Review: Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy

 

British cinema is apparently undergoing a renaissance.  Should you require evidence of this rather brave and ambitious assertion, you could do worse than to see Tinker, Tailor, Soldier Spy.  Despite not particularly expecting to, I loved this film.  Such grim, unrelenting greyness, such attention to 70s detail, such realistic characters.  Imagine, for a moment, a spy film made in America.  The lead actors would be attractive, glamorous, bronzed and lithe – and utterly unrealistic.  Instead we’ve got John Hurt, Gary Oldman, Colin Firth, the caverns in their faces deep enough to fall into: they look like middle aged civil servants, which is what their characters are.  With the obvious exception of the always beautiful Benedict Cumberbatch, naturally.

The characterisations are excellent, starting with Gary Oldman as Smiley, who does British-stiff-upper-lip-but-quietly-falling-apart-at-the-seams to perfection.  He runs the eponymous operation, trying to uncover a mole at the heart of the British intelligence service, with the help of aforementioned Cumberbatch as Peter Guillam and Trigger from Only Fools and Horses.  He fights against the blank bureaucracy of the ‘circus’, where a group of four men with the spy in their midst try to fight the cold war in half truths and whispered assumptions.  And Christmas parties where Santa is dressed as Lenin.  Particularly good – by which I mean particularly infuriating – is Toby Jones, perhaps best known as the voice of Dobby in Harry Potter.  Here, he exudes the sort of petty irritation that anyone who has worked in an office will instantly associate with the politics of that arena.

Then there’s the photography, which is lovely, despite never breaking from its colour palate of grey with a splash of brown.  70s London looks like 70s Budapest, a subtle comparison which draws in the central observation of the film, that when it comes to the cold war, both sides were far too alike.

Admittedly, this is a film that’s a bit difficult to follow at times, and left me determined to read the book to get more of an idea of the inner thoughts of Smiley.  The scene towards the end where Smiley realises who the spy is could have done with a Poirot style explanation round the fireplace – but maybe that’s just me.  I left the cinema feeling a prickling at the back of my neck at the thought of spies sneaking up behind me – Tomas Alfredson (the director) has created the world, and now we live in it.

Robbo’s Review: The Kings Speech

The King’s Speech

Certificate: 12A

Running Time: 118 Minutes

Director: Tom Hooper

Starring: Colin Firth, Geoffrey Rush, Helena Bonham Carter, Guy Pearce

Release Date: Out Now

Helena Bonham Carter, Colin Firth and Geoffrey Rush in The King's Specch

 

WHILST the bumbling, stuttering, upper-class Englishman is nothing new to Hollywood, or indeed to Colin Firth, never before has it been so well received by film fan and critic alike.

Hugh Grant must be kicking himself.

The film tells the true story of King George V (Firth), known as Bertie to loved ones, who has been afflicted by a stammer since childhood. He is only second in line to the throne when we meet him, but when his brother Prince Edward (Guy Pearce) abdicates and war looms, the pressure is on Bertie to overcome his disability.

The debilitating nature of Bertie’s stammer is brought into sharp focus by director Tom Hooper straight from the get-go. The opening scene sees the future monarch address a large crowd at Wembley, hand clenched by his supportive wife, the future Queen Mother Elizabeth (Helena Bonham Carter).

Bertie nervously fumbles and shakes as the grandeur of the occasion gets to him, and when he finally plucks up the courage to speak into the microphone, the feedback from the speakers makes it inaudible to the crowd.

King George V (Firth) battles to overcome his stammer in public

It is with this embarrassing episode that the Queen Mum persuades our Bertie to see a speech therapist – a bally Austrailian, what what! – called Lionel Logue (Geoffrey Rush).

You can already see how this is panning out. But while The King’s Speech relies on the same old period-drama and odd-couple tricks you’ve seen before, they’re seldom pulled off as well as this.

Whilst at its core the film is a heart-warming tale of triumph over adversity, it is littered with comic moments too. When Logue discovers that Bertie doesn’t stutter when he swears, he encourages him to curse up a blue streak that finishes with the poshest use of the word “t*ts” in screen history.

Rightly so, Firth’s performance is gaining a lot of Academy award attention stateside, as is director Tom Hooper. But it is the performance of the whole cast, with special mentions to Rush and Bonham Carter, that lifts this film from shameless crowd-pleaser is deserved Oscar contender. Hear, hear!

Robbo Rating: ****

By Alexander Robertson

Colton on Film: Let Me In

TO mark the official return of Hammer Film Productions, Matt Reeves makes the second film adaptation of Swedish author’s John Ajvide Lindqvist’s Let The Right One.

A tale of prepubescent friendship, the difficulties of uncertain emotions and hormones… with a vampire.

With the acclaimed success and prestige of the Swedish addition, it seems only typical that Hollywood would have a go in order to make a quick buck.

Yet, Reeves manages to create something truly spectacular. Let Me In doesn’t read Hollywood at all, proving a lot more graphic in terms of the violence and character emotions than the 2008 Swedish version.

Chloe Grace Moretz, the 13-year-old American star plays Abby, an undead blood sucking 12-year-old that befriends Owen, brilliantly played by Aussie actor Kodi Smit-McPhee.

The two young actors had a tough role holding an entire horror film targeted for adults, and which very much centers on adult themes. However, Moretz and Smit-McPhee, stars of Kick-Ass and The Road respectively, don’t overplay the struggle of mature emotions and, in parts, make them too believable.

Let Me In is certainly a frightful horror film, but don’t let that sway you from viewing it. In essence, it’s also a haunting love story.

It may not have excelled at the Box Office in it’s opening weekend when it was perhaps deserved, but without a doubt it is definitely the best horror film to come out of America in the last decade and is most definitely worth watching.

My Verdict: ****