Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (2011)
PostPosted: Sun Jul 03, 2011 12:26 pm
A teaser trailer for a film based on one of my favourite spy-novels is currently slated for an end of the year release (or September, depending on where you live). This movie is worth any film-lover's notice based soley on its cast alone, which consists of a who's who of British top actors: Gary Oldman, Colin Firth, Tom Hardy, Mark Strong, Ciarán Hinds, Benedict Cumberbatch and John Hurt. There should be a law against having so many good actors in a film.
Its the 1970s. British Secret Intelligence (MI6, known also by its code-name 'The Circus') has been infiltrated by a spy / mole who is passing information on agents and activities to Communist Russia. Retired spymaster George Smiley (Gary Oldman) is called in to help root out the agent, who may have been planted by his old nemesis, a KGB director known only by the code-name KARLA. But the suspects are not only close colleagues and friends, but some are tied to him personal ways.
Well, that's the synopsis of the book, in any case. For a book mostly set in and around London its odd to see Instanbul in there, but if the movie can keep the core themes of the book (which take a very very bleak view on spycraft in general and the grim paradoxes associated with it) then it should prove to be a good, thought-provoking movie. John Le Carré books are difficult to adapt because they tend to have complex emotional arcs that take place mostly in the heads and souls of the characters. They also tend to have very complicated, layered (if painstakingly logical) plots, which can bog a film down, like it did The Russia House.
Also, the film has previously been adapted in the 1970s by the BBC in an extremely well-made but painstakingly slow* miniseries starring Sir Alec 'Obi-Wan' Guiness. Guiness has had many good roles on film but his turn as George Smiley is possibly his best performance (in my opinion), so Oldman has terrifyingly large shoes to fill. Also KARLA was played by a very young but very bald Patrick Stewart who manages to have a small but memorable performance without saying a word.
* The reason I'm calling it slow is not because I hate things that are slow in general; I just think they could have easily truncated some of the material towards the end instead of trying to fit in as much of the book's plot as possible. As I said, the complex plot can bog things down.
Its the 1970s. British Secret Intelligence (MI6, known also by its code-name 'The Circus') has been infiltrated by a spy / mole who is passing information on agents and activities to Communist Russia. Retired spymaster George Smiley (Gary Oldman) is called in to help root out the agent, who may have been planted by his old nemesis, a KGB director known only by the code-name KARLA. But the suspects are not only close colleagues and friends, but some are tied to him personal ways.
Well, that's the synopsis of the book, in any case. For a book mostly set in and around London its odd to see Instanbul in there, but if the movie can keep the core themes of the book (which take a very very bleak view on spycraft in general and the grim paradoxes associated with it) then it should prove to be a good, thought-provoking movie. John Le Carré books are difficult to adapt because they tend to have complex emotional arcs that take place mostly in the heads and souls of the characters. They also tend to have very complicated, layered (if painstakingly logical) plots, which can bog a film down, like it did The Russia House.
Also, the film has previously been adapted in the 1970s by the BBC in an extremely well-made but painstakingly slow* miniseries starring Sir Alec 'Obi-Wan' Guiness. Guiness has had many good roles on film but his turn as George Smiley is possibly his best performance (in my opinion), so Oldman has terrifyingly large shoes to fill. Also KARLA was played by a very young but very bald Patrick Stewart who manages to have a small but memorable performance without saying a word.
* The reason I'm calling it slow is not because I hate things that are slow in general; I just think they could have easily truncated some of the material towards the end instead of trying to fit in as much of the book's plot as possible. As I said, the complex plot can bog things down.