A Perfect Spy: Complete BBC Series (3 Disc Box Set) [DVD]
|
| List Price: | £15.99 |
| Price: | £10.48 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
14 new or used available from £8.35
Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1934 in DVD
- Released on: 2005-06-06
- Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
- Formats: PAL, Subtitled, Dolby, Colour
- Original language: English
- Number of discs: 3
- Running time: 374 minutes
Editorial Reviews
DVD Description
A Perfect Spy traces the rise and fall of Magnus Pym and his career through intelligence. From chance meetings with people will be important to him in the future to a life in Czechoslovakia, Washington and finally on the run in England Pym weaves his way through the complicated world of espionage. Where no-one is safe from betrayal, not even his father.
Synopsis
Top British Spy Magnus Pym initiates a massive man hunt when he goes missing. He's desperate to uncover who he really is, and must find himself before his hunters do...
Customer Reviews
A slow starter, but ultimately rewarding
Peter Egan, the nominal star of this serial, makes his first appearance in episode 3. In the first two episodes we see his childhood, adolescence, and early adulthood. The pacing is very slow at the beginning. Flashback sequences would have alleviated this, but the programme can be seen as an excellent antidote to the frantic cutting of modern television productions.
This role is Egan's best performance I have seen to date. In one scene he sits in a restaurant with his father and you see his attitude melt from bitterness to unwilling humour by facial expressions alone. Egan also impressively portrays the ambiguousness of the enigmatic Magnus Pym, an ambivalence that inhabits every part of his life - personal or professional.
By episode 5 the story is in full flow, and the building sense of unease compels you to watch. Magnus's life looks set to unravel. His spy bosses, his wife, even his young son begin to perceive what kind of man he is. Only Magnus's father accepted him for himself, for there is a subtle but clear similarity between them. Again, Peter Egan is convincing enough for you to lose yourself in the drama.
One of the most fascinatingly mysterious characters is Axel, who crops up throughout Pym's life and, it seems, will be a major force in his destiny.
A Perfect DVD
This John Le Carre adaptation is almost as good as Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, there's no legendary performances here but the screen play by Arthur Hopcraft and a strong cast make it a pleasurable viewing experience. The suspense and understanding the psychology of a spy builds through each episode and for such a slow paced film at times it really is surprising edge of the seat stuff. Just a quick note on Peter Egen, at first i had trouble not picturing him standing next to Richard Briers (Everdecreasing Circles) but once you get over this initial shock by the end you realise what good job he does for the part and that he is actually a rather splendid actor.
Betrayal as a way of life
What makes a perfect spy? Meet Magnus Pym. He's a nice little kid. His dad's a bit of shyster and his mum has Magnus carefully tutored to support and not to upset the old man. And why wouldn't he do everything to please his dad? He loves him. His dad's good to him. He's fun. Rick (Magnus's dad) manipulates everybody around him into impossible positions - but little kids don't notice things like that. That's the sort of thing you learn as you grow up and Magnus soaks it up like a sponge as he gets older. He's a natural: business and friendship with a smile and a stab. A chap like that can go far.
I watched this when it was first broadcast in the 1980s and it had me hooked for its seven episodes (about 50 minutes each). I wondered if it would be as good as I remembered and guess what, it's better. The story is completely gripping and the acting is just superb. The casting is a piece of genius, especially Peter Egan as Magnus, Ray McAnally as Rick and Alan Howard as Brotherhood - but really, every actor - even the smallest parts are acted to perfection. La Carre writes such a clever and convincing story. The characters are complex and colourful - no black and white/good and bad simplicity here. Rick and Magnus are absolute rotters but so likeable with it. The people who should despise them love them. How many other writers could create such paradoxical characters and make them convincing - almost ordinary? La Carre is in a class of his own. Brilliant.
Highly recommended.
![A Perfect Spy: Complete BBC Series (3 Disc Box Set) [DVD]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/512D6CSWN9L._SL210_.jpg)
![The Looking Glass War [DVD] [1969]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51844JHRHJL._SL75_.jpg)
![Spy Who Came In From The Cold [DVD]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51O7VwJdgIL._SL75_.jpg)
![The Russia House [DVD] [1991]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/413KPWQSPAL._SL75_.jpg)