The movie is missing so much and doesn't explain much, Prideaux was close to Haydon and felt betrayed as he was tortured by the Russians and that's why he killed him.
I totally agree! I bought the streaming version and watch it periodically! That said I didn’t read the book so don’t know how the movie veers. And yes, I think Prideaux felt betrayed because of their closeness but also, to me, for Hayden’s betrayal of “all of the boys” and country. Hayden would be sent to USSR with no accountability. Just a great,complex movie that some of us will continue to watch.
@@moryan6447 Love the movie overall, there's a TV series starring Alex Guiness made that's worth watching as well, more faithful to the book and far more detail.
I will never get tired of Strong and Firth acting together. They’ve been real life friends for 30+ years and their chemistry onscreen just shows. They could not have chosen a better duo for Jim&Bill.
This sequence is a work of art, with no dialogue it wraps up every single of the plot and every character, and the timing with the end of the song and the applause is brilliant
The final scene, underlaid by La Mer, is one of the best-edited, best-timed, best-acted denouements I've ever seen. It's the neatest bow on a superb, neat film. Everybody on-screen and off, at the absolute top of their game. It's perfection.
Quando ho visto il finale di questo film non smettevo di piangere perchè le sequenze del film sono accompagnate da una versione della canzone le mer di Julio Iglesias che si addice alla drammaticità del epilogo del film dove ricordi e nostalgie degli ex - membri del intelligence ormai in pensione si mischiano e compongono un mosaico per svelare il mistero finale fra' colpi di scena a non finire film memorabile grazie per aver caricato questo spezzone conclusivo del film molto bello e strugente.
The whole movie is a master class in storytelling, directing and acting. It's brilliant really including the painful ending with Ricky standing in the rain hoping against hope to see her again and Connie in the window with a cigarette wondering where it all went wrong for her when she was so right.
Jim didn't do that to the boy, in the book. He mentored him: became his role model. I did not care for this change, at all. Jim was betrayed but he NEVER betrayed in turn. I don't know why I'm standing up for a fictional character... But here I am.
I get it…but I also kind of get the change. It’s a moment of tough love. He doesn’t want to see young Bill walk the same path he did. Broken, alone and betrayed. And given young Bill’s nature…I guess he was doing what he thought was right. I didn’t mind the change. I didn’t see it as a betrayal. I saw it as tough love. If you truly love someone then let them go.
because you like the principle of it. and those principles reflect the thinking of the author who created the story in the first place. and stories in general are the most powerful way of passing along our models of reality. the tampering of the character is tampering with important concepts that were both written by a great genius who knew what he was talking about, and also fit correctly with your own observations of human behavior. Also, it was cruel and stupid.
When Guillam walked past Smiley he just couldn't help but give a cheeky smirk, and who could blame him with a boss as cool as that? Seeing him in Control's chair was awesome. George Smiley is the man.
This is a most wonderful film, stella cast, no swearing, no outlandish car chases, no over the top sex scenes, just top quality acting, and Mark Strong such a superb actor, as was all the cast
I was sure that noone could top the Alec Guiness portrayal...until I saw how Gary Oldman took the part and wove it into something so much more nuanced. A Perfect Living Actors' representation of how Less is always More. Amazing.
[La Mer] Lyrics Somewhere beyond the sea Somewhere waiting for me My lover stands on golden sands And watches the ships that go sailing Somewhere beyond the sea She's there watching for me If I could fly like birds on high Then straight to her arms, I'd go sailing [Bridge] It's far beyond a star It's near beyond the moon I know beyond a doubt My heart will lead me there soon We'll meet beyond the shore We'll kiss just as before Happy we'll be beyond the sea And never again I'll go sailing [Outro] We'll meet, I know we'll meet beyond the shore We'll kiss just as before Happy we'll be beyond the sea And never again I'll go sailing And never again I'll go sailing And never again I'll go sailing
With that final scene of Smiley sitting at the head of the table, all I can think is: It's not too late for Alfredson to adapt more John le Carre novels! I would LOVE to see more of Oldman as Smiley.
Questo film è meraviglioso avvincente cinico e geniale perchè simula in modo credibile gli intrighi gli inganni il cinismo e la crudeltà dei giochi di potere che avvengono in determinati ambienti dove come ci spiega un altro grande film con una frase eloquente che " è un gioco dove nessuno vuol perdere " tutto questo per mantenere l'equilibrio e la stabilità del sistema sociale mondiale.P.S. grandissima interpretazione canora la cover di Julio Iglesias " Le Mer ".
Mark Strong is such a solid actor. It only took three scenes to convey a very complex mixed bag of emotions. 😢His love was a traitor and duty demanded absolute reciprocity. All these feelings are conveyed without a word being uttered.. magnificent. A masterpiece.
The more I watch Tinker Tailor, the more I've come to love Mark Strong s portrayal of a deeply hurt man who's been to hell and back, all because of the man he loved. Jimmy Prid, that is.
Strong's performance is sublime, especially in the above scenes at the party, when he slowly realises that the man he loves is a traitor. It's brilliantly acted and shot.
I like that everything got so messed up cos everyone was banging each other , only in the UK would it go on for so long , we don't like airing our laundry
@@sergejkarov9149 Actually I think he did know then, or at least was highly suspect of him. If you remember the scenes where Smiley interviews Bill Haydon in that holding cell at the end, Smiley mentions something about Jim Prideaux being aware, or suspecting Haydon. I can't remember the exact wording, but it is mentioned. Watch it again, as I will. :)
And Connie left alone, knowing that her beloved Circus was violated. The best is Percy, walking past George - I'm guessing that he's been so painfully sacked that he's genuinely oblivious to Smiley being there.
This is one of those rare movies that as soon as I have watched it to the end, I start watching it from the beginning one more time. I loved this movie from the beginning, and I don¨t understand why it's not higher in peoples appreciation.
One reason for this in my opinion is that it’s not an easy movie to follow for a casual viewer, there are a lot of things which aren’t given a vivid explanation but are nonetheless there for the viewer to see and hear as long as they are fully invested in it and paying attention. In that way it reminds me of certain elements of Tarantino movies, which rely on the viewer’s perception of events and dialogue. A friend of mine complained about tinker tailor to me saying it was very boring as it mainly consisted of men sitting at tables talking and arguing, which could be considered true because he didn’t get the gist of it at all. The really clever thing about the film is the subtleness of the dialogue and the little details contained in the scenes which can be easily missed if not paying proper attention. In that sense it’s in a bit of a niche as the majority of movies are aimed at people with short attention spans and low patience so they don’t get bored and switch off, while tinker tailor is more of a slow burner building up to a very intense finale, giving us hints all the way through. That’s why I think it’s a masterpiece
Ill watch this again and finish it this time. I just finished slow horses and i want more gary oldman being an oldman in espionage. Hopefully i wont sleep halfway.
The second time I watched the movie I sat down with a clipboard and made one of those diagrams with individuals, aliases, relationships, boxes and arrows, and watched with a lot of pauses. Great move, as we all know.
I've watched it many times . The intricacies are many and it's textures only reveal themselves as you get to know each of the characters better. As good as it gets. A true classic!
I read Tinker, Tailor many years ago (a few times) I had the tv adaption with Alec Guinness on video tape and later on dvd and put off watching this movie because I thought the original couldn’t be matched. It was, a little more stylised but every bit as good. If only they’d make Smiley’s People now.
it's easy to overlook in the movie, but, also taken from the books, the Circus had some truly amazingly adept people working in it: Jim Prideaux, who realised who the mole was before anyone else, so mentally trained that weeks of sleep deprivation and torture didnt break him, master marksman, Connie, who had an extraordinary memory and eye to detail, capable of noticing things anyone would miss, Bill, who managed to live as a double agent for decades under anybody's nose, Peter, the perfect right hand; silent, smart, fearless. and obviously George, whose greatest skill, the ability to follow and make sense of a moltitude of threads without losing sight of the objective. And, in the books, Jerry, De Salis, Tarr, even Lacon. They're all flawed but they all show to be extremely competent and skilled in the end
That was the point of the book. Le Carre was surrounded by mediocrity and incompetence in MI5 and MI6, leading a boring life, so he wrote about what he would have liked it to be like. It wasn't all the fault of the spies - I've recently read about Klaus Fuchs and how MI5 and 6, and the FBI, worked to bring him down, and you realise that a lot of the problems are caused by internal politics and the law itself. MI5 wanted not only to catch a spy but to prosecute him successfully. They made many mistakes, but in Britain (and the USA) they couldn't simply make one disappear.
@@historex54tamiyaIts a perfect song for the period version of it and it’s something spies would probably listen to. A French love song sung by a Spanish singer. Very international and cosmopolitan
@jamo3976 watch the BBC series and you find out how it should have been done. The ending and the movie misunderstands le carré's book. It is miscast and the sets are ridiculous.
What a wonderfully edited sequence. Tells a complete fucking story in the span of one song. I know we can talk about the performances and direction but the editing in this sequence is brilliantly paced and crafted. Great work from top to bottom
I had seen bits of this movie over the years and decided it was time for a full viewing. After seeing it four times I am still moved by the ending. What a wonderful way to finally acknowledge the love of Prideaux and Haydon. That said, I am a Smiley man through and through.
Well said. That was well done, and mostly untouched in the BBC series, I think. That was why I was disappointed they turned Sherlock gay as well (not that he doesn't give good gay, of course). In the novel it's a woman he dumps unceremoniously. Maybe one day we can live in a world where a movie director doesn't need to twist a character's sexuality just to suit a narrow agenda, even when that agenda is light years ahead of the agenda it is dismantling.
small gestures, small means of expression... but what a great story, what a great characters, what a great emotions... This movie is a masterpiece indeed.
Pe li cu lon! Debe de ser de las mas subvaloradas. Tremenda. El trabajo de edicion encapsulando la esencia del msg de la peli en la cancion es un desbole de genialidad. No tiene desperdicio.🙌 ❤
I had to watch this film five times before i fully understood it - it's THAT good. In the context of the film, the ending is just stunning. Oh dear, i'm not usually an espionage kind of guy, but Prideaux was firing from below so yeah, the bullet would have gone up into Haydon's brain. RIP Bill Haydon.
thanks to this clip, watching it again now, #6. Oh my God, i never got it. Peter Guillam is homosexual. No wonder he has no interest in the lovely Belinda.
No, i did not get it all the fifth time, only 90 percent. George tried to save Karla, convince him to defect, when he was facing return to apparent certain death at the hands of the Soviets. Tragically, he was a diehard Communist, willing even to die for Communism. However, he survived.
@@Meandgenevieve - Yes, when Smiley told Guillam to 'clean up his loose ends', because it could get messy, so Guillams 'flat mate' had to leave... So sad, so many facets !
There are so many subtleties to enjoy throughout this movie and in this clip. I just watched the 1979 series, and I don't think it compares. The casting for all the major roles in this film was outstanding.
The BBC series is much better for texture, detail and acting, but if you have to stuff it all into 2 hours and 12 minutes this was a fine way to do it.
The timing! The moment of gut wrenching regret for what hes about to do cut short by the shot that hits with the suddenness of reality crashing through your door is purely and simply grown up storytelling that no longer exists in popular culture
Esta película está en el top 5 de mis favoritas. Grande, grande, grande... Sin fallos. No sobra ni falta nada. Un reparto espectacular para una historia perfectamente narrada. Genial.
Just brilliant. I remember first seeing the film in a group which was vastly lost quite early on. I and another were completely entranced by it, watching it bloom into a true climax of pure thriller-laden espionage. I’ll never forget that and feel lucky that I/we ‘got it’ first time. Though, I did rewatch it when released to firm things up. Timelessly brilliant in my opinion.
An excellent movie...perfect in every way...and the end...fantastic...so well done with Le mer. I watched this movie many times and still it nevers disappoints.
A lot of great movies--even masterpieces--fail to land the plane at the very end. It's so hard to do. Drawing together story, character, themes, tone, past, and present like this is really something special. Hard pressed to think of a final sequence I like better.
i love the film but i think you have to know the book, or at least the 1979 tv series, to appreciate it. there's more back story than story. it's so chopped down i can't imagine it making a lot of sense to a first time film goer.
As much as i like alec guiness as smiley, i have to say i prefer oldman as smiley and this version they capture the decade perfectly reminds me of childhood, bloody good film never gets old, or tired and an exellent first class performance by all actors but what a bloody good actor oldman is, perfection in that role
The problem with Guniness was believability and suspension of disbelief. The idea he could have made it from Tatooine back to 1970s Earth and been regenerated as an old English spy just defies all plausibility.
I think my favorite part of the ending is when Smiley comes home. His wife is back and for the first time in the entire movie, you see him falter for a moment and hold himself steady on the staircase rail. Just an incredible ending to an incredible film.
Managed to record this movie onto a CD; great movie, keep re-watching it over and over; no cheap theatrics, just a great story with relatively unknowns but for John Hurt; and I think the best recording of La Mer ever by one of the greatest singers ever.
@@aaronkazi I was more worried he "managed to record this movie onto a CD". It sounds like he might have just discovered that electricity is now a thing.
I think this movie/story encapsulates a place far beyond the ordinary or mundane, yet the emotions and relationships are as old as time itself. We witness loyalty, betrayal, secrecy, revenge, itegrity and/or the lack of it and the price each character pays for their chosen path. All brought together in this fine adaption of Le Carre's masterpiece portraying a rather seedy world. The casting was supurb and the sheer Britishness of it all makes for a glorious piece of cinema.
Jim Prideaux is probably Mark Strong's finest performance.
@@Th0ughtf0rce Absolutely
Watch Our Friends in the North for a better performance from Mark Strong
Someone has not seen Ridley Scott's Body of Lies where Mark Strong played the director of Jordan Intelligence
Thanks for the suggestion, I'll be on the lookout for it.
What a cast, what a movie, what a song!
yes almost perfect...
The best one to me
Best Spy movie ever.. Real, witty, high stakes., clever... And what an ending. Never gets old
The movie is missing so much and doesn't explain much, Prideaux was close to Haydon and felt betrayed as he was tortured by the Russians and that's why he killed him.
I totally agree! I bought the streaming version and watch it periodically! That said I didn’t read the book so don’t know how the movie veers. And yes, I think Prideaux felt betrayed because of their closeness but also, to me, for Hayden’s betrayal of “all of the boys” and country. Hayden would be sent to USSR with no accountability. Just a great,complex movie that some of us will continue to watch.
@@moryan6447 Love the movie overall, there's a TV series starring Alex Guiness made that's worth watching as well, more faithful to the book and far more detail.
The mini series 1979 was better and it IS the best.
Well, second, maybe, after Spies Like Us
I will never get tired of Strong and Firth acting together. They’ve been real life friends for 30+ years and their chemistry onscreen just shows. They could not have chosen a better duo for Jim&Bill.
This sequence is a work of art, with no dialogue it wraps up every single of the plot and every character, and the timing with the end of the song and the applause is brilliant
The final scene, underlaid by La Mer, is one of the best-edited, best-timed, best-acted denouements I've ever seen. It's the neatest bow on a superb, neat film. Everybody on-screen and off, at the absolute top of their game. It's perfection.
🏴
Hear hear!!!!!!
This and The Long Good Friday. British cinema at its best.
The fact that it ties everything off without a single word being spoken is a testament to the skill of the cast and director.
It is one of the best endings of a film I've seen, and I've seen many over the decades. Brooding, bittersweet, triumphant, and altogether classy.
Quando ho visto il finale di questo film non smettevo di piangere perchè le sequenze del film sono accompagnate da una versione della canzone le mer di Julio Iglesias che si addice alla drammaticità del epilogo del film dove ricordi e nostalgie degli ex - membri del intelligence ormai in pensione si mischiano e compongono un mosaico per svelare il mistero finale fra' colpi di scena a non finire film memorabile grazie per aver caricato questo spezzone conclusivo del film molto bello e strugente.
The whole movie is a master class in storytelling, directing and acting. It's brilliant really including the painful ending with Ricky standing in the rain hoping against hope to see her again and Connie in the window with a cigarette wondering where it all went wrong for her when she was so right.
I completely missed Connie in the window. Fantastic movie.
Jim didn't do that to the boy, in the book. He mentored him: became his role model. I did not care for this change, at all. Jim was betrayed but he NEVER betrayed in turn. I don't know why I'm standing up for a fictional character... But here I am.
I get it…but I also kind of get the change. It’s a moment of tough love. He doesn’t want to see young Bill walk the same path he did. Broken, alone and betrayed. And given young Bill’s nature…I guess he was doing what he thought was right. I didn’t mind the change. I didn’t see it as a betrayal. I saw it as tough love. If you truly love someone then let them go.
because you like the principle of it. and those principles reflect the thinking of the author who created the story in the first place. and stories in general are the most powerful way of passing along our models of reality. the tampering of the character is tampering with important concepts that were both written by a great genius who knew what he was talking about, and also fit correctly with your own observations of human behavior. Also, it was cruel and stupid.
Big up, mark! Best watcher in the unit , eh
I think he did that to protect the boy from the dark side of his identity.
@@barbados3592 *watches one Jordan Peterson video
When Guillam walked past Smiley he just couldn't help but give a cheeky smirk, and who could blame him with a boss as cool as that? Seeing him in Control's chair was awesome. George Smiley is the man.
But that image is so sad....he is completely alone....he got that chair....loosing all other people
I just thank God that have talent and imagination to write master pieces. Most people use those gifts and talents it to produce trash
But Smiley had one glaring weakness, his kryptonite, his wife ..... which made him human, and a believable character.
@ivanozappulla1274 the price paid for country.
@@ivanozappulla1274Na, he dropped the inept dead weight. Those other clowns were being bent over a barrel by the Russians and didn’t even realize it.
This is a most wonderful film, stella cast, no swearing, no outlandish car chases, no over the top sex scenes, just top quality acting, and Mark Strong such a superb actor, as was all the cast
I was sure that noone could top the Alec Guiness portrayal...until I saw how Gary Oldman took the part and wove it into something so much more nuanced. A Perfect Living Actors' representation of how Less is always More. Amazing.
Fantastic each and everyone
Seeing the ending again makes me want to watch it again now…. It’s a slow burn but delivers so well.
I watched it 3 times and in will do it again for sure 😊
I just rewatched the bbc version on yt, in a 10 hour video that also includes smileys people
true it us dufficult to follow when watching first time
Just did my 4th watch. Still seeing new things
If you think the film is a slow burn, it’s nothing to the wonderful BBC six episode production!
[La Mer] Lyrics
Somewhere beyond the sea
Somewhere waiting for me
My lover stands on golden sands
And watches the ships that go sailing
Somewhere beyond the sea
She's there watching for me
If I could fly like birds on high
Then straight to her arms, I'd go sailing
[Bridge]
It's far beyond a star
It's near beyond the moon
I know beyond a doubt
My heart will lead me there soon
We'll meet beyond the shore
We'll kiss just as before
Happy we'll be beyond the sea
And never again I'll go sailing
[Outro]
We'll meet, I know we'll meet beyond the shore
We'll kiss just as before
Happy we'll be beyond the sea
And never again I'll go sailing
And never again I'll go sailing
And never again I'll go sailing
Throughout the cast, the acting in this film is completely wonderful. Top to bottom, left to right, a perfect cast.
With that final scene of Smiley sitting at the head of the table, all I can think is: It's not too late for Alfredson to adapt more John le Carre novels! I would LOVE to see more of Oldman as Smiley.
Oh definitely! Before Oldman becomes too old to play Smiley.
Smiley should be older. He was semi retired in the book.
Arguably the best juxtaposition of a funky, soaring disco pop song and a high power rifle shot to the head, at least which I know of.
wow the best compliment i've ever heard
And the single tear to emphasize the scene
"La Mer" as "soaring disco pop song" is one hell of a juxtaposition on it's own.
@@karaloop9544 lol!
you made my day with this one ❤
Questo film è meraviglioso avvincente cinico e geniale perchè simula in modo credibile gli intrighi gli inganni il cinismo e la crudeltà dei giochi di potere che avvengono in determinati ambienti dove come ci spiega un altro grande film con una frase eloquente che " è un gioco dove nessuno vuol perdere " tutto questo per mantenere l'equilibrio e la stabilità del sistema sociale mondiale.P.S. grandissima interpretazione canora la cover di Julio Iglesias " Le Mer ".
Love Mark Strong. Has the best walk. Watch him in Rock n Rolla.
Always reminded me of Dimitar Berbativ for some reason. He's great in Kick Ass too.
Great movie. Great cast. Gary Oldman killing it as usual.
Mark Strong is such a solid actor. It only took three scenes to convey a very complex mixed bag of emotions. 😢His love was a traitor and duty demanded absolute reciprocity. All these feelings are conveyed without a word being uttered.. magnificent. A masterpiece.
The more I watch Tinker Tailor, the more I've come to love Mark Strong s portrayal of a deeply hurt man who's been to hell and back, all because of the man he loved.
Jimmy Prid, that is.
Strong's performance is sublime, especially in the above scenes at the party, when he slowly realises that the man he loves is a traitor. It's brilliantly acted and shot.
I like that everything got so messed up cos everyone was banging each other , only in the UK would it go on for so long , we don't like airing our laundry
@@warrenmilford6848 i do not think he new anything about the traitor at the party ....party was held much earlier than the events that are to ensue..
@@sergejkarov9149 Actually I think he did know then, or at least was highly suspect of him. If you remember the scenes where Smiley interviews Bill Haydon in that holding cell at the end, Smiley mentions something about Jim Prideaux being aware, or suspecting Haydon. I can't remember the exact wording, but it is mentioned. Watch it again, as I will. :)
@@warrenmilford6848 he warned Bill before the Hungarian incident and George says “because he knew it was you all along”
What a perfect song for a perfect ending and I also think Gary Oldman gave one of his best performances here.
El tema de la canción, tiene que ver con la trama de la película?
Fantastic, emotional ending. Ricky Tarr waiting for Irina in the rain not knowing of her fate. Secrets until the very end.
Never noticed that - nice one. Makes it even more poignant
Yeah, that sitch is really sad the more I think about it
And Connie left alone, knowing that her beloved Circus was violated.
The best is Percy, walking past George - I'm guessing that he's been so painfully sacked that he's genuinely oblivious to Smiley being there.
One of my favorite movies! Had to buy it and watch it periodically😊
This is one of those rare movies that as soon as I have watched it to the end, I start watching it from the beginning one more time. I loved this movie from the beginning, and I don¨t understand why it's not higher in peoples appreciation.
It has one flaw: No Alec Guinness.
@@TedSeay I think Gary Oldman did a really good job channeling him though
One reason for this in my opinion is that it’s not an easy movie to follow for a casual viewer, there are a lot of things which aren’t given a vivid explanation but are nonetheless there for the viewer to see and hear as long as they are fully invested in it and paying attention. In that way it reminds me of certain elements of Tarantino movies, which rely on the viewer’s perception of events and dialogue. A friend of mine complained about tinker tailor to me saying it was very boring as it mainly consisted of men sitting at tables talking and arguing, which could be considered true because he didn’t get the gist of it at all. The really clever thing about the film is the subtleness of the dialogue and the little details contained in the scenes which can be easily missed if not paying proper attention. In that sense it’s in a bit of a niche as the majority of movies are aimed at people with short attention spans and low patience so they don’t get bored and switch off, while tinker tailor is more of a slow burner building up to a very intense finale, giving us hints all the way through. That’s why I think it’s a masterpiece
The best spy movie I've ever seen . Really brillant.
Ill watch this again and finish it this time. I just finished slow horses and i want more gary oldman being an oldman in espionage. Hopefully i wont sleep halfway.
The second time I watched the movie I sat down with a clipboard and made one of those diagrams with individuals, aliases, relationships, boxes and arrows, and watched with a lot of pauses. Great move, as we all know.
Excellent marksmanship with the rifle, getting the bullet through one of the wire squares on the fence.
I've watched it many times . The intricacies are many and it's textures only reveal themselves as you get to know each of the characters better. As good as it gets. A true classic!
Love this film. It's a grown up world I could happily inhabit.
I read Tinker, Tailor many years ago (a few times) I had the tv adaption with Alec Guinness on video tape and later on dvd and put off watching this movie because I thought the original couldn’t be matched. It was, a little more stylised but every bit as good. If only they’d make Smiley’s People now.
Exactly how I feel. I do believe Smiley's People is in the pipeline but who knows?
The Honourable Schoolboy first, please. In its own way that could easily make the best movie
it's easy to overlook in the movie, but, also taken from the books, the Circus had some truly amazingly adept people working in it: Jim Prideaux, who realised who the mole was before anyone else, so mentally trained that weeks of sleep deprivation and torture didnt break him, master marksman, Connie, who had an extraordinary memory and eye to detail, capable of noticing things anyone would miss, Bill, who managed to live as a double agent for decades under anybody's nose, Peter, the perfect right hand; silent, smart, fearless. and obviously George, whose greatest skill, the ability to follow and make sense of a moltitude of threads without losing sight of the objective. And, in the books, Jerry, De Salis, Tarr, even Lacon. They're all flawed but they all show to be extremely competent and skilled in the end
I saw what you did there…. Mole-titude - very good sir.
That was the point of the book. Le Carre was surrounded by mediocrity and incompetence in MI5 and MI6, leading a boring life, so he wrote about what he would have liked it to be like. It wasn't all the fault of the spies - I've recently read about Klaus Fuchs and how MI5 and 6, and the FBI, worked to bring him down, and you realise that a lot of the problems are caused by internal politics and the law itself. MI5 wanted not only to catch a spy but to prosecute him successfully. They made many mistakes, but in Britain (and the USA) they couldn't simply make one disappear.
So brilliant. Wraps the entire story over the arc of one song. Whoever did the editing in this film should have won an Oscar.
Agree, the Le Mar song makes it ruthless and sad!
Just an unbelievable choice. Watching it now you can’t imagine it any other way…
@@historex54tamiyaIts a perfect song for the period version of it and it’s something spies would probably listen to. A French love song sung by a Spanish singer. Very international and cosmopolitan
@jamo3976 watch the BBC series and you find out how it should have been done.
The ending and the movie misunderstands le carré's book. It is miscast and the sets are ridiculous.
you’re ridiculous.
What a wonderfully edited sequence. Tells a complete fucking story in the span of one song. I know we can talk about the performances and direction but the editing in this sequence is brilliantly paced and crafted. Great work from top to bottom
One of the great spy movies ever made done with typical British understatement. The cast is bloody amazing.
Masterpiece of a movie from a masterpiece of literature.... Shame we still haven't got Smileys People
Did you ever catch the miniseries? What did you think of that?
Alec Guinness, 1982 I think
Have watched this movie +20 times. Fantastic.
me 120x second to godfathers (360)
Gary Oldman looks soo great in this movie btw he always handsome ❤😂
RIP Le Carré
R.I.P Le Carré
Great movie…i didn’t know that Julio was groovin’ like this back in the days….the band is killin’👌👌👌👌wish i was living back then,what a great decade..
Shoot why do you think he was so popular this man could sing his heart out in any language he knew.
... Yeah, the band is great. I realize it now, but I was there; my parents had the album. Very smooth. I wish Iglesias kept that jazzy sound.
One of the greatest pairing of song and music to film narrative ever.
1:07 Jerry rules. Connie too. And Contol. Bless their hearts 💕
I had seen bits of this movie over the years and decided it was time for a full viewing. After seeing it four times I am still moved by the ending. What a wonderful way to finally acknowledge the love of Prideaux and Haydon. That said, I am a Smiley man through and through.
Well said. That was well done, and mostly untouched in the BBC series, I think. That was why I was disappointed they turned Sherlock gay as well (not that he doesn't give good gay, of course). In the novel it's a woman he dumps unceremoniously. Maybe one day we can live in a world where a movie director doesn't need to twist a character's sexuality just to suit a narrow agenda, even when that agenda is light years ahead of the agenda it is dismantling.
The more I watch it, the more I see. Thomas Alfredson did a brilliant job, as did all the players; a huge collection of talent.
2:43 the bass and the plant, thanks you editor amigo
the ending never bored to see
That made me uplode it!
My favourite scene in film
Just an amazing movie! One of those films you can watch forever. The story, the acting, the edit, the colour, the cinematography - its just beautiful!
Props to anyone who could follow this plot, LOL.
It helps if you have read the book
I watched the film. I had no idea what was going on. I read the book -then watched the film again. It made a lot more sense second time.
Oh to be swanning around a night club with a glass of brandy and a cigarette dancing to this. Bliss.
small gestures, small means of expression... but what a great story, what a great characters, what a great emotions...
This movie is a masterpiece indeed.
Pe li cu lon! Debe de ser de las mas subvaloradas. Tremenda. El trabajo de edicion encapsulando la esencia del msg de la peli en la cancion es un desbole de genialidad. No tiene
desperdicio.🙌 ❤
I had to watch this film five times before i fully understood it - it's THAT good. In the context of the film, the ending is just stunning. Oh dear, i'm not usually an espionage kind of guy, but Prideaux was firing from below so yeah, the bullet would have gone up into Haydon's brain. RIP Bill Haydon.
And Control drinking himself to death.
thanks to this clip, watching it again now, #6. Oh my God, i never got it. Peter Guillam is homosexual. No wonder he has no interest in the lovely Belinda.
No, i did not get it all the fifth time, only 90 percent. George tried to save Karla, convince him to defect, when he was facing return to apparent certain death at the hands of the Soviets. Tragically, he was a diehard Communist, willing even to die for Communism. However, he survived.
@@Meandgenevieve - Yes, when Smiley told Guillam to 'clean up his loose ends', because it could get messy, so Guillams 'flat mate' had to leave...
So sad, so many facets !
@@BurntPlaydoh Wow, thanks. Will look into it.
There are so many subtleties to enjoy throughout this movie and in this clip. I just watched the 1979 series, and I don't think it compares. The casting for all the major roles in this film was outstanding.
The BBC series is much better for texture, detail and acting, but if you have to stuff it all into 2 hours and 12 minutes this was a fine way to do it.
The timing!
The moment of gut wrenching regret for what hes about to do cut short by the shot that hits with the suddenness of reality crashing through your door is purely and simply grown up storytelling that no longer exists in popular culture
That final shot of smiley to the applause..
Esta película está en el top 5 de mis favoritas. Grande, grande, grande... Sin fallos. No sobra ni falta nada. Un reparto espectacular para una historia perfectamente narrada. Genial.
Tambien para mi
Brilliant book, excellent TV series and a film I keep going back to again and again.
Just brilliant. I remember first seeing the film in a group which was vastly lost quite early on. I and another were completely entranced by it, watching it bloom into a true climax of pure thriller-laden espionage.
I’ll never forget that and feel lucky that I/we ‘got it’ first time. Though, I did rewatch it when released to firm things up.
Timelessly brilliant in my opinion.
I always tell people that TTSS isn't a spy movie, it's an espionage movie...and there's a big difference.
Great movie & great performances .
This is bloody fabulous
An excellent movie...perfect in every way...and the end...fantastic...so well done with Le mer.
I watched this movie many times and still it nevers disappoints.
Killer brass riff!
A lot of great movies--even masterpieces--fail to land the plane at the very end. It's so hard to do. Drawing together story, character, themes, tone, past, and present like this is really something special. Hard pressed to think of a final sequence I like better.
Best end sequence I have ever seen.
i love the film but i think you have to know the book, or at least the 1979 tv series, to appreciate it. there's more back story than story. it's so chopped down i can't imagine it making a lot of sense to a first time film goer.
Magnifici sia il libro che il film!
This is fabulous. Best ever, thankyou
Simply amazing film. Filmmaking at it's very best...
another four viewings and a year and i will have a complete understanding of the entire film.
This film is perfect.
Phenomenal movie catchy ending song too...
The movie ending is considerably more upbeat (believe it or not) than the book's.
But damn, Oldman in the last shot is BOSS.
I'm sad they didn't make a sequel to this movie.
As much as i like alec guiness as smiley, i have to say i prefer oldman as smiley and this version they capture the decade perfectly reminds me of childhood, bloody good film never gets old, or tired and an exellent first class performance by all actors but what a bloody good actor oldman is, perfection in that role
The problem with Guniness was believability and suspension of disbelief. The idea he could have made it from Tatooine back to 1970s Earth and been regenerated as an old English spy just defies all plausibility.
I think my favorite part of the ending is when Smiley comes home. His wife is back and for the first time in the entire movie, you see him falter for a moment and hold himself steady on the staircase rail. Just an incredible ending to an incredible film.
In a final where all lose their loves...he gets again the wife....until next flirt...
@@ivanozappulla1274 absolutely
The stagger bookending the one Smiley makes when he sees Anne and Haydon at the Circus Christmas party.
.
.
why is it a great spy movie? the stakes are real and every one is a lonely shattered miserable person , exactly what a spy is
Marvelous ending scene👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
The way Jim looks at bill.... heartbreakingly beautiful....
This is a very smart movie. I enjoy a franchise like the Bourne films but this is closer to the spy business.
I love this movie. I’ve seen it countless times and i still haven’t found all the threads yet 😅
That’s part of why i love it so
Waiting for Smiley's People to come out. That would be amazing.
How great is Colin Firth , I always see himas the good guy
Michael Buble's first screen role. Not many people know that.
Epic ending scene👍🏼
Kingsman
Venom
Jim Gordon
Doctor Strange
For such a dark genre, this is surprisingly close to a happy ending.
The book ends with Smiley setting out to Immingham, i remember because that is where I once lived...
Never gets old…
Good old Britain when you could leave your house without taking the key with you. Everyone could be trusted (except one).
Bollocks. Rose tinted glasses.
Unless you’re a spy and have something non conspicuous in your door. Great film.
It’s because no one had anything to steal
Great ending to a great movie.
I was in prison when I read the book smh they did the ending justice just like I imagined it.
Way to wrap up the ending, the best ever.
Best ever ending is Blackadder. But, yeah, you're not far off.
Kim Philby was the only british hero of the 20. century.
Managed to record this movie onto a CD; great movie, keep re-watching it over and over; no cheap theatrics, just a great story with relatively unknowns but for John Hurt; and I think the best recording of La Mer ever by one of the greatest singers ever.
Relative unknowns?! It’s a loaded cast!
Tv series is the best production I’ve ever seen.
@@aaronkazi I was more worried he "managed to record this movie onto a CD". It sounds like he might have just discovered that electricity is now a thing.
it was only on a CD until it could be converted into Betamax at the mall @@vangroover1903
ABSOLUTELY brilliant film, superbly portrayed by the best actors to fit the characters. 10/10 for me
I think this movie/story encapsulates a place far beyond the ordinary or mundane, yet the emotions and relationships are as old as time itself. We witness loyalty, betrayal, secrecy, revenge, itegrity and/or the lack of it and the price each character pays for their chosen path. All brought together in this fine adaption of Le Carre's masterpiece portraying a rather seedy world. The casting was supurb and the sheer Britishness of it all makes for a glorious piece of cinema.
Smiley, an out-of-the-family dude!