BBC America's second consistently pushed the envelope of what we, as viewers, expected from it.
One of the main reasons for Killing Eve's success is actress Jodie Comer's sly, ferocious performance as Villanelle. The female assassin is the dark, charismatic heart of the show - violent, ruthless, but always entertaining to watch. Her elaborate kills, gorgeous fashion, and smart dialogue are highlights of virtually any episode. Here are some of our favorite Villanelle quotes.
Update July 6th, 2020 by Darby Harn: Killing Eve's third season concluded in May of this year, with eight new episodes and a long list of great new quotes from everybody's favorite cold-blooded assassin Villanelle. The character went on an amazing adventure this season, searching for her roots and struggling to find some kind of future with Eve Polastri, who has her own stuff to work out. Here are a few of the best things Villanelle said from the third season.
"I'm kind of a big deal in this industry."
One thing Villanelle never shies away from is tooting her own horn. Whether that's with her outrageous (and fabulous!) outfits or just typical cosmic self-confidence, she likes to remind people of her awesomeness. A great example of this happens early in season three, who Villanelle takes on a new apprentice, Felix, as part of her bid to move in the ranks of the mysterious Twelve. She tells her new fresh off the bus charge that she's a big deal in their industry, and he needs to pay attention.
"Management sucks."
Things generally work out for Villanelle - not so much for the people she's out to kill - but in season three her mojo stops working. The first real taste of this is her arrangement with Felix, which goes south so fast it's hard not to laugh. While the two impersonate clowns at a birthday party, she coaches Felix on his first kill. It goes so bad Villanelle has to kill Felix as well, and inspires the ambitious Villanelle to say "management sucks."
"I have to kill you now."
Villanelle is a little on the fritz throughout the season, but something like a cascade failure happens when she returns home to Russia. Villanelle wants to visit her family for reasons she doesn't entirely understand herself. While there, she reconnects with her mother, brother, and step-brother and has a taste of the life she never had. But her mother shuns her, leading Villanelle to her darkest moment. She kills her mother, though in doing so, she breaks herself, maybe for good.
"Smell me, Eve."
In what had to be the best bus ride of all time, Villanelle confronts Eve on a London bus. It leads to their most charged fight - and these two have shot and stabbed each other - but also to their first kiss.
Villanelle wears a designer perfume to evoke how far she's come since they parted, but Eve's surprise kiss shatters the veneer both women cling to. Villanelle isn't as powerful or on top of it as she seems, and Eve is not as resistant to the assassin's charms as she'd like people to think.
"It's a very beautiful face."
The season ends at something of a crossroads. Well, a bridge, which is appropriate. Villanelle has turned her back on killing. Eve (played by Sandra Oh) has gotten her first taste. The two women have finally acknowledged their feelings for each other (well, Eve finally has, Villanelle was never shy about it) and confront their fears and their future on Tower Bridge. When Eve says all she sees is Villanelle's face when she closes her eyes, Villanelle responds with her usual self-assurance.
“You should never tell a psychopath they are a psychopath. It upsets them.”
Killing Eve is the story of a female assassin who loves her job. Like, loves it. The only thing that gives Villanelle anything vaguely resembling joy is killing people, which is why she takes such care in the set-up and completion of each of her assignments. (The girl does love flair.) Yet, Villanelle is also extremely aware that she isn’t normal. She knows that she’s a psychopath, and actually seems to take a significant amount of pride in that fact. Of course, she also uses it as an excuse to do and act however she likes, and often as a threat against others. (When she utters this line, for example, she’s already broken into Eve’s home and held her at knifepoint.)
"I had quite a heavy period last week, but other than that I think I'm okay."
Villanelle is an assassin who embraces being a woman as a key part of her identity. She kills people with traditionally feminine tools, too, such as hairpins and perfume. And, perhaps most importantly, she understands the power that her gender gives her in the world in which she works. One of the first kills we see her perform involves Villanelle counting on a man to mistake her for a prostitute.
In this particular scene, Villanelle is being reprimanded for a mistake – for not following instructions on her last mission. She’s wearing one of the most incredibly feminine and child-like outfits we see her in over the entire course of the show – a huge diaphanous pink tulle nightmare. She talks openly about her menstrual cycle. She understands perfectly how the fact that she is a woman affects the men around her – whether she’s working with or gunning for them – and uses it all to her advantage.
“Letting yourself into my apartment and drinking from a tiny cup doesn't make you intimidating, by the way. It's just rude.”
In Killing Eve’s first season, Villanelle’s relationship with Konstantin is one of our only windows into her personality that didn’t involve murder. Their slightly offbeat father-daughter relationship is strangely charming. And, for the most part, it seems genuine.
That, of course, changes toward the end of Season 1. Konstantin betrays her trust. Villanelle kidnaps his daughter and shoots her handler dead. (Or so we all thought at the time.) The two reconnect in Season 2 once Villanelle discovers her handler is still alive. But it’s not long before one betrays the other again.
"I just want to have dinner with you, okay!"
Killing Eve isn’t the first series to introduce the idea of a cat-and-mouse story in which the cat and the mouse are a little more interested in one another than they should be. (Looking at you, Luther.)
Here, Villanelle breaks into Eve’s home, but not – as many of us may have assumed – to kill or even threaten her. Rather, she wants to….hang out? It’s not clear whether this dinner is a date or a friendly chat, and the combination of fear and messy sexual tension between Eve and Villanelle keeps those lines firmly blurred throughout their first face to face encounter.
"I think about you, too."
"I mean, I m********* about you a lot."
Villanelle and Eve finally confess their feelings to one another in the Season 1 finale, after a fashion. Granted, neither makes a swoony declaration of love or anything. But they both do it that they can’t stop thinking about one another. And it that their infatuation with one another has kind of taken over their lives. In virtually every way.
While Villanelle its her sexual attraction up front (see above), Eve seems more confused about what she feels. Clearly, there’s something going on, but she decides to stab the object of her obsession, rather than look at those feelings too closely. Villanelle, for her part, would absolutely take their relationship to the next level right then and there, in the wreckage of her apartment. But she seems more in touch with her feelings – and honest about them – than Eve is.