I just finished the Splinter Cell series on Netflix. It was pretty fun. Plot's a little whatever (standard global espionage stuff, just like most spy movies, it's an excuse for the competency-porn starring the main characters), but they're continuing to move Sam forward in time so he's getting older, and they're moving in a new agent. Sort of hope they continue with that.
I think with spy-thriller stuff, like kaiju movies, I'm very happy for folks to shut up and play the hits, and I think this series mostly does that. It has some small swerves that I was happy to see happen, little things where they set up a potentially more eye-rolling version of the story only to say "nah, come-on, that would suck, wouldn't it?" and yes, it would've sucked, glad we did this instead. Sort of being vague here, but hopefully if you watch it you feel the same way.
Though it's hard for me to disassociate Sam from Michael Ironside's voice, Liev Schreiber does a great job. He's never doing an imitation, but his standard tough-guy performance is fairly close to Ironside's anyway, and so he works well int he part. It doesn't come off as disrespectful as, say, Sutherland subbing in for Hayter in Metal Gear. Doesn't feel like stunt casting. I don't know why they don't want to work with Ironside anymore, but if they're going with Liev as the new guy, I'll take it.
Also enjoyed Kirby Howell-Baptiste. I haven't seen her in much (this and Sandman are maybe it, and I didn't finish Sandman because... well you know), but so far I'm digging what she brings to stuff. They're clearly setting up her character to take on the Splinter Cell legacy and I hope that decision sticks. I'm sort of hoping they're bold enough to eventually do a full Batman Beyond and make Sam the guy in the chair and Zinnia the agent in the field. Maybe have a big blowout where Grim dies or retires or becomes a villain for whatever abstruse reason.
Anyway, fine way to spend a few hours. Animation isn't half bad either.