The Tailor Of Panama [2001]


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Editorial
Amazon.co.uk Review

The sly conceit at the heart of The Tailor of Panama is that tailors are the secret-keepers of the power elite: customise fine apparel for the rich and powerful, and you'll hear things only whispered in the halls of government. The film was co-adapted by John le Carré from his own novel, and directed by John Boorman with a delicious spin on the traditions of the spy genre. Pierce Brosnan qualifies as James Bond's black-sheep sibling as British MI6 agent Andy Osnard, viewing women only in terms of sexual conquest and conducting spy business by his own flexible set of rules. Banished to Panama to pay for recent indiscretions, Andy connects with Harry Pendel (Geoffrey Rush), a British ex-convict who's built a lucrative cover as tailor to Panama's highest officials. With the coveted Panama canal now under local control, Andy's arrived to see what Harry knows about the canal's pending multinational sale.

As Andy observes, Panama is "Casablanca without heroes", and that's precisely how Boorman depicts it: a melting pot of greed, ambition, and backroom manoeuvring, where Andy can bed an embassy official (Catherine McCormack) while squeezing information from Harry, who concocts a phony "silent opposition" that puts British and American forces on full alert. Harry's wife (Jamie Lee Curtis) is pulled into the scenario by Andy's ruthless scheming, and The Tailor of Panama reveals how a simple fabrication can provoke trigger-happy forces around the globe. Part comedy and part political horror thriller--with a tragic supporting role for Brendan Gleason, from Boorman's The General--this is old-fashioned spy stuff made new by leCarré's inventive plotting and keen ear for the dialogue of rogues. --Jeff Shannon, Amazon.com



Woven Out of Whole Cloth
Review date: 2008-09-16 Rating: 10 out of 10

I've watched and enjoyed "The Taylor of Panama" several times now. It seems to represent co-producer John Le Carré's homage to Graham Greene, Ian Fleming, and a spoof on the spy genre-film in general (It even includes a humorous pot-shot at "Casablanca.").

Geoffrey Rush turns in a moving performance as Harry Pendel, the tailor, whose fantasy life makes him all too vulnerable for the enticements and blackmail of the seedy would-be, but never-actually-was, James Bond--Andrew Osnard, a burnt-out MI-Sixer, banished to Panama as a punishment for peccadilloes in foreign postings [Pierce Brosnan does an engaging satire on his cinematic Bond aplomb.]. Between the fantasies of Pendel (whose dead but not-so-silent partner is portrayed by Harold Pinter) the situation soon gets out of hand and almost ruins Pendel's marriage (His wife is played by Jamie Lee Curtis.); it destroys his loyal Panamanian friends, and almost starts a war. And while Osnard and most of his colleagues prove to be as corruptible as they are mendacious, the tailor finally comes clean with his wife and mends his marriage.

Behind the satire is one of Le Carré's favorite topics, the willingness of Intelligence services to believe what they want (in this case the presence of a "silent opposition" to the local government), and, in the name of expediency, to spin the most tenuous threads into colorful yarns that they then weave into plausible fabrics and preposterous fabrications. Le Carré therefore seems to be suggesting that the various intelligence services with their vested interests are all accomplished tailors.



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Reviews


A LITTLE MASTERPIECE
Review date: 2007-03-19 Rating: 10 out of 10

Can't add very much to what other reviewers have said, apart from the strange person who thought Geoffrey Rush was miscast; one could not think of a better Harry Pendle! The whole thing is a darkly comic expose of what becomes those, who indulge in power, corruption and lies. Pierce Brosnan is an even better villain than he was a James Bond and here, he definitely enjoys his finest hour. I agree that Jamie Lee Curtis's role could have been played by just about any half decent actress, but maybe she needed the work and the producer needed a name to help with fund raising, so who really cares. She brings to the role, exactly what it requires, that of a sound, supporting actress. As hinted at before, Geoffrey Rush is simply brilliant as the overtly London Jewish, Tailor of Panama; a man who has dreams, but is hopelessly out of his depth. Despite all his failings you cannot help but love Harry Pendle and wish that his was not a dying breed. The film is tense, sinister and contains many a twist and a turn and it gets better every time I watch it. Highly recommended

Hugely Enjoyable
Review date: 2006-04-10 Rating: 8 out of 10

The Tailor of Panama is a wonderful darkly comic thriller. It really is enjoyable. Pierce Brosnan and Geoffrey Rush are superbly cast and really drive the film, though the other actors involved have little to do (John Fortune has an enjoyable small part) and Jamie Lee Curtis, I feel, is miscast. The first hour is a slow burner building the characters and the story, then the film steps up several gears and charges to a tense and brilliant ending. It is no slapstick comedy but rather darkly amusing. At the same time it manages to build the tension superbly and have its poingnant moments too. Highly recommended.

Get ready for more surprises from Brosnan
Review date: 2005-10-25 Rating: 8 out of 10

Whether the Tailor of Panama bears any resemblance to the book, I don't know - I find Le Carre's books impenetrable and I really didn't hold out much hope for this movie. In fact, I had it for several months before I got around to watching it. It was so good, I watched it again right away. And again the next day.

Other reviewers have commented on Pierce Brosnan's portrayal of Andy Osnard as anti-Bond - and he does it superbly. It's always wonderful to be surprised by actors. The surprise is not that Brosnan can play a total swine, or a brash anti-hero. The surprise is his ability to create subtleties in a character which could so easily have been a cliche. If you missed the subtleties, watch it again and concentrate on Brosnan. This is just a taste of things to come as Brosnan, freed of the shackles of Bond, flexes his acting muscles. Look forward to more surprises!

Geoffrey Rush is, as always, brilliant and understated as the victim caught up in something which quickly snowballs out of control. The only real criticism I have is that Jamie Lee Curtis is completely wasted - the role of Louisa wasn't worthy of her talents.

Get the movie, get some beer and popcorn and get ready to smile.

Sex, Lies and Saville Row.
Review date: 2004-05-21 Rating: 8 out of 10

If before the release of John Boorman's adaptation of John le Carre's "Tailor of Panama" (scripted by the novel's author himself) anybody had told me I'd ever see Geoffrey Rush and Pierce Brosnan costarring in the same movie, I'd have snapped "And pigs fly" in response. Apparently I wasn't alone in that feeling, as Mr. Rush himself said much the same thing - although more politely - in an interview broadcast around the time the movie hit the theaters.

Yet, on second thought, who'd have been more appropriate to play James Bond's evil twin than the latest incarnation of Bond himself? Who more appropriate to play the story's multifarious title character than the actor who shone in complex roles like David Helfgott, the Marquis de Sade and Shakespearean theater owner Philip Henslowe?

Going in, I didn't doubt that Geoffrey Rush would be an amazing Harry Pendel - the role of the seemingly pathetic antihero, the little man desperately trying to maintain his dignity in the face of overwhelming odds fits him like a glove; and he does indeed give a bravura, almost Chaplinesque performance. The greater surprise for me was Pierce Brosnan, who takes every single Bond cliche and merrily runs with it in the opposite direction: I confess this took some getting used to, but once I'd gotten into the swing of it, I enormously enjoyed his skill and courage in deconstructing the very image on which his fame is grounded.

Brosnan is Andy Osnard, an MI6 agent sent to Panama as a punishment for having stepped on one toe to many during his last posting. He isn't exactly enthusiastic about the assignment to what he views as a seedy tropical backwater, but his superiors tell him that he's there to safeguard British interests in the wake of the Panama Canal's turnover to the Panamanian government after General Noriega's ouster. Generating leads in preparation for his arrival, Osnard comes across the name of Harry Pendel, a tailor billing himself as one half of "Pendel and Braithwaite," ostensibly an enterprise in the venerable Saville Row tradition, founded by now-deceased Arthur Braithwaite. But the shop's alleged provenance is as big a fabrication as Harry's personal history; for in fact, he learned tailoring in prison, where he was sent for burning down his Uncle Benny (Harold Pinter)'s shop. Discovering this - and the fact that Harry used to be Noriega's tailor and is still very much in favor with the currently reigning clique (the same people already in power under Noriega: "They got Ali Baba but missed the 40 slaves," Harry comments) - Osnard quickly decides that Harry Pendel is the weakest link in the British expat community; the perfect guy to lean on and generate intelligence.

Soon Harry is trapped between the growing pressure exercised by Osnard, his considerable financial needs (which Osnard has promised to remedy) and the admonitions of his faux conscience Uncle Benny never to tell the truth, the only thing that can really hurt him: "Try sincerity, that's a virtue" Uncle Benny advises - "truth is an affliction." And so Harry spins lie after lie; constructing a mesh in which he is ultimately caught together with his wife (Jamie Lee Curtis in one of her best-ever performances) and closest friends Micky Abraxas (an almost unrecognizable Brendan Gleeson) and Marta (Leonor Varela), who have barely survived Noriega's regime - Micky broken in spirit, Marta with a perpetually scarred face. Because Harry's lies about a "silent opposition" network and alleged plans to sell the Panama Canal to the Chinese are good enough to eventually prompt the British *and* American governments to plan a new invasion - and with that prospect looming large over Panama City's infamous "cocaine towers" skyline, the Pendel family, Micky and Marta find themselves in an almost inescapable stranglehold.

Although written by one of the great masters of the spy thriller genre and despite a plot featuring all the trademark elements, "The Tailor of Panama" is *not* a thriller but a farce; as much parody of the genre as mordant satire on the intelligence community (which le Carre knows intimately from personal experience) and sharp criticism of the first world's exploitation of the corrupt power structures of strategically located, cash-strapped countries in the developing world. References to both "Casablanca" and Graham Greene's "Our Man in Havana" are deliberate; obviously so in its setting and in the satirical creation of a would-be spy spinning a web of lies just to keep the cash coming in and eventually caught in that web when his lies come true; but also in Harry's reference to Panama as "Casablanca without heroes," and when Osnard, taken to a small plane by a British diplomat, wonders aloud whether this could be "the beginning of a beautiful friendship" ("I think it desperately unlikely," is the icy response).

The movie seems to be particularly unpopular with two groups: Brosnan fans disappointed not to see him play another superhero like James Bond and Remington Steele (and there's little to be said about this; you either buy into his deconstruction of that image or you don't) and Panamanians alienated by their country's portrayal as a corrupt banana republic. I admittedly haven't been to Panama (yet); and I'm sure it has more to offer than corruption, cocaine and the colorful, seedy nightlife so amply displayed here. But Panama's history is a troubled one, and the ongoing role of the Western powers (particularly the U.S.) in its politics is problematic; so I do think le Carre and Boorman have a legitimate point.

In sum, this is a fine production, featuring great performances from its entire cast (also including Catherine McCormack as the career diplomat who becomes Osnard's love - err, sex - interest and Daniel Radcliffe, now of "Harry Potter" fame, as Pendel's son) and spellbinding cinematography by Philippe Rousselot, making Panama's lush, tropical setting come to life in all its vibrant facets. Don't be discouraged by the naysayers ... take a look and judge for yourself!


Product Details/Specifications


Actor(s):
Leonor Varela
Geoffrey Rush
Jamie Lee Curtis
Pierce Brosnan
Brendan Gleeson

Creators:
Pierce Brosnan (Primary Contributor)
Geoffrey Rush (Primary Contributor)
Philippe Rousselot (Cinematographer)
John Boorman (Producer)
John Boorman (Writer)
John le Carré (Producer)
John le Carré (Writer)
Kevan Barker (Producer)
Andrew Davies (Writer)

Director(s):

Recording label: Uca
Manufacturer: Uca
EAN: 5050582247039
Binding: DVD
Number of items: 1
Format: Anamorphic, PAL, Widescreen,
Release date: 2004-05-10
Number of discs: 1
Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
Audience rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
Region code: 2
Running time: 105 minutes
Theatrical release date: 2001-03-30
Language: English (Subtitled)
Language: Turkish (Subtitled)
Language: Polish (Subtitled)
Language: Czech (Subtitled)
Language: Danish (Subtitled)
Language: Hungarian (Subtitled)
Language: Finnish (Subtitled)
Language: Icelandic (Subtitled)
Language: Greek (Subtitled)
Language: Hebrew (Subtitled)
Language: Norwegian (Subtitled)
Language: Arabic (Subtitled)
Language: German (Subtitled)
Language: Bulgarian (Subtitled)
Language: Croatian (Subtitled)
Language: English (Original Language)
Language: Spanish (Original Language)

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