The Sympathizer | |
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Based on | The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen |
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Composer | Jo Yeong-wook |
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No. of episodes | 7 |
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Original release | |
Network | HBO |
Release | April 14 May 26, 2024 | –
The Sympathizer (Vietnamese: Cảm tình viên) is a historical black comedy drama miniseries based on the 2015 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of the same name by Viet Thanh Nguyen. The series was created by co-showrunners Park Chan-wook and Don McKellar, with Park directing for the series as well. The series premiered on HBO on April 14, 2024, and is produced by A24 and Rhombus Media.
The series is based on the story of the Captain, a North Vietnam plant in the South Vietnam army. He is forced to flee to the United States with his general near the end of the Vietnam War. While living within a community of South Vietnamese refugees, he continues to secretly spy on the community and report back to the Viet Cong, struggling between his original loyalties and his new life.[1]
No. | Title | Directed by | Teleplay by | Original air date | U.S. viewers (millions) |
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1 | "Death Wish" | Park Chan-wook | Park Chan-wook and Don McKellar | April 14, 2024 | 0.206[2] |
2 | "Good Little Asian" | Park Chan-wook | Park Chan-wook & Don McKellar and Naomi Iizuka | April 21, 2024 | 0.147[3] |
3 | "Love It or Leave It" | Park Chan-wook | Park Chan-wook & Don McKellar and Mark Richard | April 28, 2024 | 0.081[3] |
4 | "Give Us Some Good Lines" | Fernando Meirelles | Park Chan-wook & Don McKellar | May 5, 2024 | 0.070[3] |
5 | "All for One" | Marc Munden | Park Chan-wook & Don McKellar and Maegan Houang | May 12, 2024 | 0.058[3] |
6 | "The Oriental Mode of Destruction" | Marc Munden | Park Chan-wook & Don McKellar and Anchuli Felicia King | May 19, 2024 | 0.062[3] |
7 | "Endings Are Hard, Aren't They?" | Marc Munden | Park Chan-wook & Don McKellar | May 26, 2024 | 0.088[3] |
According to author Viet Thanh Nguyen, he insisted that any show adapted from his novel The Sympathizer be centered around Vietnamese people speaking Vietnamese. In early meetings, producers were uneasy about this requirement, but after political unrests during the Trump administration, the murders of George Floyd in 2020 and of six Asian-American women in Atlanta in 2021, the tone shifted.[4]
In April 2021, Viet Thanh Nguyen announced that the novel had been optioned by A24 to be adapted into a television series with Park Chan-wook directing. Rhombus Media is also involved in the production.[1] In July, HBO ordered the series from A24, and Robert Downey Jr. joined the project in a producer and co-star role.[5] The state of California awarded the production over $17.4 million in tax credits ensuring significant production would take place in state.[6] Marc Munden and Fernando Meirelles were also hired to direct some episodes of the series.[7]
Casting director Jennifer Venditti opened a worldwide casting call in order to find a main cast of Vietnamese descent, ultimately hiring Hoa Xuande, Fred Nguyen Khan, Toan Le, Vy Le, and Alan Trong.[8] Recurring roles for Sandra Oh, Kieu Chinh, and Nguyen Cao Ky Duyen were also announced in November 2022, and Downey was portraying several supporting antagonistic roles representing the American establishment.[9] In May 2023, Scott Ly and Marine Delterme joined the cast, in recurring roles.[10][11]
As a work about the Vietnamese refugee experience, the majority of the cast and crew are of Vietnamese origin, and more than half of the dialogue is in Vietnamese.[12][13] Hoa Xuande had to take a crash course to improve his Vietnamese to prepare for the main role.[14] The actor Phanxinê, who is also a well-known filmmaker in Vietnam, wanted to keep his involvement in the project private for as long as possible to minimize the political backlash he would receive, and stated that many friends discouraged him from participating.[15] It took him awhile to decide to take the role of The Major because the project is politically sensitive. He finally took it because he saw the role as safe as "he shows a good side of Vietnamese men."[16] Fred Nguyen Khan and Duy Nguyễn, who play the Captain's best friends, are also best friends in real life.[17]
Filming took place in Los Angeles and Thailand.[8] The crew's numerous attempts to obtain permission to film in Vietnam were rebuffed by its government, and so Thailand was used as a stand-in for Vietnamese scenes.[18] Downey shaved his head for the series in order to save time required to use a bald cap for each of the various characters he portrayed. A significant portion of Downey's performance was also improvised.[19]
The series premiered on HBO and became available to stream on Max on April 14, 2024.[20]
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 89% of 66 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 8.4/10. The website's consensus reads: "The Sympathizer does a solidly satisfying job of adapting its ambitious source material, conveying its core themes even as it occasionally struggles with its structure."[21] On Metacritic, the series holds a weighted average score of 80 out of 100, based on 37 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[22]
The series received much attention in the Vietnamese American community in California. For younger viewers, it presents an opportunity to showcase Vietnamese stories to a global audience. For the older generation, the series had stirred some discontent – they view the focus on the lead character, who was a communist spy, as glorifying the Communists and disparaging the South. However, the community agrees that this is a significant moment for Vietnamese representation in Hollywood.[23]
In Vietnam, where the Communist government did not allow the series to be filmed, it was also banned from being shown.[24] At the time of the series' premiere, there was no official Vietnamese translation of the original work published in the country,[25] even though a major publisher had bought the translation rights years earlier, shortly after the novel won the Pulitzer Prize.[26] After the series premiered, many articles about its production that were previously published in major newspapers were no longer accessible online, as if there was a censorship directive from the highest level or due to self-censorship, although it was unevenly applied.[25] An article in the state-run newspaper Tuổi trẻ Thủ đô described the series as "poisonous" and warned that "social media pages belonging to hostile forces [...] acclaimed the content of the series and cleverly integrated details that distorted Vietnamese history to sabotage the Party and the State" and called on young viewers to "heighten vigilance for false information regarding territorial sovereignty as well as Vietnamese history that hostile forces cleverly integrated or propagated via cinematic works."[24] Công an nhân dân, the official mouthpiece of the Ministry of Public Security, stated that the series has "distorted content", was created by "opposing elements", and the showing of the series so close to Reunification Day was made "with negative intention, to distort the triumph of the people of Vietnam."[27]
Award | Year | Category | Nominee | Result | Ref. |
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Gotham TV Awards | 2024 | Breakthrough Limited Series | Park Chan-wook, Don McKellar, Jisun Back, Amanda Burrell, Robert Downey Jr., Susan Downey, Niv Fichman, Kim Ly, Ravi Nandan, Viet Thanh Nguyen , Mark Richard, Hallie Sekoff, Ron Schmidt, John Sloss | Pending | [28] |
Outstanding Performance in a Limited Series | Hoa Xuande | Pending |