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The Spy Who Came in From the Cold

1965 - Not Rated
Release Date: 07/13/2004
Features: DVD Features: Region 1 Keep Case Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.85 Audio: Dolby Digital 5.1 - English Dolby Digital Mono - French Dolby Restored Mono - English Dolby Surround - English Interactive Features: Scene Access Interactive Menus
Time:  112  mins.
J&R Item # 1019733_5
UPC # 097360650945
Label: Paramount Home Entertainment
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DVD
 
1965 - Not Rated
Release Date: 11/25/2008
Features: DVD Features: Region 1 NTSC Keep Case 2-Disc Set Widescreen 1.85 Audio: Dolby Digital 2.0 - English Additional Release Material: Additional Audio Material - Audio Conversation - Martin Ritt, Director With Patrick McGilligan, Film Historian - 1985 Audio Commentary - Oswald Morris, Director of Photography Documentary - 1. THE SECRET CENTER: JOHN LE CARRE- 2000 2. ACTING IN THE 60'S: Richard Burton, Actor With Kenneth Tynan, Critic - 1967 Interview - John Le Carre, Author Additional Product: Booklet Trailers - Theatrical Trailer Text/Photo Galleries: Galleries - Set Designs Gallery Additional Product: Booklet - Essay - Michael Sragow, Critic
Time:  112  mins.
J&R Item # 1019733_7
UPC # 715515033121
Label: Image Entertainment, Inc.
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2-Disc Set / Criterion Collection DVD
 
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Martin Ritt's adaptation of the John Le Carre bestseller THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD stars Richard Burton as Alec Leamas, a burnt-out spy soon to retire from British Intelligence. For his final assignment, Alec must pose as a drunk who wants to defect to East Germany, where the chief of operations for the Communists, Hans-Dieter Mundt (Peter van Eyck), has captured several British spies. His acting works: Communists throw Alec into jail for public drunkenness and for having an affair with a young member of the local Communist party, Nan (Claire Bloom). In jail, he is approached by Mundt's agents and asked to defect. They take Alec to East Berlin where he is grilled by Mundt's top man, Fiedler (Oskar Werner), who believes that Mundt is actually a double agent. Shot in stark black and white in documentary style, Ritt's film is a realistic portrait of the grim life of a spy, revealing all of the profession's complexities in a style that is equally as thrilling as an elaborate action scene in a James Bond movie. At the heart of the film is Burton's bitter and world-weary Alec, and his performance here ranks among the best of his career.

"Burton is terrific....Oskar Werner matches Burton's performance as an ambitious Jewish communist agent who is hungry to displace his ex-Nazi superior." -- Mike Clark , (USA Today)

"Burton is sexily morose....[The actors] pull you into a fascinatingly crabbed, paranoid world." -- Grade: B+ -- Ken Tucker , (Entertainment Weekly)

"The drab cold war atmosphere is deftly evoked by Oswald Morris's elemental black-and-white photography and the cramped sets designed by Tambi Larsen and Hal Pereira." -- Dave Kehr , (New York Times)

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PID # 4259384


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