Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (2011) – Review

Clockwise from left: Toby Esterhase (David Dencik), Bill Haydon (Colin Firth), Percy Alleline (Toby Jones), Control (John Hurt), George Smiley (Gary Oldman), and Roy Bland (Ciaran Hinds).

In Three Days of the Condor, John Houseman and Cliff Robertson, two high-ranking members of the CIA, are briefly reminiscing about how they entered the intelligence field in the first place, with Houseman (who in the film is British) talking about how he started out a decade after World War I, or as he refers to it, “The Great War”. When Robertson asks if he misses the action from when he was younger, Houseman responds, “I miss that kind of clarity”. Most people tend to look back with nostalgia on the past in general, and today, when it comes to this age of uncertainty we all live under due to the War on Terror waged both here (with all of the terror threats, however real or imagined they are) and abroad, there has been a tendency to look back at what was thought of as the “clarity” of the Cold War, when at least, so the thinking goes, we knew who the enemy was. And the ever-looming threat of the Bomb, while keeping those in charge as well as the populace they governed in a state of alert, paradoxically created a sense of security in knowing as long as no one was going to press the button, things wouldn’t get too out of hand. Even forgetting, for the moment, the terror movement as we know it actually started in the 60’s and 70’s (under the flag of revolutionaries), we should remember the time of the Cold War wasn’t a time of “clarity”, but was just as murky as it is today. It was a world where you never really knew who to trust, and was a world of betrayal. Few people captured this Cold War world as well as John le Carre, particularly in his novels involving George Smiley, the antithesis of James Bond; or, as le Carre put it, one of the meek who do not inherit the earth. Wearing ill-fitting clothes, glasses that he constantly needs to polish, and moving at a slow gait due to his weight, Smiley might seem more fit to be a schoolmaster or an accountant rather than a spy (Smiley describes himself in The Secret Pilgrim – the last le Carre novel to feature Smiley – as “a fat man caught between the pudding and the port). But he actually uses this to his advantage, especially the way he’s able to question people and harp on the details most would forget. This would seem to make him an unlikely movie hero, but in this new adaptation of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, le Carre’s most celebrated Smiley novel, director Tomas Alfredson and star Gary Oldman do justice to the character and the story.

Peter Guillam (Benedict Cumberbatch).

As with the 1979 miniseries (more on that below), and unlike the novel, we start with a brief prologue. Control (John Hurt), the head of the British Secret Intelligence Service (referred to here, as in the novel and miniseries, as “The Circus”, as it’s headquartered at Cambridge Circus), is certain there’s a mole, or double agent, high up in British Intelligence. And he asks Jim Prideaux (Mark Strong), a “scalphunter” (jargon for those who did the dirty deeds in espionage), to go to Budapest to meet with a general who can give Prideaux the name of the mole. Unfortunately, Prideaux finds out it’s a trap, and he’s shot and presumed dead. This forces Control’s ouster (he dies soon after), as well as the ouster of his deputy, Smiley (Oldman). Some time later, however, Oliver Lacon (Simon McBurney), from the Ministry, comes to Smiley, confirming he also has heard there’s a mole inside the Circus (both this and the fact Control was investigating on his own comes as a complete surprise to Smiley), and since Smiley is out of it and therefore under the radar, he’s in a perfect position to investigate.

Ricki Tarr (Tom Hardy).

The title of the movie (and book) comes from the old nursery rhyme “Tinker, tailor, soldier, sailor, rich man, poor man, beggar man, thief”. Control assigns parts of the rhyme as code names for the people he suspects. Percy Alleline (Toby Jones), who wants Control’s job, is Tinker, Bill Haydon (Colin Firth), who runs the London division, is Tailor, Roy Bland (Ciaran Hinds), Haydon’s second-in-command, is Soldier, and Toby Esterhase (David Dencik), who runs the “lamplighters” (security division), is Poor Man (Control skips over Sailor because it’s too similar to Tailor, and Rich Man for obvious reasons; Smiley is known as Beggar Man). Smiley tries to retrace Control’s steps, as well as interview Ricki Tarr (Tom Hardy), a scalphunter who basically got the ball rolling – he had fallen in love with Irina (Svetlana Khodchenkova), a spy posing as a businessman’s wife, and before she was captured by the KGB, she told Tarr there was a mole in the Circus; he was the one who called Lacon – and Connie Sachs (Kathy Burke), the former researcher at the Circus until she was retired along with Smiley and Control. She had pointed out a Russian named Polyakov (Konstantin Khabenskiy) who might have been the mole’s handler, but no one wanted to hear it. With the help of Peter Guillam (Benedict Cumberbatch), his protege, and Lacon to an extent, Smiley tries to track the mole, as well as confront two of the ghosts in his past; Ann, his unfaithful wife, and Karla, the Soviet spy whom Smiley tried (and failed) to recruit in his younger days, and whom he suspects is behind the mole.

Jim Prideaux (Mark Strong).

Alfredson, Oldman, and co-writers Bridget O’Connor (who died after filming had wrapped) and Peter Straughan are confronting ghosts of their own with this movie. For one, the miniseries is not only well-acclaimed, it also took five-and-a-half hours to tell its story (the British DVD runs longer), while this movie clocks in at 127 minutes, so there’s quite a bit that had to be cut. For another, while there have been a number of actors to play the role of George Smiley – among them James Mason (though the character had a different name) in A Deadly Affair, Sidney Lumet’s adaptation of Call for the Dead, Denholm Elliot in the made-for-TV version of A Murder of Quality, and Rupert Davies in The Spy who Came In from the Cold – none are as memorable as Alec Guinness, who played the role in both the miniseries of Tinker, Tailor and Smiley’s People (the novel The Honourable Schoolboy actually came out between those novels, but wasn’t filmed due to budget constraints). Still, I think everyone involved has done a good job of making the movie stand on its own. For starters, Alfredson and production designer Maria Djurkovic make the building where the Circus is located an integral part of the story, with its retro look, the dumbwaiter that passes files from floor to floor, and the rooms that look as if they’re under the magnifying glass the entire time. Also, Alfredson and the screenwriters make some smart decisions in cutting the story down; in the movie, you never see Ann Smiley or Karla except in brief glimpses, which again adds to the idea of Smiley chasing their ghosts. The film also adds a Christmas party scene not in the novel or miniseries, but conveys, in flashback scenes, the relationship between several characters (as well as some dark humor; the characters sing along to a Soviet anthem at one point), as well as hints of things to come. Alfredson and the writers also bring out the sexual undercurrents only hinted at in the novel and miniseries; making the relationship between Ricki and Irina more passionate (in the novel and miniseries, he also has a wife and daughter, but that’s dropped here), having Connie tell George she’s feeling “under-f***ed” (le Carre allegedly heard  W.H. Auden tell him this in real life), making Guillam’s womanizing (more spelled out in the novel than in the miniseries) a cover for something else, and, of course, the relationship between Haydon and Prideaux. All of this helps add to the layers of deception going on.

Smiley with Connie Sachs (Kathy Burke).

Most importantly, however, Alfredson, O’Connor and Straughan, even in having to cut things down, preserve the elliptical nature of le Carre’s storytelling, making it even more so. This has frustrated many viewers (film professor and blogger David Bordwell, in his excellent essay on the film, starts out by talking about the man behind him in the theater who didn’t “get” the movie) and even some critics. First of all, I do believe as long as you keep in mind the spine of the film – there’s a mole in the Secret Service, and Smiley is being brought out of retirement to stop him – it shouldn’t be too hard to follow. More to the point, though, this elliptical style is a perfect illustration of just how murky the Cold War was – how there were, again, layers of deception before you could finally get to the truth, how you never really knew who your friends or enemies were, and how you kept secrets even from your friends if it served your purpose (as Smiley does to Tarr in a crucial scene). All of that is what spying is about, not about big operations that conclude with gun battles, and much as I’ve enjoyed movies like the Bourne  series that are about operations (though those movies are more grave and less morally certain than, say, the James Bond movies), le Carre’s novels and this movie serve as a bracing alternative to that. And while this is made more explicit in the novel (it was inspired by Kim Philby, perhaps the biggest traitor the British SIS ever had, and whom le Carre resented because they came from the same background and because le Carre was one of the people Philby betrayed), we see how spying in Britain, and even America, is often a game for the privileged class that ends up wreaking havoc for everyone else.

Smiley and Guillam with Jerry Westerby (Stephen Graham).

One disadvantage the movie has in relation to the miniseries, of course, is the miniseries allowed the actors time to develop the characters, whereas the actors in the movie have to compete with the memories of people who have read the book and/or seen the miniseries and paint the characters in quick brush strokes for those who haven’t done either. Another reason why the movie works so well is because of how well the actors are able to do this. Hurt is perfect as Control, a man being eaten away not only by the toll his job has taken on him, but also the desire to stop the forces trying to put him out to pasture. Strong, who usually plays bad guys, is excellent going against type here, and while he doesn’t have as much to work with as Ian Bannen did in his excellent performance in the miniseries, he’s able to distill both the character’s gentleness in dealing with Bill Roach (William Haddock), the outcast boy at the boarding school Prideaux ends up teaching at and with whom he bonds, and yet the steeliness that remains in him. Jones doesn’t have the same privileged nature Michael Aldridge brought to Alleline, but he goes the other way, playing someone who grabs at the inside because of how long he’s been forced to watch from the outside. Conversely, Hinds suggests more of being to the manor born than the rumpled nature Terrence Rigby brought to the working-class Roy Bland, but Hinds is able to play the character’s resentment all the same. Speaking of resentment, Dencik is less bitter and brittle than Bernard Hepton was as Esterhase, but is able to play up Esterhase’s outsider feeling, which fuels his bitterness. Hardy captures Tarr’s dangerous and romantic nature, but he’s also more mournful than Hywel Bennett was in the miniseries, which works here. Next to Oldman, whom I’ll get to in a minute, Firth has the toughest job here – next to Guinness, Ian Richardson gave the most indelible performance in the original – but if he doesn’t quite measure up, Firth does get Haydon’s cutting wit as well as his reserves of resentment and regret. And even if his character didn’t turn out to be as important here as he was in the miniseries, Cumberbatch feels just right as Guillam, someone completely professional but with his own dark currents underneath.

John le Carre (right) in a cameo at the Christmas party.

But it all turns on Oldman, and he delivers in spades. In the past, Oldman has been known for his over-the-top performances in films like True Romance, Leon: The Professional and The Fifth Element, and I’ve enjoyed many of those immensely. And even though he’s mostly tried as of late to play more characters who are essentially good if somewhat troubled, as with the Harry Potter movies and the recent Batman movies, he brings that same intensity, which also works. His Smiley is more of an active character on the face of it than Guinness’ was (we see him go swimming, for example, and taking walks), but Oldman brings the same watchfulness, patience and stillness Guinness did in his performance, and is even subtle in bringing out Smiley’s vulnerability. Much has been made of the scene where Guillam, Mendel (Roger Lloyd-Pack), another retired Secret Service agent who now works as a beekeeper, and Smiley are in a car and a bee starts buzzing around, and while Guillam tries to swat it and Mendel tries to catch it, Smiley simply lets it go. It’s a great scene, but even better, for me, is the scene where Smiley is telling Guillam about interrogating Karla, but for one second, you don’t know if he’s talking about Karla or Ann, two ghosts he’s forever chasing. Oldman plays that perfectly, without pathos. And he uses Smiley’s glasses (a key to the character) as a way of showing both Smiley’s gently probing nature and a shield he puts around himself (we can barely see his eyes at times). In short, even if you’re a fan of the original miniseries and novel, as I am, this movie version of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy stands brilliantly on its own.

Reel 73: More John LeCarré

With this episode we conclude our mini-series on spy films, with a second set of films based on the novels of John LeCarré.

We start with Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, a 2011 film directed by Tomas Alfredson and starring more high-power talent than you can shake a stick at. They spent so much money on big-name actors that they couldn’t afford punctuation for the title. (Ha! I’m pretty sure Sean hates jokes like that.) This film, set in 1973, is a Cold War thriller involving a mole near the top of British Intelligence. It’s one of those wheels-within-wheels kinds of tales that will pull you in, maybe confuse you for a while, but it all pulls together in the end.

From there we move beyond the Cold War for A Most Wanted Man, directed by Anton Corbijn and starring Philip Seymour Hoffman in his last starring role (he would appear in the last two Hunger Games films, but we’d argue that those aren’t “starring” roles for him). Hoffman plays Gunther Bachmann, the head of a covert German team that’s hoping to root out Islamic terrorists. Bachmann finds himself at odds with both German and American officials regarding their ultimate goal, which leads to an ending you may not expect. Again, lots of pieces are in motion, but it’s an intriguing tale that will have you wondering who’s on what side.

COMING ATTRACTIONS: 

Next time around we take a look at the wages of greed. We start off with The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, and then move on to a film made much later but whose timeline is nearly contemporary to the first one, There Will Be Blood. Join us, won’t you?

Hanna (2011) – Review

“You’re dead. I killed you.” Erik (Eric Bana) approaches Hanna (Saoirse Ronan) from behind.

The following is a slightly re-edited version of a review I wrote for the fanzine CAPRA.

As I mentioned when writing about The Bride with White Hair, along with their action movies, the fantasy movies that came out of Hong Kong in the 80’s and 90’s, from what I’ve seen of them, were real adult fairy tales. With the exception of the Lord of the Rings, few fantasy movies to come out Hollywood were as thrilling as the ones from Hong Kong, and didn’t feel like adult fairy tales, with the exception of  Joe Wright’s Hanna.

The movie even has a fairy-tale beginning; once upon a time, there was a teenage girl named Hanna (Saoirse Ronan) who lived in the forests of Finland with her father Erik Heller (Eric Bana), a former CIA agent now in hiding. Although he’s taught her all kinds of practical things, like how to hunt for food (we first see her shooting a deer, and saying to it, “I just missed your heart”, before killing it for good), how to speak several different languages, and various facts about the world (he uses encyclopedias), the main thing Heller has trained her to do is to be a fighter, and a killer if necessary (in their first scene together, he says she’s dead because he sneaked up on her without her knowing. She attacks him in response), drilling into her the motto, “Attack or die”. One thing she hasn’t any training for is the outside world, and like any girl of that age, Hanna is curious to see it. After some thought, Heller finally agrees, and shows her a box that will signal to the outside world where they are. Specifically, Heller has in mind Marissa Wiegler (Cate Blanchett), Heller’s old boss at the CIA. Sure enough, when the CIA picks up the signal and tells Wiegler, she insists she and her team can handle things herself (she also burns Heller’s file). Heller has escaped by the time they get there, but Hanna is there waiting. She’s taken into interrogation at a nearby safehouse, where a doctor asks her questions, and while she answers them in a dry monotone, she asks to speak to Wiegler. Wiegler, no fool, sends a double (Michelle Dockery) in to speak for her. However, even she’s unprepared for what happens next; after confirming “Marissa’s” identity, Hanna starts to cry, the two of them hug, and then Hanna snaps her neck, killing her. Not only that, but she easily subdues the soldiers sent in after her and she escapes.

“Tell me again.” “Adapt or die.”

From there, Hanna is supposed to meet her father at Grimm Park (a theme park) in Germany, and after she escapes, she sets out to do just that. After going through a long tunnel, she ends up in Morocco (the safehouse was nearby). She meets a kind old man in a village, but is unused to the modern world and is freaked out by it (her reaction to a teapot and then a television is memorable). She also meets up with Sophie (Jessica Barden), a pop culture obsessed teen of the same age, who is with her somewhat hippie-ish parents Rachel (Olivia Williams) and Sebastian (Jason Flemyng), and her younger brother Miles (Aldo Maland) as they trek across the country, and befriends them. She’s taken with their closeness as a family, while they are charmed, if mystified, by her earnestness and naivete (her idea of being nice is to kill rabbits for breakfast for them, and when Sophie arranges for the two of them to go on a double date, let’s just say it doesn’t end well). Meanwhile, of course, Marissa is hot on their trail, recruiting Isaacs (Tom Hollander), an assassin who runs a club in Germany, to follow and either capture or kill Hanna and her father.

“Why now, Erik?” Marissa Wiegler (Cate Blanchett).

The original script by Seth Lochhead (which twice made the Black List for best unproduced screenplay) was apparently a lot grittier and more realistic, until Wright and new writer David Farr did a rewrite to push it more into fairy tale territory. I have no idea how the grittier version would have played, but the fairy tale aspect work beautifully. Without ever hitting us over the head with it, Wright drops visual fairy tale motifs into the story, even before we get to Grimm Park, what with the seeming rabbit hole Hanna emerges from in Morocco, the fact Hanna uses arrows to kill animals with (and, on occasion, people), the way Marissa is always obsessed with cleaning her teeth, and so on. The music score by the Chemical Brothers also gives the movie a slightly unreal quality; although there’s pulse-pounding music as is their trademark, it’s also slightly otherworldly and exotic, especially the music that plays in Isaacs’ nightclub (the fact he whistles it at one point while on the hunt makes him seem even creepier). Grimm Park, of course, is where all the elements come into play; production designer Sarah Greenwood either built, or located, elements such as a small, old-fashioned cottage and animal structures such as a wolf’s head (which Marissa emerges from at one point), and although it isn’t red, Hanna wears a hoodie during the whole sequence. This movie has compared to Kick-Ass, which I still haven’t seen, but that movie is advertised as more comic-book in tone, and somewhat tongue-in-cheek (with Nicolas Cage as one of the stars, I guess that comes with the territory); this, on the other hand, despite the heightened elements, is played more seriously.

“HANNA!” Rachel (Olivia Williams) reacts when Hanna goes to fight Isaacs and his gang.

I’ve gone back and forth on Wright as a director. His adaptation of Pride & Prejudice was a bit rougher than previous versions, but I thought the tone worked surprisingly well; only the performance of Keira Knightley as Elizabeth Bennet didn’t quite work for me (she was fine in the comic moments, but wasn’t able to do the serious moments as well). I liked her much more in Atonement (I also thought Ronan, who played her younger sister, was terrific as well), but the movie itself seemed overdone and forced, and the final revelation didn’t play as well for me as it did in the novel. Considering that, it was surprising once again to find him on a more even keel with The Soloist, taking what could have been a mawkish “heartwarming” tale, and, thanks to restraint and good performances, making it honestly heartwarming. This may seem like strange training for an action director, but he makes the jump surprisingly well. I though his long takes in Atonement were just showing off, but he and cinematographer Alwin Kuchler (who also shot Morvern Caller for Lynne Ramsey and The Claim for Michael Winterbottom) stage one here where Heller is pursued in a train station and fights off a series of attackers that works brilliantly. There’s a lot more to why Hanna is able to fight and kill like she can, and Wright, Farr, and Lochhead are able to piece the information out slowly and achieving the right balance; never making us too impatient, yet making it logical and wrapping it up just right at the end, without making it seem like fan-wanking at the end. Also, while some have griped at the prospect of another girl action figure, Wright never eroticizes or fetishizes Hanna, instead just treating her as a somewhat abnormal girl who has normal wants, desires, fears, and curiosities.

“I just missed your heart.” Hanna at the end.

Of course, the performances also go a long way towards making this work. Williams and Flemyng don’t get much to do as the couple, but they are convincing as a couple. Barden played a similar role to Sophie in the previous year’s Tamara Drewe, if with slightly more depth, and she steals every scene she’s in here. Hollander, doing a 180-degree turn from his somewhat clueless government minister from In The Loop, is memorably creepy here, as mentioned above. Bana does his best work in years as Hanna’s father, especially in the scene where Hanna finds out the truth about how she became to be how she is. But the two who make it work are Blanchett and Ronan. As I alluded to above, Marissa is sort of playing the Big Bad Wolf (though in interviews, Blanchett has also half-joked about how she sees the story as a somewhat twisted version of Kramer vs. Kramer), and Blanchett does employ a southern accent throughout, but she never camps it up, playing a straight version of a cold and steely agent willing to do whatever it takes (although she lets some vulnerability creep through in the scene where she’s asked about ever having children, and she says, “I made certain choices”). Ronan is not only convincing in all of the fight scenes, but she also makes every aspect of Hanna convincing, from her steeliness in fights to her cluelessness about the outside world and her touching desire to want to connect with Sophie and her family. She delivers the first line of the movie (“I just missed your heart”) again near the end, but she gives the movie its heart, and its power.

Note: As it turns out, Farr ended up making a TV series (for Amazon) that was done with a more realistic tone, and while Esme Creed-Miles did a fine job playing the title role, the series ultimately didn’t measure up to the movie.

Reel 68: More Modern Fairy Tales

In this episode we continue our theme of Modern-Day Fairy Tales, even though in one case it’s not necessarily set in the present day. So let’s just call it a present-day telling of a fairy tale and leave it at that.

And that’s where we start this time around, with 1993’s The Bride With White Hair,  directed by Ronny Yu. This is a Wuxia film with a kind of Romeo and Juliet overlay, as our main characters find themselves trying to balance fate, duty and love. In addition, it’s a film that definitely has overtones from Western film sensibilities. It might be a little hard to follow at first, but if you stick with it, you’ll be well rewarded.

From there we move to 2011 and Hanna, directed by Joe Wright and starring Saoirse Ronan in the title role. This film is lodged in the present, with some of the fairy-tale elements coming from its overall structure. There are also a couple of scenes which explore it a little more overtly.

This film was the basis for the Amazon Prime TV series of the same name.  The TV show, of course, had to run a slightly different story arc, because it has to sustain the basic setup over several years. I think the series did manage to do it while remaining faithful to the basic premise. Some characters had to naturally change to make this possible. But I do think it works. What say you?

COMING ATTRACTIONS: 

In our next episode, we look at a pair of films where, for lack of a better term, Alternate History is going on. In those histories, a few iconic people get to meet one another. First is Insignificance, from 1985 and directed by Nicholas Roeg. From there it’s on to One Night in Miami… a 2020 film directed by Regina King. By the end of these films, you wish all of the events depicted had actually happened! Join us, won’t you?

Reel 9: SorkinFest Part IV–The Credited Rewrites

We’re closing in on the end of SorkinFest as we get to Part 4 of our five-part series looking at the work of Aaron Sorkin. And this time around we’re looking at a couple of films that Sorkin had a public hand in writing–or, more accurately, re-writing: 1993’s Malice, starring Nicole Kidman and Alec Baldwin, and Moneyball, the 2011 film starring Brad Pitt and Philip Seymour Hoffman. 

These two films couldn’t be more different in their subject matter or their approach to storytelling, but Aaron Sorkin has a few tricks up his sleeve that have you realizing that, even when he isn’t the primary writer, he’s going to manage to put his stamp on the film anyway. 

NOTE: I (Claude) accidentally put in the code for an older episode in the space below. My apologies if you were confused.

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