Film Review
Although Frederick Forsyth's novel
The
Fourth Protocol proved to be a worldwide bestseller, the author
had some difficulty bringing it to the big screen. He was adamant
that his friend Michael Caine would take the lead role, since this had
many similarities with the Harry Palmer character Caine had
immortalised in films such as
The Ipcress File (1965).
In the end, Forsyth and Caine founded their own production company
(Fourth Protocol) but had an uphill struggle raising the 8 million
pound budget. George Axelrod was hired to write the screenplay,
although Forsyth took over this responsibility and pretty well wrote
the script solo. The film was directed by John Mackenzie, who had
previously scored a major success with
The Long Good Friday (1980), which
is now considered a seminal British gangster film. For the second
lead, the Soviet agent Petrofsky, the relatively unknown actor Pierce
Brosnan was chosen - this was to be his feature debut in what would be
a high-profile film career.
The Fourth Protocol offers a
chillingly realistic depiction of the worlds of espionage and
international terrorism, and its central concept has a far greater
resonance today than when the
film was first seen. The film's portrayal of the ease with which
a nuclear bomb can
be smuggled into the country and assembled is factually based and
provides considerable pause
for thought. Forsyth's screenplay is as compelling as his novel,
enlivened by its well-drawn characters and a well-honed plot that
slowly builds to a
satisfying climax, even if some of the plot contrivances are a little
hard to swallow.
This is a great film for Michael Caine fans - the actor turns in one of
his most convincing and humane performances yet, assisted by Forsyth's
terse, to-the-point dialogue. Unlike Harry Palmer, who often came
across as a caricature of a British secret service agent, Caine's
character in the
The Fourth Protocol
looks so real that you can almost smell his social security
number. The biggest surprise on the acting front is Pierce Brosnan - he
makes such a sinister villain, deliciously dark and sexy, that you
wonder by what cruel trick of fate he ended up having to play bland
heroes.
The distinguished supporting cast includes the great Irish stage actor
Ray McAnally and Ian Richardson, who would shortly afterwards find
national fame as
Francis Urquhart in the BBC TV series
House
of Cards. On the strength of its performances alone,
The Fourth Protocol should be
considered one of the most gripping spy thrillers of the 1980s.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
During the Cold War, the head of the KGB, General Govershin, devises a
plan that will strike a potentially fatal blow to NATO, by breaching
the Fourth Protocol of the recent nuclear weapons treaty. He
sends his top agent Major Valeri Petrofsky to England where he will
assemble a small nuclear bomb and detonate it at an American
airbase. Govershin's gamble is that the nuclear explosion
will so fiercely inflame British public opinion that the Americans will
be forced to close their airbases on British soil, weakening NATO's
power in Europe. Meanwhile, MI5 agent John Preston manages to get
on the wrong side of his new boss, Brian Harcourt-Smith, who does not
approve of his unorthodox methods. Demoted to monitoring
suspicious activity in the UK's airports and ports, Preston sees an
opportunity to redeem himself when he thwarts the smuggling of a
component of a nuclear bomb detonator. Harcourt-Smith is
unimpressed and merely has him dismissed for insubordination.
Encouraged by a senior MI5 officer, Sir Nigel Irvine, Preston continues
his investigation and soon manages to piece together the Soviet
plot. Unless he can find Petrofsky and prevent him from
detonating the bomb, Preston can say goodbye to his pension - and a
large chunk of middle England...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.