As with my review yesterday of "The Girls with the Dragon Tattoos," this
is really a review of two versions of the same story. In yesterday's
episode of Unasked-For Film Reviews For An Audience Who Will Probably
Never Watch The Films Being Reviewed :-), I came down firmly on the side
of the older version being better. In today's episode, strangely enough,
I'm swinging the other way.

And that is nigh unto heresy, if you know the original BBC TV series
made of "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy" in 1979. That version starred Sir
Alec Guinness as George Smiley, and his performance in it is often
referred to (and rightly) as one of the pinnacles of his illustrious
career. So my preference for this new version should in no way be
construed to mean that I prefer Gary Oldman's performance to Alec
Guinness' in the same role. That's not the issue. It's that the
STORYTELLING of the new version of the film is better than the
storytelling of the older version. It's simply a better movie, on almost
all counts.

The reason for this IMO is that they hired Tomas Alfredson (the Swedish
director of "Let The Right One In") to helm the making of this movie
version, and hired two talented writers (one of whom died during the
production) to pen it. And the three of them done good. Real good. With
only 127 minutes in which to tell their story, they did a better job
than the best BBC directors and writers of their era were able to do
with the same story in seven hours.

The plot is as classic an example of Cold War Spy Storytelling now as it
was when John Le Carré penned it. "Control" (head of the British
Secret Service, played in this film by John Hurt) learns to his dismay
that there may be a mole in the top echelons of the "Circus." He sends
an operative to Budapest to find out who it is, but that operation turns
disastrously and publicly sour, and Control is forced to resign, taking
his top aide George Smiley with him. Fast forward a couple of years, and
the notion that there is a mole resurfaces. Control has died and the
four people he suspected are now in charge of the Circus, so Smiley is
brought out of retirement to find out who the mole might be. The twists
and turns are exquisite, Smiley personifying a master spy more akin to
Bobby Fischer than James Bond. It's been many years since I last read
the book, so I can't say for sure, but there is a possibility that this
latest retelling of the story may be better than le Carré's original
novel.

It should be mentioned that Gary Oldman's performance in this film is as
understated as many of his past performances have been overstated, and
that's a good thing. But the bottom line for me yet again -- a growing
trend in TV and television -- is that if you want a classic British
story told well, hire a Swede to tell it. Tomas Alfredson even looks
like George Smiley.

 
[http://www4.pictures.zimbio.com/gi/Tomas+Alfredson+2011+AFI+European+Un\
ion+Showcase+iMt4YFCCaSKl.jpg]
http://www4.pictures.zimbio.com/gi/Tomas+Alfredson+2011+AFI+European+Uni\
on+Showcase+iMt4YFCCaSKl.jpg
<http://www4.pictures.zimbio.com/gi/Tomas+Alfredson+2011+AFI+European+Un\
ion+Showcase+iMt4YFCCaSKl.jpg>


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