Pine Gap (TV series)

Summary

Pine Gap is an Australian television drama series that was released on Netflix and broadcast on ABC in 2018. The six-part series is written and created by Greg Haddrick and Felicity Packard with Mat King directing all six episodes.[3] The series was produced by Screentime.

Pine Gap
Pine Gap title screen
Title screen for season one
Genre
Created byGreg Haddrick
Directed byMat King
StarringParker Sawyers
Tess Haubrich
Jacqueline McKenzie
Steve Toussaint
Stephen Curry
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes6
Production
Executive producers
Producers
Production locationsAlice Springs, Adelaide
Production companies
Original release
NetworkABC
Release14 October 2018 (2018-10-14) –
November 11, 2018 (2018-11-11)

Overview edit

Pine Gap is an international political thriller which is set around the Australian and American joint defence intelligence facility at Pine Gap, south-west of the town of Alice Springs, Australia.[1]

Cast edit

Episodes edit

No.Title [4]Directed by [3]Written byOriginal air date [4]Aus. viewers
1"Episode 1"Mat KingFelicity Packard14 October 2018 (2018-10-14)581,000[5]
The A-Crew intelligence team at the Pine Gap joint defence facility detects a missile launch in Myanmar that brings down a small passenger plane, killing all aboard, including four Americans. When satellite imagery reveals a cache of missiles in range of the APEC conference attended by the U.S. President Larry Kerr and the Australian Prime Minister Philip Burke, mission director Gus Thomson orders a drone strike. Zhou Lin, an executive of the Chinese mining company Shonguran, seeks to obtain land near the defence facility while courting Alice Springs' Arrernte people, who own the land. His activities alarm the joint intelligence team and Kath reveals to Ethan that the Australian government is allowing Lin to buy the land. Brilliant computer nerd Moses Dreyfus discovers malware on the facility's servers, and reports it to station director Ethan James, who realises it can only have been installed by an insider.
2"Episode 2"Mat KingGreg Haddrick14 October 2018 (2018-10-14)581,000[5]
Ethan and Moses deduce that the spy installed the malware into the control room using a smartphone. The investigators suspect six members of the A-team including Jasmina and Gus, who develop a romantic relationship. The situation is compounded by news that Chinese have hacked into the Pentagon and the CIA headquarters. In the South China Sea's disputed Fiery Cross Reef, Chinese fighter jets disable a Malaysian naval warship with an EMP bomb, heightening regional tensions. While investigating the victims of the airplane crash in Myanmar, the A-team discover that the passengers included a Burmese man accused of raping Rohingya girls and a Hong Kong journalist with an "explosive story." Both the American and Australian teams suspect that the other team is withholding information.
3"Episode 3"Mat KingGreg Haddrick21 October 2018 (2018-10-21)433,000[6]
While the A-team monitor communications relating to the US President Kerr's visit to China, Ethan, Rudy, and Kath launch a secret twelve day investigation of the A-team to find the spy. Rudy and Ethan strongly believe Jas is the spy. Jas, who is working on the Myanmar airplane case, relays Gus's suspicions that the Rohingyans were behind the missile attack to Kath and Jacob, but Gus has second thoughts about this hypothesis. While monitoring Kerr's communications, he discovers a message from the Hong Kong journalist killed on the destroyed plane which he thinks refers to information found on Australian Prime Minister’s Chief of Staff Robert Boyle’s phone. He shares his thoughts with Jas, but she lands herself in trouble with Jacob when she hacks into Boyle's email account.
4"Episode 4"Mat KingFelicity Packard28 October 2018 (2018-10-28)362,000[7]
Australia-United States relations are made extremely fraught by a leaked audio recording of the US President Kerr disparaging Australia. Gus and Jas deepen their romantic relationship with Gus informing his superior Rudy and his father. Jas also informs Gus that she has learnt through her hack of Boyle's phone that the Australian Government is secretly negotiating a treaty of neutrality with China, information which he passes to Ethan. Discontented with her husband Ethan's secrecy and lack of family attention, Belle befriends Zhou Lin while visiting an Arrernte sacred site. Zhou is courting the Arrernte people for the mining project, promising money and jobs. Meanwhile, Moses befriends a teenage girl named Marissa, complicating the investigation.
5"Episode 5"Mat KingFelicity Packard4 November 2018 (2018-11-04)358,000[8]
Gus' plan to consider an NSA job offer at Fort Meade strains his relationship with Jas. Strains between the Australian and American team leaders grow over their countries's conflicting relationships with China. Simon confesses to supplying the leaked audio of President Kerr to a pro-China Japanese blogger due to mounting debts over his children's private school fees. In a show of military strength, the United States launches a pre-emptive strike on a Chinese facility on Hughes Reef. In retaliation, the Chinese down an American fighter jet. The conflict coincides with the activation of malware on the servers and the discovery of the destroyed smartphone trigger in the canteen.
6"Episode 6"Mat KingGreg Haddrick11 November 2018 (2018-11-11)348,000[9]
Pilot Captain Pearson survives the downing of his jet, but the Chinese are jamming the signals from his rescue device. A-Crew joins the effort to locate and extract Pearson, while also attempting to ascertain the identity of the malware activater. Moses is able to stop the malware download process from completing, but unable to prevent one file from being leaked. However, Jacob, Kath, Ethan and Rudi suspect Moses of being the culprit and bring him in for questioning anyway due to his relationship with apparently underage Marissa. Moses denies being the spy, but confesses to giving Marissa $12,000 to settle her welfare fraud debts. Kath is informed that the missing file from the servers has been leaked to the public. The leaker is revealed to be Arrenrte law student Immy, and the file is a video showing Gus in his decision to conduct the drone strike. Belle has an affair with Zhou, whose mining deal has been approved by the Aboriginal and Australian authorities. Kath is informed of the approval just as A-Crew locate Pearson and President Kerr is preparing to launch an attack on the Chinese to rescue him. Kath orders A-crew Australians to stop their operations, and Ethan manages to defuse the China standoff by convincing Kerr that the Chinese would deploy nuclear weapons if he was to follow through with his preparations. As the US and China enter into diplomatic negotiation, Simon strikes a deal with Kath to get back his A-team job in return for identifying the person who leaked the file to Immy. While police raid Eloise, Gus decides to remain at Pine Gap after his father believes that he helped save the President's life by making the decision to execute the drone strike. Gus and Jas repair their relationship and Zhou meets with Immy, in a hint that she is working for Chinese intelligence.

Reception edit

Critical response edit

Luke Buckmaster of The Guardian wrote that the "soporific" series was "less a spy drama than an attempt to cure insomnia." He also criticised the series for what he regarded as its poor story-writing and unsatisfactory acting, giving it one out of five stars, as "there is nothing remotely cinematic about the drama."[10] Helen Razer of the Daily Review gave the series a negative review, disparaging it as "a poor attempt at promoting favourable propaganda about Australia–United States relations". She also criticized what she regarded as the tokenistic use of Aboriginal characters.[11]

Pat LaMarco of The Daily Free Press described Pine Gap as a "dull and sluggish attempt at a thriller". He also viewed the show's release on Netflix as a sign of what he regarded as the deteriorating quality of its content, writing that "now we will be seeing critically acclaimed dramas...and low-quality, forgettable efforts such as Pine Gap on the same [streaming] service."[12]

Nine-Dash Line controversy edit

Pine Gap was removed from the content streamed by Netflix in Vietnam by order of the country's Authority of Broadcasting and Electronic Information because a map with the nine-dash line was shown in two episodes of the series, albeit in a context in which characters criticised China's claim over the waters in on-screen dialogue.[13][14]

In November 2021, the Movie and Television Review and Classification Board of the Philippines ordered Netflix to remove certain episodes that featured the nine-dash line, deeming it "unfit for public exhibition" after the country's Department of Foreign Affairs issued a complaint calling the line "illegal" and a "violation of Philippine sovereignty".[15]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Knox, David (14 September 2017). "Pine Gap thriller for ABC, Netflix". TV Tonight. Retrieved 29 October 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d Groves, Don (12 September 2018). "Premiere dates set for 'Pine Gap' and 'Fighting Season'". IF. Mark Cuban. Retrieved 29 October 2018.
  3. ^ a b Groves, Don (26 October 2017). "Mat King to direct 'Pine Gap' for the ABC and Netflix". IF. Mark Cuban. Retrieved 29 October 2018.
  4. ^ a b "Pine Gap - Episodes Guide and Summaries". Next Episode. Retrieved 29 October 2018.
  5. ^ a b "Sunday 14 October 2018". TV Tonight. 14 October 2018. Retrieved 11 November 2018.
  6. ^ "Sunday 21 October 2018". TV Tonight. 21 October 2018. Retrieved 11 November 2018.
  7. ^ "Sunday 28 October 2018". TV Tonight. 28 October 2018. Retrieved 11 November 2018.
  8. ^ "Sunday 4 November 2018". TV Tonight. 4 November 2018. Retrieved 11 November 2018.
  9. ^ "Sunday 11 November 2018". TV Tonight. 11 November 2018. Retrieved 28 December 2018.
  10. ^ Buckmaster, Luke (12 October 2018). "Pine Gap review – lots of yakkety yak and occasional scenes of bonking". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  11. ^ Razer, Helen (11 October 2018). "The ABC's Pine Gap is a stinker". Daily Review. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  12. ^ LaMarco, Pat (9 December 2018). "REVIEW: Netflix's Pine Gap is a dull and sluggish attempt at a thriller". The Daily Free Press. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  13. ^ "Vietnam orders Netflix to remove Australian spy show Pine Gap over South China Sea map". Special Broadcasting Service. Agence France-Presse. 3 July 2021. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  14. ^ Pearson, James (2 July 2021). "Vietnam orders Netflix to remove Australian spy show over South China Sea map". Reuters. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  15. ^ Ramos, Christia Marie (1 November 2021). "Netflix ordered to remove 'Pine Gap' episodes on China's nine-dash line – DFA". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 9 July 2023.

External links edit