In the bleak days of the Cold War, espionage veteran George Smiley is forced from semi-retirement to uncover a Soviet mole within his former colleagues at the heart of MI6.
Gary Oldman
George Smiley
Colin Firth
Bill Haydon
Tom Hardy
Ricki Tarr
John Hurt
Control
Toby Jones
Percy Alleline
Mark Strong
Jim Prideaux
Benedict Cumberbatch
Peter Guillam
Ciarán Hinds
Roy Bland
David Dencik
Toby Esterhase
Kathy Burke
Connie Sachs
Stephen Graham
Jerry Westerby
Simon McBurney
Oliver Lacon
Svetlana Khodchenkova
Irina
Roger Lloyd Pack
Mendel
Konstantin Khabenskiy
Polyakov
Christian McKay
Mackelvore
Zoltán Mucsi
Magyar
Péter Kálloy Molnár
Hungarian Waiter
Ilona Kassai
Woman in Window
Imre Csuja
KGB Agent
Arthur Nightingale
Bryant
Amanda Fairbank-Hynes
Belinda
Peter McNeil O'Connor
Fawn
Matyelok Gibbs
Mrs Pope-Graham
Philip Hill-Pearson
Norman
Jamie Thomas King
Kaspart
Stuart Graham
Minister
Sarah-Jane Robinson
Mary Alleline
Katrina Vasilieva
Ann Smiley
Linda Marlowe
Mrs McCraig
William Haddock
Bill Roach
Erskine Wylie
Spikeley
Philip Martin Brown
Tufty Thesinger
Tomasz Kowalski
Boris
Alexandra Salafranca
Turkish Mistress
Denis Khoroshko
Ivan
Oleg Dzhabrailov
Sergei
Gillian Stevenson
Listening Woman
Nick Hopper
Janitor Alwyn
Laura Carmichael
Sal
Rupert Procter
Guillam's Boyfriend
John le Carré
Christmas Party Guest
Michael Sarne
Karla (Voice)
Jean-Claude Jay
French Man at Residency
Tom Stuart
Ben
Harvey Walsh
Schoolboy (uncredited)
Director
Tomas Alfredson
Novel
John le Carré
Screenplay
Peter Straughan
Screenplay
Bridget O'Connor
December 25, 2014
8
The russians have placed a mole within the Circus (who is the british intelligence service, by the way). George Smiley (Gary Oldman), having been fired from the Circus, has now been rehired (secretly) to find the mole. He assembles his small team and begins to look into the matters. The possibilities are plenty, Percy (Toby Jones), Esterhase (David Dencik), Roy Bland (Ciaran Hinds) and Bill Haydon (Colin Firth). His old friend, Control (John Hurt), even suspected George himself of being the mole.
This movie is directed by a personal favorite of mine, Tomas Alfredson, who also created the vampire movie, _Let the Right One In_ (Lad den rette komme ind), as well as the amazing, _Four Shades of Brown_ (fire nuancer af brun). He is a master of creating a dark and mysterious atmosphere, and does exactly that in this movie. The pace is slow, the music is scarce and the colours are old and faded, perfect for a spy movie such as this.
Watching this movie is like watching a puzzle being carefully put together in front of you. It takes time to get it just right, and you have to look carefully at all the pieces. Good things takes time, and this movie understands that. The viewer has to watch carefully, because it constantly goes from the present and into the past. People who have died, are resurrected in the memories of the past, to help us construct the final image.
_Last words... this movie will not appeal to everyone, it requires the viewer to be active, watch carefully, and to appreciate the slow narrative. I will gladly admit that I have tried watching this movie three times before I finally succeeded in watching all of it. I am not normally a fan of these sort of movies, but I can always appreciate spectacular acting, and the craftmanship of a truly great director, and so, this movie becomes so much more than just a spy movie. It becomes a movie about people living on the edge of a war, trying to survive, trying to find the one threat that might break down the wall and destroy the british empire._