Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (novel, miniseries, and forthcoming film to be directed by Tomas Alfredson)

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Actually, I vaguely recall reading it and thinking it was something Len Deighton would have written better, but I could be confusing it with another forgettable le Carre

sarahell, Monday, 5 November 2018 19:31 (seven years ago)

The Hon. Schoolboy is great!!

mick signals, Monday, 5 November 2018 19:41 (seven years ago)

id declare firth over richardson i think

lie back and think of englund (darraghmac), Monday, 5 November 2018 20:08 (seven years ago)

unfortunately firth is walking around with a huge giant pointy arrow sellotaped to his head say "obviously the mole is me"

mark s, Monday, 5 November 2018 20:15 (seven years ago)

aye the fact that he's the best known actor of any of the suspects and is the only one that has much screen time surely signals that a bit too much (id seen the bbc miniseries before i saw the film so it's hard to tell).

( ͡☉ ͜ʖ ͡☉) (jim in vancouver), Monday, 5 November 2018 20:19 (seven years ago)

aye the fact that he's the best known actor of any of the suspects and is the only one that has much screen time surely signals that a bit too much

yeah, that was one of the disappointing things about the movie

sarahell, Monday, 5 November 2018 20:25 (seven years ago)

I wasn't familiar with the story before watching the film and I didn't twig that Firth was the mole, although to be fair the main flaw with the film is that it spectacularly bad at making you care who the mole is.

Matt DC, Monday, 5 November 2018 20:25 (seven years ago)

ah its only the point in a very vague way

also toby tchoocallim has lots of screen time and has much more of a sign pointed at him

esterhazy is a dick on a few occasions and bland uh looks sinister in a few slo-mos so tbh it keeps it clean enough that way

lie back and think of englund (darraghmac), Monday, 5 November 2018 20:34 (seven years ago)

films i had recently seen toby jones in (reverse order):
captain america: the first avenger (arnim zola)
st trinian's 2: the legend of fritton's gold (bursar)
frost/nixon (swifty lazar)
w. (karl rove) (!)

so i knew it couldn't be him

mark s, Monday, 5 November 2018 20:48 (seven years ago)

(also i'd read the book abt 349852309457 times)

mark s, Monday, 5 November 2018 20:51 (seven years ago)

My god Firth and Richardson tied? I adore Ian Richardson as Haydon. Also I do really like Hepton as Esterhase. Actually one of the performances that brings the most joy when watching! I love how he adopts an English accent in TTSS but loses it for something vaguely foreign in SP.

chinavision!, Tuesday, 6 November 2018 16:14 (seven years ago)

And his insane shirts

chinavision!, Tuesday, 6 November 2018 16:17 (seven years ago)

Esterhase also really shines in the Bern scenes in SP. We see how good he is at what he does.

chinavision!, Tuesday, 6 November 2018 16:18 (seven years ago)

yeah hes a much better performance and role in sp

lie back and think of englund (darraghmac), Tuesday, 6 November 2018 16:20 (seven years ago)

firth dies better than richardson

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Tuesday, 6 November 2018 16:52 (seven years ago)

i like richardson's weird broke-neck wriggle, even though it's totally unconvincing -- it sort of suits the stupid squalor of the situation (including the fact that the air and the charm go out of the character like a leaky balloon when he stops being an actor on a stage)

mark s, Tuesday, 6 November 2018 16:56 (seven years ago)

Ok I really don’t really remember the broke neck wriggle. Have to rewatch.

chinavision!, Tuesday, 6 November 2018 17:37 (seven years ago)

three weeks pass...

binged little drummer girl over three nights and thought it was good

the absence of actual british government agents until the last act made the one representative character take on an air of imperial cynicism that you miss out in some of the other le carre adaptations because everything's coated in that cynicism from the get-go

mh, Thursday, 29 November 2018 19:14 (seven years ago)

one month passes...

Ricki Tarr, one of fiction’s great dirtbags

I have measured out my life in coffee shop loyalty cards (silby), Friday, 18 January 2019 04:09 (seven years ago)

one month passes...

Why did Alfredson's The Snowman get such terrible reviews? I thought it was okay--standard serial-killer stuff that at least looked good and maintained a kind of desolate mood.

clemenza, Monday, 4 March 2019 12:50 (seven years ago)

(Val Kilmer's pretty bad, I should add--and almost unrecognizable at first.)

clemenza, Monday, 4 March 2019 12:53 (seven years ago)

seven months pass...

According to le Carré, The Ink Factory now plans to do new television adaptations of all the novels featuring Cold War spy George Smiley — this time in chronological order. “That means that if you actually go back to the first big conspiracies in ‘The Spy Who Came In From the Cold’ you’ve got to consider how Smiley ages and how young he was at that time,” le Carré says. That would mean finding an actor who can play younger than the Smiley incarnated by Gary Oldman in the film version of “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy.” Le Carré says that his sons are interested in casting the British actor Jared Harris, whose performance they all admired in the recent TV mini-series “Chernobyl.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/12/books/john-le-carre-agent-running-in-the-field.html

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Sunday, 13 October 2019 03:24 (six years ago)

Shit, Harris would be a really good pick

omar little, Sunday, 13 October 2019 04:07 (six years ago)

Yeah I'd be down for sure.

Ned Raggett, Sunday, 13 October 2019 04:20 (six years ago)

omg yes plz

Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 13 October 2019 04:24 (six years ago)

Understandable if interesting that he mentions Cold since a full series sweep would have to start with Call For the Dead.

Ned Raggett, Sunday, 13 October 2019 04:33 (six years ago)

tbh if you're really gonna do this why not cast multiple actors a la The Crown

Simon H., Sunday, 13 October 2019 04:43 (six years ago)

Understandable if interesting that he mentions /Cold/ since a full series sweep would have to start with /Call For the Dead/.


a parochial british detective story with a spy thriller solution. they’d do well to start with it rather than forget it.

Fizzles, Sunday, 13 October 2019 06:49 (six years ago)

tbh if you're really gonna do this why not cast multiple actors a la The Crown


if this means we get olivia colman as george smiley i’m all for it tbh

NEWS Giant penis frog didn’t have a giant penis after all (bizarro gazzara), Sunday, 13 October 2019 07:18 (six years ago)

geraldine mcewan as the smiley in a murder of quality plz

mark s, Sunday, 13 October 2019 12:59 (six years ago)

she's only a bit dead

mark s, Sunday, 13 October 2019 12:59 (six years ago)

tought to improve on Spy Who Came In From the Cold film

just as the TTSS movie did nothing. noooooothing.

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 13 October 2019 14:39 (six years ago)

six months pass...

Just read The Traitor and the Spy. I’m told this is about as good as non fiction about espionage gets, and it was good! (but still nowhere near TTSS).

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Monday, 13 April 2020 15:30 (six years ago)

i just got gifted that last week! cant wait to read

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Monday, 13 April 2020 16:05 (six years ago)

I’ve probably already said this but Spy / Counterspy is tremendous and while almost certainly not completely true it’s totally gripping and “non-fiction” in a, uh broader sense.

Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Monday, 13 April 2020 16:26 (six years ago)

The Deadly Affair is unfortunately fairly weak. Don't bother with it.

― Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Monday, 15 August 2011 20:27 (eight years ago) bookmarkflaglink

this is fair advice

some nice supporting turns but they absolutely butchered smiley/anne and shouldve really left that whole strand out

steer calmer (darraghmac), Saturday, 18 April 2020 22:36 (six years ago)

two months pass...

Currently listening to the audiobook of a perfect spy, read fantastically by David jayston (Peter Guillam from the tv series)

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Wednesday, 24 June 2020 05:21 (five years ago)

Oh I forgot to update

I finished The Traitor & The Spy and it was remarkable. I had to keep reminding myself that it was true, it was so unbelievably tense and (sometimes completely absurd!) it truly felt like a novel. Incredible stuff, highly HIGHLY recommend.

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 24 June 2020 05:45 (five years ago)

Truly a ripping yarn!

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Wednesday, 24 June 2020 06:00 (five years ago)

not read it but when it was book of the week on R4 a couple of years it caught my attention, because normally their books of the week are quite dull and this was not!

calzino, Wednesday, 24 June 2020 06:38 (five years ago)

years back

calzino, Wednesday, 24 June 2020 06:38 (five years ago)

As great as was, I was even more spellbound by, earlier Kim Philby book.

Ben Macintyre's true spy storytelling is better than almost any spy fiction. Right up there with The Traitor & The Spy, I'd recommend his Kim Philby book, A Spy Among Friends and Double Cross: the True Story of D-Day Spies.

punning display, Wednesday, 24 June 2020 20:42 (five years ago)

As great as was, I was even more spellbound by, earlier Kim Philby book.

punning display, Wednesday, 24 June 2020 20:43 (five years ago)

If you can find a copy (it's probably out of print), I really recommend Take Nine Spies by Fitzroy Maclean. It's got a great chapter about Kim Philby and another really good one about Operation Mincemeat.

Greetings from CHAZbury Park (Lily Dale), Wednesday, 24 June 2020 21:05 (five years ago)

Michael Jayston I think you mean, who I am delighted to see is still alive.

Future England Captain (Tom D.), Wednesday, 24 June 2020 21:14 (five years ago)

the Donald Maclean book, A Spy Named Orphan is a not bad read. Not much tension in it though, because the British establishment was so numb-brained back then about their posho diplomats that if "one of theirs" got shitfaced on vodka and started singing The Internationale and drunkenly telling anyone in earshot that they are a traitor, it still wouldn't be enough to arouse suspicion. whereas Gordievsky had an absolutely sadistic, switched on, paranoid evil bastard, possessed with low cunning type boss who was suspicious of all his underlings, so he is on much less borrowed time.

calzino, Wednesday, 24 June 2020 21:40 (five years ago)

xp no i meant david jason ha

i was staggered when i looked up the reader. he must be 1000 years old but it's an incredibly spry performance! tons of accents. can you imagine your reaction as a audiobook reader when the author creates a character originally from france with a bronx accent? admittedly the american accents aren't great, but he sounds about 50.

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Wednesday, 24 June 2020 21:42 (five years ago)

he's 84!

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Wednesday, 24 June 2020 21:43 (five years ago)

looks like he's recorded lots of le carre audiobooks

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Wednesday, 24 June 2020 21:44 (five years ago)

He has got an excellent voice.

Future England Captain (Tom D.), Wednesday, 24 June 2020 22:00 (five years ago)


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