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  • 28/06/2025
Brightened HD copy.
E6. Retired espionage veteran George Smiley is called out on a top secret mission: to uncover a Soviet agent within top MI6's echelons. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is a 1979 seven-part drama spy mini-series, directed by John Irvin. Jonathan Powell produced this adaptation of John le Carré's novel Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (1974). The mini-series stars Alec Guinness, Michael Jayston, Ian Richardson, Anthony Bate, Ian Bannen, Hywel Bennett, George Sewell, Beryl Reid, Susan Kodicek, Terence Rigby, Alexander Knox, Michael Aldridge and Patrick Stewart.
Transcript
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02:18George, oh boy.
02:29What an amazing thing.
02:31Trust you, popping up out of nowhere.
02:33How are you, Jerry?
02:35George, this is terrific.
02:37What are you doing now?
02:38How's the demon wife?
02:39How's everything?
02:40No, damn it.
02:41First things first.
02:42What'll you have?
02:43You don't fancy a bottle of the bubbles, do you?
02:44Shall we?
02:45A brandy and ginger ale would suit me very well, thanks.
02:47You sure?
02:48All right.
02:49Hey, lend her, sweetheart.
02:51Give us a double brandy, a bottle of ginger ale, and another bucket of gin, will you?
02:56Good girl, lad.
02:57I think I'll marry her.
02:58How many would that be, Jerry?
02:59I'm a divorce addict, a hopeless case.
03:02Not lucky like you, George.
03:05But there's only one Anne.
03:07Now, I'll do a deal with you, an offer you can't refuse.
03:09I'll shack up with Anne and be the envy of London, and you can have my job on the comic.
03:14You've got just the turn of phrase of the women's ping pong.
03:18Inscrutable Chinese wizardette.
03:20Do you fancy it?
03:21Is that the task for today?
03:23Much bigger stuff, old boy.
03:25Footer, the opiate of the people.
03:28Heap big transfer.
03:29Scottish thunder boots to rescue of ex-champions.
03:32Now on the slide.
03:33Thanks, Linda, my love.
03:34Do you want me to write it down, Mr. Westerbeek?
03:36Ah, please, Linda.
03:40Cheers, George.
03:42Cheers.
03:42This isn't entirely a chance meeting.
03:50I got the letter you wrote me last football season.
03:53I burnt it straight away.
03:57Right.
03:58Thanks.
03:59Stupid of me.
04:01Talking out of school.
04:02Sorry.
04:02No, no, no.
04:03You obviously did what you felt was the best thing at the time, and so did I.
04:07I haven't seen many of the boys and girls lately, as a matter of fact.
04:10I guess they put us both on the shelf.
04:13With me, I can hardly blame them.
04:17Firewater, not good for Braves.
04:18I think our blab crack up.
04:20I'm sure they don't.
04:21I expect they're just resting you up for a bit.
04:23They do that, you know.
04:25In case you've been wondering, I didn't tell anyone else about your letter.
04:30I was out of favor, indeed.
04:31Out of work by then.
04:33Writing to me wasn't what put them off you, if that's what you thought.
04:37In your letter, you said you were a bit worried about Toby Esterhazy.
04:43Felt sure to get something off your chest.
04:47Yes, well, I got all xenophobe and suspicious.
04:50I thought Toby had gone a bit haywire, as a matter of fact.
04:53I should talk.
04:55Tell me now.
04:57You'd just come back from Czechoslovakia, hadn't you?
05:01Last job I did for Toby.
05:03Looks like the last I'll ever do.
05:05Letterboxd job?
05:06Yes.
05:08Nothing to do with it, really.
05:10Telephone kiosk, ledge at the top, dump a little package ready for collection.
05:17That was Budapest, the Czechoslovak thing I ran into by accident.
05:21I had to go on to Prague, you see, for the comic.
05:23Nothing to do with...
05:24Linda, sweetheart.
05:27And again, Mr. Westerby?
05:29Please, my beauty.
05:30Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
05:32You've got time to eat?
05:34Mm-hmm.
05:35Ah, we'll go Dutch on that, shall we?
05:38I, um...
05:39I was in this bar in Prague.
05:42Always use it.
05:43Locals go there, all sorts.
05:45Anyway, I got in with this crowd at a corner table.
05:49They're playing the squeeze box.
05:50We're all hugger-mugger to the music.
05:53Oh, thank you, Linda, my love.
05:56Hang on.
05:57And there's, um...
05:58There's this kid with a pudding bowl haircut.
06:01Army, obvious.
06:02Anyway, he's on leave, well in his cups,
06:04and he knows I'm English.
06:05And he suddenly says,
06:07Do I want to know the truth about the British spy
06:09who got himself shot up by the Russian secret police?
06:11Just like that.
06:13Yells it right in my ear.
06:14I played dumb, of course, and he goes right on with it.
06:16You know the Jim Prito shambles.
06:20Well, the kid was bellyaching about the trials and tribulations
06:22of being a foot soldier of the line.
06:24It seems that on the two nights in question,
06:26he and his mates were being chased around the place
06:27till they were dizzy.
06:28Make camp, break camp, move up, move back, fix bayonets.
06:33But the big point
06:34was the Russian contingent.
06:38Full war paint.
06:40Tanks, motorbikes, tracker dogs,
06:42and a big carload of very sinister civilians.
06:46Dirty work, a foot in the forest.
06:48Up near the Austrian border, this was.
06:52So, my little friend, being a sassy little devil,
06:57decides to ask his sergeant what's it all about.
06:59Look, Sarge, he says, what's going on?
07:01Are we being invaded, Sarge?
07:03No, says the sergeant.
07:05The Russians are after a British spy
07:07who tried to kidnap a general.
07:11Are after?
07:13Or where after?
07:15Exactly.
07:17That's what the kid wanted to tell me.
07:19The Russians moved in on the Friday.
07:22It was the day after when they got Jim.
07:25As the kid said, they were ready and waiting for him.
07:27Knew the lot in advance.
07:30He's a bad story.
07:32Bad for our big chief.
07:34Bad for tribe.
07:37So, as soon as I got back,
07:40I went and told all to Taube.
07:44How did he take it?
07:48Well, to begin with,
07:49it was thanks a million, Jerry, old boy.
07:51He'd go and powwow with the top brass.
07:56And then the next morning...
07:59You're so plastered these days,
08:01you can't tell fact from fiction.
08:02You're an embarrassment.
08:08You're going to bend her,
08:10drink yourself in a cloud cuckoo land,
08:12and come staggering back here
08:14with a load of tripe like this.
08:18You're pathetic.
08:18Now, look, old boy.
08:22I don't want to hear any excuses.
08:24I had to report what I heard.
08:25Yes, you believed every stupid word of it, didn't you?
08:29Swallowed it like...
08:29like mother's milk.
08:34A load of half-baked wombers,
08:36you come spreading them around here.
08:37what you can remember
08:40through your alcoholic haze.
08:44I didn't forget a thing.
08:45Well, you will now.
08:48You'll forget the lot.
08:53Don't you see?
08:54The boy was a plant.
08:57Provocateur, in layman's language.
08:59He was doing a job for Moscow Center,
09:09object disruption,
09:10make the circus chase our own tales,
09:12and you fell for it, Jerry.
09:13That's all.
09:14Okay, Tobe, you know best.
09:29If you don't want the story,
09:30that's your business.
09:30I do it for the paper.
09:33You'll what?
09:34Not the bit about the Russians
09:35getting there first.
09:36Of course not,
09:37but the rest of it's all good stuff.
09:40The story wasn't covered very well at the time,
09:42just the official statement.
09:45I thought Jerry gets himself a splash
09:46about the day the Czech's mobilized
09:48for the Third World War.
09:50Except it was one lone Englishman
09:52surrounding him all by himself.
09:53That's a good piece.
09:58The comic might even run an ad on the telly.
10:03Well, the day after that,
10:04I was called for by the editor.
10:07The editor, I mean,
10:09not the sports bloke.
10:11He tells me some clown
10:12has been on the phone
10:13with a formal warning.
10:16Keep that baboon,
10:17Westerby,
10:18off the Czechos spy story.
10:20Any further reference
10:22against the national interest?
10:25End of message.
10:26Sir, I didn't get the report for the year award.
10:34Can't, can you,
10:35in your stories on the spike?
10:37Cheers.
10:38But you didn't spike it entirely.
10:41I mean, you wrote to me,
10:43dropped the letter in by hand.
10:45Must have been the same day
10:47you talked to Toby Estehisi.
10:49Yes, well, as I say,
10:53at the time it just felt odd.
10:56My mistake, old boy.
10:59When I heard you'd got the heave-ho anyway,
11:01I felt an even bigger damn fault.
11:03I thought it was you
11:11who phoned the editor, you see.
11:13It wasn't.
11:16Of course not.
11:17Sorry, old boy.
11:22Nothing under war going on,
11:23as a robot?
11:25I mean,
11:25the tribe hasn't gone on the rampage
11:27or anything.
11:31But are you hunting alone?
11:35I mean,
11:36I know I'm not the brightest,
11:37but when you start asking questions,
11:39there's got to be something.
11:45All I'm saying is,
11:47any time I want.
11:51Thank you, Jesse.
11:57Rum, chap, Toby Estehisi.
12:01But good.
12:02My God, first rate.
12:04Brilliant, my view.
12:05But rum.
12:08Don't forget to give my love to Anne,
12:10will you?
12:11One of the great marriages
12:12that always says, sir.
12:13Oh, come on, Jerry.
12:14Out with it.
12:16Did Toby say something about Anne?
12:20Some story he'd got.
12:24I told him to stuff it up
12:25his silk drawers.
12:27Come on!
12:39Come on!
12:46Please!
12:47Please!
12:47I suppose I should be prepared
12:49for something.
12:49I should take on a temporary.
12:51The last thing you expect
12:51is loyalty.
12:55Well done!
12:56That boy,
12:57I'm going to lose this match.
13:02So much for Priddo's coaching.
13:05I'm absolutely furious with that money.
13:08It's monstrous to clear off.
13:09Did he say what's wrong with his mother?
13:12No, he did not.
13:14She is supposed to be dying.
13:16Well, that's one excuse for absence that he can hardly use again.
13:21Not at all, Mother. It's quite the reverse.
13:22One false alarm can easily lead to another.
13:24I shall ask for a full medical diagnosis next time.
13:27Oh, come on!
13:57There's good! Be tough!
14:00He's gone in the Alvis because he'd never trust any other form of transport.
14:05But if he'd gone for good, he wouldn't leave the caravan behind, would he?
14:09It stands to reason that.
14:12Besides, he'd have said goodbye properly, Rhino would.
14:16Wouldn't just go. Not Rhino.
14:18Not like a Juju man.
14:19Not like a Juju man.
14:21ORGAN PLAYS
14:51I've come about the first.
15:21Hello, Toby.
15:29Peter.
15:30It's not exactly five star.
15:50But then we are shopping a bit down market.
16:06Safe houses I have now.
16:15Taking weight off your feet.
16:16Won't be long.
16:43So we're expecting a pole, are we, Peter?
16:46A pole in the fair trade you think I might like to take on as a courier?
16:51I'd like him on my own payroll for preference.
16:53It looks useful.
16:54But what's the point?
16:56My lads are underemployed as it is.
16:59Very generous of you, Peter.
17:09Stay put, Toby.
17:16Sorry about this, Toby.
17:18Against the wall, Toby.
17:19Did he come alone or is there some little friend waiting down in the square?
17:34It looks all clear to me, sir.
17:36Go back to the other room and don't take your eyes off the street.
17:41You've seen something?
17:48Turn the light out a moment.
18:01Just a shadow, I suppose.
18:04Yes, I think so.
18:09I want to put a thesis to you, Toby, about what's been going on.
18:26Let's cast our minds back, say, about 18 months, when Control is still with us.
18:33Percy Alleline wants his job.
18:35Everyone knows that.
18:36But although Control is sick and past his prime, Percy can't dislodge him.
18:41It's a time of uneasiness in the service.
18:45Morale is low.
18:46Activity is low, yes?
18:48I remember, George.
18:50Well, Percy's door opens one day and one of our senior men walks in.
18:55We'll call him Gerald.
18:58Well, it's just a name.
19:00And Gerald says, Percy, I've stumbled on a major source of Russian intelligence.
19:05It could be a gold mine.
19:07Perhaps they take a walk in the park or drive in a car, but whatever, Percy listens.
19:12Because what Gerald goes on to say is music in Percy's ears.
19:18Some of us, Gerald tells him, are worried sick about the state the circus has got into.
19:23I mean, look at our operational losses.
19:25Agents, networks.
19:27He's careful not to suggest there's a traitor inside the circus, but he emphasizes that slovenliness at the top is leading to failure all round.
19:40That is to say, it's all Control's fault.
19:44My thesis, you understand.
19:47Sure, George.
19:49Another notion is that Percy Alleline was his own Gerald.
19:53That he went out and bought himself a top Russian spy and manned his own boat from then on.
19:57But I don't believe that's what happened.
19:59I think he'd mess it up, don't you?
20:01Sure, George.
20:02So the next thing is for Gerald to say to Percy, I and a little group of like-minded friends want you to be our father figure, Percy.
20:14We are not political men.
20:16We don't know our way in the Whitehall jungle.
20:18But you do.
20:20Did you bring a babysitter, Toby?
20:22George, why should I?
20:24I came to meet Peter and some pearl in the fur trade.
20:28Do you want Faun to go down and have a look?
20:31No, no.
20:32Need him here.
20:33Can't take the chance.
20:36Yes, well, Gerald says that if Percy will handle the committees, he and his friends will handle Merlin.
20:45Merlin being the Moscow intelligence source, and witchcraft the name of the material he supplies.
20:52And how well it all worked.
20:54Merlin's material proved excellent, as everyone agreed, except Control.
21:00And eventually Control was out, and Percy was king.
21:05So what's new, George?
21:08Ever bought a fake picture, Toby?
21:14Sold a couple once.
21:16The more you pay for it, the less inclined you are to doubt its authenticity.
21:21Merlin's price was 20,000 francs a month into a Swiss bank, according to the file.
21:29Oh, yes, Toby.
21:30This is official.
21:31There came the day when Gerald admitted Percy to the greatest secret of all, that the Merlin set up as a London end.
21:44Alexei Alexandrovich Polyakov, cultural attache at the Russian embassy in London.
21:51You're on record as grading him Snow White, Toby, quite untainted with a mischief of espionage.
21:59In fact, he's Merlin's London representative.
22:04That's a start, I should tell you now, but very clever not.
22:07Now, everything to do with witchcraft is secret, of course, but inevitably a lot of people are involved.
22:13Transcribers, translators, codists, evaluators, God knows what.
22:17Doesn't worry Gerald, of course.
22:20He likes it.
22:22Because the art of being Gerald is to be one of a crowd.
22:27But when it comes to Polyakov, that's a different story.
22:33Who knows it?
22:35Only you, Roy Bland, Bill Hayden and Percy.
22:42Three of you and Aliline.
22:44You're the magic circle.
22:50Who meets him, Toby?
22:57For God's sake, let me sweat the bastard.
23:09You all meet him.
23:11How's that?
23:12Percy represents the authoritarian side, asks after his wife, suggests it's time he took a little holiday.
23:20Very paternal Percy would be.
23:23Bill Hayden, I think, would see Polyakov much more often.
23:26Bill's a Russian expert, for one thing, and his good entertainment value.
23:29I'd expect Bill to shine when it comes to the briefings and follow-up sessions, making sure the right messages went back to Moscow.
23:41Roy Bland's good on economics, as well as being top man on the satellite countries, so he'd have plenty to chat about.
23:47Then there's you, Toby.
23:50You'd have your solo sessions with Polyakov, because there's tradecraft to discuss, and all those little snippets about goings-on inside the embassy, which are very much your field.
24:03And if the magic circle wanted Polyakov to do some photography inside the embassy, it would be you who would supply the film.
24:13Replenish his stock from time to time.
24:20Take him.
24:22Little sealed packets.
24:26Toby, you wouldn't be lying, would you?
24:28Did you bring a babysitter?
24:30No, cross my heart, George, I swear to you.
24:32What would you use for a job like this?
24:34Cars?
24:35No.
24:36On foot.
24:38Keep walking them through.
24:39How many?
24:40Eight.
24:42Ten, maybe.
24:43What about one man alone?
24:45One?
24:46Never.
24:47Impossible.
24:48I can call Mendel to take a look.
24:51I'm sure Toby's right.
24:54Listen, George.
24:56I know Polyakov works for Moscow Center.
24:59Of course I do.
25:00We all know.
25:02But come on.
25:03Think how many other operations we've run this way.
25:07We've bought Polyakov, right?
25:10He's a Moscow hood, but he's also our Joe.
25:14Now, he's got to pretend to his own people that he's spying on us.
25:18So we've got to give him one or two goodies now and again.
25:23Sure, I've passed him the odd sealed packet.
25:26Chicken feed.
25:27So he can send them home and Moscow Center clap him on the back and tell him he's a big man.
25:33It happens all the time.
25:35Now, come on, George.
25:37You know the game.
25:39So are you Polyakov's agent inside the circus?
25:45Someone has to be.
25:47If Polyakov's cover for meeting you people is that he's spying on the circus,
25:52then he must have a man on the inside, mustn't he?
25:56And Polyakov can't report back to Moscow Center after he's picked up a great load of circus chicken feed and just say,
26:03I got this from the boys.
26:05He's got to have a whole history.
26:07How he selected his man, courted him, bought him, how they meet and where.
26:18The whole paraphernalia of running a double agent and all this in Moscow Center's archives.
26:26You, Toby?
26:30Toby Eslehazy masquerades as a circus traitor in order to keep Polyakov in business.
26:37My hat, Toby.
26:39A dangerous job like that deserves a whole chest full of medals.
26:43You're on a damn long road, George.
26:48What happens to you if you never reach the other end?
26:51With Lacon and the minister behind me.
26:55Why become the little guy?
26:58Why not go for the big ones?
27:00Percy Alleline? Bill Hayden?
27:02I thought you were a big guy these days.
27:04You're the perfect choice, Toby.
27:07Resentful about slow promotion.
27:09Sharp-witted.
27:12Fond of money.
27:14With you as his agent, Polyakov has a cover story that really sits up and works.
27:19The big three give you the little sealed packets of chicken feed,
27:25and Moscow Center thinks you're all theirs.
27:29The only problem arises when it turns out you've been handing Polyakov the crown jewels
27:35and getting Russian chicken feed in return.
27:39If that's the case, Toby, you're going to need some good friends.
27:44Like us.
27:46Gerald, of course, is a Russian mole.
27:49And he's pulled the circus inside out.
27:53But witchcraft material isn't chicken feed.
27:56It's the best.
27:58It was good at first.
28:00Listen, George.
28:02Suppose you're wrong.
28:03Toby.
28:04Who told you to muzzle Jerry Westerby?
28:07The same person who sent you down to Sarat with a thousand pounds for Jim Fredo,
28:11and the instruction, get lost?
28:15Speak up.
28:16Was it Percy?
28:18I think so.
28:20Maybe it was Bill, though.
28:24Well, listen, it was a big operation.
28:27Sometimes Roy.
28:29It never seemed to come straight from one.
28:33There was a committee.
28:35I took a lot of orders.
28:37You told Fredo to forget about Tinker Tailor.
28:41Where did that come from?
28:42I never knew what that meant.
28:44Now, George, that's the truth.
28:47Poor Toby.
28:48Yes, I do see.
28:51What a dog's life you must have been leading, running between them all.
29:01George, if there's anything I can do of a practical nature...
29:07Do you know me, George?
29:09My boys are pretty well trained.
29:11If you want to borrow them...
29:14I'd have to speak to Lacon, of course.
29:16But...
29:18Well, you'd expect that.
29:24All I want is for this thing to be cleared up.
29:27For the good of the circus.
29:29I want nothing for myself.
29:33Where's this safe house you keep exclusively for meeting Polyakov?
29:37Five Loch Gardens at Camden Town.
29:43You're going to be staying here for a night or two.
29:46And Faun will look after you.
29:55Faun.
29:56You'll have to make appropriate explanations to the circus.
29:59By telephone.
30:01You're having girl trouble, or whatever sort of trouble you're in these days.
30:05Then there's your wife, of course.
30:09Sure, George. I can handle that.
30:14If he's any bother, Faun, use your own discretion.
30:18Peter, I want you to watch my back. Will you do that for me?
30:32Look for one man, but look.
30:33We will join at the Sussex Gardens.
30:34We will join at the Sussex Gardens.
30:35We will join at the Sussex Gardens.
30:36We will join at the Sussex Gardens.
30:37We will join at the Sussex Gardens.
30:38We will join at the Sussex Gardens.
30:39We will join at the Sussex Gardens.
30:43We will join at the Sussex Gardens.
30:44We will join at the Sussex Gardens.
30:46We will join at the Sussex Gardens.
32:28Same as you, George.
32:30Just a feeling.
32:32Someone.
32:33I couldn't say for certain.
32:34I covered both of you right to the front door.
32:37If either of you did have company, he's cleverer than me.
32:39That's been known.
32:43Do you have anyone particular in mind?
32:44Shall I go down to pavement level, take a sniff?
32:51Well, proceed?
32:53Yes.
32:54Right.
32:55Now, the minister has one major worry.
32:57In his own words, how much porcelain gets broken at the end of the day.
33:02Scandal he's talking about.
33:04If we unmask the mole, are the Russians going to cut their losses by telling the press of
33:08the world how they've made fools of us all this time?
33:10I think not.
33:11If you make your enemy look stupid, you lose the justification for taking him on.
33:15Yes, I've told him that, George.
33:17So isn't his mind at rest?
33:19He hopes there'll be nothing messy, George.
33:22Nothing that could provoke Moscow.
33:24But proceed.
33:25Heavens, yes.
33:27Clean the stables.
33:29Mm-hmm.
33:30Problem, flush out the mole.
33:33Method.
33:34We need to alarm him just sufficiently to make him call for a crash meeting with Polyakov at
33:41the safe house, a meeting Gerald the Mole needs all to himself, secret from the rest of
33:48the witchcraft magic circle.
33:50There are two of them and Alaline.
33:53You've definitely declared Esterhazy.
33:55Oh, yes.
33:57Carla really did bring off the perfect fix for a while.
34:02It would be beautiful in another context.
34:05Tinker, Alaline, Taylor, Hayden, Soldier, Bland.
34:10Spot the mole.
34:11Quite.
34:12Ways and means, George.
34:15Ricky Tower will go to Paris.
34:18He'll make use of the appropriate embassy facilities.
34:21To send a signal to the head of London station.
34:27Something, something, something.
34:29Which we'll now concoct.
34:31It's an unusable.
34:41"'Back with my coffee.'
34:41Yeah.
34:42"'Time with my coffee.'
34:42Yeah.
34:44Personally, let's make you Breakfast."
34:44Right.
34:45See what!'
34:45What!
34:45Fight with my coffee.
34:46I'm not going to go toийce, but I'm walking into located c Kaggle.
34:47This way to do that.
34:48So where I will not go to school.
34:49I'm at the middle of school.
34:50I'm not going to go.
34:52I'm not going to go to the hotel, man.
34:53I'm doing to go to college.
34:53I'm doing right.
34:54I'm doing that harder with my own coffee space.
34:55Oh, no.
34:57I'm doing much to do this.
34:57Letも go of my coffee that goes.
35:28The message will be, have information vital to the safeguarding of the service.
35:55Request immediate meeting, personal.
35:58Remember, vital to the safeguarding of the service.
36:03It's even true.
36:05Don't forget that.
36:06No mistakes, Ricky.
36:08Your head's on the block.
36:11You're not the only one, Peter.
36:13Yeah.
36:21Yeah.
36:21Yeah.
36:23Yeah.
36:23We'll see you next time.
36:53So
37:23And stay fast in peace.
37:37According to thy word.
37:53Through my eyes.
37:57Have seen thy salvation.
38:10Which now has prepared me by the face of all people.
38:22To be a light.
38:31To lighten thy chances.
38:39And to be the glory of thy people Israel.
38:48Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost.
38:57Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost.
39:06Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost.
39:15As it was in the beginning.
39:18Is now and ever shall be.
39:24One without end.
39:31Amen.
39:33Amen.
39:34Amen.
39:36Amen.
39:38Amen.
39:39Amen.
39:40Amen.
39:41Amen.
39:42You

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