Friday, December 9, 2011

The Movie of a Lifetime

John le Carré: “Tinker Tailor” the movie of a lifetime

Salon exclusive: The spy fiction icon calls the new film the best adaptation of his work everBy John Le Carre

Once in a lifetime, if a novelist is very lucky, he gets a movie made of one of his books that has its own life and truth. This is the achievement of Tomas Alfredson and his team.

Yet I have been asked if an American audience — accustomed to the speed and dash of most movie-making today — will have the concentration span needed to follow an intelligently paced narrative of some complexity? I believe that audiences are far better at doing this than film-makers give them credit for. This is a movie that entertains superbly and thrillingly at its own pace and rhythm — a hypnotic movie that takes you over completely. I don’t believe that any audience, once introduced to it, will be able to take its eyes off the screen.

In profound ways, it is touching and often alarming. In less profound ways, it is exciting and occasionally very funny. Its complexities are a pleasure to share, and the more so since the movie gently explains them and delivers a satisfying dénouement.

It is a work of art that stays with you, as good works of art do.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I will see this movie.

Fred Hudson said...

So will I. I have a long history with the novel. I tried reading the book in 1974 when it came out in paperback. I tried again earlier this year. I tried again a few days ago when I saw that the movie was coming out and that the movie was possibly very good. I will see the movie, but finally have given up on reading the book. Spy novels are not my thing. There is too much detail, too much to figure out, too much to ponder. This is not my genre. Besides, when I first tried reading the book in 1974 I gave up and then peeked at the end. I know who the mole is!