Thursday, January 22, 2026

Sherlock Season 2 Episode 2

 


"The Hounds of Baskerville" is the second episode of the second series of the BBC crime drama series Sherlock, which follows the modern-day adventures of Sherlock Holmes, and was first broadcast by BBC One on 8 January 2012. It was written by co-creator Mark Gatiss, who also portrays Mycroft Holmes, Sherlock's brother in the series, and was directed by Paul McGuigan. The episode is a contemporary adaptation of The Hound of the Baskervilles, one of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's most famous works.

In the episode, Sherlock (Benedict Cumberbatch) and his crime-solving partner John Watson (Martin Freeman) take on the case of Henry Knight (Russell Tovey), who 20 years earlier witnessed the brutal killing of his father by a "gigantic hound" on Dartmoor. The investigation leads the pair to Baskerville, a military research base.

Because of the popularity of the novel, Gatiss felt a greater responsibility to include familiar elements of the story than he did when adapting the lesser-known stories. The script was intended to follow elements of the horror genre and make the episode scary. As opposed to traditional ghost stories, Gatiss's plot focused on more contemporary horrors, conspiracy theories and genetic modification. Filming was done throughout May 2011, with additional shots taking place as late as August. Location shooting took place mostly across South Wales, though parts were shot in Dartmoor. The hound was created using visual effects.

After its broadcast on BBC One, the episode received consolidated figures of 10.266 million viewers in the United Kingdom. This rating, although a slight drop from the previous episode, still represented the second largest audience in British television the week it aired. Critical reaction toward the episode was largely positive, with reviewers praising both the modernisation and its tonal fidelity to the original. Critics praised Cumberbatch, Freeman, and Tovey, as well as Sherlock's "mind palace" sequence.

Plot

Sherlock and John receive a visit from Henry Knight, who witnessed his father's being killed by a "gigantic hound" on Dartmoor 20 years ago. After years of therapy, Henry revisited the site, only to see the hound's footprints, prompting his request for help. Though initially dismissive, Sherlock is soon intrigued by Henry's use of "hound" instead of "dog". Sherlock and John arrive on Dartmoor to find that the hound is a local legend. They visit Baskerville, a nearby Ministry of Defence research base, using Mycroft's security pass. After Mycroft's credentials cause a security alert, Dr. Bob Frankland vouches for Sherlock's identity, despite knowing the truth. Frankland says he was a friend of Henry's father and is concerned for Henry's well-being.

Henry tells John and Sherlock about the words "liberty" and "in" in his dreams. Sherlock, John, and Henry then visit the hollow in the hope of finding the hound. On the way, John hangs back to observe what seems to be Morse code signals but these prove to be unrelated to the case. When he catches up to Sherlock and Henry, Henry says that he has just seen the hound in the thick fog and that Sherlock must have seen it, too, which Sherlock denies. Later, at a local inn, Sherlock is visibly shaken and confesses he did see the hound. John tries calming him, suggesting he imagined it, but Sherlock reacts with anger, denying there is anything wrong with him. John leaves him alone and tries to pump Henry's therapist, Louise Mortimer, for information, under the guise of chatting her up. However, they are interrupted by Frankland, who blows his cover. Meanwhile, Henry hallucinates that the hound is stalking his home.

The next morning Sherlock theorizes that "hound" may be an acronym rather than a word. The pair run into DI Lestrade who was sent by Mycroft to keep an eye on Sherlock. They interrogate the innkeepers about a past order for meat that John spotted, which struck him as odd for a vegetarian restaurant. The innkeepers admit keeping a dog on the moor to boost the tourist trade, but pretend to the investigators that it had been put down. This explanation satisfies Lestrade but not Sherlock, who insists that the dog he saw was monstrous.

Calling Mycroft, Sherlock gains access to Baskerville again. Searching the lower levels of the genetics labs alone, John finds himself trapped and then hears growling, which he assumes is the hound. Locking himself in an empty cage, he calls Sherlock, who rescues him. Sherlock deduces that a chemical weapon designed to trigger violent hallucinations was responsible. Retreating into his "mind palace", a memory technique, Sherlock realises that "liberty" and "in" stand for Liberty, Indiana. After viewing confidential files, he learns that "H.O.U.N.D." was a secret C.I.A. project aimed at creating a hallucinatory anti-personnel chemical weapon. Although the project was abandoned several years before, Sherlock realises Frankland, who participated in the project, has continued it secretly.

After John receives a call from Mortimer warning that Henry has run off with a gun, John, Sherlock, and Lestrade run to the hollow to find Henry about to commit suicide. Sherlock explains that the hound was a hallucination; his father had been killed by Frankland, wearing a gas mask and a sweatshirt with "H.O.U.N.D. Liberty, IN" on it. A child could not cope with this, so his mind tricked him. Every time Henry came back, Frankland gassed him with the hallucinogen. The fog in the hollow is actually the chemical agent, triggered by pressure pads in the area. As Henry calms down, they all fall under the influence of the gas and see a savage dog preparing to attack them, and John shoots it. Frankland appears at the scene, and Sherlock briefly hallucinates that he is Moriarty, before giving chase. Henry realises that his father had been murdered because he found Frankland testing the drug. Frankland flees into the base's minefield and is blown up.

As Sherlock and John prepare to leave the following day, John wonders why he saw the hound in the laboratory despite not having inhaled the gas from the hollow. Sherlock surmises that the leaking pipes poisoned John in the laboratory. John realises that Sherlock locked him in the labs to test his theory. He also points out that Sherlock was wrong for once; he'd believed the drug was in Henry's sugar and had surreptitiously put it in John's coffee.

In the closing scenes, Mycroft oversees the release of Moriarty from a holding cell, which has "Sherlock" written all over the walls.

Sources and allusions

The story is based on Arthur Conan Doyle's novel The Hound of the Baskervilles, and also contains plot devices and lines from other Doyle stories:

  • The hallucinogenic gas comes from "The Adventure of the Devil's Foot".[1]
  • Holmes' bloodsoaked appearance with a harpoon comes from "The Adventure of Black Peter".[2]
  • Holmes' stated preference for something stronger than tea, perhaps "seven per cent stronger", is a reference to his use of a seven per cent cocaine solution described in The Sign of the Four.[3]
  • The scene wherein Holmes claims to have made a bet with Watson comes from a similar scene in "The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle." The episode also introduces the popular catchphrase, "Once you've ruled out the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be true", from several stories.[4] The copy of The Racing Post, in the man's pocket is a clear allusion to the 'Pink 'un' from the original story's "When you see a man with whiskers of that cut and the 'Pink 'un' protruding out of his pocket, you can always draw him by a bet"
  • Sherlock calls Lestrade "brown as a nut", a phrase taken word-for-word from a different conversation in A Study in Scarlet.[2]

Production

Casting

Russell Tovey appeared in the episode as Henry Knight.

In June 2011, it was announced that Russell Tovey would appear in Sherlock series two in its second episode.[5] Tovey, who liked Sherlock for staying true to the style of the novels despite its modern twist, said of the experience: "It's amazing to be a part of it", adding, "I got to act with Benedict and Martin which was awesome". The actor also explained that during his scenes, "We did about two and a half weeks of night shoots in Cardiff and I felt like I had jetlag."[6] In terms of Henry's character, Tovey did not want him to be a "jibbering wreck", but rather mature and truthful as well as damaged and haunted. Gatiss also made Henry display signs of survivor guilt. Tovey's nephew auditioned for the part of a younger Henry, but another child actor was cast for the role as the nephew was considered too young.[2]

Background and writing

"For ["The Hounds of Baskerville"], I wanted to make it as scary as possible, and for it to be a proper horror story. But what didn't feel right was making it a haunted house story. So I realised that the thing we're most afraid of nowadays is faceless government and conspiracy theories ... and they're almost the modern equivalent of ghost stories. And the great thing is, you can have all the tropes of a ghost story. So rather than Baskerville being a big spooky house, it's a facility ... with dark rumours about the 'things' they're breeding there."

Mark Gatiss, on writing the horror tone of "The Hounds of Baskerville"[1]

The episode was based on The Hound of the Baskervilles, first serialised in 1901–1902; it is considered one of Arthur Conan Doyle's most famous Holmes stories, as it was written after Doyle killed off Sherlock and, consequently, sold well. It was also one of the most adapted novels in the Sherlock Holmes series.[2] Because of its popularity, writer Mark Gatiss felt a greater responsibility to include familiar elements of the story than he did when adapting the lesser-known stories.[7][8] Conan Doyle had killed off his famous character in the 1893 story "The Final Problem", but bowed to popular pressure to write another Holmes adventure. Gatiss observed that Conan Doyle's weariness with the character is demonstrated by Holmes' absence for half of The Hound of the Baskervilles, in which Doctor Watson's role is foregrounded.[1]

In contrast to the original, however, the producers decided to centre Sherlock in their adaptation, so Sherlock only threatens to stay behind in London.[7] In addition, the three episodes of the second series show Sherlock dealing, respectively, with love, fear, and death. Here, the producers wanted Sherlock, an arch-rationalist, to confront something that seemed impossible, especially since their Sherlock is still a young character who has not experienced fear yet.[2] Freeman stated that when he sees the hound, Sherlock becomes "really terrified" and for some time, stops trusting the evidence he has seen.[9]

The producers also considered how to make the dog believable because, according to Gatiss, audiences always find the dog disappointing in the adaptations.[10] Therefore, Gatiss wanted the solution to be more than a "dog with luminous paint". In one scene, Henry has an hallucination in his home, wherein the hound sets off the bright security lights in his back garden. That scene is apparently based on the experience of co-creator Steven Moffat and his executive producer and wife Sue Vertue, who also have bright security lights and are frequently startled whenever the lights turn on at night.[2]

There were other differences from the novel. Henry Knight was based on Sir Henry Baskerville, but the character Barrymore, a butler in the book, became an Army major. Another character, Fletcher, was original to the episode; the character was based on Bertram Fletcher Robinson, the journalist who assisted Doyle with the novel. In another scene, John notices what appears to be Morse code, but it is unrelated to the case. Moffat named it the funniest instance where the producers take an element from Doyle's works and "do something cheeky with it". The Baskerville base was based on Porton Down military science research centre. While conducting research for the episode, Gatiss learned that artists and scientists made a luminous rabbit, using the green fluorescent protein of a jellyfish, which formed the basis for a side story involving a "glow-in-the-dark" rabbit created at Baskerville by Dr. Stapleton, the mother of the child who wrote to Sherlock at the beginning of the episode requesting that he help her find her missing rabbit. In the episode, it is specified that the spliced-in "GFP gene" that had allowed the rabbit to glow had come from a jellyfish of the species Aequorea victoria. Also, Gatiss suggested the concept of a "mind palace", a memory technique originating in Ancient Greece; the idea came from a book by illusionist Derren Brown. This technique would lead Sherlock to the revelation of the secret H.O.U.N.D. project.[2]

Early script drafts had Henry accidentally kill Louise Mortimer, but producers were never satisfied with this development, thinking Henry would have failed if she died. Writers also posited that Henry's father's murder involved revenge after he had an affair, but the producers and Gatiss found it easier to mention he died because he learned of Frankland's experiments with the hallucinogenic gas. The ending also changed; the final scene had originally involved Moriarty entering the Tower of London but that was held back for the following episode.[2]

Filming and effects

The Bush Inn in St Hilary, Vale of Glamorgan, doubled as the Cross Keys pub in Dartmoor.

"The Hounds of Baskerville" took around four weeks to film, with shooting mostly taking place throughout May 2011. Additional scenes were shot later in July and August. Filming on location mostly took place across South Wales, with parts of the episode being shot on location in Dartmoor, even though the producers did not originally intend to do so. The first day took place at a cemetery. The producers were looking for a village in South Wales that was "very English-looking."[2] Scenes of the fictional "Cross Keys" pub were filmed at the Bush Inn in St Hilary, Vale of Glamorgan. The production team donated £500 to the village after filming had finished.[11] In one scene, after Sherlock first witnesses the hound, Sherlock makes deductions about a mother and son from a nearby table. In filming the scene, Cumberbatch has to recall multiple pages of monologue in front of camera, and had to talk faster than he was used to.[9]

The scenes at Baskerville were filmed at a number of locations. The exterior was filmed at the gas works by Baverstocks near Llwydcoed in Mid Glamorgan.[12] The labs meanwhile were filmed in two separate locations, one of which was a microchip processing facility. The switch between two locations meant that the crew had to transport a lift set. The scenes in Dewer's Hollow, where the hound was sighted, was filmed near Castell Coch. The reveal scenes in the hollow took two nights to film. At some point filming the scenes were delayed due to rain. The scenes shot in Dartmoor took place in areas such as Haytor and Hound Tor, the latter of which was said to be where the original story was set.[2]

Throughout his scenes, Rupert Graves was tanned because before filming the episode, the actor was in Guadeloupe, an island on the Caribbean, appearing in Death in Paradise. As a result, Gatiss added mention that Lestrade went on holiday in the script. In the original episode, John was to hallucinate the hound at a meat storage locker. However, after visiting such a locker in Bristol, the producers came to realise that it would be too expensive, and cold for Freeman, forcing them to change the setting to the Baskerville labs. In one scene, Sherlock is driving a Land Rover with John as a passenger after their arrival at Dartmoor; John was originally going to be the one driving the car, however Freeman cannot drive. In the client scenes, Tovey had to smoke a herbal cigarette as it was illegal to smoke real cigarettes on set. Throughout the episode, the production crew used split dioptres in certain scenes, a camera technique where two separate camera angles are at the same focus on screen. The episode also includes shots of the hound, which was produced by visual effects. Although the series used computer-generated imagery (CGI) in the past, it was the first time a visual effect was made on a large scale. However, there was no guide for the cast to interact with.[2]

Broadcast and reception

"The Hounds of Baskerville" was first broadcast on BBC One on Sunday, 8 January 2012 between 8:30 p.m. and 10:00 p.m. It received preliminary overnight figures of 8.16 million viewers with a 29 per cent audience share. It was down by almost 400,000 from the previous week, but it was still the most seen broadcast in its time slot, beating ITV1 drama Wild at Heart.[13][14][15] When final ratings are factored, the episode saw an increase of more than two million viewers, totalling 10.266 million viewers, making it the second most viewed programme for the week.[16][17] The episode was later repeated on the digital channel BBC Three on Saturday, 14 January 2012 from 7pm,[18] and was seen by 710,000 viewers.[19] It also became the most-watched programme of 2012 on the online BBC iPlayer as of May, with over 1.6 million views.[20]

The British Board of Film Classification awarded the episode a 12 certificate for "moderate threat and violence."[21] The episode, which is accompanied by an audio commentary by Moffat, Gatiss, Tovey and Vertue,[22] was released with the remainder of the second series in the UK on DVD and Blu-ray on 23 January 2012.[23][24]

Critical reception

The scene in which Sherlock clambered to the top of a tor at Dartmoor reminded a critic of Caspar David Friedrich's painting Wanderer above the Sea of Fog.[25]

Reviews of the episode were mostly positive. In a pre-broadcast review, Terry Ramsey of The Daily Telegraph labelled the story's shift from a Gothic house to a military research base "an inspired piece of modernisation". He praised the two lead actors, and say that "the script is sharp and witty and the updating is clever, while remaining true to the original. A modern classic."[26] Serena Davies, also of The Daily Telegraph praised the episode for being "pacy, sharp and witty, as we've come to expect from the Moffat and Gatiss crack creative duo, and rather less inscrutable than the New Year episode." Davies rated the episode four out of five stars.[27] Chris Harvey, again from The Daily Telegraph identified a range of clues, cultural references and possible inspirations. He suggests that the scene in which "Sherlock Holmes clambered alone to the top of a Dartmoor mound and surveyed the landscape below, it appeared to be a direct visual reference to ... Wanderer above the Sea of Fog" by 19th century German Romantic landscape painter Caspar David Friedrich. Harvey also identified several references to Thomas Harris' character Hannibal Lecter, plot similarities to the 2005 film Batman Begins, and jokes similar to Scooby-Doo.[25]

Sam Wollaston, for The Guardian, favourably compared "The Hounds of Baskerville" to "A Scandal in Belgravia", writing that the episode "has a 21st-century pace to it, and fizzes with the wit we've come to expect from Sherlock ... [recapturing] the essence of The Hound of the Baskervilles ... like the original, it's properly creepy".[28] The Radio Times's David Butcher compared the episode to Steven Moffat's series opener, "A Scandal in Belgravia", saying this "is more of a creepy affair, all jittery camerawork, paranoia and suspense."[29] Christopher Hootan of Metro thought the episode was "the perfect marriage of misty, moor-based foreboding and modern, fast-paced thriller," adding that "with a breakneck script and captivating acting from Benedict Cumberbatch, Sherlock offers about the fastest hour and a half of television going at the moment."[30]

"Tackling The Hound of the Baskervilles, Mark Gatiss faced a toughie. How do you make a functional modern mystery thriller from a story so familiar to so many? How do you thrill an audience who already knows whodunit? With adroit plotting, sneaky inversions, excellent grounding in source and genre, and a delicious sense of mischief comes Gatiss' answer in the form of The Hounds of Baskerville. Episode 2.2 serves up a psychological horror that gives good scare before revealing its supernatural hound to have a very real-world provenance."

Louisa Mellor from Den of Geek[31]

Louisa Mellor of Den of Geek believed the episode was "well-schooled" in the horror genre, "with plenty of freaking out and jumping at shadows. Arnold and Price's elegant music came to the fore wonderfully in the largely wordless scenes of Watson and Henry's fearful hallucinations." Mellor was also appreciative of McGuigan's "stylish hand" as director, particularly highlighting the "mind palace" sequence, as well as Tovey's performance as Henry Knight and for "once again" seeing Watson's role for being "more than just sigh exasperatedly at his flatmate and apologise to others on Sherlock's behalf." In summary, the reviewer stated "I can only echo Sherlock's own closing words to Henry: "This case, thank you, it's been brilliant"."[31] Chris Tilly of IGN rated the episode a "good" 7 out of 10, but stated that although it was "full of mystery and intrigue," the central story "wasn't strong enough to fill the 90-minute run-time, running out of steam at the mid-way point and padded out with irrelevant and at times exasperating efforts to throw the audience off the scent." Tilly praised Cumberbatch's performance as a mentally broke down Holmes, and Freeman for being "let off the leash this week, with Watson investigating solo on a couple of occasions," and also thought Tovey was a "fine addition to the ensemble."[32]

David Lewis of CultBox called it "a pretty straightforward thriller about chemical warfare, cover-ups and a colossal canine. It's also suspenseful, spooky and superb." The reviewer also commented on the hound's appearance: "It isn't [mutant], of course—just an evil-looking mutt hired by Gary and Billy to drum up business for their boozer—and happily, like all the previous hounds that have haunted Holmes in film and TV for nearly a hundred years, it looks gloriously rubbish when it finally appears." Lewis rated the episode four out of five stars.[33] Morgan Jeffery of Digital Spy thought "The Hounds of Baskerville" was "an excellent installment of Sherlock — fun, moody and, at times, genuinely scary." Jeffery felt that the final realisation of the hound was impressive, and praised the CGI work, as well as the performance of Cumberbatch and Freeman.[34]

However, some critics gave the episode mixed to negative reviews. Tom Ryan of WhatCulture rated the episode two and a half out of five stars, summing up the review with; "Given the popularity of the original book and the success thus far of the current TV series, it is safe to assume that last night's episode was perhaps the most eagerly anticipated installment of the show since its inception. Too bad then that it was so underwhelming."[35] The Guardian writer Stuart Heritage stated; "Last night's Hounds of Baskervilles wasn't quite as rapturously received as other adventures, perhaps because of the amount of time that Cumberbatch and Freeman spent apart. The whole middle section, where Watson stormed off in a huff after being subjected to another one of Sherlock's baroque "that man is left-handed and also has dog hair on one of his socks" monologues, felt slow and flat precisely because there was none of the chemistry between the two leads that we've come to expect from Sherlock."[36] Jim Shelley of the Daily Mirror stated that the episode was "a disappointment," contrasting it against the original book as "a tedious treatise against vivisection." However, Shelley stated that he enjoyed the "mind palace" scene.[37]


The Secret Agent (2025)

 


The Secret Agent (Portuguese: O Agente Secreto; Brazilian Portuguese: [u aˈʒẽt͡ʃi seˈkɾɛtu]) is a 2025 neo-noir historical political thriller film written and directed by Kleber Mendonça Filho. It follows Armando (Wagner Moura), a former professor caught in the political turmoil in the midst of the Brazilian military dictatorship, attempting to flee persecution and resist an authoritarian regime. The supporting cast includes Carlos Francisco, Tânia Maria, Robério Diógenes, Maria Fernanda Cândido, Gabriel Leone, Alice Carvalho, Hermila Guedes, Isabél Zuaa, and Udo Kier in his final film role.

The film had its world premiere at the main competition of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival on 18 May, where it received widespread acclaim and became the festival's most awarded film, winning the Best Actor award for Moura, the Best Director award for Mendonça Filho,[3] the Art House Cinema Award and the FIPRESCI Prize for Best Film.[4][5] At the 83rd Golden Globe Awards, it became the first Brazilian film nominated for Best Motion Picture – Drama, winning Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama (Wagner Moura) and Best Foreign Language Film. It was selected as Brazil's official entry for Best International Feature Film at the 98th Academy Awards, making the shortlist.[6][7]

It was theatrically released in Brazil and Germany on 6 November 2025 by Vitrine Filmes and Port au Prince Films, respectively, and was released in France on 17 December by Ad Vitam.

Plot

In 1977, during the political turmoil of the Brazilian military dictatorship, former professor and widower Armando Solimões travels to Recife during the carnival holiday, where his young son Fernando has been living with his in-laws since the passing of his wife, Fátima Nascimento. He arrives at a refuge operated by a former anarco-communist Dona Sebastiana, where he befriends other political dissidents including Claudia, Haroldo and Angolan Civil War refugees Thereza Vitória and Antonio. Meanwhile, corrupt Civil Police chief Euclides and his sons Sergio and Arlindo are called in during the holiday to investigate a severed human leg that has been found inside a captured tiger shark.

Armando is placed in work by his dissident network at the city's identity card office under the alias of Marcelo, where he has a chance encounter with Euclides, who offers him his friendship and protection. Euclides's arrogant behavior visibly annoys Armando, which includes harassing Hans, a Jewish Holocaust survivor who is mistakenly assumed to be a Nazi fugitive. Armando's job also affords him the opportunity of searching for files on his late mother "India", of whom he has few memories. Meanwhile, in São Paulo, hitmen Bobbi and Augusto are hired by Henrique Ghirotti, a former Eletrobras executive director, to kill Armando, with whom he has a political and personal vendetta. Sergio and Arlindo dispose of the human leg in the Capibaribe River, where it suddenly revives and attacks gay men cruising in a public park at night; the story, presumably a newspaper cover-up for the political corruption and violence during the carnival week, creates a public frenzy.

Armando meets Elza, the leader of a political resistance movement in the Brazilian northeast, at the Cinema São Luiz [pt], where his father-in-law Sr. Alexandre works as a projectionist. Recording a testimony about Ghirotti's corrupt activities, Armando recounts a dinner he attended with Fátima that ended in a physical altercation with Ghirotti and his son, following remarks on the couple lower socioeconomic class and supposed communist sympathies. Elza informs Armando that a contract killing has been ordered and instructs him to flee the country. Augusto and Bobbi hire a local impoverished gunman, Vilmar, to find Armando. Anticipating a departure, Armando bids farewell to Dona Sebastiana and the other refugees.

The following day, Armando's cover is blown after Bobbi surveil Sr. Alexandre. Vilmar identifies Armando but fails to kill him, shooting Arlindo and a fellow police officer. Bobbi, watching from afar, chases a bleeding Vilmar through Recife's downtown and is later killed in a barbershop by Vilmar.

In the present day, history student Flavia researches Elza's resistance network through her audio recordings and newspaper archives, learning that Armando was murdered and framed as a corrupt professor. Traveling to Recife, Flavia meets with Fernando, now a middle-aged doctor, who agrees to be interviewed in the hospital where he works after Flavia donates blood. The pair discuss the identity of Armando's mother, his political past and his subsequent assassination. Fernando states he does not have a single memory of his father, but fondly recalls watching Jaws with his grandfather at a movie theater which has since become the hospital where he works.

Cast

  • Wagner Moura as Armando Solimões / Marcelo Alves and Fernando Solimões (adult)[8]
    • Enzo Nunes as Fernando Solimões (young)
  • Carlos Francisco as Sr. Alexandre
  • Tânia Maria as Dona Sebastiana
  • Robério Diógenes as Euclides
  • Maria Fernanda Cândido as Elza
  • Gabriel Leone as Bobbi Borba
  • Roney Villela [pt] as Augusto Borba
  • Kaiony Venâncio as Vilmar
  • Alice Carvalho [pt] as Fátima Nascimento
  • Hermila Guedes [pt] as Claudia
  • Isabél Zuaa [pt] as Thereza Vitória
  • Licínio Januário as Antonio
  • Laura Lufési as Flavia
  • Thomás Aquino as Valdemar
  • Italo Martins as Arlindo
  • Igor de Araújo as Sergio
  • Udo Kier as Hans
  • João Vitor Silva [pt] as Haroldo
  • Robson Andrade as Clóvis
  • Geane Albuquerque as Elisângela
  • Aline Marta Maia as Lenira Nascimento
  • Luciano Chirolli [pt] as Henrique Castro Ghirotti
  • Gregorio Graziosi as Salvatore Ghirotti
  • Isadora Ruppert as Daniela
  • Buda Lira as Anísio
  • Suzy Lopes as Carmem
  • Marcelo Valle as João Pedro

Production

Development

Kleber Mendonça Filho wrote the script over three years, partially overlapping with the production of Pictures of Ghosts.[9][10] It was co-produced by companies from Brazil (CinemaScópio, Itapoan and Vitrine Filmes), France (MK2 Films and Arte France Cinéma), Germany (One Two Films) and the Netherlands (Lemming Film).[11] The film also received subsidies from the Brazilian Fundo Setorial do Audiovisual/Ancine,[12] the French Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée (CNC),[13] the Dutch Netherlands Film Fund,[14] and the Germans Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg and German Federal Film Fund.[15]

The film is a neo-noir historical political thriller,[16] heavily inspired by Robert Altman, Brian De Palma, Sam Peckinpah, Martin Scorsese and Steven Spielberg productions of the 1970's.[17][18] In a January 2026 Film at Lincoln Center event, Mendonça Filho curated some films that influenced The Secret Agent, including: John Boorman's Point Blank (1967), Karel Kachyňa's The Ear (1970), Elio Petri's Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion (1970), Jorge Bodanzky and Orlando Senna's Iracema (1974), Héctor Babenco's Lúcio Flávio (1977), Steven Spielberg's Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), and Eduardo Coutinho's Twenty Years Later (1984).[19]

Cinema São Luiz, where some scenes take place.

The Secret Agent's main motifs also echo Spielberg's Jaws (1975), particularly in that Recife is a coastal city plagued by tiger shark attacks.[20] While some scenes take place during a screening of Richard Donner's The Omen (1976) at the Cinema São Luiz [pt].

All the aspects of "the hairy leg" story are based on real newspaper reports from the 1970s, specially from Diário de Pernambuco, that created a public frenzy in Recife. The story allowed the press to conveniently cover-up censored news about police violence, corruption and homophobia.[21]

The production marks Wagner Moura's first Portuguese language production in eight years.[22][23] It was Udo Kier's final film role before his death in late 2025,[24] in his second collaboration with Mendonça Filho following Bacurau (2019).

Filming

Carnival parade in Recife near Cinema São Luiz.

Principal photography took place during ten weeks in 2024, shooting on location in Recife, Pernambuco. Many of the films scenes were shot in historical city's buildings, such as the Cinema São Luiz [pt] (one of the last art house cinemas in Brazil) and on most of Recife's colonial bridges.[25] For the haired leg chase scenes, shooting took place in location at the Capibaribe River, featuring its usual capybara inhabitants, and at "May 13th Park" (Parque 13 de Maio [pt]). Carnival scenes were reenacted near the Aurora Street (Rua da Aurora), where Recife's main carnival association parade take place. Scenes featuring the captured tiger shark and Armando teaching past were shot at the Federal University of Pernambuco campus, a state owned university.[25]

Additional scenes were shot in São Paulo, featuring Euclides and Bobbi characters. Principal photography wrapped by late August 2024.[26][27] Pick-up scenes were shot in Brasilia in December 2024.[citation needed]

Mendonça Filho and his long-time partner Emilie Lesclaux produced the film through their film company CinemaScópio. The film also marks Russian-French cinematographer Evgenia Alexandrova's first collaboration with the filmmaker,[28] who shot the film with Panavision anamorphic lenses and vintage camera equipment, aiming to replicate the visual style of the 1970s movies.[29]

Post-production

The film entered post-production in September 2024, shortly after the 81st Venice International Film Festival where Mendonça Filho was a jury member for the main competition. As usual for the director's films, it features many MPB songs alongside its original score by Mateus Alves and Tomaz Alves Souza.[30]

Release

Cast during the 2025 Cannes Film Festival

The film had its world premiere at the main competition of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival on 18 May,[31] receiving a 13-minute long standing ovation,[32] and was the most awarded film in the festival.[33] It competed for the Palme d'Or,[34] winning the Best Actor prize for Wagner Moura (the first Brazilian actor to win it) and the Best Director prize for Mendonça Filho (the second Brazilian filmmaker to win it after Glauber Rocha in 1969).[5][3] A few days after its premiere, Neon acquired North American distribution rights to the film, while Mubi acquired the rights for the United Kingdom, Ireland, Hispanic America, and India.[35][36]

The Secret Agent had its North American premiere at the Main Program of the 52nd Telluride Film Festival.[37] At the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival it received a gala screening the Special Presentations section.[29] It was also screened at the Main Slate at the 2025 New York Film Festival.[38] In October, it was screened in the "Best of 2025" section of the 20th Rome Film Festival[39] and at the Adelaide Film Festival.[40]

The film's Brazilian premiere took place on 10 September 2025 at the Cinema São Luiz [pt].[41]

It received a wide theatrical release in Brazil and Germany on 6 November 2025. Neon released the film in North American theaters on 26 November.[42] It received a theatrical release on 17 December by Ad Vitam in France.

Reception

Box office

On its opening weekend in Brazil, The Secret Agent had 273,000 admissions, grossing R$6.6 million at the box office, topping Predator: Badlands debut weekend (R$5.7 million) and Black Phone 2 fourth weekend (R$1.8 million).[43][44] By the end of its first full week, alongside September and October previews, the film had surpassed 500,000 admissions and R$10 million at the box office.[45][46] By January 2026, The Secret Agent had more than 1.5 million admissions in Brazil, grossing R$31 million ($5.8 million) and surpassing Bacurau as Mendonça's highest grossing film.[47]

In its limited release weekend in the United States, The Secret Agent grossed $71k on the 5-day opening thanksgiving holiday, with an average $23k per theatre, beating I'm Still Here’s previous record for Brazilian productions opening weekend in the U.S.[48] By 19 January 2026, the film had grossed $2.5 million in its limited 136 theaters run at the U.S. box office.[49]

On its opening weekend in France, The Secret Agent had more than 100,000 admissions, grossing $726k over 186 theatres. By 11 January 2026 the film had grossed $2.5 million at the French box office, bringing its international box office total to $5.7 million.[49]

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 99% of 155 critics' reviews are positive. The website's consensus reads: "A thematically rich and visually arresting political thriller, The Secret Agent blends grindhouse stylization with biting social commentary to weave a vividly dangerous yet darkly human tale."[50] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 92 out of 100, based on 34 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[51]

Steve Pond of TheWrap pointed out that "cohesiveness or coherence are not high on [the film's] list of attributes", "but [the film's] messiness is part of its charm".[52] David Ehrlich of IndieWire gave the film a 'B+' score, concluding that "always compelling, but sometimes more sedate than its material demands — [it] is often at its most alive during its detours".[53]

Other critics praised the film for its ambition, visual style, and emotional depth. Shannon Connellan of Mashable called it “a complex, time-jumping political crime thriller” and wrote that its “compelling script, impeccable acting, and striking 1970s aesthetic” make it “impossible to look away.” [54] Pavel Snapkou of Showbiz by PS described the film as “a bright and memorable” neo-noir political thriller, praising its “vivid, vibrant scenes” and calling Moura “electrifyingly good,” delivering “one of the best male performances of the year.” [55] Carlos Aguilar of The Playlist hailed the film as “an imposing masterpiece steeped in history and a palpable adoration for cinema.” [56]

Oscar submission process

Despite Mendonça Filho having been passed over twice by the Brazilian submission commission for the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film,[57] for two critically acclaimed productions, Aquarius in 2016 (due to the political boycott of the Temer administration)[58] and Bacurau in 2019 (during the Bolsonaro administration), The Secret Agent was expected to be the country's safe choice after its successful run in the 2025 Cannes Film Festival and the ongoing Neon strong awards season campaign.[59][60]

By August, the film was shortlisted alongside other five Brazilian feature films. Shortly after, reports emerged suggesting a possible snub in favor of Manas (2024), which was supported by a lobby of 70 high-profile companies for its supposed "urgent subject in Brazil". The movement created a public uproar driven by the perception of abuse of political and personal power in the Brazilian Oscar submission process, instead of artistic merit and commercial logic.[61][62][63]

Following the negative response to the Manas campaign from critics and the Brazilian film industry, which included a four-minute long video by Fernanda Torres supporting selection of the The Secret Agent, the latter was ultimately chosen as the country's official submission on 15 September.[64][65][66]

Accolades

At the 2025 Cannes Film Festival, The Secret Agent was the festival's most awarded film, winning the Best Actor award for Moura, the Best Director award for Mendonça Filho, the Art House Cinema Award and the FIPRESCI Prize for Best Film.

At the 2025 New York Film Critics Circle Awards, it was also the most awarded film (alongside One Battle After Another), winning Best Foreign Language Film and Best Actor (Wagner Moura). At the 2025 Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards, it won Best Foreign Language Film and was the runner-up for Best Picture and Best Lead Performance. At the 31st Critics' Choice Awards, it won Best Foreign Language Film and was nominated for Best Actor. At the 83rd Golden Globe Awards, it became the first Brazilian production nominated for Best Motion Picture – Drama, and Moura the first Brazilian to win for Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama, while the film also won for Best Foreign Language Film.

Furthermore, The Secret Agent was named the best film of the year on The Hollywood Reporter’s top 10 Best Films of 2025, placed fourth on Cahiers du Cinéma top 10 films of 2025,[67] sixth on BBC’s 25 Best Films of 2025,[68] eighth on The New York TimesBest Movies of 2025,[69] one of the Top 5 International Films of the year by the National Board of Review, and also appeared on former President of the United States Barack Obama's annual list of his favorite films of the year.[70]

Award Date Category Recipient(s) Result Ref.
Cannes Film Festival 24 May 2025 Palme d'Or Kleber Mendonça Filho Nominated [71]
FIPRESCI Prize Won [72]
Prix des Cinémas Art et Essai Won [73]
Best Director Won [71]
Best Actor Wagner Moura Won
Sydney Film Festival 15 June 2025 Sydney Film Prize The Secret Agent Nominated [74]
Jerusalem Film Festival 25 July 2025 Best International Film Award Won [75]
Miskolc International Film Festival 13 September 2025 Emeric Pressburger Prize Nominated [76]
Lima Film Festival 16 September 2025 Trophy Spondylus Won [77]
International Critics' Jury Award for Best Film Won
Latin American Fiction Competition - Honorable Mention Won
Biarritz International Festival of Latin American Cinema 18 September 2025 Abrazo d'honneur Kleber Mendonça Filho Won [78]
International Federation of Film Critics 21 September 2025 Grand Prix for Best Film of the Year The Secret Agent Nominated [79]
San Sebastián International Film Festival 24 September 2025 City of Donostia
(San Sebastian Audience Award)
Nominated [80][81]
Zurich Film Festival 26 September 2025 Golden Eye Award for achievement in acting Wagner Moura Won [82]
Film Festival Cologne 6 October 2025 The Hollywood Reporter Award for Best of Cinema Fiction Kleber Mendonça Filho Won [83]
Hamburg International Film Festival 8 October 2025 Hamburg Producers Award The Secret Agent Nominated [84]
Arthouse Cinema Award Won [85]
Middleburg Film Festival 19 October 2025 International Spotlight Award Kleber Mendonça Filho Won [86]
Critics Choice Awards Celebration of Latino Cinema & Television 24 October 2025 Director Award Won [87]
Chicago International Film Festival 24 October 2025 Gold Hugo The Secret Agent Nominated [88]
Best Actor Wagner Moura Won [89]
Virginia Film Festival 26 October 2025 Craft Award for Achievement in Cinematography Evgenia Alexandrova Won [90]
Gáldar International Film Festival 27 October 2025 Best Feature Film The Secret Agent Won [91]
Newport Beach Film Festival 6 November 2025 Outstanding Performance Wagner Moura Won [92]
Stockholm International Film Festival 14 November 2025 Bronze Horse The Secret Agent Nominated [93]
Best Cinematography Evgenia Alexandrova Won
Gotham Independent Film Awards 1 December 2025 Best Original Screenplay Kleber Mendonça Filho Nominated [94]
Outstanding Lead Performance Wagner Moura Nominated
New York Film Critics Circle 2 December 2025 Best Foreign Language Film The Secret Agent Won [95]
Best Actor Wagner Moura Won
Atlanta Film Critics Circle 3 December 2025 Top 10 Films The Secret Agent Won [96]
National Board of Review 3 December 2025 Top 5 International Films Won [97]
IndieWire Honors 4 December 2025 Performance Award Wagner Moura Won [98]
Washington DC Area Film Critics Association 7 December 2025 Foreign Language Film The Secret Agent Nominated [99]
Los Angeles Film Critics Association 7 December 2025 Best Picture Runner-up [100]
Best Lead Performance Wagner Moura Runner-up
Best Foreign Language Film The Secret Agent Won
Toronto Film Critics Awards 7 December 2025 Best Foreign Language Film Runner-up [101]
Outstanding Lead Performance Wagner Moura Runner-up
Chicago Film Critics Association 11 December 2025 Best Actor Nominated [102]
Best Foreign Language Film The Secret Agent Nominated
Havana Film Festival 12 December 2025 Best Film Nominated [103]
Best Director Kleber Mendonça Filho Won
Best Screenplay Won
Best Production Design Thales Junqueira Won
Best Editing Eduardo Serrano and Matheus Farias Won
Best Original Score Tomaz Alves Souza and Mateus Alves Won
San Francisco Bay Area Film Critics Circle 14 December 2025 Best Actor Wagner Moura Nominated [104]
Best International Feature Film The Secret Agent Nominated
St. Louis Film Critics Association Awards 14 December 2025 Best Film Nominated [105]
Best Actor Wagner Moura Nominated
Best International Feature Film The Secret Agent Nominated
IndieWire Critics Poll 15 December 2025 Best Film 5th place [106]
Best Director Kleber Mendonça Filho 3rd place
Best Performance Wagner Moura 3rd place
Best Screenplay Kleber Mendonça Filho 5th place
Best Cinematography Evgenia Alexandrova 6th place
Best International Film The Secret Agent 3rd place
Southeastern Film Critics Association 15 December 2025 Top 10 Films of 2025 10th place [107]
New York Film Critics Online 15 December 2025 Best Actor Wagner Moura Nominated [108]
Best International Feature The Secret Agent Nominated
San Diego Film Critics Society 15 December 2025 Best Actor Wagner Moura Nominated [109]
Best Foreign Language Film The Secret Agent Nominated
Seattle Film Critics Society Awards 15 December 2025 Best International Feature Nominated [110]
Dallas–Fort Worth Film Critics Association 17 December 2025 Best Foreign Language Film 3rd place [111]
Austin Film Critics Association 18 December 2025 Best Film 6th place [112]
Best International Film Won
Best Actor Wagner Moura Nominated
Best Original Screenplay Kleber Mendonça Filho Nominated
Florida Film Critics Circle 19 December 2025 Best Actor Wagner Moura Nominated [113]
Best Ensemble The Secret Agent Nominated
Best Production Design Thales Junqueira Nominated
Best Foreign Language Film The Secret Agent Nominated
Online Association of Female Film Critics 19 December 2025 Best Male Lead Wagner Moura Nominated [114]
Best International Feature The Secret Agent Nominated
Boston Online Film Critics Association 19 December 2025 Best Film 9th place [115]
Best Actor Wagner Moura Won
Black Film Critics Circle 20 December 2025 Top Ten Films of 2025 The Secret Agent 7th place [116]
Pandora International Film Critics Awards 21 December 2025 Best Actor Wagner Moura Won [117]
Alliance of Women Film Journalists 31 December 2025 Best Film The Secret Agent Nominated [118]
Best Actor Wagner Moura Nominated
Best International Feature The Secret Agent Nominated
New Jersey Film Critics Circle 31 December 2025 Best Picture Nominated [119]
Best International Feature Nominated
Puerto Rico Critics Association 2 January 2026 Best Picture Nominated [120]
Best Actor Wagner Moura Runner-up
Best Original Screenplay Kleber Mendonça Filho Nominated
Best International Feature The Secret Agent Runner-up
Best Film Editing Eduardo Serrano and Matheus Farias Nominated
National Society of Film Critics 3 January 2026 Best Picture The Secret Agent 3rd place [121]
Best Actor Wagner Moura Runner-up
Best Screenplay Kleber Mendonça Filho 3rd place
Best Film Not in the English Languange The Secret Agent Won
Critics' Choice Movie Awards 4 January 2026 Best Actor Wagner Moura Nominated [122]
Best Foreign Language Film The Secret Agent Won
Columbus Film Critics Association 8 January 2026 Best Lead Performance Wagner Moura Nominated [123]
Best Foreign Language Film The Secret Agent Nominated
The Astra Awards 9 January 2026 Best Actor – Drama Wagner Moura Nominated [124]
Best International Feature The Secret Agent Nominated
Acting Achievement Award Wagner Moura Honored
AARP Movies for Grownups Awards 10 January 2026 Best Foreign-Language Film The Secret Agent Nominated [125]
Golden Globe Awards 11 January 2026 Best Motion Picture – Drama The Secret Agent Nominated [126]
Best Foreign Language Film Won
Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama Wagner Moura Won
Hawaii Film Critics Society 12 January 2026 Best Actor Nominated [127]
Best Foreign Language Film The Secret Agent Nominated
Lumière Awards 18 January 2026 Best International Co-Production Won [128]
Houston Film Critics Society 20 January 2026 Best Picture Nominated [129]
Best Actor Wagner Moura Nominated
Best Foreign Language Feature The Secret Agent Nominated
Online Film Critics Society 26 January 2026 Best Picture Pending [130]
Best Actor Wagner Moura Pending
Best Film Not in the English Language The Secret Agent Pending
London Film Critics Circle 1 February 2026 Foreign Language Film of the Year Pending [131]
Actor of the Year Wagner Moura Pending
International Cinephile Society 8 February 2026 Best Picture The Secret Agent Pending [132]
Best Director Kleber Mendonça Filho Pending
Best Actor Wagner Moura Pending
Best Supporting Actress Tânia Maria Pending
Best Original Screenplay Kleber Mendonça Filho Pending
Best Ensemble The Secret Agent Pending
Best Cinematography Evgenia Alexandrova Pending
Best Editing Matheus Farias and Eduardo Serrano Pending
Best Production Design Thales Junqueira Pending
Best Sound Design Tijn Hazen Pending
Paris Film Critics Awards 8 February 2026 Best Picture The Secret Agent Pending [133]
Best Director Kleber Mendonça Filho Pending
Best Actor Wagner Moura Pending
Latino Entertainment Journalists Association 9 February 2026 Best Picture The Secret Agent Pending [134]
Best Director Kleber Mendonça Filho Pending
Best Actor Wagner Moura Pending
Best Supporting Actress Tânia Maria Pending
Best Original Screenplay Kleber Mendonça Filho Pending
Best Ensemble Casting Gabriel Domingues Pending
Best Cinematography Evgenia Alexandrova Pending
Best Editing Matheus Farias and Eduardo Serrano Pending}
Best Production Design Thales Junqueira Pending
Best Costume Design Rita Azevedo Pending
Best Non-English Language The Secret Agent Pending
Santa Barbara International Film Festival 8 February 2026 Virtuoso Award Wagner Moura Honored [135]
Film Independent Spirit Awards 15 February 2026 Best International Feature Film The Secret Agent Pending [136]
Online Film & Television Association 15 February 2026 Best Picture Pending [137]
Best Actor Wagner Moura Pending
Best Foreign Language Film The Secret Agent Pending
NAACP Image Awards 28 February 2026 Outstanding International Motion Picture Pending [138]
Dorian Awards 3 March 2026 Non-English Language Film of the Year Pending [139]
Satellite Awards 8 March 2026 Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama Wagner Moura Pending [140]
Best Motion Picture – International The Secret Agent Pending