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L'espion qui venait du froid

Original title: The Spy Who Came in from the Cold
  • 1965
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
20K
YOUR RATING
L'espion qui venait du froid (1965)
British agent Alec Leamas refuses to come in from the Cold War during the 1960s. But his next mission may be his final one.
Play trailer1:31
2 Videos
62 Photos
SpyDramaThriller

Instead of coming in from the Cold War, British agent Alec Leamas chooses to face another mission.Instead of coming in from the Cold War, British agent Alec Leamas chooses to face another mission.Instead of coming in from the Cold War, British agent Alec Leamas chooses to face another mission.

  • Director
    • Martin Ritt
  • Writers
    • John le Carré
    • Paul Dehn
    • Guy Trosper
  • Stars
    • Richard Burton
    • Oskar Werner
    • Claire Bloom
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    20K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Martin Ritt
    • Writers
      • John le Carré
      • Paul Dehn
      • Guy Trosper
    • Stars
      • Richard Burton
      • Oskar Werner
      • Claire Bloom
    • 170User reviews
    • 101Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Oscars
      • 10 wins & 5 nominations total

    Videos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:31
    Trailer
    The Spy Who Came In From The Cold
    Trailer 1:53
    The Spy Who Came In From The Cold
    The Spy Who Came In From The Cold
    Trailer 1:53
    The Spy Who Came In From The Cold

    Photos62

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    Top cast37

    Edit
    Richard Burton
    Richard Burton
    • Alec Leamas
    Oskar Werner
    Oskar Werner
    • Fiedler
    Claire Bloom
    Claire Bloom
    • Nancy 'Nan' Perry
    Sam Wanamaker
    Sam Wanamaker
    • Peters
    George Voskovec
    George Voskovec
    • Comrade Karden - Defense Attorney
    Rupert Davies
    Rupert Davies
    • George Smiley
    Cyril Cusack
    Cyril Cusack
    • Control
    Peter van Eyck
    Peter van Eyck
    • Hans-Dieter Mundt
    • (as Peter Van Eyck)
    Michael Hordern
    Michael Hordern
    • Ashe
    Robert Hardy
    Robert Hardy
    • Dick Carlton
    Bernard Lee
    Bernard Lee
    • Mr. Patmore - Grocer
    Beatrix Lehmann
    Beatrix Lehmann
    • Tribunal President
    Esmond Knight
    Esmond Knight
    • Old Judge
    Tom Stern
    • CIA Agent
    Niall MacGinnis
    Niall MacGinnis
    • Checkpoint Charlie Guard
    Scot Finch
    • German Guide
    Anne Blake
    Anne Blake
    • Miss Crail
    George Mikell
    • Checkpoint Charlie Guard
    • Director
      • Martin Ritt
    • Writers
      • John le Carré
      • Paul Dehn
      • Guy Trosper
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews170

    7.519.9K
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    Featured reviews

    8pmw1004

    Is that right?

    The last reviewer wrote: Burton is cast as Alex Leamas, a nerve-dead, aged secret operative operating out of West Berlin. After a routine assignment goes awry, Leamas is sent home and out of the service. He struggles to try to live a normal, average life as a librarian's assistant, but he can't make it work for him (something that is not helped by his chronic alcoholism). This fact is made forcefully clear when he winds up beating a local grocer and is sentenced to jail time. Slowly but surely, he allows himself to be pulled back into the Cold War he operated in, not suspecting or maybe not even caring that his superiors are setting him up for a fall.

    I think this is wrong. I believe the Burton character, Leamas, working with his UK spy agency, pretends to be kicked out of the spy service and acts as if he is going to seed so he can be "turned" by the enemy and complete his secret mission.

    Regardless, it's a great film with a great performance by Burton as the world-weary spy who has seen it all, and Claire Bloom as the idealistic UK communist party member who has no idea how ugly it is out there.
    9anurag-sharma

    If only more spy movies were like this.....

    It's truly refreshing to see a spy movie which does not involve fast cars, bikini clad women, super heroes etc. This movie shows how spies are used and discarded. The main character cannot perform stunning stunts while doing one hand push ups. He is just your average Joe who drinks too much and knows that there is no escape from his profession which he seems to hate. The idealism of young people seems to depress him even more which he rips apart towards the end (the highlight of the movie). The bleak look of the movie (it's in B&W) gives it even more of an authentic look and sets the mood for the viewer.

    There are no explosions, no car chases, no sweeping a woman off her feet......just plain, simple story telling.
    8keihan

    The great Richard Burton performance no one saw...

    It seems to me as though no one remembers this film. In fact, I think that it would be fair to say that I wouldn't have become intrigued enough by it to finally rent if I hadn't seen just the briefest of clips of it on an ABC news broadcast. When I think about it, I realize why should anyone remember it? This was made during the Golden Age of Bond, which this film acts as a dark mirror to. More's the pity, actually, as this was one of Richard Burton's finest performances.

    Burton is cast as Alex Leamas, a nerve-dead, aged secret operative operating out of West Berlin. After a routine assignment goes awry, Leamas is sent home and out of the service. He struggles to try to live a normal, average life as a librarian's assistant, but he can't make it work for him (something that is not helped by his chronic alcoholism). This fact is made forcefully clear when he winds up beating a local grocer and is sentenced to jail time. Slowly but surely, he allows himself to be pulled back into the Cold War he operated in, not suspecting or maybe not even caring that his superiors are setting him up for a fall.

    One will never mistake Alex Leamas' grey, rainy world for the sunlight universe of James Bond. It offers what is probably the ugliest depiction of the Great Game on film: drunkards, ex-Nazis, Jews, and die-hard Communists swimming like sharks through a fish pond, all of them devouring any who get in their way. None have any more than lip-service loyalty to their fellow operatives, their countries, or maybe even their own ideologies. At it's center stands Burton, playing Leamas as a walking dead man, festering with hate, resentment, and cynicism at the system that eventually sends him into the gutter. His devastating parked car monologue alone is worth the price of renting this one from the local video store.

    It's bitter cynic tone may have been the film's undoing; rarely have I seen a film so downbeat in it's depiction of humanity. Still, it is not one that deserves to be forgotten.
    8wisewebwoman

    Best Burton Performance!

    The Spy Who Came In From the Cold stars Richard Burton as a world-weary, defeated, cynical and alcoholic ex-agent. It is the performance of his life. It is astonishing to think he was only 40 when he starred in it, as he looks so much older, perhaps from the five-pack-of-cigarettes and three bottles of hard liquor a day that was his habit then.

    The movie is from the John Le Carre novel and is a hard-nosed look at the world of international espionage and double agents, as different from the Bond movies as night from day.

    Stripped of glamour and endless sunshine, Martin Ritt, the director, uses black and white, rain and wind to enhance the story. One could say the cinematography is a character in itself.

    There is no distinction here between the good guys and the bad guys. Spies are of themselves irredeemably evil men in the game for their own nefarious purposes, divorced from all that is decent and humane.

    Burton's eyes constantly reflect this as he manages to infiltrate the East Communist Bloc and plays the game instigated by his "Control" in London.

    Claire Bloom portrays his innocent young girlfriend, naive and pliable. Oskar Werner and Peter Van Eyck play the East Germans fighting for control of Burton's memoirs and each other.

    It is hard to be believe that Burton lost his Oscar to Lee Marvin (in Cat Ballou!!) when he so richly deserved it for his once in a lifetime performance in "The Spy--" Cyril Cusack has a wonderful supporting role as "Control" and just about steals his two scenes from Burton. He never disappoints.

    I loved this film in the theatre when it was released and subsequent viewings never fail to enthrall me.

    8 out of 10.
    10rooprect

    Ladies and gentlemen, the greatest spy film ever made.

    You can check my voting history to see how rarely I give out perfect 10s. But this film truly deserves the honor.

    I hesitate to call it a spy movie because it's nothing like any spy movie I've ever seen. There are no hi tech gadgets, shoe phones and sexy Russian agents. There are no fantastic plots to recover microfilm hidden in the crown jewels. The hero doesn't even carry a gun. Instead the battle is fought with pure intelligence, political manipulation and trickery. This is what true espionage is about, the way WWII history books tell us. In the same way Kubrick's "2001: A Space Odyssey" broke the rules of the scifi stereotype, this film did the same with the spy genre.

    I won't say anything about the plot except that it requires your full attention. Things are not spelled out for us, and it requires a bit of work to piece it together, but that makes the payoff all the more stunning. This movie reads as if it were a book (which may be good or bad depending on how you like your movies). But I assure you it's not boring. I found myself whispering after every scene "This is so freaking cool! How much cooler can it get?" The answer: much.

    The acting is flawless. Richard Burton is perfect as the cynical, faithless enigma who hides his mission so well even we can't guess what he's up to. Claire Bloom is equally convincing as the clueless but intelligent bystander. Oskar Werner, in the greatest role I've seen him play, is both chilling and magnetic as the interrogator. Even the minor roles were expertly played.

    The script is so clever I highly recommend watching the film with subtitles so that you don't miss any of the great lines and wit. It may also help you keep up with the plot which, as I said, can be tricky.

    Sol Kaplan's musical score is sparse but very effective in maintaining the heavy mood. The piano pieces really make you feel the weight of the dreary, cold war era. And the lack of music during tense scenes is equally powerful.

    And that brings me to my favourite part of the film: the amazing camera work, cinematography and lighting. This is one of those films that makes you realize that black&white isn't just a choice of film; it's an entire art form unto itself. Darkness and light, sharpness and haze, shadows and contrast are used to the fullest. But it's not obnoxiously done like a 2nd year film student might do. No, everything flows naturally so a layperson can enjoy the scenery just as much as a cinema geek.

    And there you have it; nothing but praise from me. The only problem is that it has ruined all the other spy films and political thrillers for me.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      After Richard Burton became a superstar, he insisted on casting his friends from his days at the Old Vic and West End (London's equivalent to New York City's Broadway). Friends of Burton's cast in this movie included Michael Hordern and Robert Hardy. Burton's former leading lady (on-stage and in two movies) Claire Bloom, however, was cast by Martin Ritt. This caused friction for several reasons: Burton had wanted his wife, Dame Elizabeth Taylor, in the role, and he and Bloom had been an item in the 1950s. John le Carré remembers that "off-screen Bloom preserved a dignified distance in her caravan".
    • Goofs
      At the beginning of the film they say that Leamas has been waiting for days for the arrival of Riemeck. This behavior doesn't make sense, as it gives away the arrival of a defector to the opposing side.
    • Quotes

      Alec Leamas: It was a foul, foul operation, but it paid off.

      Nan Perry: Who for?

      Alec Leamas: What the hell do you think spies are? Moral philosophers measuring everything they do against the word of God or Karl Marx? They're not! They're just a bunch of seedy, squalid bastards like me: little men, drunkards, queers, henpecked husbands, civil servants playing cowboys and Indians to brighten their rotten little lives. Do you think they sit like monks in a cell, balancing right against wrong? Yesterday I would have killed Mundt because I thought him evil and an enemy. But not today. Today he is evil and my friend. London needs him. They need him so that the great, moronic masses you admire so much can sleep soundly in their flea-bitten beds again. They need him for the safety of ordinary, crummy people like you and me...

      Nan Perry: You killed Fiedler!

      Alec Leamas: How big does a cause have to be before you kill your friends? What about your Party? There's a few million bodies on that path!

    • Connections
      Featured in Great Performances: Richard Burton: In from the Cold (1988)

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    FAQ21

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    • Is Richard Burton wearing eyeliner? Did guyliner exist in 1965?
    • Who reported Leamas as missing (i.e., who caused the missing report to appear in the newspaper)?
    • Chicago Opening Happened When?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 9, 1966 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Criterion Collection
    • Languages
      • English
      • Dutch
    • Also known as
      • Alto espionaje
    • Filming locations
      • Smithfield Market, Dublin, County Dublin, Ireland(Checkpoint Charlie, Berlin - opening scene: Leamas waits for the agent to come through the border from East Germany)
    • Production company
      • Salem Films Limited
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $529
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 52m(112 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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