Friday, November 4, 2016

Bridge of Spies

This week we screened Bridge of Spies. I'd seen and enjoyed it at the cinema, but even so a second screening was even better.

My notes are as follows

Bridge of Spies

USA 2016                    141 minutes

Director:                      Stephen Spielberg

Starring:                        Tom Hanks, Mark Rylance, Amy Ryan, Alan Alda and Austin Stowell

Awards and Nominations

  • Won Oscar for Best Supporting Actor (Mark Rylance) and five further nominations including Best Film, Best Original Screenplay and Best Soundtrack
  • Won BAFTA for Best Supporting Actor (Mark Rylance) and eight further nominations including Best Director, Best Film, Best Original Screenplay, Best Original Cinematography and Best Soundtrack

“Steven Spielberg’s Cold War spy-swap drama Bridge of Spies is a movie of glorious craftsmanship, human sympathy and flair. It’s a consciously old-fashioned piece of Hollywood storytelling conceived in something like the heartfelt, ingenuous style of Frank Capra. Where once we had Mr Smith Goes To Washington — here we have Mr Hanks Goes To West Berlin.”
 

Peter Bradshaw

50 Best Films of 2015

(Bridge of Spies was number two)

 During the Cold War the CIA recruits insurance lawyer James B Donovan (Tom Hanks) to negotiate the release and exchange of Francis G (Gary) Powers (Austin Stowell), the pilot of a U-2 spy plane shot down over East Germany. Donovan travels to Berlin to negotiate the deal, offering as an exchange the Soviet spy Rudolf Abel (Mark Rylance) whom Donovan had previously defended during his trial for espionage in the US.

Screenplay writer Matt Charman became interested in Donovan after reading about him in a biography of President Kennedy; after a meeting with Donovan’s son in New York he pitched his story to several studios, with DreamWorks choosing to buy it and then Spielberg deciding to direct. DreamWorks then brought in the Coen Brothers to revise Charman’s original script, although their work with Charman was collaborative, as Charman confirmed in an interview:

“[The Coen Brothers] were able to really punch up the negotiations on the back end of the movie, then they handed the baton back to me to do a pass after they did their pass, to make the movie just sit in a place we all wanted it to. The flavour they brought is so fun and enjoyable. It needed to be entertaining but truthful.”

 Inevitably for the purposes of the film the screenplay had to compromise with strict historical accuracy: the most significant of the changes is that it shortens the timescales of events which while increasing tension can give a misleading impression of the whole operation. However most reviewers accepted this departure from the historical record as inevitable, and the film itself acknowledges this by advertising itself as being “inspired by true events”.

The film is a US/German co-production and Spielberg used many actual Berlin locations for scenes that actually took place there, including the former Tempelhof Airport for Donovan’s arrival and the real Glienicke Bridge (the so-called “Bridge of Spies”) to film the prisoner exchange. For the latter location the German government closed the bridge to traffic for a weekend to allow filming to take place, and Angela Merkel visited the set to watch the filming.

On its release the film received many positive reviews and many nominations during the awards season, but it was Mark Rylance who won most of the film’s awards for his role as Rudolf Abel. He had already won Tony and Olivier Awards for his stage work in New York and London as well as several BAFTA awards for his TV work, most recently for his role as Thomas Cromwell in the BBC adaptation of Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall (2015), and so this Oscar has allowed him to complete an uncommon “triple” win.

Here is the trailer:

 

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