Tom Quinn (Spooks)
Tom Quinn | |
---|---|
Spooks character | |
First appearance | "Thou Shalt Not Kill" |
Last appearance | "Series 10, Episode 6" |
Portrayed by | Matthew Macfadyen |
In-universe information | |
Alias | Matthew Archer[1] Steve Wilkes[2] Davy Crockett[3] Mr Anderson[4] John Steadman[4] David Ghetty[5] Jack[6] Mike[7] |
Title | Former Chief of Section D |
Occupation | Former MI5 officer |
Spouse | Christine Dale[8] |
Significant other | Ellie Simm (former) |
Nationality | British (Irish descent) |
Tom Quinn is a fictional character in the BBC espionage television series Spooks (called MI-5 in the United States), 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.
Series creator David Wolstencroft believed that writing Tom was the most fun, yet hardest to work on. During the second series, the producers were unsure whether Macfadyen would return for the third; because of this, Tom was originally killed in the second series finale. However, when Macfadyen decided to appear in the first two episodes of the third series, series writer Howard Brenton had to "unkill him." Reaction towards the character by fans were positive, though critics were mixed about Macfadyen's portrayal. Tom Quinn would later appear again as a cameo on the final episode of Spooks; his brief return was met with generally positive reactions.
Role in Spooks
[edit]Character arc
[edit]Tom Quinn joined Section D in 1996,[8] where he eventually became Head of Section D following the imprisonment of predecessor Lucas North (Richard Armitage) during an operation in Russia.[9] Throughout the first series, Tom engages in a relationship with Ellie Simm (Esther Hall), who knows him as "Matthew Archer", a civil servant in IT.[1] In the second episode, Tom performed an undercover operation with fellow officer Helen Flynn (Lisa Faulkner) to recruit the wife of right-wing businessman, Robert Osbourne, who was believed to incite race riots throughout the country. However, during the operation, Osbourne discovers they are spies and attempts to get his hands on information regarding MI5 operations. When Tom fails to cooperate Osbourne tortured Flynn with a deep fryer before killing her. Tom is able to escape and works with Harry to have Osbourne assassinated in retribution.[2] When Tom is shot during a Turkish Consulate raid in the third episode,[10] Tom is forced to admit his true identity and profession, which temporarily puts a strain on their relationship.[11] In the series one finale, Tom has his home protected in order to keep Ellie and her daughter Maisie safe. However, in the end of the finale, he inadvertently brings home a laptop rigged with C4; Ellie and Maisie become trapped in the house with the bomb.[3] The bomb fails to detonate. However, by the end of the second series premiere, Ellie leaves Tom, claiming that he will always choose his job over her.[12]
Later in the second series, Tom starts a brief relationship with Vicky Westbrook (Natasha Little),[4] which he ends due to her behaviour after an EERIE (Extreme Emergency Response Initiative Exercise) in the fifth episode.[13] In the following episode, Vicky retaliates by posting his phone number in Soho telephone boxes and clubs, garnering him unwanted attention. While Tom has Sam Buxton (Shauna Macdonald) find and destroy every leaflet, CIA liaison Christine Dale (Megan Dodds) makes Vicky stop the harassment. At the end of the episode, he starts a relationship with Dale,[14] which superior Harry Pearce (Peter Firth) disapproves of, demanding that he end it.[5] In later episodes, a shift in conscience starts to interfere with Tom's work, such as when he goes undercover to stop a renegade British Army major.[5] In the series two finale, he learns from Dale that an American assassin, Mickey Karharias, is visiting the UK. It is later revealed Karharias was actually killed, and the entire operation was orchestrated by supposedly dead CIA agent Herman Joyce (Tomas Arana), who is seeking revenge on Tom for ruining his daughter's life when Tom recruited her. Joyce frames Tom for assassinating the Chief of the Defence Staff. While Tom attempts to prove his innocence, Harry corners him, forcing Tom to wound Harry and escape into the North Sea. At the end of the episode, the team assumes he drowned.[15]
In the third series premiere episode, Tom survives and poses as a vagrant in order to find Joyce in a church; Tom kills Joyce and leaves his body outside Thames House in an attempt to prove his innocence. When it does not, Adam Carter (Rupert Penry-Jones) tracks down Joyce's wife and makes her confess to their plan to frame Tom, clearing him of all charges.[16] Tom is reinstated as Head of Section and Christine Dale is removed from her position, telling him he should also leave though Tom disagrees with her. However, in the next episode, he undergoes a "conscience explosion" and sabotages an operation to lure a terrorist cell into buying "red mercury", because he did not like what was being done to the scientist in order for him to attempt to create it (which includes forging gambling debt, prompting the man's wife to leave him. He also develops a severe alcohol problem). As a result, Tom is decommissioned and takes early retirement from MI5.[7] In the book Spooks: The Personnel Files, Tom is revealed to have married Christine Dale following his retirement and to have founded a private security company called 'Trans Atlantic Security'.[8] He is also mentioned in Season 7 Episode 1 when Lucas North asks Harry 'How did Tom Quinn work out?'. Tom briefly returns in the final episode, hired by Harry Pearce as an "outside contractor" to eliminate the head of a conspiracy of Russian nationalists who tried to derail the move to a closer Russian/UK relationship. Although brief, this scene makes it clear that Tom is still involved in spying.[17]
Characteristics
[edit]Tom Quinn is depicted as "serious, focused and popular" with his team, as well as "deeply intelligent", with "impeccable instincts."[18] Throughout the first series, Tom has a relationship with Ellie Simm. In the first few episodes, Tom deals with keeping his true identity secret, but not being truthful to Ellie is "eating away at him."[19] Ultimately, Tom tells her the truth,[11] and she later leaves him in the beginning of the second series as a consequence.[12] Throughout the second series, Tom's "journey" has evolved slowly, where his attitude to his work has changed, and his conscience has "kicked in", finding himself questioning the world he is in.[20] In Tom's final episode, writer Howard Brenton described Tom as not disillusioned, but "sort of becomes a human being."[21]
Conceptual history
[edit]Series creator David Wolstencroft believed that writing Tom was the most fun, yet the hardest work compared with other characters, because he was Spooks' primary protagonist.[22] Wolstencroft chose a job in Information Technology (IT) as the cover story Tom used in his relationship with Ellie, because he felt that in real life people are reluctant to ask questions about IT work.[23] To portray the character, actor Matthew Macfadyen followed the scripts, and did not want to deviate from them, as he did not believe doing so would be useful. Macfadyen was also keen to explore parts of Tom from within him for influence.[22]
During production of the first series, Macfadyen, along with co stars Keeley Hawes and David Oyelowo were wary of playing the lead characters in their mid-twenties, but since felt they earned the right to be in the series.[24] During production of episodes three and five of the first series, Macfadyen burst a blood vessel on one of his eyes. Macfadyen compensated by wearing sunglasses in order to hide it.[25] Halfway through filming series two, Macfadyen got to carry a gun for the first time in the series; he was disappointed in not carrying one in the first series.[26]
Though Macfadyen enjoyed working in the series,[22] he began to feel "very sluggish and fed up" with playing the same character for two years.[27] When the producers knew Macfadyen planned to leave, they did not know whether or not he would appear in the beginning of the third series. Howard Brenton, who wrote the series two finale, originally killed Tom off by drowning him while trying to escape onto the North Sea, while labouring under the impression that he was not to return.[28] The producers would have continued the third series without Tom, however when they heard the actor would be prepared to return for the first two episodes of the third series, they were rewritten to include his character Tom.[29] Brenton had to "unkill him."[28] After a seven-year absence, in October 2011, it was announced that Macfadyen was to make a "fleeting" cameo appearance in the final episode of the series. A Spooks insider stated that his scene "will bring back all the memories of Tom and what the character endured in those first few series."[30]
Reception
[edit]The character gained Matthew Macfadyen recognition during his tenure on Spooks, but since his departure, Macfadyen stated that "no one notices me now."[27] Fan reaction of the character proved positive. In the "Best of Drama" viewer polls at BBC Online, Macfadyen was voted fifth in the "Best Actor" category in 2002, ahead of co-star Peter Firth, who was voted 21st.[31] He would later be voted fourth in 2003,[32] and then fifth again in 2004; co-star Rupert Penry-Jones was voted third in the same category.[33] Furthermore, the scene entitled "Tom's death (or was it?)" in the cliffhanger of series two, was voted second in the "Favourite Moment" category in 2003, beaten only by the return of "Dirty Den" Watts in EastEnders.[34]
Critical reaction towards the character was generally mixed. In a DVD review of the first series, Michael Mackenzie of Home Cinema thought Macfadyen was not a very good actor and believed "he seems to be in some sort of contest with Keanu Reeves to see how long he can maintain the same lifeless facial expression," but thought the character himself, particularly his personal life, mostly worked well for the most part as it continues "as a standard soap opera."[35] In review of the second series, Dennis Landmann of MovieFreak praised the "drama and intensity that builds around his character," noting Tom's somewhat "haunted soul" and the last five minutes of the last episode "were so powerful they affected how I felt for the next couple of days; I kept thinking about the character and the tragic events that happened to him."[36] In the third series, Mackenzie praised the episode where Tom tries to clear his name, but thought his exit was "not particularly satisfying."[37] However, David Blackwell of Enterline Media thought that his farewell scene was "one of [his] best moments of the first two episode (in addition to the way Tom acts in the opening episode)."[38]
Critical reaction toward Tom's cameo appearance was met with generally positive reviews. Christopher Hootan of Metro opined "the return of Tom Quinn as a hired assassin in the final few seconds was a nice nod to early series of show."[39] Rob McLaughlin of Den of Geek noted that Tom's return among the final few minutes of the show was "a welcome return from an old friend,"[40] while Dork Adore reviewer Nick Bryan called it "a nice touch," also reflecting that it "nailed home the central moral: no-one ever escapes from the horror. (Especially since that guy was written out of the show due to an attack of conscience, yet is now doing Harry’s dirty work.)"[41] Vicky Frost of The Guardian meanwhile, felt the cameo "made no sense at all. Obviously it was super cheesy," but she "obviously" "completely loved it – despite knowing it was coming."[42]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Bharat Nalluri (director); David Wolstencroft (writer) (13 May 2002). "Thou Shalt Not Kill". Spooks. Series 1. Episode 1. BBC. BBC One.
- ^ a b Bharat Nalluri (director); David Wolstencroft (writer) (20 May 2002). "Looking After Our Own". Spooks. Series 1. Episode 2. BBC. BBC One.
- ^ a b Andy Wilson (director); Howard Brenton & David Wolstencroft (writer) (17 June 2002). "The Lesser of Two Evils". Spooks. Series 1. Episode 6. BBC. BBC One.
- ^ a b c Bharat Nalluri (director); Howard Brenton (writer) (9 June 2003). "Nest of Angels". Spooks. Series 2. Episode 2. BBC. BBC One.
- ^ a b c Ciaran Donnelly (director); Steve Bailey (writer) (28 July 2003). "Strike Force". Spooks. Series 2. Episode 8. BBC. BBC One.
- ^ Sam Miller (director); Ben Richards (writer) (4 August 2003). "The Seventh Division". Spooks. Series 2. Episode 9. BBC. BBC One.
- ^ a b Jonny Campbell (director); Howard Brenton (writer) (18 October 2004). "The Sleeper". Spooks. Series 3. Episode 2. BBC. BBC One.
- ^ a b c Spooks: Harry's Diary. London, United Kingdom: Headline Publishing Group. 2007. ISBN 978-0-7553-3398-1.
- ^ Reynolds, Simon (17 October 2008). "TV – Interview – Richard Armitage ('Spooks')". Digital Spy. Hachette Filipacchi UK. Retrieved 6 August 2010.
- ^ Rob Bailey (director); Simon Mirren (writer) (27 May 2002). "One Last Dance". Spooks. Series 1. Episode 3. BBC. BBC One.
- ^ a b Rob Bailey (director); Howard Brenton (writer) (4 June 2002). "Traitor's Gate". Spooks. Series 1. Episode 4. BBC. BBC One.
- ^ a b Bharat Nalluri (director); David Wolstencroft (writer) (2 June 2003). "Legitimate Targets". Spooks. Series 2. Episode 1. BBC. BBC One.
- ^ Justin Chadwick (director); Howard Brenton (writer) (7 July 2003). "I Spy Apocalypse". Spooks. Series 2. Episode 5. BBC. BBC One.
- ^ Justin Chadwick (director); David Wolstencroft (writer) (14 July 2003). "Without Incident". Spooks. Series 2. Episode 6. BBC. BBC One.
- ^ Sam Miller (director); Howard Brenton (writer) (11 August 2003). "Smoke and Mirrors". Spooks. Series 2. Episode 10. BBC. BBC One.
- ^ Jonny Campbell (director); Howard Brenton (writer) (11 October 2004). "Project Friendly Fire". Spooks. Series 3. Episode 1. BBC. BBC One.
- ^ Bharat Nalluri (director); Jonathan Brackley & Sam Vincent (writers) (23 October 2011). "Series 10, Episode 6". Spooks. Series 10. Episode 6. BBC. BBC One.
- ^ "Tom Quinn character file". BBC.co.uk/drama/spooks. Retrieved 7 August 2010.
- ^ Landmann, Dennis (20 April 2005). "MI-5 – Volume 1". Movie Freak. Archived from the original on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 7 August 2010.
- ^ Penhale, Faith (2004). Creating Season 2 (Spooks DVD (Series 2) Disc 1). Contender Entertainment Group.
- ^ Brenton, Howard (2005). Episode 3.2 (Spooks DVD (Series 3) Disc 1). Contender Entertainment Group.
- ^ a b c Macfadyen, Matthew; Wolstencroft, David (2003). Playing: Tom Quinn (Spooks DVD (Series 1) Disc 2). Contender Entertainment Group.
- ^ Featherstone, Jane; Wolstencroft, David (2003). Episode 1 Audio Commentary (Spooks DVD (Series 1) Disc 1). Contender Entertainment Group.
- ^ Oyelowo, David (2003). The Cast (Spooks DVD (Series 1) Disc 2). Contender Entertainment Group.
- ^ Collins, Simon Crawford (2003). Episode 3 Audio Commentary (Spooks DVD (Series 1) Disc 2). Contender Entertainment Group.
- ^ Macfadyen, Matthew (2003). The World of Spies (Spooks DVD (Series 1) Disc 3). Contender Entertainment Group.
- ^ a b Lane, Harriet (17 February 2010). "Matthew Macfadyen: 'I do have a good eye'". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 August 2010.
- ^ a b Brenton, Howard (2004). Episode 10 (Spooks DVD (Series 2) Disc 5). Contender Entertainment Group.
- ^ Penhale, Faith (2005). Episode 3.1 (Spooks DVD (Series 3) Disc 1). Contender Entertainment Group.
- ^ Methven, Nicola (17 October 2011). "Matthew Macfadyen returns as MI5 agent Tom Quinn for the final ever episode of Spooks". Daily Mirror. Trinity Mirror. Retrieved 6 July 2012.
- ^ "BBC – Best of 2002 – Best Actor". BBC Online. BBC. Retrieved 14 October 2010.
- ^ "BBC – Best of 2003 – Best Actor". BBC Online. BBC. Retrieved 14 October 2010.
- ^ "BBC – Best of 2004 – Best Actor". BBC Online. BBC. Retrieved 14 October 2010.
- ^ "BBC – Best of 2003 – Favourite Moment". BBC Online. BBC. Retrieved 14 October 2010.
- ^ Mackenzie, Michael (31 August 2003). "Spooks: Season One (2002) Region 2 DVD Video Review". Home Cinema. The Digital Fix. Retrieved 6 August 2010.
- ^ Landmann, Dennis (9 March 2005). "MI-5 – Volume 2". Movie Freak. Archived from the original on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 6 August 2010.
- ^ Mackenzie, Michael (27 September 2005). "Spooks: Season Three (2004) Region 2 DVD Video Review". Home Cinema. The Digital Fix. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 6 August 2010.
- ^ Blackwell, David (4 March 2005). "MI-5/ SPOOKS Season 3". Enterline Media. Retrieved 14 October 2010.
- ^ Hootan, Christopher (23 October 2011). "Spooks came to a close with a heart-stopping finale". Metro. Associated Newspapers. Retrieved 6 July 2012.
- ^ McLaughlin, Rob (24 October 2011). "Spooks series 10 episode 6 review: series finale". Den of Geek. Retrieved 6 July 2012.
- ^ Bryan, Nick (23 October 2011). "Spooks: Series 10, Episode 6 – Dork Review". Dork Adore. Retrieved 6 July 2012.
- ^ Frost, Vicky (23 October 2011). "Spooks: series 10, episode six". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 July 2012.