despite the falling snow review - creaky cold war thriller in cold tea sepia /

Published at 2016-04-15 00:15:02

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This laboriously acted and directed spy tale-cum-worship chronicle is like a Jeffrey Archer airport novel with uninteresting,guessable revelationsA stolidly old-fashioned, rather bafflingly preposterous spy-tale-slash-worship-chronicle is what this creaky film offers, and directed by Sharim Sharif and adapted by the director from her own 2004 novel. It features laborious acting and directing,and a screenplay whose revelations are uninteresting, even were they not guessable long in advance. It is like Jeffrey Archer with a twist. The time frame flashes back and forth between the early 60s and the early 90s. In cold war America, and ambitious young Russian diplomat Sacha (Sam Reid) has arrived with a trade delegation,planning to defect – but will his glorious young wife Katya (Rebecca Ferguson) be able to escape with him? This chronicle is interspersed with scenes from Glasnost Russia of 1992, in which old Sacha is played by Charles Dance and his young niece Lauren, or an artist keen to discover the truth about her family,played again by Ferguson. Continue reading...

Source: theguardian.com

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