Film Review
By the mid-1960s, cinema audiences must have thought they knew all
there was to know about the world of international espionage from the
James Bond film: exciting adventures in exotic locations, a concoction
of dry Martinis, guns, bikini-clad girls and fast cars.
Martin Ritt's adaptation of John Le Carré's
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold
gives a far more accurate portrayal of the life of a secret service
agent, a soberingly gritty depiction that could not be further removed
from the fanciful world of 007 and his colourful adversaries.
The film is notable for Richard Burton's vivid
portrayal of a world-weary agent and Martin Ritt's masterful
direction which tacitly avoids the familiar spy thriller
clichés. Burton was at the top of his game when he made
this film and deserved to win the Oscar for which he was nominated but
didn't get. His Leamas is not the smooth charmer portrayed by
Sean Connery in the Bond films, but a cynical, solitary
antihero who endures his squalid and precarious work as if through some
sadomasochistic compulsion. Leamas is in some sense a
throwback to the old film noir hero, a twisted ruin of a man whose only
satisfaction in life comes from the danger inherent in his job.
Although there is very little to like about the character, Burton
succeeds in making him sympathetic. He is ably supported by his
talented co-stars, which include Claire Bloom, Oskar Werner and Peter
van Eyck. Rupert Davies plays George Smiley, the character that
Alec Guinness would make his own in the BBC television adaptations of
Le Carré's novels.
This is unquestionably one of Martin Ritt's most inspired films
(although it was not a great success at the box office, presumably
because audiences preferred their spy thrillers shaken, not
stirred). Ritt started out in American television, before
he was blacklisted for alleged involvement in Communist activities
during the McCarthy witchhunts of the early 1950s. He is
perhaps best known for directing the gritty Paul Newman western
Hud (1963). For
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold,
that Ritt was influenced by the film noir thrillers of the forties and
fifties is apparent in the harsh lighting and unusual camera angles
that he employs in certain scenes to heighten the tension.
However, Ritt uses these expressionistic touches sparingly and if
anything tends to eschew stylisation for a documentary-like realism,
which perfectly captures the unique atmosphere of Le Carré's
labyrinthine spy novels. Few films have ever conveyed the
shadowy world of espionage as authentically as this chilling and
compelling work.
© James Travers 2009
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Film Synopsis
Having failed to get one of his key operatives out of East Berlin, spy
administrator Alec Leamas is recalled to London and is immediately
demoted to a desk job. Tired of the routine and deeply
embittered, Leamas resigns and finds work outside the secret services,
as an assistant librarian. His colleague, Nan Perry, takes a
shine to him and they start to have a relationship. Having
assaulted a grocer, the former spy is arrested and serves a term in
prison. On his release, Leamas is approached by East German
agents who offer him money in return for secrets. In reality,
Leamas is still working for the British secret service, his mission
being to plant false information that will convince the German
communists that one of their leading intelligence officers, Mundt, is a
double agent. Leamas's fake testimony will enable Mundt to
be disposed by his arch-rival, Fiedler. But as Leamas soon
discovers, even the best laid plans can go wrong...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.