Genre: | Comedy, drama |
Creator: | Jean-François Halin |
Director: | Alexandre Courtès |
Theme Music Composer: | Nicolas Godin |
Country: | France |
Language: | French |
Num Seasons: | 2 |
Num Episodes: | 24 |
List Episodes: |
|
Producer: | Alexandre Courtès |
Runtime: | 21-31 minutes |
Company: | Mandarin TV |
Network: | Arte |
A Very Secret Service (fr|Au service de la France|lit=In Service of France) is a French comedy-drama series created by and produced by Gilles de Verdière.[1]
In 1960, young André Merlaux eagerly accepts a cryptic summons to take a position as a trainee officer with the French Secret Services (based on the Service de Documentation Extérieure et de Contre-Espionnage). He will be watched over by the operations director Moïse, and reluctantly mentored by senior colleagues Moulinier (in charge of African affairs), Jacquard (Algeria), and Calot (Eastern Bloc). It is the height of the Cold War and the position of France as a Great Power is in crisis, faced with independence challenges from the colonies of French West Africa, above all the fight over the independence of Algeria. French society is changing at home as well, with a rising counterculture exemplified by growing feminism and New Wave cinema.
Principal photography for the first series took place between October 2014 and February 2015 in Île-de-France and Morocco.[2]
The series recalls in style and tone, although it is slightly more serious (writer Halin was also credited for the screenplay of all three OSS 117 films, and one of the three Les Guignols authors).[3] The show uses historical events as background or foreground for its action, similar to Mad Men (such as the Algerian war of independence and the first French nuclear test, Gerboise Bleue).
Arte's president of fiction, Olivier Wotling, confirmed a second season to Le Figaros TV Magazine on July 3, 2016.[4] [5]
In a March 2019 interview with the French language outlet PureMédias, Hugo Becker expressed doubt regarding the likelihood of a third season, stating that the series had reached "the end of the arc," and adding that while "there might be material... the story is complete and I think that's fine."[6] As an aside, however, several characters (including Moulinier, Jacquard, and Calot) as well as the SDECE office sets from the television show are vividly featured in (2021), indirectly creating a shared universe between the two franchises.
It was commissioned by Arte, where it premiered in 2015,[8] and was later distributed worldwide by Netflix on 1 July 2016.[9] The second season appeared on Netflix in August 2018. The show was removed from Netflix in November 2022.[10]
Steve Greene of IndieWire wrote that despite a "certain level of absurdity", the show was a "pretty well-calibrated balance between homage and parody".[11]