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Thread: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

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  1. #1
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    Default Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

    Quote Originally Posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Post


    apologies for the split thread but the reviews for Tinker TSS are wonderful!

    Telegraph
    Calum, Anna and others commented on this on another thread, but I think it merits its own.

    I saw Tinker Tailor... last night. It is absolutely absorbing, mesmerising and a treat for the eyes - unusual hypnotic direction, haunting details, a grainy, washed out look that makes the film look as if it was made in the 70s let alone set then. What the TV series had going for it in terms of the time to work out the story in a leisurely way, the film makes up for in cinematic intensity. Couple of quibbles: Ricky Tarr (Tom Hardy) is a bit too glam and engaging; and Gary Oldman's voice... well he claims to have sought to escape the Alec Guinness shadow, but he seems vocally to be doing a Guinness impression most of the time (yes, most of the time - his accent is a bit variable), with those big owlish glasses too.

    But it's very good nonetheless. A film to lose yourself in for 2 hours in a darkened cinema one rainy autumn afternoon....



    EDIT: I don't think I've ever seen a film that scores 100% on this website which collates significant press criticism and evaluates it rather crudely but accurately in my experience: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/tink...r_soldier_spy/
    "The isle is full of noises... Sounds, and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not"
    The Tempest, Act III scene 2 ll 148-9

  2. #2
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    I can't get to the cinema now but will look out for a DVD in due course. I laboriously put the TV production onto video, week by week and this is still clear to me. Almost every part seemed to have ideal casting and Hywell Bennett's Ricky Tar had a sly sinister edge to him that would be hard to match IMO. And I absolutely love Alec Guinness in almost everything he did but this is what I remember him by.

  3. #3
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    Thanks Caliban, can't wait. I've just re-read the book - Le Carré's prose is just superb.

    I find it impossible, sitting on the 205 bus back to Paddington at the end of my trips to London, not to think as the bus drives along Sussex Gardens of Smiley sitting in his seedy hotel room, working through the files.

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Anna View Post
    haven't you ever seen him in his Usherette's uniform?

    Rumbled. Yes, I'm yours for a choc-ice and a Kia-Ora (as you've probably heard)




    Quote Originally Posted by Richard Tarleton View Post
    Thanks Caliban, can't wait. I've just re-read the book - Le Carré's prose is just superb.

    I find it impossible, sitting on the 205 bus back to Paddington at the end of my trips to London, not to think as the bus drives along Sussex Gardens of Smiley sitting in his seedy hotel room, working through the files.
    I cycled down part of Sussex Gardens on my way home after the film last night! I'd forgotten that's the setting in the book (in the film it's a Dickensian-looking place in the rather improbable shadow of St Paul's (digitally superimposed, I thought)... )
    "The isle is full of noises... Sounds, and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not"
    The Tempest, Act III scene 2 ll 148-9

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    I shall certainly go and see it, but without the tension of not being sure who the mole was till right near the end, it will be a rather different experience from watching the TV version.

  6. #6
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    I feel that the 'suspense' of the TV version is now compromised by Ian Richardson's casting as Bill Haydon. Post-Urquart, he's now expected to be the villain.

    This film has had such good reviews, that I fear I can only be disappointed. Nevertheless, I shall go.

  7. #7
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    Me too - I think the BBC production was one of the highlights of the last half century - I regularly revisit it on DVD. I thought all the suspects were perfectly cast and thought Richardson was superb! Sir Alec well even the way he cleaned his specs.............................

  8. #8
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    I want to see the film BUT I have to finish watching the fantastic 1979 TV series again. I bought the set today and Smiley's People. Alec Guinness is wonderful, Ian Richardson is hilarious and Beryl Reid had me sobbing just as she did 32 years ago. I have just watched Episodes 1 to 4 in succession (I meant to spread it out, one a night, but it is so watchable). Am I right in thinking the first broadcast of TTSS was interrupted by a BBC strike and they feared there might be national riots?

  9. #9
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    I saw Tinker Tailor... last night.
    was that the BFI premiere then? I hadn't appreciated you moved in such circles.

  10. #10

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    thanks Caliban .... lucky you ... i have conspired with swmbo to get tickets immediately it is shown here ...
    "Society is indeed a contract. It is a partnership in all science; a partnership in all art; a partnership in every virtue, and in all perfection. As the ends of such a partnership cannot be obtained in many generations, it becomes a partnership not only between those who are living, but between those who are living, those who are dead, and those who are to be born.”

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