Tough to rate.... | Russia House [VHS] | Sean Connery, Michelle Pfeiffer
 
 


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Russia House [VHS]
Sean Connery, Michelle Pfeiffer

MGM (Video & DVD), 1993

average customer review:based on 31 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended






HEAD AND HEART, ACTION AND INTELLIGENT INTRIGUE IN ONE SUPERB MOVIE

Connery and Pheiffer and Le Carre; what a movie menage! Shot in Moscow and Great Britian, this is one of the most realistic yet fast-paced spy adventures ever made.
A classic.Reminiscent of the wuality of Marathon Man Marathon Man. Another comarison for quality/reality, Spy Game Spy Game (Widescreen Edition) (Just noted it's selling for one cent in Amazon marketplace!) Lecarre was involved in the production, which seems to give/keep the great novel's edge. I'd had this film on laser, just updated to DVD, so it's even better being sharper. Gotta run to catch m'plane to Minsk.


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russian house

great movie...shows russian life and living conditions as they are in the real world...been there done that....james


Tough to rate....

Ok, here goes:

This movie is a bit of a tough watch, and a tough one to rate. The positives are the acting - Connery, Pfeiffer, Brandenauer, etc all play their parts very well. And the settings were good - Russia looked like what we (American point of view, here) imagine it to be, and the same for Portugal...

I'd like to give it more than 3 stars, just for the above reasons and the fact that I personally liked the theme.

Unfortunately, the plot is tedious a la the LeCarre novels of the Karla trilogy (Tinker Tailor, Smiley's People, etc) written for 1970s pseudo-intellectualism with very little of the action we've come to expect from "spy thrillers" such as the Tom Clancey genre. The plot can leave you yawning at times and its easy to get destracted watching it unfold in the first three-quarters of the movie. And once that happens, you've lost the story.

Some specific points:
I mentioned the acting above, but one draw back was the somewhat stereotyped portrayal of the characters (not the actors' fault): the Brits are all understated, "old boy" public school establishment types; the Americans are brash, somewhat impatient and with some strong language; the Russians are all intellectual and fatalistic....Way too stereotypical for good character development.

Connery and Pfeiffer seemed a mismatch to me, though both played their roles well. It might have come off better with a perhaps slightly younger actor for Barley (rather than Connery) or an older female actor for Katya (Pfeiffer). I think the latter would have been best.

I'm uncertain as to what the denouement was meant to be: the revelation of Dante's intention with the manuscript he gave the West, or Barley meeting Pfeiffer and her family at the docks in Portugal as they defected?

The music was good, but was played redundantly throughout the film. It needed at least some VARIETY.

Not a bad flick, but its NOT a "spy movie". Its a drama. So be prepared to pay close attention; this isn't a casual watch.


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An underrated masterpiece

Many talents are responsible for THE RUSSIA HOUSE being one of the most elegant and sophisticated spy thrillers ever made: John Le Carre, whose novel provides the film's basis; Tom Stoppard, who wrote the intricate, witty screenplay; Ian Baker, whose gorgeous cinematography captures a Glasnost-era Soviet Union in decay; Jerry Goldsmith with one of his most beautiful scores; and the great Fred Schepisi, a criminally underrated director, whose sure and subtle hand was at the helm of this production. Then there's the cast--Sean Connery in arguably his finest role; Michelle Pfeiffer, James Fox, Roy Scheider, John Mahoney, Klaus Maria Brandauer. This is a classic Le Carre tale of a down-and-out, middle-aged man who is given one last redemptive shot at minor heroism. On one of his frequent trips to his beloved Russia, Barley Blair (Connery), a British publisher, unwittingly inspires a Soviet weapons scientist, "Dante" (Brandauer) to betray his country by writing a book filled with his country's military secrets. But the British intelligence service gets ahold of Dante's manuscript before Blair does. Blair is faced with a choice--cooperate with British intelligence, or look for a way to keep his promise to Dante. The story is set against a climate in which cold war intelligence communities are looking for a new angle to play in the midst of Perestroika. If this were just a politically topical movie, it would have aged very badly (and as in any Le Carre-based enterprise, there's a fair share of cheap laughs at Americans). But the film remains a deeply moving one nearly 20 years after its release because of the strength of the performances and the beauty of the filmmaking. This kind of intelligent and stylish thriller simply does not get made any more and it's a shame. A must-see film.


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Intelligent casting, strong performances, and the persuasive chemistry between Sean Connery and Michelle Pfeiffer prove the virtues in director Fred Schepisi's well-intended but problematic screen realization of this John Le Carré espionage thriller. At its best, The Russia House depicts the bittersweet nuances of the pivotal affair between a weary, alcoholic London publisher (Connery) and the mysterious Russian beauty (Pfeiffer) who sends him a fateful manuscript exposing the weaknesses beneath Soviet defense technology. Connery's Barley is a gritty, all-too-human figure who's palpably revived by his awakening feelings for Pfeiffer's wan, vulnerable Katya, whose own reciprocal emotions are equally convincing. Together, they weave a poignant romantic duet.

The problems, meanwhile, emanate from the story line that brings these opposites together. Le Carré's novels are absorbing but typically internal odysseys that seldom offer the level of straightforward action or simple arcs of plot that the big screen thrives on. For The Russia House, written as glasnost eclipsed the cold war's overt rivalries, Le Carré means to measure how old adversaries must calibrate their battle to a more subtle, subdued match of wits. Barley himself becomes enmeshed in the mystery of the manuscript because British intelligence chooses to use him as cat's paw rather than become directly involved. Such subtlety may be a more realistic take on the spy games of the recent past, but it makes for an often tedious, talky alternative to taut heroics that Connery codified in his most celebrated early espionage role.

If the suspense thus suffers, we're still left with an affecting love story, as well as some convincing sniping between British and U.S. intelligence operatives, beautifully cast with James Fox, Roy Scheider, and John Mahoney. Veteran playwright Tom Stoppard brings considerable style to the dialogue, without solving the problem of giving us more than those verbal exchanges to sustain dramatic interest. --Sam Sutherland


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reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7



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