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Review: Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy

It's no secret - this spy ranks with the best

September 15, 2011 09:59
Long-suffering and wracked by regret: Gary Oldman as George Smiley

ByJonathan Foreman, Jonathan Foreman

2 min read

Gary Oldman is the greatest but perhaps least appreciated British film actor of his generation. Not only does he have extraordinary range - his better-known roles include incarnations as Sid Vicious, Count Dracula and Lee Harvey Oswald - but in more than a quarter century of performances he has never played a false, uninspired or uninteresting note.

Never showy or over the top, if Oldman is not as celebrated as contemporaries like Daniel Day Lewis, Colin Firth or even Tim Roth, it is partly because he inhabits his roles so completely. There is no trace of a Gary Oldman persona, never a sense that this is a typical Oldman performance. (Hollywood discovered early on that Oldman could produce faultless and consistent American accents of every regional hue, and has had him play everything from evil Republican senators to Batman's Commissioner Gordon.)

Oldman's quiet but profound skills and lack of evident ego make him an inspired choice to play George Smiley in the new adaptation of John le Carré's classic spy novel, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy.

It is no small thing to take on a role that Sir Alec Guinness made his in the celebrated 1979 BBC TV series. And there are times in the new film when Oldman sounds eerily like Guinness, while looking disconcertingly like the comic actor Bill Nighy. But Oldman pulls it off in a performance that risks being almost too contained, until a moment comes when his reticent, long-suffering, regret-wracked spy confronts a villain and vengeful anger suddenly fills his voice and eyes.