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  • Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy - Tomas Alfredson
    by Zettel at 21:36 on 17 September 2011
    Saturated with atmosphere: so much so that narrative, character and suspense struggle to keep their heads above water till eventually going down with all hands about half way through, leaving at least me disappointed and unsatisfied. This despite some superb, darkly evocative cinematography (Hoyt van Hoytema), impeccable design (Maria Djurkovic) and Art direction (Tom Brown); plus much needed musical enlivenment from Alberto Iglesias.

    I’ve seen this twice now: mostly because I was so disappointed first time and then given the curiously universal critical praise it has received. Sadly, and I was really looking forward to this one, my first impressions were borne out.

    Le Carré is a superb writer, greatly under-rated simply because of his dedication to the ‘spy’ genre instead of writing what some are pleased to call ‘literature’. But his chosen context is so rich in ethical ambiguity; conflicting personal, social and political beliefs, that one wonders what these high-minded, superior critics consider is missing from Le Carré’s world of loyalty and betrayal, conviction and cynicism, idealism and disillusionment.

    That said, cinematic adaptations of books have a chequered history: most commonly offending Goldman’s (William) Law – that a film cannot be true to the book; but must be true to the spirit of the book. The principle underlying Goldman’s dictum rests upon the profound difference in form between film and novel. This poses greater problems with some writers than others: and Le Carré is a tough nut to crack. His meticulous development of character and nuanced moral context is gradual and cumulative in its effect. Similarly his carefully structured plots are irreducibly and rightly driven by character rather than the other way round.

    Tinker Tailor therefore would always present a major challenge to anyone trying to film it. It has Le Carré’s most enigmatic character, George Smiley, centre stage but never more elusive; and an intricately layered plot assuming some familiarity with the hotbed of conflicting ego’s, ambition and Public School superiority that apparently dominated the world of MI5 – the ‘Circus’ of which Le Carré had personal experience.

    The rightly praised 1979 BBC version with Alec Guinness took the obvious route: 7 episodes with a 5 hour running time offered space within which to replicate Le Carré’s assiduous establishment of character and unwinding of plot. Indeed so outstanding was this version, even on re-showing years later, that it was a surprise to hear of the current release.

    So the dilemma becomes acute: how do you compress plot and character successfully into 127 minutes? It is so clear that Alfredson hasn’t that one is tempted to say you can’t. For me the only method with a chance of resolving this dilemma would be to return to the golden age of film noir and use the off-screen narrator to maintain pace and story. For some reason many film purists, just like the literary elite above, regard the film narrator with disdain. That seems to me a pretty dumb attitude: one thing among many, the great noir directors knew peerlessly how to do, was to drive narratives forward with pace, suspense and excitement.

    ‘Pace, suspense and excitement’: all crucially and culpably missing from Alfredson’s Tinker Tailor. His pace is not only funereally slow to the point of tedium at times; but it also plods metronomically on with no variation or cadence which are the heartbeats of suspense. I say culpably because with the time challenge outlined above Alfredson constantly indulges himself with slow tracks, zooms and pans, over-held close-ups on not merely impassive, but frankly vacant faces. It’s all very pretty and atmospheric but again and again I found myself distractedly thinking – “oh for God sake get on with it man”. One can only stay attentive for a certain number of slow zooms to a glass of scotch, a cigarette lighter (even a significant one) or a file, a ventilator and so on and so on ad inf. Add to this, self-consciously sparse, almost Pinteresque dialogue and even if you know the plot you’re having to scramble to keep up. And awake.

    One’s criticism of actors and performance must therefore be qualified by the misconceived Directorial approach to the film. That said: for me Oldman’s performance is as one-paced as the film itself: both in delivery and action. From the trailer and the way he looks, Oldman seems a promising Smiley – until he says or does anything. Portentous delivery of the most prosaic of lines with little or no variation in tone or inflection, instead of conveying a sense of inner gravitas, makes Oldman’s Smiley look bored much of the time. Alec Guinness’s Smiley expressed the profound world-weariness of a man who had seen too much of the worst of humanity in the worst of situations, but who knew there was a crucial duty required which perhaps only he could fulfil, if our best qualities were to be protected and preserved. Some of the time Oldman looks as if he’d just like to get back to finishing the Times crossword.

    Good film actors can without a word of dialogue or even perceptible movement, convey a sense of things going on behind the eyes: thinking, feeling, deliberating etc. Great film actors can even somehow, wordlessly and movelessly, convey a sense of what they are thinking. Of course they utilise context, setting and narrative position to assist them, but they draw us into their character, the film and the story. Guinness did this with Smiley: we felt his world-weariness and disappointments; shared his frustrations and setbacks; and empathised with his sense of unavoidable duty. I’m afraid Oldman is just blank: nothing happening; and though the externals of his acting are impeccable, he looks just right, he articulates the lines well - we remain uninvolved and detached from his Smiley from beginning to end. To be fair Oldman has done some very good work so perhaps it’s just a question of good actor: wrong role. Which is why talk of Gary Oldman and an Oscar for this role strikes me as ludicrous.

    Sadly it doesn’t stop there: the cabal of four characters who form the core of the film: Percy Alleline (Toby Jones), Bill Haydon (Colin Firth), Roy Bland (Ciaran Hinds) and Toby Esterhase (David Dencik) have so little time to say or do anything that they remain mere sketches with no sense of conspiratorial involvement at all. The Alleline of the book is powerful, pompous, overwhelmingly ambitious and territorial and this is germane to the narrative. Alfredson’s Alleline is therefore misconceived and as a result Toby Jones miscast. Both Bland and Esterhase are vital characters in the book: here they either just look long and meaningfully at the camera or break down to cue. Colin Firth, never bad, is here at his least convincing and Benedict Cumberbatch is mis-directed into an unconvincing gay Peter Guillam, George's strong right arm.

    By far the best performance in the film, perhaps not surprisingly is John Hurt as Control: the domineering, cantankerous, intemperate outgoing Head of the Circus who first suspects there is a Russian mole amongst the men around him. Tom Hardy is also effective as louche, insubordinate field operative Ricky Tarr through whom information about the mole in the Circus first flows. For me Alfredson missed the most promising approach of all: the one character in the Smiley novels, critical to their narrative drive, is disappointingly under-developed – Smiley’s wife Anne. Known to his enemies as his ‘weak point’ and intermittently unfaithful; love for and faithfulness to Anne lie at the heart of Smiley’s raison d’etre. Love as a form of necessity that survives even betrayal. Although Le Carré uses this drive in developing the Smiley character he doesn’t write Anne with any conviction. In fact he is another artist (I offered the same observation recently about Terrence Malik) who just doesn’t do women: or at least strong, sexually active, intimate women. He’s good with brainy older spinstery types like Connie Sachs (nice little cameo by Kathy Burke by the way) but stays aloof from the very feelings he uses to explore George’s motivation. This offered a real opportunity to add something which Alfredson has ignored.

    Tinker Tailor therefore flatters to deceive: its trailer is better than the film itself; again including shots not in the final film – I do wish they’d stop this disreputable practice – but for its striking atmosphere and however imperfect storytelling, it is worth seeing. As I seem to be saying too often nowadays – this Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is not up to its own publicity or the possibilities provided by the source material.

    Se also: http://www.zettelfilmreviews.co.uk
    Twitter: zettel23
  • Re: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy - Tomas Alfredson
    by Account Closed at 21:50 on 17 September 2011
    Ooo very interesting review - thank you. I haven't seen the film but would like to, I'll watch it with a more critical eye after reading this.

    Only one point I would quibble - that le Carre is an under-rated writer. I don't agree with this - I think he's very highly regarded as a literary writer. The only reason he isn't garlanded with prizes is because he doesn't allow his novels to be entered (he withdrew himself from the Man Booker International prize a few years ago).
  • Re: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy - Tomas Alfredson
    by Zettel at 22:05 on 17 September 2011
    Wow Flora - that was quick! I was just polishing.

    The film is interesting and worth seeing but perhaps I was hoping for too much.

    You may be right about Le Carre's reputation but if so I think the recognition has been relatively recent and may be connected with his willingness to do a couple of fairly extensive interviews with the BBC which opened him up a bit.

    I do wish someone had asked him about the Anne/woman thing though - I do think it is interesting.

    Thanks for the comment - hope you enjoy the film. Good luck with the book.

    Z
  • Re: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy - Tomas Alfredson
    by Account Closed at 22:15 on 17 September 2011
    I haven't seen the Alec Guinness version so I wonder if that will make a difference, I know to many people who have seen that adaptation, Alec Guinness is Smiley.

    I love the book though, which means my bar is quite high already.

    I agree that Le Carre's reputation has built over the years. I think he has a slightly Dickensian attitude towards women actually (I don't mean in the sense of being old fashioned, I mean he somehow renders them a bit like Dickens did).
  • Re: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy - Tomas Alfredson
    by Zettel at 01:15 on 18 September 2011
    The only problem with Guinnness as Smiley is that one couldn't quite see Alec Guinnness as passionately devoted to a woman even though in real life I believe he may have been.

    z
  • Re: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy - Tomas Alfredson
    by chris2 at 21:00 on 28 September 2011
    Great review but unfortunately you've confirmed all my worst fears about going to see this film (under pressure from other half), given my admiration for the TV version.

    Le Carré is a superb writer, greatly under-rated simply because of his dedication to the ‘spy’ genre


    Agreed, but I didn't think Tinker Tailor was one of his best-written, although the plot was marvellous. I'd say that 'A Perfect Spy' ranks as one of the best novels of any kind that I've read. Perhaps its being the most autobiographical of his works, and therefore possibly the most important to him, ensured its greater excellence.

    I'll probably go to see TTSS anyway!

    Chris

  • Re: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy - Tomas Alfredson
    by EmmaD at 13:28 on 02 October 2011
    Well I loved the film - although I can absolutely see why it could also be seen as you have, Zettel.

    If you love LeCarré you love complexity of a sort that film just doesn't do, so I was going in the spirit of seeing it as a film on its own - despite or perhaps because of knowing the book very well and loving it very much, and knowing the TV series well too - and as a film I really thought it worked. I always felt that the slowness was to a purpose. I agree that it did lose in terms of character-drive and the actually trail of WhoIsIt, partly because there's so little room for backstory in a film, and it's next-to-impossible to make a trawl of the archives, round which the book is built, into good film. But it gained in the expression of the times and the tensions visually - the Christmas party, for example.

    Oldman didn't catch the disappointed romantic who nonetheless keeps going because what else can you do? in Smiley - and yes, leaving Ann out was part of that failure. But I did have a stronger sense than I ever get with Guinness, that this is a man, now in his 60s, who spent the war under cover in Germany, who must have been physically capable of much action that he regrets, as well of as the moral and ethical betrayals and compromises.

    I do agree about LeCarré and women, though. I think it's perhaps simply a matter of a typically homosocial background, education and working life as a boarding-school-educated, motherless (although I've heard him tell two versions of what happened to his mother...) member of SIS with diplomatic cover; he just doesn't know what makes them (us) tick. But then he's not alone in that, among excellent male novelists. And he's wonderful with all the many layers of love and friendship between men (I liked the film making Peter Guillam gay. It brought another light on the crucial Haydon/Prideaux relationship, though I felt sorry for Benedict Cumberbatch having that haircut.)
  • Re: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy - Tomas Alfredson
    by Zettel at 14:02 on 02 October 2011
    Emma

    Agree about the haircut! Exploring the misogynistic male clubbiness of MI5 would have been a genuinely interesting spin. Just feel Guillam the wrong character to choose - too bluff, action driven, fixer.

    Also agree that Oldman is much better physically than Guinness for the part: gives a sense of physical not just intellectual power. One could imagine Oldman having the kind of deep passion for Ann it was always hard to envisage with Guinness. But it is an odd art film acting: for it to work for this kind of character you have 1st act nothing which Oldman did fine: but at the same time the mind must actually be full of ideas and feelings - which magically the camera will somehow pick up. I didn't get any sense of this happening with Oldman - as if he was so concentrated on the physical and the lines etc that there was no space to live the character inside.

    Also agree with much else you say. I enjoyed the film but had high expectations and was disappointed. On your on your point about the difficulty of getting the backstory etc across - just so. But if in this story, this drama the suspense doesn't come from the twists and revelations of plot where does it come from? Not much actually happens. I think Alfredson could have made a 'better' film but it wouldn't have had that superbly created atmosphere - that takes screen time to establish.

    Thanks for the comment - glad you liked the film.

    z