Pendant la guerre froide, les services secrets britanniques et soviétiques tentent de se déjouer les uns les autres en utilisant l'agent double Krasnevin, alias Alexander Eberlin, comme pion... Tout lirePendant la guerre froide, les services secrets britanniques et soviétiques tentent de se déjouer les uns les autres en utilisant l'agent double Krasnevin, alias Alexander Eberlin, comme pion dans ce jeu d'espionnage complexe.Pendant la guerre froide, les services secrets britanniques et soviétiques tentent de se déjouer les uns les autres en utilisant l'agent double Krasnevin, alias Alexander Eberlin, comme pion dans ce jeu d'espionnage complexe.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Avis à la une
British acting stalwart, Tom Courtenay, plays the very understated character of Gatiss, a rival British spy who distrusts Eberlin. Look out for appearances by Richard O' Sullivan, of '70s televisual fame in the comedy series, Man About The House. The audience is also treated to a few guest appearances by British satirist, Peter Cook, for once unaccompanied by his partner-in-crime, Dudley Moore. Cook plays a comical womanising spy, Prentiss, who delivers such sexist lines they would make a millennial audience wince. Discussing with Eberlin the fact that his latest sexual conquest is "Eine kleine raver", in her company, is one of them. Still, the film is, naturally, indicative of its time.
The action sequences in the film are gritty and the film has a suitably brooding atmosphere which is, ironically, sometimes offset by the rather vibrant costumes the characters wear, supplied by veteran stylist, Pierre Cardin. Furthermore, the cinematography by Christopher Challis is tactful and it is accompanied by the appropriately minimalist score by veteran Jazz musician, Quincy Jones, whose scoring work for Sidney Lumet's adaptation of the Le Carré spy thriller, The Deadly Affair (1968), I equally enjoyed. After the film's recent premiere on Blu-Ray by Powerhouse Films, I thought it was timely to unearth this nearly fifty-year-old curio. If anything, watch it for Harvey's performance alone. That is, if you can simultaneously support Farrow's frequently sickly and mopey character.
And although likewise flawed there are some great individual performances great shots of London/Berlin ( I was in East Berlin in 1980 and it didn't look or feel much different) that make it the perfect rainy Wednesday afternoon companion.
Note, as uneven as it is, overall I think films like this are a more enjoyable experience than current releases like the Girl Who Played with Fire or the Social Network that are more consistent; but consistently mediocre. But as always, YMMV.
This needs to be a paranoid espionage thriller. It's not thrilling. Laurence Harvey is playing the character too coldly. He needs to be scared or something or else the audience won't care. Nobody is rooting for him. I barely know what Caroline sees in him. The story is too stiff and so is the lead.
p.s. the ever so mod and swinging soundtrack music is by Quincy Jones!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesProducer and Director Anthony Mann died during production and was replaced by Laurence Harvey.
- GaffesWhen Gatiss comes to fetch Eberlin away from Caroline to go after the man in the photograph, a moving shadow of the boom microphone is visible on the wall above Eberlin and Caroline as he is putting on his suit coat.
- Citations
Sobakevich: I mean, if you want to turn this into a gun war, it's all right with us - but our reserves are closer.
Gatiss: Who do you think you are, Al Capone?
Sobakevich: Who's Al Capone?
Gatiss: He was a megalomaniac gangster who murdered anyone who got in his way.
Sobakevich: Really? Whatever happened to him?
Gatiss: He changed his name to Stalin and moved to Russia.
Sobakevich: I thought he sounded familiar.
- Crédits fousOpening credits are shown over a scene of someone moving a marionette by pulling on the various strings.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Berlin - The Swinging City (1968)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is A Dandy in Aspic?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Réquiem por un dandy
- Lieux de tournage
- Checkpoint Charlie, Kreuzberg, Berlin, Allemagne(Eberline drives up to in his red car, but turns around here)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 47 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1