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1.76 mi | Ashburn 20147
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Smiley's People
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Purchase options and add-ons
| Format | Color, Full Screen, Collector's Edition, Box set |
| Contributor | Mario Adorf, Alec Guinness, Bill Paterson, Michael Byrne, Tusse Silberg, Andy Bradford, Curd Jürgens, Bernard Hepton, Anthony Bate, Eileen Atkins, Germaine Delbat, Vladek Sheybal See more |
| Language | English |
| Runtime | 5 hours and 24 minutes |
| Color | Color |
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Product Description
Product Description
The thrilling sequel to Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy
Both had supposedly outlived their usefulness to the Circus, the British Secret Intelligence Service: George Smiley, the retired head of espionage, and General Vladimir, an aging informant who reported to him. When the general walks into a bullet after sending an urgent message to his old handler, the Circus asks Smiley to "tidy things up." But Smiley hears Vladimirs message as a call to arms against his nemesis, the Soviet super spy Karla, once again tantalizingly within his grasp.
Alec Guiness reprises the role of British spymaster George Smiley in this gripping sequel to the television masterpiece Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. Filmed on location in London, Paris, Hamburg and Berne, Smileys People also stars Eileen Atkins, Anthony Bate, Bernard Hepton, Michael Lonsdale, Beryl Reid, Patrick Stewart and Bill Patterson.
DVD Special Features Include: digitally remastered presentation, exclusive interview with John le Carré, production notes, cast filmographies, le Carré biography and booklist, full-color insert with glossary of characters and terms.
Amazon.com
The second of the BBC's well-regarded serializations of John Le Carré's espionage bestsellers, Smiley's People is slightly less compulsively watchable than Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy if only because Tinker, Tailor had a much stronger plot premise (who is the mole in British Intelligence?) than Smiley's People, which takes a very long time to come into focus. Retired spymaster George Smiley (Alec Guinness) wanders around Europe and visits a succession of desperate or eccentric characters as he plays a game which finally leads to another confrontation with and a possible victory over his Moriarty-like Soviet arch-nemesis Karla (an expressive but silent Patrick Stewart).
Directed by Simon Langton and coscripted by John Hopkins and Le Carré himself, this is a leisurely mystery. It offers a cannily generous central performance from Guinness, who never takes off his scarf and does his best to fade into the background while a succession of striking character players hold center screen; but slowly and by sheer presence he begins to dominate the panoramic view of European treachery, deception, and disappointment. Among the terrific supporting cast are Michel Lonsdale, Mario Adorf, Vladek Sheybal, Michael Gough, Alan Rickman (a tiny, early role as a hotel clerk), Beryl Reid, Ingrid Pitt, Bernard Hepton, Michael Elphick, Rosalie Crutchley, Michael Byrne, Bill Paterson, and Maureen Lipman. Smiley's People is more interested in character than thrills, with each cameo contributing another view of the human cost of the cold war: most of the old friends Smiley seeks out react to his reappearance by saying they never wanted to see him again, and victory is only possible because Smiley discovers that his opposite number has a weakness that makes him almost sympathetic. It was originally broadcast in six hourlong episodes, and its intelligent approach works better if you watch episode-length chunks, letting one sink in before going on. --Kim Newman
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.33:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : Unrated (Not Rated)
- Product Dimensions : 7.75 x 5.75 x 1 inches; 9.57 ounces
- Media Format : Color, Full Screen, Collector's Edition, Box set
- Run time : 5 hours and 24 minutes
- Release date : August 10, 2004
- Actors : Alec Guinness, Eileen Atkins, Bill Paterson, Vladek Sheybal, Andy Bradford
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo)
- Studio : Acorn Media
- ASIN : B00007LV9M
- Number of discs : 3
- Best Sellers Rank: #45,952 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #2,082 in Mystery & Thrillers (Movies & TV)
- #7,189 in Drama DVDs
- Customer Reviews:
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2004Like the other famous best-seller turned BBC series coming from the unchallenged master of the intelligent spy thriller John LeCarre, this original teleplay is an absorbing treatise on the hidden and conflicted corners of the human heart, the many ways in which our own natures feed into and extend the darker impulse of a society bent on pursuing the secrets and treachery that ever lurks for the unsuspecting victim. Here, in the finale of LeCarre's three best-selling novels tracing the pilgrim's progress of George Smiley, the intrepid and unlikely hero of the post-industrial Western world, Alec Guiness wonderfully reprises his role as George Smiley, concluding LeCarre's marvelously convoluted narrative. Thus do we trace the continuing history of human perfidy, moral compromises, and treachery native to the world of British intelligence.
In "Smiley's People", the object of Smiley's ministrations is once again thrust toward achieving final revenge against the legendary Karla, the Chief of the Soviet Covert Espionage Bureau, played masterfully in an understated fashion by Patrick Stewart. Having stuck a devastating blow against Karla previously through the ingenious employment of Jerry Westerby in the Far East, Smiley now turns to using an assassination in London of an obscure Eastern European émigré and would-be counter-revolutionary into an entry-point into Karla's domain, and as the Circus (British Intelligence) begins to unravel the many points of light this careful sifting of signs through tradecraft, they discover the one irresistible lure they need to tempt Karla out of the darkness and into their waiting clutches. Given all the murder and mayhem that Karla has visited both on the Circus in general and on George Smiley in particular, there is a number of levels of revenge operating here, and these the production faithfully mines in exploring the impulses, rational and otherwise, that propel such human urges.
The cast of characters and the supporting cast are marvelous in revealing the onion skin as it continually peels away in this intelligent, taut tale. The plot, as usual, is ingenious, intricate, and horrific in its human toll, played out against a landscape of the far-flung persons and places across the European landscape, from London to Berne to Deep inside the former Soviet Union. Once again we are whisked away on a cautious yet beautifully choreographed adventure into the heart of darkness of ourselves, and we shouldn't be surprised to find some scar tissue and broken bones as we descend deeper into the tortuous caverns we keep hidden in our subconscious realms.
LeCarre is nothing if not a superb chronicler of the ways in which our own natures become a battle ground for the struggle between good and evil, the good we can be for others, and the evil we do to them and ourselves by subscribing to ideologies, almost any ideology, that finally forces us to choose between our values and our duty. This is a marvelous video production, eminently faithful to the text from which it springs, a stunning example of the sophistication, complexity, and sheer intelligence of sensitive film-making and astonishing in its depiction of the subterranean world of international espionage. Enjoy!
- Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2009We watched Smiley's People over the past two weeks. My wife had not seen Tinker, Tailor nor has she read the books but she enjoyed the film tremendously. I have read the other reviewers' criticisms of the quality of the transfer to DVD but did not notice the quality myself. In retrospect the sound was muddy at times. Still, this and its sister series Tinker, Tailor, are probably the best 12 hours of television ever presented. The books were outstanding, and fortunately free of LeCarre's later anti-Americanism, and the film versions are faithful and very well done.
The story picks up after George Smiley has retired and his place taken by the lightweight Saul Enderby and his sycophant assistant Lauder Strickland. The General, played by another old favorite Curt Jurgens, is assassinated as he is maneuvering to resume his war with an old foe, Karla, head of Moscow Centre. Smiley is called in to cover up any association between the Circus, Britain's now emasculated MI 6, and the General, a former agent. Smiley begins to pick up the scent of what the General was doing and this leads to a chance to end his career with the trapping of his old nemesis. The story does continue from the earlier book and series but can be enjoyed without seeing the other film first.
Alec Guiness is at his best here and in the earlier series. The other actors are excellent and fit the mind's eye version formed by reading the books. The casting was excellent. The locations in Smiley's People are an added benefit and are beautifully photographed. It is worth the time and money spent to watch it.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 7, 2005This will drive collectors nuts, but I own a PAL version on tape, and the DVD version is missing bits and pieces of certain scenes.
For example, at the end of his visit to Willem's house his wife shows him to the door and says, "Don't come back, Max. We don't need a vicar anymore." Hearing the sound of the motorcycle being started by his escort, Ferguson, Smiley says; "It seems I do".
A small thing, but some of the flavor is missing. Like Miss Marple in "Nemesis", this is Smiley's swan song, and time for his fellow colleages to express their admiration of his talents. For example, during Grigoriov's interview, Smiley appears to be making notes. At the end of the meeting he leaves the notepad on the table, and Skordeno calls out to Smiley as he leaves, indicating he has left them behind; "Mr. Smiley, your notes". Smiley says to Skordeno, "Oh those. I don't think they consitute a breach of security, do you Skordeno?". The camera looks down from Pauli's viewpoint to see that the notepad is blank. Smiley hadn't written anything, it was just to impart an air of officiality to Grigoriov. The camera closes in on Skordeno's face to catch a smile of appreciation. You see? It's small, but there are levels of meaning lost by omitting the scene. Shameful, it's one of the things I remember from the film quite well, as you can tell.
Sorry to make you crazy; now you'll wonder what else is missing, heh heh.
Top reviews from other countries
WLReviewed in Canada on January 3, 20185.0 out of 5 stars engrossing spy drama
engrossing spy drama. very intense, intricate plot. Alec Guiness at his best.
Bob DigbyReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 1, 20045.0 out of 5 stars Probably the best television series ... ever!
This is wonderful drama at its best. The brilliant novel by John Le Carre is beautifully and loyally scripted, and Alec Guinness - the only Smiley! - gives a supreme performance. The cast is is of a strength and quality that today's producers can only dream of, and, best of all, the 5-plus hours that BBC gave to this allowed the plot to breathe and grow, and with it the full tension to develop. Alec Guinness gives an Oscar-quality performance; his cameo scene with Beryl Reed as Connie Sachs remains one of television's finest moments. Sian Phillips is Ann; her role forever makes the transition seamless from 'Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy'. Look for a small role from a younger Alan Rickman, Eileen Atkins (brilliant as the pawn in a game that is quickly out of her control), Bernard Hepton (wonderfully sleazy as Toby Esterhazy), Michael Byrne (the maverick civil servant for whom Smiley is forever the hero), Bill Paterson (brilliant acting - you just hate him), and Maureen Lipman (sharp, bright, vintage performance). The score is sensitive, under-stated, and proves that an intelligent public (the majority) don't need loud music to mask drama. To think that, in this one year, television spawned this and 'Brideshead Revisited'. A golden era indeed. Watch, and watch again.
JumblyReviewed in Canada on July 19, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Highly entertaining spy story of another era.
Doreen LangmeadReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 6, 20135.0 out of 5 stars SMILEY'S PEOPLE
FANTASTIC! Alec Guinness took over the character of George Smiley and he was author John Le Carre's undoing because he could no longer write any more Smiley books.
Peter BudzikReviewed in Canada on December 15, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Excellent results

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