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IMDbPro

A Perfect Spy

  • Minissérie de televisão
  • 1987
  • 6 h 14 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,3/10
1,1 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Peter Egan in A Perfect Spy (1987)
John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy: Episode 3
Reproduzir trailer1:07
10 vídeos
11 fotos
Suspense

A ascensão e queda de Magnus Pym e sua carreira na inteligência. De encontros casuais com pessoas que serão importantes para ele no futuro a uma vida na Tchecoslováquia, Pym tece seu caminho... Ler tudoA ascensão e queda de Magnus Pym e sua carreira na inteligência. De encontros casuais com pessoas que serão importantes para ele no futuro a uma vida na Tchecoslováquia, Pym tece seu caminho pelo complicado mundo da espionagem.A ascensão e queda de Magnus Pym e sua carreira na inteligência. De encontros casuais com pessoas que serão importantes para ele no futuro a uma vida na Tchecoslováquia, Pym tece seu caminho pelo complicado mundo da espionagem.

  • Artistas
    • Ray McAnally
    • Rüdiger Weigang
    • Alan Howard
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,3/10
    1,1 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Artistas
      • Ray McAnally
      • Rüdiger Weigang
      • Alan Howard
    • 21Avaliações de usuários
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Indicado para 2 Primetime Emmys
      • 1 vitória e 6 indicações no total

    Episódios7

    Explorar episódios
    PrincipaisMais avaliados1 temporada1987

    Vídeos10

    John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy: Episode 3
    Trailer 1:07
    John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy: Episode 3
    John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy: Episode 6
    Trailer 1:04
    John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy: Episode 6
    John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy: Episode 6
    Trailer 1:04
    John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy: Episode 6
    John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy: Vol. 3
    Trailer 1:20
    John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy: Vol. 3
    John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy: Episode 1
    Trailer 1:13
    John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy: Episode 1
    John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy: Episode 5
    Trailer 1:06
    John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy: Episode 5
    John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy: Episode 7
    Trailer 1:01
    John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy: Episode 7

    Fotos11

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    Elenco principal97

    Editar
    Ray McAnally
    Ray McAnally
    • Rick Pym
    • 1987
    Rüdiger Weigang
    • Axel
    • 1987
    Alan Howard
    Alan Howard
    • Jack Brotherhood
    • 1987
    Peter Egan
    Peter Egan
    • Magnus Pym
    • 1987
    Jane Booker
    Jane Booker
    • Mary Pym…
    • 1987
    Tim Healy
    Tim Healy
    • Syd Lemon
    • 1987
    Peggy Ashcroft
    Peggy Ashcroft
    • Miss Dubber
    • 1987
    Andy de la Tour
    Andy de la Tour
    • Muspole
    • 1987
    Jack Ellis
    • Perce Loft
    • 1987
    Benedict Taylor
    Benedict Taylor
    • Magnus Pym
    • 1987
    Leonard Preston
    • Fergus
    • 1987
    Sarah Bullen
    • Kate
    • 1987
    Paul Daneman
    Paul Daneman
    • Bo Brammell
    • 1987
    Madeline Church
    • Georgie
    • 1987
    Peter Sands
    Peter Sands
    • Nigel
    • 1987
    Lesley Nightingale
    • Sabina
    • 1987
    Ian Thompson
    Ian Thompson
    • Police Superintendent
    • 1987
    Alan Cohen
    • Dance Band Leader
    • 1987
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários21

    7,31.1K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    10vicboyd001

    Perfection

    This is without doubt my favourite Le Carre novel and it is transformed to the silver screen with all the love and care one could wish for. I read a review on this site that seems to find the characters loathsome but I believe this misses the point. All Le Carre stories are essentially love stories and this is no exception. It is an accurate reflection of the period in which it is set. Betrayal is the key by everybody for the good of nobody. Pym upbringing is so close to my own that I find it chilling watching. Peter Egan is in his finest role and the late lamented Ray McAnally is unbelievably good. Even the smallest roles played by such as Andy de la Tour, Tim Healy and Jack Ellis are spot on. This cast is a Theatre Impresario's Dream. The Story should not be spoiled by ill informed description but suffice it to say it relates to a young mans slow but inexorable destruction and descent into espionage and treason. All my sympathies lie with Magnus Pym and his sole (non sexual) love for Poppy (Rüdiger Weigang-as wonderful as always. His only true friendship but also by definition another in the long line of betrayals. OUTSTANDING! Rent it, buy it. love it.
    chaos-rampant

    Causing a man to come back upon his house

    There is a brilliant lesson of sorts here about narrative depth, but you must know the book. Lavishly conceived by Le Carre as his magnum opus, the book is not any other spy thriller you picked up on an airport, it's one of the most tantalizing I know. The center is this, a mysterious man, posing as someone else, is holed up in a small room in Dorset overlooking the ocean and recalls a whole journey through life.

    The childhood stream-of-consciousness where he attempts to be Faulkner without conquering the madness doesn't work; so much else does. It has a strong sense of presence in several places from Greek islands to Washington, the center of control. It has a sense of anxious premonition about the extents of control. It has a narrator writing a memoir while efforts are underway to apprehend him before he defects to the other side. It has several relationships of ambiguous love defined in his imagination. It has a disappearance in the middle of the night and a strange encounter in a Czech barn.

    This, it just won't do.

    The most glaring fault by far is that they simplified the structure, making it a linear telling in one go (practically). The childhood segment works even less because when seen, it loses the shroud of memory. Seeing Rick is never going to be as powerful as sensing him move through room's of the son's memory. It still covers most of the narrative ground but we lose the premonition, we lose the mystifying sense of machinery set in motion long ago and discovered only when the ground beneath our feet shifts, we lose the depth of the betrayal of love. We lose it all and get a nicely groomed play. Its idea of profound emotion is actors grimacing in close up; I was stunned to see that it's from the late 80s, it looks 20 years older.

    I don't know if this is watchable fiction, maybe it is, but it's a complete catastrophe where it should go beyond it and give us lives, contact, sense, everything Le Carre strove to have it slide through portals of remembrance is reduced to the Cliff notes version.

    But something weird happens. To see this and to have known the book is to have images of something I've known as deeper, more elusive, more rending and this, for me, was to recall even the book as deeper than Le Carre managed with words. A powerful scene in the film exemplifies just this, when his wife, alarmed by events, begins to read an unfinished manuscript he's left behind, ostensibly a novel he's writing (he says), but she suspects it's more, we know it's more, it's the disguised recollections of a lifetime (this is completely flattened in this linear telling).

    She cries as she reads about betrayal as hope, as salvation, as an adventure for the imaginative soul, but oh how much more maddeningly full is the life behind the words. His wife, his mentor in the service, will they ever truly know? To know this is to realize how much we won't truly know in turn. There's only so much you can say and so easy to misunderstand. What Le Carre doesn't put to words around this life deserves its Tarkovsky film.
    9Jerry-Kurjian

    Like a moth to the candle

    This is my second time through for A Perfect Spy. I watched it 2 or 3 years ago and liked it. I like it still. It's natural that it gets compared to the beeb's other big Le Carre' series, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy. Tinker Tailor focuses on the "game" spies play; Perfect Spy gives us the other axis - what kind of person a spy is. There are a number of themes that these movies share, along with others in the genre.

    Ambiguity - moral, sexual, interpersonal - which creates a multidimensional space of true vs. false, inside vs. outside, love vs. responsibility. In a way, these characters are happiest when they are being treated the most shabbily by those they love and respect - "backstabbed" in its various nuances.

    The theme of fathers and father-figures is also important. One of the most intriguing characters in A Perfect Spy is Rick, the main character Magnus' perhaps ersatz father. Throughout the story he betrays and is betrayed. A rogue who always manages to climb back up the ladder when he's been toppled, who seems impervious to what others think of him, asks Magnus each time they meet, "Do you love your old man?" and never, "Do you love me?" Maybe it says this somewhere else, but A Perfect Spy is a love story.

    Another theme is that of malignancy. The nature of the business is to turn others - turn them against their government, against their friends and associates, turn them against their values and beliefs. In each of the Le Carre' movies I have seen, The Spy who Came in From the Cold, Looking Glass War, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Smiley's People, and A Perfect Spy, turning and being turned is the foundation of the tragedy.

    Finally, not so much a theme as an artistic touch - in each of these films there is usually only a single gun shot, or perhaps two shots bookending the story. Violence, torture, cruelty are always just beneath the surface. We see their results not as streams of blood or dank prison cells but in the the objects Le Carre''s characters cling to as they are ineluctably sucked down into the morass.

    If you haven't seen the films above, and you enjoy A Perfect Spy, you are in for a treat. I'd also recommend The Sandbagger series (Yorkshire TV), the 2nd and 3rd seasons of which begin to reach the level of this kind of complexity. The IPCRESS File and Burial in Berlin are nice, though light weight. For political intrigue try A Very British Coup, House of Cards and Yes, Minister/Yes, Prime Minister.

    If only a brit would set his hand to making The Three Kingdoms - there would be a film with intrigue and complexity.
    6BlissQuest

    The Perfect Idiot?

    I clearly missed the joke behind this series. How does a man so gullible climb his way through the ranks of British intelligence? Maybe that was Le Carré's point; that any idiot could have been "a spy" during the cold war, and that it was exactly his stupidity that kept him unwittingly "under the radar"...Either way, I came away feeling extremely annoyed at the end.
    8pekinman

    It's out on DVD at last.

    It's been a long time since I saw this mini-series and I am happy to say its remembered merits have withstood the test of time.

    Most of the components of 'A Perfect Spy', the adaptation of LeCarré's finest novel, in my opinion, are top-drawer. Outstanding aspects of it are the musical score and the masterful screenplay, the latter written by Arthur Hopcraft who was also, I believe, the screenwriter for 'Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy' with Alec Guinness a few years before.

    The actors are mostly very good, some superb, like Alan Howard's Jack Brotherhood and Ray McAnally's Ricky Pym. Peter Egan is fascinating to watch because his face changes with every camera angle. The passage of time and the effects upon the physical appearances of the characters is very believably done. So much so that I wondered exactly how old Peter Egan was at the time of filming. The only jolt comes after the character of Magnus Pym is transferred from the very able hands of a young actor named Benedict Taylor to those of a noticeably too-old Peter Egan, just fresh out of Oxford. But this is a minor and unimportant seam in the whole.

    Egan has trouble being convincing only when the text becomes melodramatic and he needs to be "upset" emotionally, ie cry. None of the actors have a very easy time with these moments, aside from the wonderful Frances Tomelty who plays Peggy Wentworth for all she's worth and steals the episode with ease.

    Jane Booker is annoying as Mary Pym. She has part of the character under her skin but often displays an amateurish petulance that diminishes her as a tough cookie diplomatic housewife, which Mary Pym is. Rüdiger Weigang is splendid as Axel, amusing, ironic and brilliant. I also enjoyed Sarah Badel's camp turn as the Baroness.

    The British view of Americans is vividly rendered in some dryly hilarious scenes. When the Yanks have come abroad to confab with Bo Brammell (head of MI6) the American contingent are portrayed as empty-headed buffoons who appear to have memorized a lot of long words out of the Dictionary and spiced them liberally with American jargon and psycho babble, much to the bemused scorn of the English.

    The humor and sadness are subtly blended. LeCarré has a knack for mixing disparate elements in his stories and Hopcraft has brilliantly captured the melancholy, yet wistful, atmosphere of the original.

    Not a perfect production (what is?) and yet the best of the LeCarré adaptations to reach film or television to date.

    Highly recommended to all spy-thriller lovers and especially LeCarré fans. DVD available from Acorn.

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      According to source novelist John le Carré, the character of Rick Pym (Ray McAnally) is heavily based upon his own father.
    • Conexões
      Featured in Wogan: Episode #9.10 (1989)

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    Perguntas frequentes18

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    Detalhes

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    • Data de lançamento
      • 4 de novembro de 1987 (Reino Unido)
    • País de origem
      • Reino Unido
    • Idioma
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    • Também conhecido como
      • John le Carré's A Perfect Spy
    • Empresas de produção
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC)
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

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    • Tempo de duração
      • 6 h 14 min(374 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Stereo

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