In From the Cold
In From the Cold is an American spy thriller television miniseries created by Adam Glass that premiered on Netflix on January 28, 2022.[1][2] The series stars Margarita Levieva as Jenny Franklin, a divorced single mother and former Russian intelligence operative living undercover in the United States, who possesses experimental shape-shifting abilities from her past as a bio-engineered agent.[3][2] Exposed during a family trip to Madrid, Jenny is coerced back into espionage by the CIA to thwart an international conspiracy involving a powerful new drug and rogue elements within Russian intelligence.[3] The eight-episode first season explores themes of identity, maternal duty, and Cold War legacies, blending high-stakes action with supernatural elements, and was canceled after one season in 2023.[4] The supporting cast includes Cillian O'Sullivan as Chauncey, Jenny's pragmatic CIA handler; Lydia Fleming as her teenage daughter Becca; and Charles Brice as her fiancé Chris, whose relationships are tested by her double life.[1] Additional notable performers are Stasya Miloslavskaya as young Jenny Franklin / Anya Petrova.[3] Directed by Ami Canaan Mann, Birgitte Stærmose, and others, the series was produced by Glass's Shattered Glass Productions in association with Silver Lining Entertainment, with filming locations including Madrid and Los Angeles.[1] Critically, In From the Cold received mixed reviews, praised for its fast-paced plot and Levieva's charismatic lead performance but critiqued for uneven pacing and reliance on familiar spy tropes.[5] It holds a 71% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on reviews as of November 2025, with a consensus noting its entertaining mix of maternal drama and genre thrills.[2] On IMDb, it scores 6.3 out of 10 from over 10,000 user ratings as of November 2025, reflecting its appeal as a bingeable limited series amid Netflix's 2022 slate of original content.[1]Premise
Synopsis
In From the Cold is an American spy thriller television series that centers on Jenny Franklin, a divorced single mother living in suburban New Jersey, who harbors a secret past as a former KGB operative known as Anya Petrova. During a trip to Madrid to chaperone her daughter Becca's figure skating competition, Jenny's covert identity is exposed to the CIA, leading to her blackmail and coerced return to espionage activities.[1][6] The central narrative revolves around Jenny's struggle to balance her everyday family responsibilities with the demands of her resurfaced spy life, as she undertakes missions for CIA handler Chauncey while grappling with her history as a bio-engineered Russian agent. This involves investigating a global conspiracy centered on mind-control technology, forcing her to leverage her unique abilities amid escalating threats to her loved ones.[7][8] The series blends traditional spy thriller elements with science fiction, particularly through Jenny's shape-shifting capabilities that allow her to impersonate others, heightening the tension between her dual identities and the high-stakes intrigue.[9][10]Key elements
In From the Cold distinguishes itself within the spy thriller genre through its incorporation of supernatural elements, particularly the protagonist Jenny Franklin's shape-shifting ability. This bio-engineered power enables her to alter her physical appearance, allowing her to impersonate others effectively in espionage operations. Derived from experimental KGB procedures in the Yaroslav Program involving a top-secret serum administered during her time as a Russian asset known as "The Whisper," the ability transformed her into a super-soldier capable of such transformations, which ties directly into her backstory as a former operative seeking a normal life.[6][11][7] However, the shape-shifting comes with significant limitations that add realism and tension to its use. Transformations cause intense physical pain and exert a considerable toll on her body, restricting their duration and frequency to avoid severe exhaustion or injury. These constraints prevent the ability from overshadowing the narrative, emphasizing Jenny's vulnerability despite her enhanced capabilities.[6] Central to the series' conflict is a mind-control conspiracy serving as the primary antagonistic force, where a mysterious villain leads a terrorist group capable of psychologically manipulating individuals to carry out violent acts. This sci-fi element escalates the stakes to global threats, blending covert operations with insidious control mechanisms that challenge traditional notions of agency in espionage.[11] Thematically, In From the Cold fuses Cold War-era espionage tropes with contemporary science fiction, exploring profound questions of identity, motherhood, and redemption. Jenny's dual life as a single parent and reluctant spy highlights the tension between personal concealment and familial bonds, while her journey underscores the pursuit of atonement for a haunted past amid high-stakes intrigue. This integration creates a narrative that reimagines spy dramas through a lens of supernatural personal cost and emotional depth.[6][11]Cast and characters
Main
Margarita Levieva stars as Jenny Franklin, also known by her birth name Anya Petrova, a former KGB assassin and product of the experimental Yaroslav Program that granted her shape-shifting abilities.[12] As a single mother living under an assumed identity in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, Jenny attempts to leave her espionage past behind while raising her daughter, but she is reactivated by the CIA to combat a terrorist threat, forcing her to navigate high-stakes missions alongside her efforts to maintain a normal family life.[6] Her character embodies the central conflict of the series, torn between her covert skills—earned through a traumatic upbringing in Russia—and her desire for domestic stability.[13] Cillian O'Sullivan plays Chauncey Lew, a seasoned CIA handler and war veteran who discovers Jenny's true identity and recruits her for operations against an elusive enemy.[12] Despite his commitment to national security, Chauncey grapples with personal moral dilemmas stemming from past failures, including a disgraced mission that left him operating on the fringes of the agency, which complicates his partnership with Jenny as they pursue leads on a global conspiracy.[6] He provides essential operational guidance and resources, often clashing with Jenny over tactics while forming an evolving alliance built on mutual necessity.[14] Lydia Fleming portrays Becca Franklin, Jenny's teenage daughter and a talented figure skater who is initially unaware of her mother's covert history.[13] Living a typical adolescent life focused on her sport and school, Becca becomes inadvertently entangled in the dangers surrounding her family when Jenny's past resurfaces during a trip to Madrid for a skating competition, heightening the stakes for Jenny's missions.[12] Her character's innocence and vulnerability underscore the personal toll of espionage on everyday relationships. Charles Brice depicts Chris Clarke, Chauncey's right-hand tech expert and a skilled hacker conscripted into CIA service to avoid imprisonment.[12] Hailing from Atlanta's Grove Park neighborhood, Chris offers crucial digital support for investigations, including surveillance and data analysis, while serving as a moral counterpoint to Chauncey's more ruthless approach, though his own involvement deepens through the team's family-like dynamics amid the unfolding plot.[6]Recurring
Alyona Khmelnitskaya portrays Svetlana Petrova, Jenny Franklin's mother and a former KGB field operative who later becomes an SVR instructor and handler.[15] Her character maintains deep ties to Russian intelligence, influencing subplots involving espionage and loyalty conflicts across multiple episodes.[13] Stasya Miloslavskaya portrays young Anya Petrova, appearing in flashbacks depicting Jenny's early days as a Russian operative in the 1990s.[13]Production
Development
Adam Glass, a veteran television writer known for his work on Supernatural, Criminal Minds: Beyond Borders, and The Chi, conceived In From the Cold as a female-led spy thriller infused with supernatural elements, drawing inspiration from his personal life as an empty-nester whose wife grappled with a sense of lost purpose.[16][6] He envisioned the protagonist as a middle-aged mother forced to revisit her covert past, emphasizing the strength and complexity of women over 40 in high-stakes scenarios.[16] This concept blended procedural espionage with emotional drama, reflecting Glass's experience crafting grounded narratives amid fantastical elements on Supernatural.[6] Netflix ordered the series straight-to-series on January 28, 2020, with eight episodes, appointing Glass as showrunner and executive producer.[17] The writing team, assembled under Glass's leadership, featured a predominantly female writer's room to authentically capture the protagonist's perspective and empower female voices in the production.[6] Key contributors included co-executive producer and writer Christopher Barbour, who collaborated closely on scripting to integrate thriller tension with supernatural twists.[18] The episode scripting process prioritized emotional realism, ensuring the genre blend—spy intrigue rooted in family dynamics and otherworldly abilities—served the characters' arcs rather than overshadowing them.[16] Pre-production spanned from the initial pitch through the 2020 order, though the COVID-19 pandemic delayed progress.[19] A significant revision involved incorporating the shape-shifting lore at the request of Netflix executives; Glass initially resisted but ultimately grounded the ability in a painful KGB serum experiment, drawing from horror influences like An American Werewolf in London to depict transformations as physically taxing rather than effortless.[6] By early 2021, pre-production was complete, with Glass having outlined a three-season arc to explore the lore's origins and escalating threats.[6] This female-centric vision also shaped casting, prioritizing actors who could embody the lead's multifaceted strength.[16]Filming
Principal photography for In From the Cold took place primarily in Madrid, Spain, from February 8 to May 20, 2021, after an initial delay from the planned March 2020 start due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[20][21] The production utilized a variety of real locations in and around Madrid to enhance authenticity, including the Pista de Hielo Valdemoro ice rink for figure skating scenes and Madrid's metro stations, such as Chamberí, which was redressed to resemble a Russian subway.[22][23] These choices were influenced by the series' development needs to depict diverse international settings efficiently while leveraging Spain's production incentives.[24] Cinematography was handled by Hermes Marco and Imanol Nabea, who employed Cooke S7/i and Panchro lenses on Sony VENICE cameras to capture tense action sequences with a grounded realism.[25] Their approach emphasized dynamic framing and natural lighting to heighten suspense, while seamlessly integrating visual effects for the show's shape-shifting elements, such as the protagonist's transformations.[26] The production faced significant challenges from COVID-19 protocols, including rigorous testing, social distancing on set, and phased restarts to ensure crew safety during the ongoing global health crisis.[20] Budget allocations prioritized international location shoots in Madrid as a cost-effective stand-in for multiple global sites, alongside substantial investments in visual effects to realize the sci-fi aspects without compromising narrative flow.[27] In post-production, editors Amber Bansak, Shawn Paper, and Kyle Traynor focused on pacing the blend of spy thriller action and supernatural twists, while sound design teams enhanced the immersive quality of transformation sequences through layered audio cues for morphing and environmental tension.[18] Visual effects houses like El Ranchito and CG Onset contributed over 150 futuristic user interface animations and seamless integration of shape-shifting effects, ensuring the sci-fi elements felt organic to the realistic tone.[28][29]Release
Distribution
In From the Cold was released exclusively on Netflix, with all eight episodes made available simultaneously on January 28, 2022, adhering to the streaming service's binge-watching model that allows viewers to access the full season at once.[3] This approach is characteristic of Netflix's strategy for original series, enabling immediate immersion in the narrative without weekly waits.[30] The series achieved global distribution through Netflix's platform, which operates in over 190 countries as of 2022, making it accessible to a worldwide audience shortly after its premiere.[31] To cater to non-English speaking markets, Netflix provided dubbed audio tracks in languages such as German, Spanish (Latin America), French, and Italian, alongside subtitles in English, Spanish (Latin America), French, Chinese (Simplified), and Chinese (Traditional).[3] This multilingual support facilitated broader international viewership, aligning with Netflix's emphasis on localization for global expansion.[30] Marketing efforts for the series ramped up in early January 2022, with Netflix releasing an official teaser trailer on January 4 and the full trailer on January 14, both emphasizing the show's spy-thriller elements, including high-stakes espionage and supernatural twists.[32][33] Promotional materials, shared across Netflix's social channels and Tudum site, highlighted lead actress Margarita Levieva's portrayal of a former Russian spy drawn back into covert operations, positioning the series as a gripping addition to the thriller genre.[34] No physical home media release, such as DVD or Blu-ray, has been made available for In From the Cold, confining distribution to digital streaming exclusively through Netflix.[3] This reflects the platform's focus on subscription-based access rather than traditional retail formats for its original content.[30]Viewership
Upon its release on January 28, 2022, In From the Cold achieved strong initial viewership, accumulating 85.83 million hours viewed globally in its first 16 days.[4] The series entered Netflix's global top 10 TV rankings immediately, appearing in the list for three consecutive weeks and reaching a peak position of #3 during the second week (January 30–February 6), when it logged 44.8 million hours viewed across 73 countries.[35] In the United States, Nielsen measurements showed it ranking #7 among original streaming series for the partial debut week of January 24–30, with 349 million minutes viewed (equivalent to 5.82 million hours). The following table summarizes its global performance on Netflix's top 10 TV list in the initial weeks:| Week Ending | Hours Viewed (Millions) | Global Rank | Change from Prior Week |
|---|---|---|---|
| January 30, 2022 | 24.72 | #6 | - |
| February 6, 2022 | 44.8 | #3 | +81% |
| February 13, 2022 | 16.31 | #10 | -64% |