TV

The Looming Tower, BBC Two review ★★★★

In The Looming Tower, Jeff Daniels plays John O'Neill, chief of counter-terrorism at the FBI. Tracing the years leading up to 9/11, O'Neill and his team investigate Al-Qaeda's activities

Jeff Daniels in The Looming Tower, BBC Two
It’s hard to make sense of catastrophic tragedy such as 9/11. On the face of it, there’s no sense to be made. But the creators of The Looming Tower try their best to explain – showing the various roads leading to the September 11th Attacks via U.S. government agencies and global terrorist networks.

The first episode is largely set around the FBI, just before the 1998 US Embassy bombings in Nairobi. Writer Dan Futterman (Capote, Foxcatcher) focuses on John O’Neill, the chief of FBI's counter-terrorism division (I-49). He’s played by a perfectly cast Jeff Daniels, pushing his textbook performance of hilarious, masculine aggression – similar to his Will McAvoy in The Newsroom.

Only this time, it’s a much more sweary atmosphere, which works with the rhythm and tension of this important office environment.


John O'Neill (Jeff Daniels) is an unforgettable presence

The episode is split between offices and action on the ground, both in several locations. As well as Langley, New York, and Washington D.C., we skip around Albania, Kenya, Tanzania, and Turkey to explore the network of Al-Qaeda terrorists. But that doesn’t mean the office isn’t exciting. The dialogue is quick and accessible – even the weighty expositions about African and European countries grow thrilling to listen to.

And it’s even more entertaining given the files of insults and swear words held in O’Neill’s repertoire. When discussing a vital hard drive to Schmidt, without consideration for authority he says: ‘I’ll shove that thing so far up your ass you’ll be combing s*** out of your pompous f***ing beard’. He’s an unforgettable presence.


Ali Soufan (Tahar Rahim) is O'Neill's protégé, one of the few agents who can speak Arabic

But, obviously, dark forces are at work and a tragic omen lingers over every scene. The Twin Towers do indeed loom, like the title suggests, in the background of every scene in New York. Episode 1 even ends with their flickering silhouettes shining bright in the distance.

It’s a thrilling journey with a harrowing fate, made all the more foreboding with the knowledge that the real John O’Neill died in the September 11th Attacks. And similar to Chimerica on Channel 4, the story's unsettling reality comes closer as director Alex Gibney staples together bin Laden interviews with dramatised scenes.

The horrors of 9/11 loom still –you need only make a search on YouTube to see the collapsing destruction and bewildered cries. Futterman and Lawrence Wright (author of the Pulitzer-winning source material) do well to make sense of this awful event, of the 101 minutes that changed America.

The Looming Tower airs on Friday 26th April at 9:30pm on BBC Two. The whole series is available to stream on Amazon Prime.


TRY CULTURE WHISPER
Receive free tickets & insider tips to unlock the best of London — direct to your inbox

What The Looming Tower, BBC Two review
When 26 Apr 19 – 26 Apr 20, 9:30 PM – 10:20 PM
Price £n/a
Website




You may also like: