Un groupe d'espions américains tente par tous les moyens de retrouver un précieux document qui permet de prouver l'union entre les Russes et les Américains en vue de détruire les installatio... Tout lireUn groupe d'espions américains tente par tous les moyens de retrouver un précieux document qui permet de prouver l'union entre les Russes et les Américains en vue de détruire les installations nucléaires chinoises.Un groupe d'espions américains tente par tous les moyens de retrouver un précieux document qui permet de prouver l'union entre les Russes et les Américains en vue de détruire les installations nucléaires chinoises.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Lt. Grodin
- (as Sandor Eles)
Avis à la une
The story line is simple and I won't repeat it here. I will say that from the Highwayman's exit (near the beginning) to the final revelation, the film is non-stop. George Sanders is a bonus. Not absolutely necessary to the story but certainly an amplification of the stakes involved.
Ward is the key to the story (no pun intended). Rone is drawn in for his memory. The Whore, jaded and disinterested in anything other than his immediate existence agrees to participate for money... or perhaps something else.
Remember the opening scene in Mission Impossible (Tom Cruise version)? Phelps' wife is drugged and the race is on to get the information so she can be given the antidote. Contrast this 'we're in it together' attitude with the 'I'm in it for myself' attitude of the Kremlin Letter; lots of lies and deception, but completely self-serving. Not a platitude in sight. A refreshing 'honesty' for the new millennium... from a film nearly thirty years old.
Having seen several versions including the original theatrical release, television cut and the second theatrical release I can understand the misconceptions surrounding this film.
This film is extremely violent. The violence is not the '90's variety. You aren't shown it but you feel it. Bresnavitch's fear... Rone's 'matter of fact' attitude... Ward's 'direction'... The Highwayman's' resignation...
Oh, the method for Russian/English/Russian translation must be experienced. It might not be a first but I haven't seen it in any film since.
Finally I must add that there is not one likeable character in this movie... they are all far too human.
The film has suspense , tension , emotion , mystery and specially in its final a little bit of violence . Although the picture has various ingredients for entertainment , the screenplay is confused and complex , the plot has gaps and results to be sometimes embarrassing and absurd . This movie was made and released about four years after its source novel of the same name by Noel Behn was first published in 1966 and this was the first ever adaptation for cinema of a work by Behn . This exciting picture was filmed in four countries: Finland, Italy, Mexico, and the USA ; the scenes set in Moscow were shot in Helsinki, Finland . A number of characters in this movie are known by code-names , these include "The Highwayman" (Dean Jagger); "The Whore" (Nigel Green); "The Warlock" (George Sanders); "Erector Set" (Niall MacGinnis) ; "The Negress" (Vonetta McGee); "The Priest" (Marc Lawrence); "The Dentist" (Victor Beaumont) and "The Puppet Maker" (Raf Vallone) . The film belongs to spy sub-genre developed during the cold war and its maxim representation are John LeCarre's novels adapted to cinema in various films such as: ¨The spy who came in from the cold¨ (by Martin Ritt with Richard Burton), ¨Deadly Affair¨(Sidney Lumet with Maximilian Schell) and Russia House (Fred Schepisi with Sean Connery) . The star studded casting is important with known international actors but with a blurred writing they appear acting with no sense . The film was regularly directed by John Huston (who acts in a very secondary role) . Rating : Mediocre , though entertaining .
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesUses an artsy technique, considered innovative at the time, first used in "Judgment at Nuremberg" in 1961, where scenes begin in Russian and gradually segue to English, avoiding subtitles or dubbing into English.
- GaffesWhen Ward and the Whore talk in the bathroom at the end, the movie crew is reflected in the tiles.
- Citations
Ward: Now look, I think we've left no stone unturned. But let's not kid ourselves. If any of us is caught there's only a remote possibility we'd be mistaken for Russians. Keep in mind that close examination takes time, and that time they use on you could let the rest of us escape.
Highwayman: Don't be too quick to die.
- ConnexionsReferenced in John Huston: The Man, the Movies, the Maverick (1988)
- Bandes originalesLove Is a Many-Splendored Thing
(uncredited)
Music by Sammy Fain
Played on piano at the San Francisco gay bar
Meilleurs choix
- How long is The Kremlin Letter?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Kremlin Letter
- Lieux de tournage
- Helsinki, Finlande(Opening sequence)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 6 095 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée2 heures
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1