The BBC’S 1979 seven part adaptation of John le Carré’s novel Tinker Tailor, Soldier, Spy, starring Alec Guinness, raised the bar and set the subsequent benchmark for the spy thriller genre. The BBC did such a swirling, masterful, magnificently epic job, that it’s little wonder that it’s taken 32 years to take the story to the big screen. Thankfully, the delectable team of Swedish director Tomas Alfredson (Let the Right One In) and scribes le Carré and Peter Straughan deliver in spades, because this is an absorbing, treat of a film.
It’s 1973, the midst of the Cold War and the British secret service is in a state of flux, riven by division, upheaval and change. To make matters worse, a botched snatch job in Budapest exposes the Circus (the intelligence service’s top table) to criticism resulting in Control (John Hurt) and right hand man George Smiley (an introspective Gary Oldman) being forced into retirement. Smiley whiles away his time in forced exile, lacking any meaningful purpose or direction, until a tip off from an apparent rogue agent, Ricki Tarr (the brilliant Tom Hardy), suggests that a Russian mole has infiltrated the Circus. Smiley, tasked with identifying the mole, recruits Tarr’s senior agent Peter Guillam (Benedict Cumberbatch) to help him untangle the web of deceit and deception that has enveloped the agency.
