Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
Director: Tomas Alfredson
Starring: Colin Firth, Gary Oldman, John Hurt
Details: UK/France / 120mins (15A).
After a bungled mission in Hungary that ended in the death of spy Jim Prideaux (Strong), Control (Hurt) employs George Smiley (Oldman), who was forced into early retirement, to root out a suspected Soviet mole at large in MI6. It could be anyone in The Circus, the high echelon of the British Secret Service: Percy Allenine (Toby Jones) aka Tinker, Bill Haydon (Firth) aka Tailor, Roy Bland (Ciarán Hinds) aka Soldier or Toby Esterhase (David Dencik) aka Poor Man. Smiley meticulously goes about eliminating his suspects…
That's a brief synopsis for a film that tackles John Le Carre's expansive novel and a 70s series starring Alec Guinness that took seven forty-minute episodes to get to a climax. But this film adaptation feels as in-depth. 'Meticulous' is the byword: lavish detail is extended to every corner of the screen; from the clothes to the sets, right down to the cigarettes they smoke, the overall effect is the viewer's complete absorption in this world. Credit to director Tomas Alfredson (Let The Right One In) who never takes his eyes off the ball and allow the detail to overwhelm the plot, which is always foremost in his mind. It might move at a snail's pace but it always moving. If 'meticulous' is a byword, then 'intricate' would be another. Try 'intimate', 'eerie', 'chilling', 'thorough' and 'bleak' too. A shower may be needed afterwards.
With so many star names, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy could have drowned under that weight but it manages to be a superbly plotted film and an acting tour de force. Oldman is front and centre with his quietest performance to date: Smiley has lines to say and is asked to move about but Oldman is so slight in his delivery it is as if he goes through the entire movie sitting in a chair in silence. If he downplayed a little more, he'd simply disappear. Everyone chips in with subtle turns with Benedict Cumberbatch and Tom Hardy pitching in too. It's a shame, though, that Firth and Hinds aren't as prominent as the marquee would suggest.
With so many names and double-crosses and whatnot to remember, it's hard to keep abreast of it all but this thinking man's spy thriller is one of the movies of the year.
Review by Gavin Burke
Your Comments
LittleVillage
This film is very stylish and meticilous to details .. but sadly when you take a Novel and try to condense it into 120 mins, there is a delicate balancing act of what parts to put in and what to leave out. This film feels like they left out a few important bits of the story. Characterization is poor, the pacing is uneven and to save it, it needed a real cracker of a climax ..and it didn't deliver that. Very disappointed given the amount of hype associated with this :-( - 3 stars.
Posted 21/02/2012 15:21:21
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