The Little Drummer Girl (film)
The Little Drummer Girl | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | George Roy Hill |
Produced by |
Robert L. Crawford Patrick Kelley Dieter Meyer |
Written by |
John le Carré Loring Mandel |
Starring | |
Music by | Dave Grusin |
Cinematography | Wolfgang Treu |
Edited by | William Reynolds |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release dates |
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Running time | 132 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $20 million |
Box office | $7,828,841 |
The Little Drummer Girl is a 1984 American spy film directed by George Roy Hill and adapted from the 1983 novel The Little Drummer Girl by John le Carré. It starred Diane Keaton, Yorgo Voyagis, Klaus Kinski and Thorley Walters.[1] The film received divided reviews among critics.
Plot
Set in Europe and the Middle East, the plot follows the Mossad's clandestine attempt to flush out a PLO bomber named Khalil. To neutralize Khalil, they first kidnap (and later kill) his brother who's on a lecture tour speaking to audiences in a ski mask about the profound suffering and losses of the Palestine under military occupation.
Charlie, an anti-Zionist American actress in Greece shooting a wine commercial, is seduced by Joseph, who tricks her to believe he is the masked man she met back in the UK. She is kidnapped and taken to a house of Israeli Mossad spies (who set up the commercial gig) to eventually be recruited and convinced that they too want peace and an end to the killing. Monitored and manipulated at every step, Charlie proves that she is clever and capable by acting well in manouvres that develop Mossad's narrative for her. She eventually arrives at a resistance headquarters in a bombed out Palestinians city where the leader, Tayeh, is unsure but permits her to go to a desert guerrilla training camp for a month.
Tayeh clarifies that they are not anti-Semitic, they are anti-Zionist and she advances to her next assignment. Now a double agent of sorts, under the Israeli Mossad cover impersonating the dead man's girlfriend, she connects with a man that she deduces is actually Khalil as they prepare an exploding briefcase with his bomb signature—a specially wrapped coil of wire. As Charlie delivers the briefcase to the "peacenik" target, Professor Minkel, the Mossad, who've been watching, control the situation. She says her lines to the objecting professor and the briefcase is whisked away by a man in a bomb suit. Charlie returns to Khalil and they drive away after the large building explosion that she knows is a false flag event harming no one, despite what the evening news says to fool Khalil. He's not easily disarmed and does not fall asleep as planned. He's suspicious of the extreme quiet around their country refuge. Khalil removes the batteries from her portable radio with a tracker and secret signal button for when he fell asleep. Alerted, Joseph and others of the Mossad team move in not to capture but to kill Khalil, as other Mossad agents kill other PLO recruiting agents. All of the Palestinian guerrillas are destroyed and engulfed by flames from jet bombers.
In an Israeli hospital, Charlie is physically unharmed but emotionally wrecked and betrayed because all she wanted was to help Palestinians and end the killing, but ultimately she was used and manipulated by the Israeli Mossad to slaughter every Palestinian she met. Eventually she returns to her acting in the UK but is too broken and walks off stage. Joseph is there, tells Charlie his real name, restates that he's done with killing, doesn't know what's right and wrong, but he loves her. She says that she's dead. They walk off together into the night.
Cast
- Diane Keaton as Charlie
- Yorgo Voyagis as Joseph
- Klaus Kinski as Martin Kurtz
- Sami Frey as Khalil
- Michael Cristofer as Tayeh
- Eli Danker as Litvak
- Ben Levine as Dimitri
- Jonathan Sagall as Teddy
- Shlomit Hagoel as Rose
- Juliano Mer as Julio
- Sabi Dorr as Ben
- Doron Nesher as David
- Smadar Brener as Toby
- Shoshi Marciano as Rachel
- Philipp Moog as Aaron
- Bill Nighy as Al
- David Suchet as Mesterbein
- John le Carre as Commander
Response
The film opened to mixed reviews from critics.
References
- ↑ Canby, Vincent. "New York Times: The Little Drummer Girl". NY Times. Retrieved 2008-10-26.