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SPOILER
ALERT - SPOILER ALERT - SPOILER ALERT
The Simple version;
There is a Russian spy in British Intelligence. Retired Intelligence
Officer George Smiley is asked to come out of retirement to identify
the traitor.
Above: The original Smiley, Alec Guinness
Below: The New, Gary Oldman
The Background; the
early Seventies and the Cold War rumbles on. The Head of British
Intelligence, (known as the Circus) Control and his deputy George
Smiley are forced out after a disastrous operation behind the Iron
Curtain. Intelligence Officer Jim Prideaux has been shot and captured
in Hungary on a mission to reveal the identity of the mole. The name
of the story comes from the nicknames assigned to key players by the
outgoing Control; thus Smiley himself is 'Beggar-Man', New
Intelligence chief Percy Alleline is 'Tinker', his deputy Bill Haydon
'Tailor'. Roy Bland and Toby Esterhase, two high-rising stars of the
Secret Service are 'Soldier' and 'Poor-Man' respectively. These, then
the possible suspects for the betrayal of Prideaux and the Service.
Above; The secure room at the heart of the Circus, Control (John Hurt) is losing his grip
Witchcraft; a
high-level source of fantastic Soviet state secrets, 'Witchcraft's'
identity and information are jealously guarded secrets. The story is
set in the years of paranoia following the spy scandals of the
post-war years; England is no longer considered fit for the 'top
table' of Intelligence agencies and England wants her seat back. At
what cost?, supposing Witchcraft is too good to be true?. If British
Intelligence buys one more dud it is finished as a serious player –
we will never be trusted again. Delight at Witchcraft's potential is
widespread, especially among those climbing the ladder. Only two
people – Control and Smiley – doubt Witchcraft, smelling a rat.
Laconic
intervention; Overseeing British Intelligence is, inevitably a civil
servant (The real power in England since the stapler and the hole
punch were invented); Oliver Lacon. Lacon has got wind of the mole
from disgraced Intelligence Officer Ricky Tarr, himself a suspected
defector. Wisely, Lacon brings Smiley in to find the traitor.
Gary Oldman's Smiley is measured, studied and close to flawless
Smiley's friends;
Terminally ill, Control has now died. Young star of the Circus, Peter
Guillam and a retired Special Branch Officer, Mendel (first name
'Officer') are enlisted quietly by Smiley to assist him. In his
travels, Smiley also visits Connie Sachs, a former 'Registry Queen',
sacked from the Circus by Alleline for her insistence that a Soviet
Cultural Attaché,
Polyakov was a spy. A
former Duty Signals
Officer, Jerry Westerby was
on duty at the Circus the night Prideaux was shot. He called Smiley's
house and his wife Ann answered. Haydon then arrived at the Circus
and claimed he'd seen the news at his (gentleman's) Club. Smiley is
no fool – he knows his wife is unfaithful and this confirms her
affair with Haydon.
Above; Ricky Tarr, as played by Tom Hardy
Karla;
Ricky Tarr reveals
to Smiley that he was in Istanbul to investigate a Soviet agent,
Boris. To get to Boris, Ricky had an affair with his wife Irina,
herself an agent. Tarr fell for her and she offered him the name of
the Circus mole if Tarr could get her to safety in the West. The mole
was controlled by the most shadowy figure of all; Karla, a
high-ranking KGB officer and spymaster. (Smiley
has actually met Karla; many years before, when he interrogated the
captured KGB
officer in India. Karla's
nature was revealed by his insistence on returning to Russia in
disgrace, knowing that he would almost certainly face execution.
Karla, simply put, is a
fanatic.) Tarr sends a
signal to the Circus, but is ordered home at once. He then finds
Boris has been murdered along with the Circus' Station Chief in
Istanbul. Irina is captured by the KGB and realising he has been
betrayed and framed, Tarr goes into hiding. Smiley
sends Guillam to 'borrow' the Circus logbook for the night of Tarr's
message, but the relevant pages have been removed.
Above; Benedict Cumberbatch is Guillam, seen here in the Circus Registry
The
school teacher; Jim Prideaux was repatriated after a spy exchange and
sacked. Taking a job at a minor prep school he tends his wound and
bides his time. Smiley tracks him down and a bitter Prideaux reveals
he was in Hungary to learn the name of the mole. During harsh
interrogations by the Soviets, he saw a blonde prisoner, Irina being
executed.
Chicken-feed
for Caviar; Alleline ('Tinker'), Haydon, ('Tailor') Bland ('Soldier')
and Esterhase ('Poor-Man') have
all been meeting Polyakov, the Cultural Attaché
at a safe house. The idea
was to hand Polyakov low-grade material, known as 'Chicken-feed' to
convince his Soviet masters he is a loyal and active spy. At the same
time, he would hand over the 'Witchcraft' material. The reality?
- the
'Witchcraft' material was Chicken-feed and at least one of the
British suspects were handing over top-level British and American
secrets at the meetings.
Smiley
visits the tailor; Learning of the safe house from Esterhase, Smiley
arranges for Tarr to present at the Circus' Paris Station and claim
to know the mole's identity. This triggers a meeting at the safe
house, the panicked mole running to inform Polyakov and request the
KGB to eliminate Tarr. Smiley is waiting, of course and arrests
Haydon.
Dramatis Personae with the author John Le Carre
The Book; essential for any Espionage or Cold War buff.
Note to the reader; the above is a cut-to-the-bare-bones account
of the 2011 film, some events have
been twisted to fit and for clarity, but the gist is, I believe,
faithful enough. The book and classic Television play were more
complex and the TV version more faithful to the original. Almost
every reviewer I've read prefers the TV mini-series, but I feel many
have missed something; the film
version isn't trying to be original, however much Gary Oldman's
Smiley (deliberately) echoes the late Alec Guinness'. Rather, there's
a genuine, credible attempt to set the story into a structured
reality and identity that you might call '1970's drab Cold War'. I'll
try to avoid the horribly over-used word 'palette' here, but the
colours and tones are muted, Seventies orange
brought in as a sinister and
genuinely disconcerting reminder that the times I grew up in were
anything but the safety and stability of life with Mum. By
the bye, look out for a Le Carré
cameo, during the flashback Christmas party scene.
Above; John le Carre in Hamburg, 1964
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy is
a great film for people wanting cinema realism with their Espionage
story. The plot isn't easy to get through, but it's far from the
gordian knot of common
perception. Even intelligent audiences seem to struggle and my
inevitable conclusion is because films are just too easy to watch
these days. In the early days of cinema, plots were generally; Hero
meets girl, Hero gets knocked back, Hero wins girl – or something
equally simplistic. Then, as competition from TV and radio grew,
film-makers had to bring in gimmicks such as wide-screen and then,
with the politically-savvy audiences of the late sixties and
seventies, they turned to story as a draw. Compare the seventies
politico-thrillers such as The Conversation
or All the President's Men
and the Bourne
movies and you see the
difference; modern films draw the viewer along with action sequences
as the pull, as opposed to plot and dialogue. This
film makes you think,
you have to stay 'switched on' throughout or you just won't get it,
just the flavour. I've read arguments that the flavour is enough, the
essence is the same, but having a drink of Ribena doesn't mean you've
eaten a blackcurrant. Maybe
Ribena's better.
Above; Smiley with Peter Guillam
Smiley Vs Bond; Where Tinker, Tailor – indeed all John Le Carré's works scores is the realism. Both Le Carré and Ian Fleming worked in Intelligence – the latter for wartime Naval Intelligence, Le Carré for both the Security Service (often called MI5) and the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6), but whereas Fleming's creation was mainly fantasy and exaggeration based on an intelligence framework, Smiley's world is a dirty mirror of reality. Officers and Agents in the real World rarely carry guns or gadgets; if you are caught with either in a hostile country you must be a spy, up to no good. So too with Smiley's reality; on his side of the mirror agents don't drive Astons or drink Dom Perignon on luxury yachts because real ones don't. Perversely, the appeal is the opposite of Fleming's, the normally unattractive grey dowdyness of it all, the bleak outlook and haggard, awful people are compelling. Le Carré works hard to make them this way; they are either intelligent, unpleasant, loyal, treacherous, noble or vain, but they all have their motivation and their purpose. (If you want to take the Bond comparison further, see the forthcoming SPECTRE as both films were lensed by Hoyte Van Hoytema.)
Le Carré displays a phenomenal intellect and ability to paint his characters with the palette (aargh!) of memory, giving fictional characters the lives and attributes of real people. This is most evident in his books, but it transfers to the screen. My advice for people new to his works is to try the film before the books, but beware; the earlier Le Carré works are the best. Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, (Pub. 1974) The Honourable Schoolboy (Pub. 1977) and Smiley's People (1979) form a trilogy, known as the 'Karla Trilogy', A Perfect Spy (1986) is a fabulous, semi-autobiographical work, loosely based on his own childhood and strained relationship with his father; a criminal associate of the Krays, The Russia House (1989) is a late Cold War thriller with unforgettable characters, while The Secret Pilgrim (1990) gives Smiley a swansong and us a selection of short espionage stories that I found utterly beguiling. If I leave out any classics, it's because I haven't read them all.
So, if I had to rate this film – and I do, I'd give it...
Yes, 4 Rose and Daggers out of 5!
Dramatis Personae;
Gary Oldman is George Smiley
John Hurt is Control
Colin Firth is Bill Haydon
Mark Strong is Jim Prideaux
Ciaran Hinds is Roy Bland
Benedict Cumberbatch is Guillam
David Dencik is Toby Esterhase
Toby Jones is Percy Alleline
Kathy Burke is Connie
Simon McBurney is Oliver Lacon
and
Michael Sarne is Karla
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