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Rabbit Hole: teaser

First look at upcoming US spy drama, starring Kiefer Sutherland.

A teaser has been released for Paramount+’s upcoming spy drama Rabbit Hole, starring Kiefer Sutherland.

The 8 part series also features Charles Dance (Game of Thrones) as Dr. Ben Wilson, Meta Golding (Empire) as Hailey Winton, Enid Graham (Mare of Easttown) as Josephine “Jo” Madi, Jason Butler Harner (Ozark) as Valence, Walt Klink (Arctic Circle) as The Intern and Rob Yang (Succession), as Edward Homm.

In Rabbit Hole, John Weir (Sutherland), a master of deception in the world of corporate espionage, is framed for murder by powerful forces who have the ability to influence and control populations.

In addition to Sutherland, Rabbit Hole features a dynamic cast including Charles Dance (Game of Thrones) as Dr. Ben Wilson, Meta Golding (Empire) as Hailey Winton, Enid Graham (Mare of Easttown) as Josephine “Jo” Madi, Jason Butler Harner (Ozark) as Valence, Rob Yang (Succession) as Edward Homm and Walt Klink (The English) as The Intern.

Sutherland serves as executive producer for Rabbit Hole, alongside writer-directors John Requa and Glenn Ficarra (This Is Us, WeCrashed), Charlie Gogolak (The Sinner, WeCrashed), Suzan Bymel (Designated Survivor) and Hunt Baldwin (Longmire The Closer).

Two episodes Monday, 27 March on Paramount+ then weekly.

One Response

  1. I’m a sucker for most spy yarns, and particularly for James Bond and those ‘Bond’ action movie knock offs if they’re done right, which is not always the case. The glamour side of spying is of course less glamorous if you watch the occasional British Cold War era spy story with its dark 60’s pathos and droll stoic British Intelligence characters, but at least these shows are usually believable, not like the never ending ’24’ which was Kiefer’s previous action hero success. Kiefer is getting on in age now and his stolid acting style as seen in ’24’ and ‘Designated Survivor’, generally means that most shows starring or produced by Kiefer are written for him and his acting technique. The interesting part is that Rabbit Hole only has 8 episodes, (which perhaps is a new economic trend) so maybe this will benefit the screenplay for this show, and the viewer can have a beginning a middle and an end.

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