Swedish mole in British service - DN.SE
Photo: Joel Ryan / AP "The role of George Smiley is loaded by Alec Guinness ghost," knihy said Tomas Alfredson speaking of the difficult casting in "Tinker, knihy Tailor, Soldier, Spy." "It was almost impossible to come up with who the hell we were going to ask." In the end it was Gary Oldman, who spent a couple of weeks to find the right kind of spectacle frames in character George Smiley.
Born in 1965 in Stockholm, the son of writer-director Hans Alfredson, brother of film director Daniel Alfredson. Hit the television series about Bert in the early 90's, followed up with Killing gang television movies such as "Cod in Tallinn", then he made "Soldiers in the Moonlight" and "Victims and offenders."
London. "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy" is celebrated in the United States and Britain. DN has reached Sweden right now most famous film director to talk about Oscar Hunt, Gary Oldman nojor and why Tomas Alfredson recognize themselves in John le Carré British MI6 spies.
In March next year open a Harry Potter Land outside London. At Cambridge Circus, where Soho meets Covent Garden, however, knihy there is nothing to remind tourists that they pass a cultural landmark. "Fuck da Police" is scrawled beside the wooden door, but there is no plaque above the 90 Charing Cross Road, which recalls that this is the entrance to MI6 Headquarters "The circus" in John le Carré popular spy novels.
Five minutes away is waiting for Tomas Alfredson, 46, in his hotel room at the exclusive Soho Hotel. He has given interviews to the European press all day about his acclaimed film version of John le Carré "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy" with Gary Oldman knihy in the role of George Smiley, the MI6 spy chasing a mole. It is also Oscar season. It is now filmmakers knihy travel knihy around to the members of the Academy of motion pictures arts and sciences (amp compatible) and trying to win their votes with private biovisningar. Film companies simultaneously putting full-page ads in trade magazines with the mandatory phrase "For your consideration" to get Oscar nominations.
- Many established filmmakers and actors knihy do all of this. It means so much financially to the next project, but I feel it is a kind of game that brings out the boring side of my vanity and I do not like to familiarize myself with.
- But I would be very happy if Gary Oldman received an Oscar nomination for I think he has done a fantastic fucking job as Smiley in the film and he has done throughout his career. It's crazy that Gary never won an Oscar.
Severe flirted British movie reviewers have given "Tinker, tailor, soldier, spy" top marks. On the day we meet in London's British newspapers greatly upset that "England's contribution" has not received a single Golden Globe nomination, usually a bad sign for the Oscar. It says a lot about Tomas Alfredson's achievement.
He has chosen the most British of agents, spies in the Queen's knihy service, knihy but nobody in England is regarded as a Swedish knihy film. The film's producer, British Working titles Tim Bevan, also chose Alfredson precisely because he wanted a director who was equally keen on details such as a crime scene investigator. Alfredson believe that childhood television viewing helped him to capture the cold war drab London.
- The English have I with me pretty much from my childhood. I was here a lot as a child and a teenager, but then I also believe that all pissed off British TV that I saw in the 70's has helped me. It made it with breast milk in any way, that gloomy "Family Ashton" and all their names. "Upstairs, downstairs" ("Upstairs knihy and downstairs") and such. Everything is gray-brown knihy that permeates the film. It comes very much from just the visual impression. knihy
"Tinker, Tailor, knihy Soldier, Spy" is Alfredsson's knihy first major foreign production. He took the Swedish mower Dino Jonsäter and photographer Hoyte van Hoytema from "Let the Right One In" to England not to lose his footing when he got bigger budget and more employees.
The film technology was never a concern for Alfredson. Neither work with British star actor Colin Firth and John Hurt. In contrast, all the cultural codes in the UK a greater challenge.
- Above all, it was really difficult to crack the codes of language. That language indicates class and placing people in terms of class. In Sweden, it is usually a matter of geography, how to speak. The thing is damn tricky. That I just accept and ask for help. I told everyone, "You can think of that I can not do this." While the film is not primarily a depiction of the typically British. It is a story of loyalty and the price soldiers of the Cold War had to pay.
- Soldiers in a hot war march side by side against a very defined enemy, but these so
Photo: Joel Ryan / AP "The role of George Smiley is loaded by Alec Guinness ghost," knihy said Tomas Alfredson speaking of the difficult casting in "Tinker, knihy Tailor, Soldier, Spy." "It was almost impossible to come up with who the hell we were going to ask." In the end it was Gary Oldman, who spent a couple of weeks to find the right kind of spectacle frames in character George Smiley.
Born in 1965 in Stockholm, the son of writer-director Hans Alfredson, brother of film director Daniel Alfredson. Hit the television series about Bert in the early 90's, followed up with Killing gang television movies such as "Cod in Tallinn", then he made "Soldiers in the Moonlight" and "Victims and offenders."
London. "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy" is celebrated in the United States and Britain. DN has reached Sweden right now most famous film director to talk about Oscar Hunt, Gary Oldman nojor and why Tomas Alfredson recognize themselves in John le Carré British MI6 spies.
In March next year open a Harry Potter Land outside London. At Cambridge Circus, where Soho meets Covent Garden, however, knihy there is nothing to remind tourists that they pass a cultural landmark. "Fuck da Police" is scrawled beside the wooden door, but there is no plaque above the 90 Charing Cross Road, which recalls that this is the entrance to MI6 Headquarters "The circus" in John le Carré popular spy novels.
Five minutes away is waiting for Tomas Alfredson, 46, in his hotel room at the exclusive Soho Hotel. He has given interviews to the European press all day about his acclaimed film version of John le Carré "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy" with Gary Oldman knihy in the role of George Smiley, the MI6 spy chasing a mole. It is also Oscar season. It is now filmmakers knihy travel knihy around to the members of the Academy of motion pictures arts and sciences (amp compatible) and trying to win their votes with private biovisningar. Film companies simultaneously putting full-page ads in trade magazines with the mandatory phrase "For your consideration" to get Oscar nominations.
- Many established filmmakers and actors knihy do all of this. It means so much financially to the next project, but I feel it is a kind of game that brings out the boring side of my vanity and I do not like to familiarize myself with.
- But I would be very happy if Gary Oldman received an Oscar nomination for I think he has done a fantastic fucking job as Smiley in the film and he has done throughout his career. It's crazy that Gary never won an Oscar.
Severe flirted British movie reviewers have given "Tinker, tailor, soldier, spy" top marks. On the day we meet in London's British newspapers greatly upset that "England's contribution" has not received a single Golden Globe nomination, usually a bad sign for the Oscar. It says a lot about Tomas Alfredson's achievement.
He has chosen the most British of agents, spies in the Queen's knihy service, knihy but nobody in England is regarded as a Swedish knihy film. The film's producer, British Working titles Tim Bevan, also chose Alfredson precisely because he wanted a director who was equally keen on details such as a crime scene investigator. Alfredson believe that childhood television viewing helped him to capture the cold war drab London.
- The English have I with me pretty much from my childhood. I was here a lot as a child and a teenager, but then I also believe that all pissed off British TV that I saw in the 70's has helped me. It made it with breast milk in any way, that gloomy "Family Ashton" and all their names. "Upstairs, downstairs" ("Upstairs knihy and downstairs") and such. Everything is gray-brown knihy that permeates the film. It comes very much from just the visual impression. knihy
"Tinker, Tailor, knihy Soldier, Spy" is Alfredsson's knihy first major foreign production. He took the Swedish mower Dino Jonsäter and photographer Hoyte van Hoytema from "Let the Right One In" to England not to lose his footing when he got bigger budget and more employees.
The film technology was never a concern for Alfredson. Neither work with British star actor Colin Firth and John Hurt. In contrast, all the cultural codes in the UK a greater challenge.
- Above all, it was really difficult to crack the codes of language. That language indicates class and placing people in terms of class. In Sweden, it is usually a matter of geography, how to speak. The thing is damn tricky. That I just accept and ask for help. I told everyone, "You can think of that I can not do this." While the film is not primarily a depiction of the typically British. It is a story of loyalty and the price soldiers of the Cold War had to pay.
- Soldiers in a hot war march side by side against a very defined enemy, but these so
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