The woman can act, and if she’d been the traditional foil to the Sexy Serial Killer this show still would have been good. But Eve isn’t a foil, she’s the primary focus of Killing Eve, and the show is more interested in exploring her—a messy middle-aged woman who shops at Uniqlo and Gap and is horrified that chickens poop eggs—instead of the serial killer, which helps it transcend the trope.

Advertisement

Because when it comes to stories that have the Sexy Serial Killer trope, the bulk of the narrative, inevitably, is focused on the sexy serial killer themselves. It makes sense! Serial killers in stories, be they vampire, witch, or dude with a knife, are a fantasy. They’re the Beast of Beauty and the Beast taken to an extreme. Their behavior and approach to life is so distinctly different from our own that it’s fun to play in their world. The hunter, by contrast, always comes off a little boring. They’re all too often average, and while tempted by the serial killer, they are ultimately Good, and need to do Good things, like stop the killer.

These stories are also painfully static. A Sexy Serial Killer inevitably finds their love for the hunter to outweigh their good sense. They twist themselves to be with the hunter. The hunter just keeps on being noble and kind. Yet in Killing Eve, Eve is the one changing.

Advertisement

The show begins by hinting that there’s something off about Eve. It’s not just in her refusal to heed warnings or respect her superiors. It’s in the little moments—like how she can tell her husband how she’d kill him without blinking, or how she stabs herself just to understand what it’s like to exert that kind of pressure.

The key moment, although it’s the quietest one, is after her first real interaction with Villanelle. The two women haven’t even spoken yet, but just stared at one another after Eve puts herself between Villanelle and her target. Eve is shaken by the taut, oddly erotic encounter and decides to head home on a bus. But when she sits down at the bus stop she notices a crack in the glass. Her finger glances over it, her eyes study it, and then she suddenly, violently smashes the glass with her elbow.

Advertisement

It’s an outpouring of all her rage and betrayal up until that point and foreshadowing to the final moments of the season, where she and Villanelle encounter each other again. Eve tracks Villanelle down and after confessing their preoccupation with each other they lie on a bed, a tangle of obsession and lust. In the moment Villanelle seems to have won. She’s worn Eve down like every Sexy Serial Killer before her has worn down every hunter before Eve.

But this is Eve’s story, and while every point in the show has been driving her towards Villanelle, it’s also been driving her towards embracing her own violence independent of Villanelle. When she digs a knife into Villanelle’s belly it isn’t just about what she’s feeling toward the woman herself, it’s about her need to experience the violent acts she’s so obsessed with.

Advertisement

The moment is shocking, and part of that shock comes because we simply don’t know Eve’s full motivation—we only know that this act was as inevitable as their obsession. It’s fascinating, and Eve is a fascinating character—much more than the assassin she’s been hunting. By putting the focus on her story, and using the Sexy Serial Killer trope to support that, Killing Eve has transcended the tired trope, and made it fresh again. Sometimes the hero really can be more interesting than the villain.