Heathrow, to push the UK and US into going to war against Iran. The attack is stopped and Pollard is arrested. Harry is reinstated. | |||||||
36 | 10 | "Diana" [11] | Julian Simpson | Howard Brenton | 10 November 2005 (BBC One) | 6.18 | |
After former MI5 officer Angela Wells visits Ruth, she comes to the Grid and holds everyone hostage, demanding that the service reveals evidence that Harry and MI5 conspired to kill Diana, Princess of Wales, or she will detonate a bomb. The team thinks it has found evidence that Harry sat on a secret committee discussing such a plot, but he reveals this was just a gamed scenario to help increase Diana's security. Ruth tricks Angela and is able to end her threat. The team decides to let Angela go because she was distraught over Peter Haigh's death. However, Angela’s true plan is to blow up the Royal family. The team is able to defuse a large bomb in time. When the team returns to Thames House, Angela awaits and uses a sniper rifle to gravely wound Adam, and she then prepares to shoot Harry. |
Spooks is a British television spy drama series that originally aired on BBC One from 13 May 2002 to 23 October 2011, consisting of 10 series. The title is a colloquialism for spies, and the series follows the activities of the intelligence officers of Section D in MI5, based at the service's Thames House headquarters, in a highly secure suite of offices known as The Grid. In the United States, the show is broadcast under the title MI-5. In Canada, the programme originally aired as MI-5, but later aired on BBC Canada as Spooks.
Rupert William Penry-Jones is a British actor, known for his performances as Adam Carter in Spooks, Clive Reader in Silk, DI Joseph Chandler in Whitechapel, and Mr. Quinlan in the American horror series The Strain.
Adam Henry Carter is a fictional character from the BBC espionage television series Spooks, which follows the exploits of Section D, a counter-terrorism division of MI5. He is portrayed by British actor Rupert Penry-Jones. The character is a former MI6 officer who takes charge as the chief of Section D, and hence the head protagonist following the departure of Tom Quinn in series three.
Tom Quinn is a fictional character in the BBC espionage television series Spooks, which follows the exploits of Section D, a counter-terrorism division of MI5. He is portrayed by British actor Matthew Macfadyen. In the first two series, Tom is the chief of Section D. The character was in the first and second episode of the third series but was decommissioned as a result of sabotaging an operation.
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