Displaying items by tag: Stephen Graham

Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy

Sunday, 08 January 2012 11:30
Synopsis: Based on the classic novel of the same name, the international thriller is set at the height of the Cold War years of the mid-20th Century. George Smiley (Gary Oldman), a disgraced British spy, is rehired in secret by his government -- which fears that the British Secret Intelligence Service, a.k.a. MI-6, has been compromised by a double agent working for the Soviets.

Release Date: December 9, 2011 (select cities)

Starring: Gary Oldman, Colin Firth, Tom Hardy, Mark Strong, Benedict Cumberbatch, Toby Jones, David Dencik, Svetlana Khodchenkova, Stephen Graham, Kathy Burke, Ciarán Hinds

Directed By: Tomas Alfredson ("Let the Right One In")

Screenplay By: Peter Straughan & Bridget O'Connor; Based upon the novel by John le Carré
Published in Coming Soon

Currently in theaters now, and opening wide on January 6th, is the new espionage thriller from Swedish director Tomas Alfredson (Let the Right One In) called Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, which is based on the popular book by author John le Carre. The film stars a who's who of the best British actors working today including Gary Oldman (The Dark Knight), recent Oscar-winner Colin Firth (The King's Speech), Tom Hardy (Warrior), Mark Strong (Green Lantern), Ciaran Hinds (Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance), Benedict Cumberbatch (BBC's Sherlock), Stephen Graham (HBO's Boardwalk Empire), Christian McKay (I Melt with You), Toby Jones (Captain America: The First Avenger), and John Hurt (Immortals).

IAR's managing editor Jami Philbrick recently had an opportunity to sit down with Gary Oldman, and Mark Strong to discuss Tinker Tailor Solider Spy. The actors talked about the new film, their secretive characters, the life of a spy, adapting the novel, and working with each other on the project.

Published in Video Interviews

Opening in theaters on October 14th is a new crime thriller from first time director Ami Canaan Mann, daughter of director Michael Mann (Heat), called Texas Killing Fields. The film reunites The Debt co-stars Sam Worthington (Avatar) and Jessica Chastain (The Help), as well as featuring a cast of exceptional actors including Jeffrey Dean Morgan (Watchmen), Jason Clarke (TV's The Chicago Code), Annabeth Gish (The X-Files), Sheryl Lee (Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me), Stephen Graham (Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides), and Chloe Grace Moretz (Kick-Ass). 

IAR's managing editor Jami Philbrick recently had a chance to sit down and speak with actor Sam Worthington, as well as director Ami Canaan Mann about Texas Killing Fields. Worthington, and Mann spoke honestly about the new film, the true story that it is based on, Mann's approach to the material, Worthington's research into his role; why he wanted to re-team with his The Debt co-star Jessica Chastain, and the "good cop/bad cop" routine. 

Published in Video Interviews

An adaptation of one of author John le Carre's many spy novels, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy promises to be the sort of espionage film in which intelligent, paranoid operatives attempt, by means of deduction and subterfuge, to root out a mole in MI6.  Basically, it's not the sort of spy movie in which a megalomaniac commandeers a nuclear weapon and lots of henchmen with terrible aim are easily dispatched by a suave secret agent.  As such, the poster campaign has not involved heroic poses and guys holding guns.  Instead, we've been consistently treated to the faces of awesome British actors rendered in Cold War era code.  The latest poster is the second to feature the impeccable Gary Oldman as George Smiley, and this time he's looking right out at you. 

Published in Movie News

An essential, often overlooked ingredient in any proper Cold War spy thriller is the presence of frequent and well-chosen code names, along with innocuous phrases loaded with hidden meaning for the agents of espionage playing out the film's story.  The first clip from the upcoming John Le Carre adaptation Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy is absolutely loaded with such code words, as John Hurt, who plays a Circus (a sly title for the MI6 intelligence service) director codenamed Control, lays out a list of potentially traitorous moles within the organization to Mark Strong as Jim Prideaux, who conspicuously lacks a codename.  That's okay, though, because the suspects are known as Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, and Poor Man, along with also un-monikered George Smiley, the principal character played by the great Gary Oldman, who is also seen briefly in the clip.

Published in Movie News

If you live in America and are excited for Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, the John Le Carre adaptation that is overflowing with phenomenal British actors, then you may have noticed that the film hits cinemas in the United Kingdom very soon, on September 16th.  Here in the Colonies, however, the film's release date has long been scheduled for a full two months later,  hitting American theaters on November 18th.  Well, your wait to take in some Cold War era espionage and top-notch thespianism just got a little longer, as Deadline reports that Focus Features will now release Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy Stateside three weeks later, on December 9th.

Published in Movie News

There's definitely a place for spy films involving thrilling car chases, over-the-top stunts, and conveniently effective rubber masks.  An altogether rarer beast is the intelligent, grown up espionage film examining the elaborate games and psychological somersaults required of those in the spying business.  Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, adapted from the novel by John le Carre, looks to be just such a film.  As a new UK teaser makes clear, Gary Oldman plays a semi-retired MI6 secret agent tasked with rooting out a mole at the height of Cold War paranoia.  It's a damn fine trailer, though it does make the odd choise of having voiceover pronouncing text that's onscreen.

Published in Movie News

Thanks in no small part to films like Seven, police procedurals are most commonly associated with the grimy, foreboding environs of the big city, particularly when these procedurals involve the pursuit of possibly serial-killing murderers.  The upcoming thriller Texas Killing Fields stars Sam Worthington and Jeffrey Dean Morgan as two detectives, one from rural Texas and one from New York, attempt to track down a murderer who deposits his victims in a bayou known as a popular body-dumping site.

The first trailer for the film suggests that the desolate atmosphere of small-town Texas lends itself to the slow-build dread  of a serial killer-mystery just as well as an apathetic metropolis.  Also on hand in the trailer are Jessica Chastain and Chloe Moretz, who has dropped a body or two onscreen between her roles in Kick-Ass and Let Me In.

Published in Movie News

That Gary Oldman has never even been nominated for an Oscar boggles the mind.  We're talking about the prolific master of accents who has played Lee Harvey Oswald, Drexl Spivey, Jean-Baptise Emanuel Zorg, Rosencrantz, Ludwig van Beethoven, and even Sirius Black and Commissioner Gordon.  For the first time in his long and varied career, though, Mr. Oldman is stirring up awards-y talk for his lead performance in Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, an adaptation of the novel by espionage-master John le Carre.  A new UK trailer for the Cold War-era thriller introcudes Oldman as George Smiley, a more-or-less retired spy tasked with rooting out a Soviet mole in MI6, the British intelligence agency.  Like its predecessor, it's a hell of a trailer, promising a classy, gripping film with a faultless ensemble at work.

Published in Movie News

At San Diego Comic-Con, Universal hosted a panel promoting Snow White & the Huntsman, which begins production in the United Kingdom next week.  As our panel coverage established, director Rupert Sanders was on hand, along with producers Joe Roth and Palak Patel, along with stars Kristen Stewart, Charlize Theron, Chris Hemsworth, and Sam Claflin.  Since shooting hasn't yet started, the panel presented a first look at the four stars in costume, as well as a conceptual image of the eight dwarfs who, in this iteration, look like gruff, battle-hardened warriors.  Now, the four images of the costumed principal cast are available for your viewing, and the influence of Peter Jackson's take on The Lord of the Rings is on display, particularly in the case of Snow White herself.

Published in Movie News
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