We begin in a dark room illuminated by a
single, dim light. An old man crouches behind what appears to be either a desk
or a small table. A younger man sits in front and to the left of the desk.
Stacks of files and papers surround the old man. The desk is heavily cluttered.
Ashtrays over-flow with mashed down cigarettes.
“Trust no one, Jim,” the old man says.
“Especially not in the main stream.” In front of him is a chessboard. The
pieces have pictures of five faces taped to them. He aligns the pieces at the
front of the desk. “There’s a rotten apple, Jim, and we have to find it.”
The five faces are those of top agents in
MI6 (the CIA for Great Brittan), also known as the Circus. The old man is
Control (John Hurt), and
he believes one of these five is a mole for the Russians. This belief has
become an obsession. An obsession that Control believes he is at the verge of
resolving. He secretly sends Jim Prideaux (Mark Strong) to Hungry in hopes
that the final piece to his troubling puzzle is there.
Unfortunately, the mission Control sends
Prideaux on is botched, forcing Control to retire and take his right-hand man, George
Smiley (Gary Oldman), with him. The internal investigation is forgotten until
Minister Lacon (Simon McBurney) is approached by an AWOL spy about a mole at
the top of Circus. Sadly, by this point Control has passed away, and the
knowledge he has goes along with him. In desperation, Lacon decides to bring
Smiley out of retirement to lead a team to spy on the spies in MI6.
A question lingered in my mind as I
watched this film: is it based on a true story? Only after the film was over
and the credits began without noting any such real-world events did I realize
the answer to my question. Tinker Tailor
Soldier Spy (127 minutes) is set in 1973, at the peak of the Cold War with
the Soviet Union, and is an impressive portrayal of the same-named novel by John le Carré.
The reason I wondered if it were based on
a true story is because of the realism. These appeared to be real agents, in a
real organization, following real-world laws of physics. Other spy movies tend
to have completely fake and unrealistic plots with the carved-chin cool and
confidant heartthrob who is mankind’s only hope for survival. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy has no such
heartthrob. The majority of the agents portrayed in this film are rather old
and those that are young are the agency’s scalp hunters and pawns.
The agency is presented realistically.
The women in the film only work secretary positions and are frequently flirted with
by the gentlemen in the film. This is a very probable environment in 1973. The
dim light and smoky environment give the film a dark atmosphere.
Tinker
Tailor Solder Spy is a brilliant orchestration of
espionage, betrayal and treason of the highest degree. It also accounts affairs
and forbidden love, as well as the twisted emotions that result. This is a
world where no one trusts anyone, and tensions are always on edge. Even though
this is a spy movie, the plot is very thick. This is one of those movies you
have to watch twice in order to fully understand and appreciate. The violence
is brutal in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy.
In one scene, a woman gets shot in the head while nursing her infant. In
another, a spy witnesses domestic abuse while observing a Russian agent.
The
only gripe I would really have is the flashbacks. They occur in this movie
without warning. It is very easy to think you’re watching the current time when
it is actually from the past. This can throw you off and confuse you while
trying to follow the plot. As said earlier, this is a movie you’ll probably need
to see twice. But it is definitely worth the second view.
I
thoroughly enjoyed the portrayal of George Smiley by Gary Oldman. The closed
off manner of his interactions told of a man who had endured countless years of
pain. He only speaks when he has to, and when he does it’s powerful.
The
screenplay, written by Bridget O’Conner and Peter Straughan, is skillfully crafted. O’Conner actually
passed away from cancer before the movie went into production. A dedication is
made to her at the end of the film, before the credits. The director, Tomas
Alfredson (Let the Right One In) does
an outstanding job of bringing the smoke-clouded and checker-walled world of
the Circus to life.
“Tinker
Tailor Soldier Spy” is rated R (due to violence, language and sexuality).