Share:   
 

Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (2011)

 Netflix (3.5)
 MovieReviews (1.75 by 4 users)
Thrillers
0 min.

R

Synopsis:
"John Le Carr��'s classic thriller of Cold War espionage follows an English spy as he returns to MI-6 under a cloud of suspicion. In the years since he was sacked by the agency, some suspect he's become an operative for the Soviet Union."


Currently 2 reviews and 0 comments.

"Soldier Spy Deconstruction"

"John Le Carre, the English author of the book “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy”, might have wanted to write an entertaining or interesting story but, the whole purpose of all his spy novels is to paint a skeptical and critical picture of the West. His British agents are anti-heroes, the antithesis of James Bond. From the beginning to the end, this whole film features dreary, drab and gloomy sets and interiors, whether we are in swinging free-market London or gray Communist Budapest. The important thing is that there is no distinction made between the gloom of the East or the West.

The notion of there having been a symmetry of culpability and morality between the Communist countries and the Western democracies, is a Marxian rhetorical relic out of the Cold War, which has been largely exposed as false and illogical. Freedom was missing from the Communist countries, which did not allow it's subjects to leave without an exit visa. These visas were difficult to come by and were only granted every three or four years, depending on the standing of the subject who was asking for permission to leave. Escape attempts were punishable by death. In Western countries, no permission is required for anyone who simply wishes to leave, for any reason, or for any amount of time.

Le Carres equivocating intellectual prevarication cannot hide the fact that there was also no freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom of association or freedom to decide which career one wanted to pursue, in Communist countries. The staggering poverty and squalor in East Germany, relative to the West, is also not mentioned or referenced in Le Carres Communist regimes. This whole reality is entirel hidden and must not be mentioned, in order to persuade the audience that Western agents are pathetic figures who lead frustrating lonely lives, in contra distinction to the impression one gets watching a James Bond blockbuster. In critical Marxist deconstructionist fashion, we are treated to the scene of a used Aston Martin, the kind that Sean Connery drove in Goldfinger, painted blue and towing the small outdated trailer-home of it's secret agent owner. Also following Marxist-feminist theory, we see the slogan painted on a wall, in the background, which reads “The Future is Female”. Most of the spies in our film are old single men swimming together in a dirty pond, for exercise, presumably.

This film starring Gary Oldman is a sleeper, despite Oldman's first class performance. It is truly difficult to stay awake through all the outdated Marxist self delusion and pessimism towards our Western society."
by Catallaxy on Sun Apr 29th, 2012
0 Comments | Reply | Report

"Take a pillow"

"If you haven't read the book you'll never figure out what's going on. If you have read the book you'll want to throw up, if you can stay awake. Gary O. is so intent on being subtle he almost disappears. Poor Colin Firth should have passed this turkey by. The screenwriters can't have read the book - more's the shock Le Carre' was listed as one of the producers. The rest of the cast were almost invisible due, in large part to the script and poor direction. Save your money, wait till it ends up on cable so you can at least change the channel!"
by dklwood on Sat Jan 14th, 2012
0 Comments | Reply | Report





In the Box Office


1. Marvel's The Avengers $55.0M Tickets
2. Battleship $25.3M Tickets
3. The Dictator $17.4M Tickets
4. Dark Shadows $12.7M Tickets
5. What to Expect When You're Expecting $10.5M Tickets
6. The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel $3.2M Tickets
7. The Hunger Games $3.0M Tickets
8. Think Like a Man $2.7M Tickets
9. The Lucky One $1.7M Tickets


Most Recently Discussed


Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (2011)
13 reviews, 7 comments.
The Devil Inside (2012)
13 reviews, 0 comments.
The Hunger Games (2012)
10 reviews, 0 comments.
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn: Part 1 (2011)
13 reviews, 0 comments.
Drive (2011)
16 reviews, 0 comments.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Pa ... (2011)
29 reviews, 0 comments.
Hugo (2011)
8 reviews, 4 comments.
Act of Valor (2012)
7 reviews, 0 comments.

» More Recent Reviews









Follow us on Twitter  ·  Facebook Page  ·  F.A.Q.  ·  About Us  ·  Contact Us

© Copyright 2012 Digimedia.com, L.P.  ·  Terms & Conditions  ·  Privacy  ·  Changelog