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| #Post#: 691-------------------------------------------------- | |
| TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY (1979) | |
| By: agate Date: March 20, 2015, 11:19 am | |
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| TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY (1979) | |
| This TV adaptation of a John LeCarr� story was first shown in | |
| 1979, and that is approximately when I first saw it. I've | |
| recently revisited it, partly to see what it was about it that I | |
| liked, or whether I'd remembered it right. As I watched it this | |
| second time, I realized that my first viewing had been in black | |
| and white�quite a different experience from color, in this case. | |
| Alec Guinness�s performance as George Smiley, former head of the | |
| �Circus� (British Secret Intelligence Service), is stunning. | |
| According to the movie critic Roger Ebert, | |
| [quote]In the real world, where his real name is David Cornwall, | |
| [LeCarr�] was one of the British spies who was betrayed by Kim | |
| Philby, the notorious MI6 operative who was a double agent for | |
| the Soviets.[/quote] | |
| With that information and a bit more at hand, I can say that | |
| this story is a fictional version of some of Cornwall/LeCarr�s | |
| experiences in connection with the exposure of a mole in MI6, | |
| probably here known as the Circus. | |
| Spy stories usually bore me because their plots are too | |
| intricate to follow. Or, rather, I lose interest in following | |
| them. But this story is an exception. It touches on the | |
| rottenness at the roots of the whole espionage system. | |
| And it is very elegantly presented, with each of the six | |
| episodes framed by somber music introducing and closing them. | |
| The opening involves a starkly simple photo of a matryoshka or | |
| nesting Russian doll. This seems to be a typical matryoshka�a | |
| woman�s figure, and each nesting doll as we come to it is | |
| identical in appearance except that of course it is smaller. The | |
| last one, however, which lacks facial features. It has been left | |
| blank, almost as if it is up to the viewers to insert them. Or | |
| to imagine them. | |
| Smiley is the most enigmatic and hard-to-decipher of the | |
| "operatives" who are at the center of this story. In the end it | |
| is Smiley who �wins� even though we sense that his life is often | |
| in danger during the course of the action. We want Smiley to | |
| win, for there is about him a decency that the others often | |
| lack. | |
| Then there is the concluding part of each of the six | |
| episodes�harder to account for: a choirboy�s singing of a | |
| liturgical piece. I wondered all along what it was doing there | |
| since none of the characters is devout, and religion isn�t | |
| mentioned. | |
| Or is it? Jim Prideaux, who was very nearly killed during an | |
| action that went bad in Czechoslovakia, is told to �get lost� | |
| and is eventually found, coaching at a boys� school. He may be | |
| about to lose his job, and he has been made lame by the injuries | |
| he suffered at the time of the incident, but he is still the | |
| honorable agent even though he apparently broke under | |
| interrogation by the Soviets. | |
| When this is revealed to George Smiley, he seems to understand. | |
| It becomes clear that a �good� spy is one who values human life. | |
| Contrasted with the enemy�s way of operating, which is to insist | |
| ruthlessly that the end justifies the means and that life is | |
| therefore cheap, expendable, the honorable British spy may be | |
| fighting a losing battle, but will go on fighting nonetheless. | |
| This is not a classic good versus evil tale, or at least that�s | |
| not how I see it. Two political systems are pitted against each | |
| other�the capitalist system of Britain and the communist | |
| ideology of the Soviet bloc�but LeCarr� is far from simplistic | |
| about this opposition. He sees the decay that is at the root of | |
| much of British tradition. He suggests (strongly) that the | |
| time-honored convention of sending upper-class boys to all-boy | |
| schools promotes an old-boy network rife with favoritism and | |
| homosexual attachments that aren't always benign. | |
| Backing this school system up, of course, is the Church of | |
| England, with compulsory chapel for the boys, who are | |
| indoctrinated with the impressive, possibly overwhelming (to an | |
| impressionable child) Anglican aesthetic. For sensitive boys who | |
| want to believe in the fundamental improving qualities of the | |
| Christian ethos, such as the boy who attaches himself to | |
| Prideaux, their lives will be molded forever by this schooling. | |
| In a scene near the end, this boy is reading from Scripture and | |
| stumbles over the old verb form �shewed,�and Prideaux, who by | |
| now is probably aware that his temporary job as coach is about | |
| to crumble, nevertheless gives him the needed information so | |
| that he can proceed. | |
| Prideaux has done the honorable thing, the properly British | |
| thing. This is what LeCarr� seems to be saying in this entire | |
| story: There are (or were) still those in the intelligence | |
| service trying to do their job responsibly and honorably, and | |
| then there were those corrupt operatives, who would cynically | |
| sell out. | |
| It�s a very somberly patriotic story, worth watching for | |
| Guinness�s acting if for no other reason. Our final glimpse of | |
| him is a masterpiece of understatement, and sums up Smiley as we | |
| have known him in this story: withholding judgment, willing to | |
| hear people out, unemotional but not coldly so. | |
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