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Jackson Lamb and His Team Take On Internal Threats in Slow Horses Season 3

Slow Horses


In Season 3 of AppleTV+’s hit show Slow Horses, a group of MI5 agents who aren’t considered good enough for top assignments in Her Majesty’s intelligence service tackle some of the most dangerous plots against the British government. Jackson Lamb, played by Gary Oldman, is the disheveled and grumpy leader of these misfit spies at Slough House. This season, the threats come from within the government itself.

The group includes River Cartwright (Jack Lowden), who is often clumsy; Louisa Guy (Rosalind Eleazor), a determined former jewel thief; Shirley Dander (Aimee-Ffion Edwards), who struggles with drug addiction; Roddy Ho (Christopher Chung), a childish computer hacker; and Marcus Longridge (Kadiff Kirwan), who has a gambling problem.

They all reunite to rescue their colleague Catherine Standish (Saskia Reeves) and to keep the nation’s most secret record, the Grey Books, out of enemy hands. The tension quickly builds as writers Will Smith, Mark Denton, and Jonny Stockwood bring Mick Herron’s bestselling book Real Tigers to life. As we head into the fourth season, there are hints of an exciting face-off between Oldman and Hugo Weaving.

Catherine Standish, the kind and steady office manager at Slough House, is kidnapped by operatives led by Sean Donovan (Sopé Dirisù). Lamb and his team immediately start working to bring her back safely. Lamb assigns tasks to his team and begins to realize how much they all rely on Standish’s calm presence. Despite their efforts to search every corner of London, they cannot find Standish, and Lamb starts to feel desperate.

We soon learn that Standish is held captive in a remote safe house outside the city. Lamb discovers that she has been taken by a “Tiger Team,” a group of trained specialists hired by high-ranking government officials to carry out secret tests on MI5 to expose any weaknesses.

River receives a photo of Standish with a gun to her head and gets a mysterious phone call to meet a former MI5 agent named James “Spider” Webb (Freddie Fox). River learns that to save Standish, he must retrieve a top-secret file.

Still from the series
Still from the series (Apple TV+)

After the Tiger Team completes their drill, Donovan refuses to release Standish and goes rogue, aiming to get his hands on the Grey Books. These books contain highly classified secrets of the British government and other countries, including the United States.

This puts Standish in real danger, and Lamb is determined to catch Donovan. MI5 assigns Diana Scrivener (Kristin Scott Thomas), an experienced spy, to oversee operations at Slough House in Season 3. She and Lamb engage in a strategic game of cat-and-mouse as they work to deal with Donovan and find the Grey Books. Oldman and Thomas share a strong on-screen chemistry, which adds depth to the story.

James “Spider” Webb, who was the chief operations officer at the security firm that organized the Tiger Team, appears to have set up Slough House and his old adversary, Cartwright. But things go wrong when Donovan confronts Webb, demanding the Grey Books. When Webb refuses, Donovan accidentally kills him in a heated argument.

Now Donovan is a murderer and a rogue agent, and both Slough House and MI5 must keep the scandal from going public. Donovan is haunted by the loss of Alison Dunn (Katherine Waterston), an MI5 agent he loved, who died in mysterious circumstances. He believes MI5 caused her death and rejects the idea that she took her own life. As Donovan opens up to Standish, we see him less as a killer and more as a heartbroken man trying to uncover the truth.

In the final episodes, River and Louisa are tasked with taking Donovan and his associate to a satellite records room to swap the Grey Books for Standish. An MI5 team plans to ambush and kill River, Louisa, Donovan, and Standish at the facility.

Acting Director Ingrid Tierney (Sophie Okonedo) is overwhelmed and resorts to extreme measures, ready to blame Slough House and her superiors. Meanwhile, Lamb heads to the safe house with Danny Ho to rescue Standish. Shirley and Marcus assist River and Louisa, and everything points to a complex power play set up by Diana Scrivener.

Her ultimate goal is to remove Tierney and reclaim leadership at MI5. Donovan only used the Grey Books as a way to uncover the truth about Alison. By the time Donovan finds the file, he works with River and Louisa, even providing cover. Donovan is fatally shot and dies, asking River and Louisa to reveal the cover-up.

Still from the show
Espionage, Betrayal, and Unexpected Alliances Unfold (Apple TV+)

Two MI5 agents, Hobbes (Chris Coghill) and another are sent to kill Lamb and Standish at the safe house, but Lamb cleverly outsmarts them with help from Ho and a double-decker bus. Meanwhile, River, Louisa, Shirley, and Marcus are trapped in a firefight, fighting their way out of the records facility against Nick Duffy (Chris Reilly).

Marcus kills Duffy in a brutal fistfight, and the Slough House agents all make it out alive. Back at MI5 headquarters, Diana and Ingrid tensely watch to see who will win control, and Diana comes out on top.

The river takes the file that Donovan died for to his grandfather, David (Jonathan Pryce), seeking advice. David tells him that the file doesn’t prove anything and that River needs to toughen up if he wants to succeed in MI5. He then burns the file in the fire. Jackson and Catherine have a deep conversation where Jackson dismisses her romantic ideas about their work. Standish walks 20 miles home.

The season ends with Lamb and Scrivener walking through a park, discussing what happened and what they did for each other. Lamb enjoys an ice cream cone, and Scrivener is the only one who can talk back to Lamb without consequences.

Season 4 hints at a bomb explosion somewhere in London, with a bearded Hugo Weaving getting involved. All of the main characters—Lamb, Scrivener, Cartwright, Guy, Dander, Longridge, and Ho—are set to return. Apple TV+ seems confident in the series, having already approved a fifth season.

As Season 3 of Slow Horses ends, it leaves viewers with a thrilling setup for Season 4. The series has consistently portrayed a blend of dark humor, intense espionage, and complex character dynamics, making it a standout in the spy genre.

Jackson Lamb and his team of misfit agents continue to navigate the dangerous waters of British intelligence, often finding themselves in morally gray areas where the line between right and wrong blurs. The internal conflicts within MI5, coupled with the personal struggles of each agent, provide a rich narrative that keeps the audience engaged.

The season’s end sets the stage for more intrigue, with Lamb and his team poised to face new challenges, including a potential bombing in London. The addition of Hugo Weaving hints at even more complicated dynamics and high-stakes scenarios in the upcoming season.

As always, the relationships between the characters, particularly the evolving tension between Lamb and Scrivener, remain at the heart of the story. Their unique bond, filled with witty banter and mutual respect, adds depth to the otherwise high-pressure world of espionage.

Apple TV+’s decision to greenlight a fifth season shows the platform’s confidence in the show’s future, ensuring fans can look forward to even more action, betrayals, and unexpected alliances. As Slow Horses continues to grow, it promises to keep pushing the boundaries of spy drama, making it a must-watch for anyone fascinated by the darker side of intelligence work.

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