I was a big fan of LeCarre's from the get-go, with THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD, although I remember throwing the book across the room when I finished it. I later liked A SMALL TOWN IN GERMANY a lot, because by then I was familiar with the turf, both physical and internal, but I didn't much care for THE LOOKING GLASS WAR, and actually for similar reasons - I knew sources and methods, and I found the tradecraft in the book unconvincing. Then came TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY, THE HONORABLE SCHOOLBOY, and SMILEY'S PEOPLE (collectively, the Quest for Karla), and next, my own personal favorite, THE LITTLE DRUMMER GIRL. "Sooner or later, they say in the trade, a man will sign his name."
What did I think of the more recent feature version of TINKER TAILOR, with Gary Oldman? I have two contradictory reactions. If you didn't know the story, you'd get lost in the thickets. On the other hand, not knowing the story, you wouldn't realize what you're missing. Having read the book more than once, and seen Guinness more than once, I kept noticing holes in the plot - how did Smiley get from Point A to Point B, when they left out the roadmap? But again, if you came to the movie without preconceptions, it might slide right by, nothing in your peripheral vision. The biggest weakness of the Oldman feature isn't Oldman, of course: he's terrific. And the compression, eh, you can't do much about that. The real weakness is in the supporting characters, not the actors, but the parts they play.
Maybe it's comparing apples and oranges. Let's face it, if you give yourself two hours (the movie version), vice five (the BBC version), a lot of stuff is bound to fall by the wayside, but in the TV production, you get a very strong sense of Toby Esterhase and Bill Haydon and Roy Bland, and each of them seem solid, probable suspects - each of them having something to hide, of course - not to mention what a snake Percy Alleline is. That's really what I missed most in the picture, not the careful chess game Smiley plays, but the feeling he's up against a real adversary, or several of them, conspiring.
Obviously, it's easy to take shots at a movie when you don't think it measures up to the book, and there's the obverse, that you can make a better picture out of a generic potboiler than you can from a more heavyweight source. They're two very different mediums, anyway. If you've ever tried to do a screen treatment (I've done a couple), you find out first thing that you're in a foreign country, the environment is at right angles to a novel or a short story. But in either case, it seems to me that it's about gaining the confidence of the audience - maybe with a movie, the audience is more passive than a reader is, if your ideal reader is engaged, but you can't let them slip through your fingers, either way. They surrender their trust, and you have a responsibility to play fair, and give as good as you got.
I'm not, in this sense, complaining. I respected the Gary Oldman picture of TINKER TAILOR - I just wasn't invested in it. It's likely I was just too ready to find it wanting, compared to the longer Guinness version, which has a lot of room to breathe. And maybe that's the issue. It's the difference between total immersion and a quick, chilly dip in the pool. Both have their virtues. In the case of TINKER TAILOR (and SMILEY'S PEOPLE, as well), I think the stories are better served by a circular, more ambiguous method. It's a matter of pacing. Not the shortest distance between two points, or the most direct, but the long way around, a different rhythm, where time is elastic, and memory an unreliable witness.
DavidEdgerleyGates.com
I didn't see the newer version, but I am a big fan of the Guinness Tinker, Tailor. Sir Alec was a genius and the supporting case excellent as well.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Janice re the Alec Guinness version - so I never bothered with the new one. I loved "The Spy Who Came in from the Cold" with Burton and Werner - fantastic movie, although it broke my little teenaged heart when I saw it when it came out.
ReplyDeleteLove LeCarre's earlier books, not so much the later ones. Oddly, I just re-read "Call For The Dead", and "The Looking Glass War" and I agree with you, David, about "Looking Glass," a very awkward and ineffective tale. I guess you can't get it right every time. Love Alex Guinness and, like Eve, never bothered with the new film.
ReplyDeleteDavid: Get ahold of a DVD of THE DEADLY AFFAIR (1966, dir. Sidney Lumet) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0061556/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
ReplyDeleteIt's probably the best of the feature adaptions.
Thanks, David, I will make a point of it. I've always been a fan of James Mason.
ReplyDeleteIt's a bit of a jolt to realize I saw The Spy Who Came In From The Cold in a first-run theatre. I'm not sure I picked up all the subtleties, but I still recall that last scene all these years later.
ReplyDeleteI am a big fan of early Le Carre, especially TINKER and SMILEY'S. I loved the Guiness version and went to the movie with trepidation. Of course, it was inevitable that they had to cut, cut, cut but what stunned me was that they left out the cleverest part of the plot, leaving a huge hole. You hint at it but I will be more blunt: Why were the non-traitors at the Circus protecting the mole? The movie gives no clue, but the book explains it brilliantly. To be fair, it is complicated. I know some people who watched the whole tv version and couldn't understand that part of the plot!
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