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Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy Poster

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

How do you find an enemy who is hidden right before your eyes?
2011 | 127m | English

(222219 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

In the bleak days of the Cold War, espionage veteran George Smiley is forced from semi-retirement to uncover a Soviet mole within his former colleagues at the heart of MI6.
Release Date: Sep 16, 2011
Director: Tomas Alfredson
Writer: John le Carré, Peter Straughan, Bridget O'Connor
Genres: Drama, Mystery, Thriller
Keywords london, england, budapest, hungary, espionage, spy, cold war, 1970s, secret agent, mi6, mole, british spy, british intelligence
Production Companies Paradis Films, StudioCanal, Kinowelt, Working Title Films, Karla Films, AZ Celtic Films
Box Office Revenue: $80,600,000
Budget: $30,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Gary Oldman George Smiley
Colin Firth Bill Haydon
Tom Hardy Ricki Tarr
John Hurt Control
Toby Jones Percy Alleline
Mark Strong Jim Prideaux
Benedict Cumberbatch Peter Guillam
Ciarán Hinds Roy Bland
David Dencik Toby Esterhase
Kathy Burke Connie Sachs
Stephen Graham Jerry Westerby
Simon McBurney Oliver Lacon
Svetlana Khodchenkova Irina
Roger Lloyd Pack Mendel
Konstantin Khabenskiy Polyakov
Christian McKay Mackelvore
Zoltán Mucsi Magyar
Péter Kálloy Molnár Hungarian Waiter
Ilona Kassai Woman in Window
Imre Csuja KGB Agent
Arthur Nightingale Bryant
Amanda Fairbank-Hynes Belinda
Peter McNeil O'Connor Fawn
Matyelok Gibbs Mrs Pope-Graham
Philip Hill-Pearson Norman
Jamie Thomas King Kaspart
Stuart Graham Minister
Sarah-Jane Robinson Mary Alleline
Katrina Vasilieva Ann Smiley
Linda Marlowe Mrs McCraig
William Haddock Bill Roach
Erskine Wylie Spikeley
Philip Martin Brown Tufty Thesinger
Tomasz Kowalski Boris
Alexandra Salafranca Turkish Mistress
Denis Khoroshko Ivan
Oleg Dzhabrailov Sergei
Gillian Stevenson Listening Woman
Nick Hopper Janitor Alwyn
Laura Carmichael Sal
Rupert Procter Guillam's Boyfriend
John le Carré Christmas Party Guest
Michael Sarne Karla (Voice)
Jean-Claude Jay French Man at Residency
Tom Stuart Ben
Harvey Walsh Schoolboy (uncredited)
Name Job
John le Carré Novel
Peter Straughan Screenplay
Tomas Alfredson Director
Bridget O'Connor Screenplay
Jack English Still Photographer
Dixie Chassay Casting Associate
Dan Grace Costume Supervisor
Tom Brown Supervising Art Director
Libbie Barr Script Supervisor
Gábor Hevesi Gaffer
Gábor Homonnay Costume Supervisor
Tatiana Macdonald Set Decoration
Ayberk Dorukhan Erdogdu Art Department Coordinator
Hilal Sezer Assistant Costume Designer
Nicholas Roche-Gordon Key Set Costumer
Ruslan Ogorodnik 3D Artist
Nick King Visual Effects Producer
Katalin Ujvari Key Set Costumer
Felicity Bowring Makeup Designer, Hair Designer
Fredrik Nord Visual Effects Supervisor
Donald McInnes Key Hair Stylist
Nick Foley ADR Voice Casting
Tunc Erguden Property Master
Peter Taylor Camera Operator
Larry S. Prinz Gaffer
Stephen Griffiths Supervising Sound Editor
Howard Bargroff Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Klári Riesz Key Set Costumer
Louis Elman ADR Voice Casting
Gyula Krasnyánszky Pyrotechnic Supervisor
Kirsten Lane Music Consultant
Pilar Foy Art Direction
Mark Raggett Supervising Art Director
Nick Angel Music Supervisor
Abigail Barbier ADR Voice Casting
Hildegard Haide Key Makeup Artist
Márton Kristóf Cableman
Klári Szinek Key Hair Stylist
Lizzie Lawson Key Makeup Artist
Barnaby Smyth Foley
Ebru Kiziltan Key Makeup Artist
Andrea Cripps Assistant Costume Designer
István Török Dolly Grip
Christophe Maratier Armorer
Sirio Quintavalle Visual Effects Supervisor
Mária Raffai Seamstress
Mark Holt Special Effects Supervisor
Orin Beaton Boom Operator
Sara Trezzi Visual Effects Producer
Alan Martin Gaffer
Andy Shelley Supervising Sound Editor
Ildikó Aradi Hairstylist
Zsuzsa Mihalek Set Decoration
Jina Jay Casting
Chris Murphy Boom Operator
Aron Hjartarson CG Supervisor
Jallo Faber Second Unit Director of Photography
Béla Gajdos Armorer
Rosaria Coppola Seamstress
Gail Behrmann Researcher
Aimee Dadswell Visual Effects Producer
Hasan Ormanlar Key Grip
Mark Trend First Assistant Editor
György Rajna Boom Operator
Doug Cooper Sound Re-Recording Mixer
James Bellamy Music Editor
János Kiss Key Grip
Chris Cull Property Master
Hoyte van Hoytema Director of Photography
Jacqueline Durran Costume Design
Dino Jonsäter Editor
Maria Djurkovic Production Design
Alberto Iglesias Original Music Composer
Nellie Burroughes Stunt Double
John Casali Production Sound Mixer
John William Turner Dailies Technician
Name Title
Robyn Slovo Producer
Tim Bevan Producer
Eric Fellner Producer
Organization Category Person
BAFTA Awards Best Director Tomas Alfredson Nominated
BAFTA Awards Best Supporting Actor Mark Strong Nominated
Venice Film Festival Best Supporting Actress Ruth Wilson Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 23 30 15
2024 5 26 36 17
2024 6 26 41 18
2024 7 30 51 14
2024 8 24 41 18
2024 9 17 27 13
2024 10 23 41 13
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2025 1 24 41 17
2025 2 22 43 4
2025 3 9 29 1
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Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 9 718 839
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Reviews

brekkil
8.0

The russians have placed a mole within the Circus (who is the british intelligence service, by the way). George Smiley (Gary Oldman), having been fired from the Circus, has now been rehired (secretly) to find the mole. He assembles his small team and begins to look into the matters. The possibilitie ... s are plenty, Percy (Toby Jones), Esterhase (David Dencik), Roy Bland (Ciaran Hinds) and Bill Haydon (Colin Firth). His old friend, Control (John Hurt), even suspected George himself of being the mole. This movie is directed by a personal favorite of mine, Tomas Alfredson, who also created the vampire movie, _Let the Right One In_ (Lad den rette komme ind), as well as the amazing, _Four Shades of Brown_ (fire nuancer af brun). He is a master of creating a dark and mysterious atmosphere, and does exactly that in this movie. The pace is slow, the music is scarce and the colours are old and faded, perfect for a spy movie such as this. Watching this movie is like watching a puzzle being carefully put together in front of you. It takes time to get it just right, and you have to look carefully at all the pieces. Good things takes time, and this movie understands that. The viewer has to watch carefully, because it constantly goes from the present and into the past. People who have died, are resurrected in the memories of the past, to help us construct the final image. _Last words... this movie will not appeal to everyone, it requires the viewer to be active, watch carefully, and to appreciate the slow narrative. I will gladly admit that I have tried watching this movie three times before I finally succeeded in watching all of it. I am not normally a fan of these sort of movies, but I can always appreciate spectacular acting, and the craftmanship of a truly great director, and so, this movie becomes so much more than just a spy movie. It becomes a movie about people living on the edge of a war, trying to survive, trying to find the one threat that might break down the wall and destroy the british empire._

Jun 23, 2021
r96sk
8.0

Great cast, nice cinematography and a fascinating plot. <em>'Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy'</em> is very much a slow burn but it's worth it at the end, even if I wouldn't describe the premise as unpredictable - it isn't predictable per se, I just can't say I was majorly surprised at what occurs that' ... s all. It's not as complicated as the film suggests I feel, that's not a criticism but I'm just saying if I wrote down what I thought was going to happen at the start and checked it at the end, I'd be mostly right - at least with an outline. That's not me being big headed, I just feel it throws a lot of false curve balls to go around the houses a tad. The only part, to be honest, I didn't fully get while watching was the Polyakov bits. All the cast give excellent performances, with Gary Oldman (Smiley) and Colin Firth (Haydon) standing out most. You've also got Tom Hardy (Tarr), Mark Strong (Prideaux), Benedict Cumberbatch (Guillam), Stephen Graham (Westerby) and Toby Jones (Alleline) all there too. You can't really go wrong with a list like that. The onscreen talent carry events, but this is still a film that keeps you watching and paying attention - just not to a deep, deep level. With everything said, I still enjoyed this. You should definitely give it a view.

Jun 23, 2021
FilipeManuelNeto
6.0

**Despite a great cast and good script material, the film is tiring, stagnant, a bit gray and boring to watch.** This film is a remake of an older film from 1973 (I haven't seen it yet, but I intend to), both of which are film adaptations of a spy novel that was written by John Le Carrée. Being t ... he original story known for its quality and this film being an elaborate super production and with a cast full of established names, I was expecting a great film… but the truth is that I felt disappointed in that expectation. The movie is not as interesting and good as I would have liked. In fact, the film has a lot of well-known actors, with the strongest and most impactful performance given to us by an experienced Gary Oldman. The actor regained his native English accent and was able to masterfully adapt to the character, fully deserving the Oscar nomination for Best Actor he received that year. Besides him, Toby Jones and Colin Firth were also in great shape in this film, but Benedict Cumberbatch, John Hurt and Tom Hardy are not far behind them. The story is relatively simple: in the midst of Cold War intrigue, MI6 tried to help a Soviet officer defect in Budapest. This officer knew the identity of a double agent, undercover in the British services. However, the operation goes very badly and it becomes evident to the leaders of MI6 that there really are one or more traitors, very well placed within the secret service. To find out who they are, they call in George Smiley, a retired agent with a lot of experience. On a technical level, I can't help but appreciate the dark cinematography and the way it tries to recreate the dirty, foggy and somewhat paranoid atmosphere of Cold War London, in addition to the atmosphere of British houses of that time and all the effort of the set and costumes. The film is effective in its effort to transport us to the time and context, and manages to place itself in a pleasantly paranoid environment, where everyone is suspicious of everyone else. It's not an action movie and, therefore, the effects are few and discreet, functional. Despite strong performances from the cast and excellent source material and well-written script, the film has two main issues: atmosphere and pacing. Tomas Alfredson deliberately slowed the film, and that makes the film tiresome and boring, if you add the lack of movement, the endless dialogue, the way each action and movement takes as long as possible in front of the camera. Also, one has to be very attentive to the names of the various characters, and their role in the film, or we will never understand the plot while watching the film.

Jun 18, 2022
Geronimo1967
7.0

Many folks will remember the wonderful BBC adaptation of this John Le Carré story that featured the late Sir Alec Guinness as the measured and sagely "George Smiley" character. This time, this almost as superior adaptation places an on-form Gary Oldman in that role. What role? Well having just been ... pensioned off, he is re-recruited by "C" (John Hurt) to try and track down a KGB spy deep within the fabric of MI6. It's fair to say that, as this story starts to unfold, we discover there are plenty of suspects and the classily written story bombards us with characterful and suspicious scenarios that might be true, might be half-true, or might just be genuine red herrings! A formidable cast of British stalwarts add richness to this complex but not convoluted tale of deceit and betrayal. Tom Hardy, Colin Firth and even the usually unimpressive Mark Strong chip in well but my plaudits go to the truly odiously ambitious Toby Jones ("Alieline") and to Benedict Cumberbatch's "Guillam". Tomas Alfredson has paced this film well. It can appear slow at times, but on the second time of watching I appreciated there was much more substance to some of the dialogue, the nuanced efforts from the stars and from a very well crafted period production. It just goes to show that less can definately be more when the writing and acting do all the heavy lifting in concert, leaving the pyrotechnics and visual effects in their boxes.

Jul 22, 2022