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The Looking Glass War [1969] | ![The Looking Glass War [1969]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51844JHRHJL._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Director: Frank R. Pierson Actors: Christopher Jones, Paul Rogers, Ralph Richardson, Anthony Hopkins Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Category: DVD
List Price: £12.99 Buy New: £3.78 You Save: £9.21 (71%)
New (9) Used (1) from £3.78
Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 7825
Format: Pal Language: English (Original Language) Rating: Suitable for 12 years and over Region: 2 Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 103 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
EAN: 5035822005839 ASIN: B000AAVDF6
Theatrical Release Date: 1969 Release Date: October 17, 2005 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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Hopkins Does His Best with a poor film! November 17, 2007 S. Thomson (Sunny Surrey, U.K) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Good story, made on a tight budget, sadly. Hopkins clearly showed his early talents in this stark, moody film. However, I hadn't known Finnair was still in business after the 70's (Do they still fly anywhere at all?!) so that was a moment of light relief. Otherwise, it's simply a film which showed (as the first Reviewer comments) the true paranoia and desperation of the times.
Disappointing September 15, 2007 Network English (Finland) 4 out of 10 found this review helpful
Sorry, but I found this to be a very poor adaptation of the book. Frank Pierson made this great novel into barely more than a romantic(!!) melodrama without the happy end. I give it one star for a great shot of a Finnair plane landing at Helsinki in 1969.
Behind enemy lines March 21, 2007 Kona (Derbyshire) 27 out of 29 found this review helpful
The year is 1969 and the Cold War is raging. A British spy who was investigating missiles on the East German border has just been killed. The West needs another agent fast and they hire Leiser (Christopher Jones), a handsome and clever young man from Poland. He agrees to be a spy in exchange for political asylum in the West. He sneaks into East Germany and finds not only missiles, but also an very pretty girl, while his trainers (Anthony Hopkins, Ralph Richardson) anxiously wait to hear from him. This isn't the James Bond kind of spy movie; there's no glitz or glamour and definitely no humor. Instead, it's a grim, pitiless look at the men who pull the strings in the espionage game. There isn't a lot of action; the bleak and hopeless mood of the times pervades the story. With Hopkins and Richardson around, one has to wonder why they recruited an outsider to join British Intelligence, but if you can overlook this plot hole, it is an engrossing film. Handsome Christopher Jones, a James Dean look-alike, is appropriately petulant and charismatic. It's a shame his voice had to be dubbed; one wonders what his voice really sounds like. Young Anthony Hopkins brings his usual intensity and dignity to a rather thankless role. It's an interesting and quite cynical look at the paranoia that characterized the 60s.
Games Behind The Wall February 21, 2007 ianrmillard 12 out of 22 found this review helpful
A good adaptation of the John le Carre novel, made in 1969, some years after the short book came out. British Intelligence wants a spy on the ground in East Germany (DDR) and recruits a recently defected young Polish seaman for the purpose. He is trained in Morse code and radio and in the arts of defence with pistol, bare hands and anything else around the home. An amusing scene has him fighting back for real with a youngish Anthony Hopkins at the safe training house in Brighton, run by a sexy Service widow (one of the best played roles in a tight field). The police come to the door about the noise of fighting, only to be reassuringly fobbed off by the woman in such terms as "oh, fficer, I'm so sorry, only the boys having a little wrestle!" leaving the plods to imply that "the boys" are about 10 years old. In the end, the defector is played back into Eastern Europe to try to film misiles (placed there contrary to the East German disarmament understanding). It all goes wrong, he is caught, not least because the British have deliberately given him an obsolete and bound to be tracked radio. He is killed and hopkins has an epi over the coffee cups as the callous older agent-handlers and bosses look slightly embarrassed. Well done on the whole. I enjoyed it.
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