And Jessica takes risks of her own as she steps into the political limelight. Following a secret debrief from Saul, a stunned Estes authorizes a covert operation to pursue intel recovered in Beirut--but not without putting his own trusted operative in charge. Brody, still reeling from his misadventures with the bombmaker, gets another shock when he runs into Carrie at Langley.
A casual invitation to bury the hatchet turns into an encounter neither of them could have foreseen. Meanwhile, Carrie is forced to play second fiddle after her rash judgment call at the hotel, as Estes is busy sweeping the tracks clean to keep Jessica off their trail. Dana visits the hospital and is shocked by what she sees there. Faber gets tangled up with the CIA when he asks one too many questions about his old friend Tom Walker. Brody agrees to work with Carrie and Quinn to stop an attack on America, but his loyalty to the United States is questioned when Gettysburg once again becomes a battleground.
Reeling from the recent ambush, Carrie and team struggle to regain control of their operation, while Brody and family attend a tony fundraiser at a Virginia horse farm. Meanwhile, an anguished Dana pressures Finn to come clean about their hidden crime. He lies for Carrie. He lies for Roya. And as Dana turns to an unlikely source for comfort, her father comes face to face with his deadly past. In an effort to clarify his priorities, Brody makes a necessary phone call before things spiral further out of control.
Saul teams up with Virgil and Max to dig up some information on one of their own. And while the Brody family enjoys an all-expense paid vacation of sorts, Carrie finds herself preparing for the most important breakfast meeting of her career. Brody and Vice President Walden find themselves at odds over the future of their political relationship while Dana and Finn come terms with their own differences. Dangerously close to exhaustion, Carrie continues her hunt for Nazir, her suspicion turning to inside the Agency itself.
Roya reveals her true colors under interrogation, as Saul finds himself fighting for his career under the most unexpected circumstances. Meanwhile, the Brody family struggles to maintain anything close to sanity in their high-rise fishbowl. Following the dramatic events at the mill, Carrie must decide where her heart really lies: Does she want to be back at the CIA—with a promotion, no doubt--or a very different life?
Brody shares a drink with Faber to consider the future of his family, while Saul is tasked with a secret mission. And Quinn makes a decision that may change everything. Saul plots a risky counterstrike on the terrorists connected to the bombing, but his efforts to revive the CIA are threatened when Carrie becomes the focus of a hostile Senate investigation.
Saul attempts to track down those responsible for the Langley attack, recruiting an unlikely expert to follow the money trail. Quinn, troubled by the collateral damage from a recent mission, tries to take matters into his own hands. An embattled Carrie learns who is really on her side and the Brody family turns to therapy to mend their broken household. As fugitive Nicholas Brody finds himself in increasingly desperate straits, he returns to his faith for guidance in an unexpected way.
Back in DC, Carrie struggles to connect with Saul when a mysterious man offers to help her, but at a great cost. Carrie learns that even in its crippled state, the CIA can still exercise power when needed.
Saul and Fara follow the money trail to an unexpected location, and Carrie has breakfast with a new client. A mysterious man enters the country at the US-Canadian border. In DC, Carrie puts her mission on the line to do a risky favor. Saul is forced to rub elbows with his adversary, Senator Lockhart, on an elite hunting trip. Still on the run, Dana makes a shocking discovery that could end her getaway for good.
Meanwhile Saul struggles to keep an intrusive Senator Lockhart at bay, and Dana makes a radical decision that will change the Brody family forever. With his old adversary in custody, Saul makes the gamble of his career. Carrie and Quinn scramble to contain a local police investigation, while Mira finds her marriage at a crossroads. After new information comes to light, Carrie and Quinn pursue a key suspect in the Langley bombing. Saul deals with political backlash while Fara discovers the toll an intelligence job can take.
Meanwhile, the Brody family gets startling news. Carrie reunites with Brody, but the circumstances are more difficult than either of them could have imagined.
Meanwhile Saul gets a win from an unlikely source, and Dana grapples with her new life away from home. Brody embarks on a high stakes mission, but his fragile condition threatens the entire operation. Quinn makes an uncomfortable discovery about Carrie, while a sudden crisis forces Fara to rejoin the team.
Carrie and Brody find refuge on the edge of the desert, but security forces are closing in. As Saul plans a last ditch rescue operation, Brody struggles to find redemption. As CIA Chief of Station in Kabul, Carrie makes a critical decision when her counterpart in Islamabad delivers urgent intelligence on a high value target.
Back in the States, Saul struggles to adjust to his new role in the private sector. An official inquiry brings Carrie back to the States, where she struggles with her ambivalence towards motherhood. Quinn spirals out of control, while a disgraced former case officer reveals disturbing new information. Fara fails to recruit a key asset, forcing Carrie to intervene.
Still reeling over events in Islamabad, Quinn zeroes in on a potential lead. Carrie gets a tip from Redmond regarding Quinn's lead. Saul calls in a favor with an old friend in the Pakistani military.
Fara uncovers a deep-rooted conspiracy. Retro Gaming Shop All. Savings Spotlight Household Essentials Savings. Personal Health Incontinence Sexual Wellness. Vision Center Vision Center. Netflix Hub Shop all Netflix. Sacramento Supercenter Sacramento, Add to cart. Free shipping, arrives by Thu, Jan 6 to Sacramento, Want it faster? Add an address to see options. Now Carrie must prove that not all conspiracies are theories. Carrie Mathison is back in the US on the streets of New York, fighting for the protection of civil liberties and against the abuse of power within our government.
She remains in opposition with Saul, who is still with the CIA. Out of the CIA and living in Berlin, Carrie is trying to start a new life but realizes now she's the one with a target on her back. One thing quickly becomes clear: she's never been at greater risk or with more to lose. Carrie's CIA career takes off when she becomes an overseas station chief, but but every drone strike and tactical raid comes at a cost and she quickly learns the true price of power.
There would be no Homeland without the award-winning Israeli drama series Prisoners of War , a two-season series that was adapted into eight seasons of Homeland. Though Homeland would evolve to become its own thing, Prisoners of War gave Homeland creators Alex Gansa and Howard Gordon, along with Prisoners of War creator Gideon Raff, the idea to build a show around prisoners of war returning home after years of captivity and trying to readjust to life back home as their families moved on without them.
Prisoners of War is different enough that it works more as a companion piece to Homeland rather than as its source material, and in some ways it's a better show as it really focuses on the family drama rather than the CIA's operations against terrorists. This one's for fans of Homeland 's early seasons.
What if there was a drama featuring like half a dozen Nicholas Brodys? It followed a Muslim undercover FBI agent Michael Ealy who infiltrated a sleeper cell of terrorists, who all came from different racial and economic backgrounds, and had varying ideas of Islam and the cell's purpose. Sleeper Cell was particularly adept at raising issues that had fractured the Muslim community, such as the violence used by radicals, as well as stirring up paranoia that anyone -- no matter their skin color -- could be an agent of domestic terrorism.
Thanks to natural charisma and a few extra hours put in the gym, it takes John Krasinski only a few minutes to stop making a frumpy face into the camera, shed his Jim Halpert image, and become America's newest version of the literary action hero Jack Ryan. Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan gives us the Jack Ryan origin story, showing the CIA agent in his early days as a desk jockey before he shot up the ranks to become one of the agency's greatest assets.
Like Homeland , Jack Ryan spent tons of cash to get on-location shots around the globe, making it TV's best-looking spy thriller thanks, Jeff Bezos! It's not quite the character study that Homeland is -- Jack's a little bland, especially in Season 1 -- but it's a solid interpretation of the books that made Clancy commonplace on the bedside tables of dads everywhere.
If you say you love spy shows but also say "I haven't seen The Americans yet" then turn around and keep walking, pal. FX's drama isn't just one of the best spy shows ever made, it's one of the best TV shows ever made , period.
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