Eine amerikanische Schauspielerin mit einer Vorliebe für Lügen wird vom Mossad, dem israelischen Geheimdienst, gezwungen, einen palästinensischen Bomber in die Falle zu locken, indem sie vor... Alles lesenEine amerikanische Schauspielerin mit einer Vorliebe für Lügen wird vom Mossad, dem israelischen Geheimdienst, gezwungen, einen palästinensischen Bomber in die Falle zu locken, indem sie vorgibt, die Freundin seines toten Bruders zu sein.Eine amerikanische Schauspielerin mit einer Vorliebe für Lügen wird vom Mossad, dem israelischen Geheimdienst, gezwungen, einen palästinensischen Bomber in die Falle zu locken, indem sie vorgibt, die Freundin seines toten Bruders zu sein.
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- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 Nominierung insgesamt
- Julio
- (as Juliano Mer)
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John le Carré's brand of espionage stories is often muddled. His world is a murky chaotic vision where questionable things are done which are often not the right course of action. Having said that, I don't understand why the Israelis would ever recruit Charlie. It doesn't make sense to me. I don't see Charlie helping the Israelis or ever believe them enough to really help them. They don't need the recruit to be Jewish, just not anti-Israeli. It might make sense if they pretend to be another terrorist group hoping to connect to Khalil. It's simply hard to understand the Israeli's course of action. Charlie's motivation for her journey is way too twisty. If one can ignore the questionable motivations, the plot is an intriguing twisty affair.
Nevertheless, I love the movie despite Diane Keaton (she does a good job, it's just I can't buy her in the role!).
Charlie, a little pro-Palestinian Jane Fonda wannabe, is kidnapped by the Israeli Mossad, humiliated, and offered the job of spying on Palestinian terrorists. She accepts because, um, because, well, the screenwriter says so. Okay, so there's a vague effort to make us believe that Charlie's in love with one of the Mossad agents, but since her attraction to him was based entirely on the belief that he was a romantic, dashing leader of the Palestinian `revolution,' there's no basis for her to continue being attracted to him once she learns he's a spy for the Israelis whom she hates.
I'm not sure any woman in the world is quite so easily manipulated as Charlie in this movie. If such a woman really exists anywhere, why on earth would anyone want her as an intelligence agent? Anyone who can be convinced to change sides that easily once can surely be convinced to do so a second time. You wouldn't dare let her out of your sight for ten seconds, and as for allowing her to join a Palestinian terrorist training camp, where she'd be out of sight and in the presence of her old friends for months on end, forget about it. It's absurd. If I were politically correct, I would call it a misogynist movie, but that would probably be unfair. There's no evidence that director George Roy Hill imagined Charlie's weakness and stupidity to be typical of all women.
It's a shame that Charlie is neither a believable nor a likeable heroine, because in every other respect THE LITTLE DRUMMER GIRL is a great spy movie. I can't say precisely how realistic it is technically, but it feels authentic at every turn. The brutal interrogations of the captured terrorist, and the intense multilayered surveillance of Charlie ring very true. There's no one-man-army James Bond crap here; the Israelis assign a full squad of spies to every job. More importantly it gives us the psychological feel of the espionage profession. The stock in trade of professional spies is the betrayal of loyalty and the abuse of friendship. Naturally, this does not make for likeable characters, however much one may admire the cause for which they work. Hill does not attempt to sugarcoat this; he shows it to us as it is.
Diane Keaton should not be blamed for failing to make her ridiculous character convincing; she is clearly doing the best she can, and quite probably the best that anyone could have. Klaus Kinski steals every scene he gets as Mossad master agent Marty Kurtz. David Suchet gets a fine small role as a terrorist thug.
THE LITTLE DRUMMER GIRL is a fine example of how outstanding supporting performances, dedication, and sincerity (you rarely find movies this honest in Hollywood anymore) can rescue a movie whose protagonist is badly written. It's not half the movie it could have been, but it's a good movie anyway.
Rating: **½ out of ****.
Recommendation: See it on video or DVD with your friends.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesSource novel author John le Carré appeared in this movie under his birth name David Cornwell and not as John le Carré. This film was the first appearance by le Carré in a filmed adaptation of one of his books. The second would be in Dame, König, As, Spion (2011) twenty-seven years later.
- Zitate
Martin Kurtz: Where would you have us go Charlie? Maybe you would prefer us to take a piece of Central Africa or Uruguay? Not Egypt, thank you, we tried that once and it was not a success. Or back to the ghettos?
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Details
Box Office
- Budget
- 15.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 7.828.841 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 2.632.719 $
- 21. Okt. 1984
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 7.828.841 $
- Laufzeit
- 2 Std. 10 Min.(130 min)
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1