“We are not policemen, we are spies,” goes the famous John le Carre quote from his novel A Most Wanted Man. “We do not arrest our targets. We develop them and redirect them at bigger targets. When we identify a network, we watch it, we listen to it, we penetrate it, and by degrees we control it.”
That’s as good a yardstick as any for what constitutes verisimilitude and fidelity to the hall of mirrors existence that the men and women of the secret world inhabit. Fans of the genre, to be sure, have an abundance of pop culture to sample from when it comes to stories about spies and their craft — from books like le Carre’s to also movies and streaming TV series. Below, we’ve rounded up seven titles from across the streaming universe that ought to be on the radar of any lover of spy and spy-adjacent series, a list that keeps getting longer all the time.
7 streaming spy series
We’ll start things off with two spy series that you should definitely check out on the biggest streamer of them all.
Kleo
This first one is a slick and incredibly addictive German-language series that should appeal to fans of shows like Killing Eve and The Americans. Kleo is a Cold War-era espionage thriller, one in which the titular protagonist is an East German spy who has just spent two years in prison when we meet her. She’s abruptly released upon the dismantling of the Berlin Wall and quickly sets out on a revenge spree that leads from Berlin to improvised electro clubs and Mallorcan fincas all the way to Chile’s Atacama Desert.
As for Kleo — the show, that is, which currently has a 92{dec8eed80f8408bfe0c8cb968907362b371b4140b1eb4f4e531a2b1c1a9556e5} critics’ score on Rotten Tomatoes — you know you’re in for a fun spy romp that doesn’t take itself too seriously even before the opening shot, which is of an alley not far from the Berlin Wall in the East Berlin of 1987. Before that, there’s a title card, greeting us with the following tongue-in-cheek intro:
“This is a true story.”
“None of this ever happened.”
The Night Agent
This next spy-adjacent series was #1 Netflix show in the world for several weeks earlier this year. It’s The Night Agent, based on Matthew Quirk’s novel of the same name, which racked up almost 169 million hours viewed over the course of its first week of availability on Netflix. That gave the 10-episode series starring Gabriel Basso as a heroic FBI agent, the third-best first-week showing ever for a series on Netflix.
Creator Shawn Ryan has described the series as “All The President’s Men with car chases.” From the official Netflix synopsis:
“The Night Agent is a sophisticated, character-based, action-thriller centering on a low-level FBI Agent who works in the basement of the White House, manning a phone that never rings — until the night that it does, propelling him into a fast-moving and dangerous conspiracy that ultimately leads all the way to the Oval Office.”
Apple TV Plus spy series
Moving right along, Apple’s streaming service also has two must-watch spy shows worth checking out: Tehran, and Slow Horses.
Slow Horses
The latter, with a star-studded cast that includes Gary Oldman and Kristin Scott Thomas, is an adaptation of Mick Herron’s spy novels that have made him something of an heir apparent to the late master of the genre himself, le Carre.
The title Slow Horses is derived from Slough House, the name of the fictional MI5 branch where outcasts and screw-ups are sent to spend the remainder of their time with the service — and it might as well be a continent away from MI5’s glittering Regent’s Park headquarters. At Slough House, spies like River Cartwright work under the auspices of the crass, crude, perpetually farting (but deceptively brilliant) Jackson Lamb.
Season 2 of Slow Horses debuted on Apple TV+ back in December, and two more seasons are on the way.
Tehran
While you’re waiting on Slow Horses to return, meanwhile, make sure you also check out Tehran — a seemingly ripped-from-the-headlines Israeli drama on Apple’s streamer from creator Moshe Zonder, head writer for the excellent thriller Fauda on Netflix.
Tehran’s narrative hangs on Mossad hacker/spy Tamar Rabinyan who’s dropped deep inside Iran — into its capital city, in fact, as the show’s title suggests. She’s there to hack into and disarm the defenses of an Iranian nuclear reactor that the Israelis want to bomb. Needless to say, it goes wrong — and it keeps going wrong. She has to improvise her way towards mission success, and staying alive.
Shaun Toub, who was born in Iran and plays the character of Faraz Kamali, posted on his Instagram a clip from Season 2, which hit Apple TV+ in May of last year. “I already miss Tehran,” he wrote. “Can’t wait for Season 3.”
In response to a commenter asking when the new season would arrive, he answered, “next year” (as in, 2023).
Three more shows to check out
These next titles, meanwhile, are spread across three different streamers: Hulu, Prime Video, and Sundance Now.
The Old Man
Another spy series based on a novel, FX’s The Old Man (which you can watch on Hulu if you don’t have cable or don’t have the FX channel in your cable package) stars Jeff Bridges and John Lithgow as Dan Chase and Harold Harper — two characters from an older generation of spooks who find themselves caught up in a new version of The Game that they probably didn’t realize they’d still be playing in their twilight years.
The series is based on Thomas Perry’s 2017 novel of the same name. More so than many of the other titles on this list, you actually don’t have to care one bit about spies or espionage to appreciate the masterful storytelling and strong collection of acting talent here that will keep you on the edge of your seat through all seven episodes.
The season ends on a huge cliffhanger, by the way, but not to worry — FX has already ordered up a second season of the show.
Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan
Prime Video’s Jack Ryan is another all-around solid and action-packed spy series, and its fourth season just hit Amazon’s streamer in June. The cast includes John Krasinski in the title role, with Wendell Pierce and Michael Kelly reprising their roles as CIA Officer James Greer and former CIA Officer Mike November, respectively.
From Prime Video’s summary of Season 4:
“The fourth and final season of Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan finds the titular character on his most dangerous mission yet: facing an enemy both foreign and domestic. As the new CIA Acting Deputy Director, Jack Ryan is tasked with unearthing internal corruption, and in doing so, uncovers a series of suspicious black ops that could expose the vulnerability of the country. As Jack and the team investigate how deep the corruption runs, he discovers a far-worse reality—the convergence of a drug cartel with a terrorist organization—ultimately revealing a conspiracy much closer to home and testing our hero’s belief in the system he has always fought to protect.“
The Bureau
This brings us to my personal favorite, the French-language thriller The Bureau (aka Le Bureau des Legendes).
Much of the action in this spy series from France takes place in and around an office — specifically, a bureau of the Dírection Générale de la Sécurité Extérieure (or DGSE), France’s equivalent of the CIA. That makes this series something of a workplace drama, albeit one that’s interrupted by plenty of sequences in the field, as well as of sumptuous Parisian vistas for audiences to lust over, not to mention spooks hunched over computers or around conference room tables, mapping out operations that unfold a long way from home.
In each season, the bureau stares down existential threats to France and its agents, including everything from ISIS terrorists to Russian hackers. You’ll watch DGSE agents, analysts, bureaucrats, and bosses study files, dispatch orders, and monitor events in real-time, and you’ll hang on to every word.
Creator Eric Rochant spoke with us about the series back in 2020.