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Smiley's People
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Directed by Simon Langton
A sequel to 1980's Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, this BBC miniseries once again focuses on British spy George Smiley (Sir Alec Guinness), once again called out of retirement, this time by the fussy Oliver Lacon Anthony Bate, to deal with a scandal in the British spy establishment. An ex-Russian general and British spy (Curt Jurgens) is found brutally murdered in a London park after frantically contacting the British Secret Service. His cryptic message: "Tell Max it concerns the Sandman." It seems that the general and his crony Otto Leipzig (Vladek Sheybal) were cooking up a scheme to blackmail the head of the Russian secret service, Karla (Patrick Stewart), when they were murdered. Smiley gathers his old associates (almost all the actors reprising roles from the first miniseries) and picks up the general's harrowing trail. He finds that Karla has been secretly supporting a daughter in the West through almost comically inept intermediaries such as Grigoriov (Michael Lonsdale). This information allows him to face off against his old adversary and avenge the humiliation he and his agency suffered with the double agent Karla had in Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. Made in 1982, the sequel has one major casting substitution: Michael Byrne instead of Michael Jayston as Peter Guillam, Smiley's faithful lieutenant. ~ Nick Sambides, Jr., All Movie Guide
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joem18bjoem18b Are there any old-fashioned spi ...
by joem18b in joem18b Blog
hasn't rated it.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"I was jogging the other day, listening to Filmcouch #97, and the boys on the program asked whether there are any movies being made in the old spy genre anymore. Pure spy movies, as I think they put it. Or are we now left with, through evolutionary Hollywood transmogrification, only action spies (Bourne), humorous spoofy spies ([More]
JymkataJymkata Re: Favorites
by Jymkata in British Invasion
"My UK Favorites:I'm not sure if you're only looking for movies set in the UK (with stiff upper lips & veddy,veddy Brittish accents), but these are my favorite productions made in the UKTelevision: The Office, The Singing Detective, [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Smiley's People almost pulls off the rarest of tricks: It is almost, but not quite, as good as its predecessor, 1980's Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. Its failure to be as good probably rests in its not quite having the crackling suspense of the original and a storyline not quite as good as Tinker Tailor's. Although director John Irvin adds some "action" sequences, this miniseries seems more stage-bound than its predecessor. Still, the miniseries offers rich compensations, including uniformly fine performances. First is the late Sir Alec Guinness reprising his role as George Smiley. Guinness and screenwriter John LeCarre, who wrote the screenplay based on his best-selling novel, infuse Smiley with a real disgust at the ineptitude and timidity of his supervisors (primarily Barry Foster, having a great time as the foppish, eccentric spy boss Saul Enderby). Smiley's People also has more humor than its predecessor, particularly with Michael Lonsdale. Playing a sad sack but thoughtful Russian blackmailed into betraying his boss, Lonsdale falls apart with hysterical self-centeredness. It's a funny, crafty performance that adds life to what could have been a dragging homestretch. ~ Nick Sambides, Jr., All Movie Guide
 

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Puhnner
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