Posted: Tue May 09, 2006 9:28 am
The new British DVD from Network is much better than all previous editions. It was digitally restored (cleaned up) on a high-definition progressive scan transfer and is 2.35:1 anamorphic, as opposed to the really weak non-anamorphic transfer that there previous edition had, that seems to have been mastered on analogue, not digital. There is still some contrast fluctuation in a few scenes and it is quite soft at times, highly detailed at others, but is overall very clean, with vibrant colours. There are contemporary (1966) interviews with the stars and director Michael Anderson, which are quite fascinating in that quaint 60s BBC style.
Not a great spy thriler, but a good one, with superb cinematography by Erwin Hillier (I Know Where I'm Going!; A Canterbury Tale) and exciting, expansive, bombed-out Berlin locations. Max von Sydow (great hairstyle) and Alec Guinness are excellent and deliver Pinter's witty, economic dialogue with aplomb. The casting of a Segal still confounds me slightly; why is an American working for MI5? In Trevor Dudley Smith's novels, Quiller is British. I guess it's the standard safety casting, so that the movie would sell in the States. Fine actor and a good performance, but the film has a rather strange tone at times, due to his presence, though this is no criticism of his performance.
The DVD is well worth acquiring if you are a fan of the film.
Not a great spy thriler, but a good one, with superb cinematography by Erwin Hillier (I Know Where I'm Going!; A Canterbury Tale) and exciting, expansive, bombed-out Berlin locations. Max von Sydow (great hairstyle) and Alec Guinness are excellent and deliver Pinter's witty, economic dialogue with aplomb. The casting of a Segal still confounds me slightly; why is an American working for MI5? In Trevor Dudley Smith's novels, Quiller is British. I guess it's the standard safety casting, so that the movie would sell in the States. Fine actor and a good performance, but the film has a rather strange tone at times, due to his presence, though this is no criticism of his performance.
The DVD is well worth acquiring if you are a fan of the film.