Julia Roberts Movie:

The Quiller Memorandum



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Julia Roberts Movie:
The Quiller Memorandum



Movie
The Quiller Memorandum
The Quiller Memorandum
List Price: $19.98Label: 20th Century Fox

Salesrank: 39282

Released: November 7, 2006
Our Price: $9.92
Used Price: $9.88
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Color
  • Dolby
  • DVD
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • George Segal
  • Alec Guinness
  • Max von Sydow
  • Senta Berger
  • George Sanders
  • Editorial Review:
    With little else to help him beyond sharp wits, a strong will and a very dedicated schoolteacher, American spy Quiller (Segal) combs West Berlin for the headquarters of a shadowy neo-Nazi movement. Closing in on one disturbing truth, he quickly learns another: he is not the pursuer, but the prey – in a rapidly closing trap!

    The Quiller Memorandum Reviews:
    Uniquely low-key spy film, written by Harold Pinter, with Alec Guinness. Enough said! 4 Star Review
    2009-07-07 - Well, almost....

    I had never seen this before yesterday, and having lived in Berlin in the 1990s, I love seeing that town on film in any period. It's mostly West Berlin here, and it's a treat to see; few films use this much of their home city, and if you like that incomparable town you'll love watching it in Quiller.

    I found Segal to be better than usual, less glib and more appealingly serious at points, and Senta Berger a fine romantic foil (and just plain fine). Guinness is superb as always, as is Max Von Sydow (what a great bad guy he was!), the direction is unforced, and the story itself is a refreshingly low-key spy tale, pointing out that Bond was the anomaly/fantasy in a world of cold war info gathering and slogging leg work. But what I really loved here was Pinter's script.

    In typically Pinteresque fashion, we are given little backstory on the characters, which lends a slightly odd feel to the proceedings, and it works to perfection in this anti-Bond vehicle. The rather bad narration on the dvd by two NYC film school profs misses Pinter's genius almost entirely; are these the best guys the studio could find?

    Pinter was brought in to be Pinter, no doubt, and the idea of letting him loose on Trevor Dudley-Smith's novel works splendidly. There's an off-kilter menacing vibe throughout and it meshes perfectly with the plot itself. The dialogue is also oft classic, notably the British upper caste asides; few were ever as quietly withering in their social critiques as Mr. Pinter.

    Not a shoot-'em-up at all, and that's one of Quiller's main strengths.
    All brains and no guns make for a most interesting and unique thriller indeed.

    The Quiller Memorandum 4 Star Review
    2009-03-13 - It's what you expect a espionage story to be intriquing and suspenseful, however; it wasn't as thrilling as the Jason Bourne and Harry Palmer series but more realistic than the James Bond fantasy of sex and gadgets.

    DECADE OF THE SPY STORIES 5 Star Review
    2008-10-30 -

    Starting with the 007 books by Ian Fleming in the 1950's continuing for at least another decade or so, one can view those years as a decade of the spy novels. Near the top of any list of spy books were those written by Adam Hall (Elleston Trevor 1920-1995) which comprised the best selling "Quiller" series of books. Using the pen name "Adam Hall", Elleston Trevor wrote 19 novels all concerning the Quiller character and his career. Two standout features of Quiller was that he worked alone, and he never carried a pistol. For a time in 1975 the Quiller character appeared in a British television series. Most of Elleston Trevor's 'Adam Hall' books are yet obtainable through dealers, however, some sell a;t fairly hefty prices.

    The movie taken from the first Quiller novel, The Berlin Memorandum, was renamed for the movie, The Quiller Memorandu, with the movie containing the same mind grabbing content as the novel. Next to LenDeighton's Harry Palmer books made into movies, Funeral In Berlin and Billion Dollar Brain, the movie The Quiller Memorandum is somewhat unique. In an era noted for the East against West, this movie deals with a Neo Nazi movement in Germany. The movie was unique for its time with a subject that one can still read about in newspapers of our time. Unique again in the 60's era of gadgetry Quiller never resorts to carrying a firearm.

    The color of the The Quiller Memorandum is still excellent, and the wide screen version offers a very enticing view helping to draw the viewer deeply into the plot. There are enough twists and turns to keep even the most avid spy reader and viewer interested. Though the books are generally much better suited for involving the reader, the movie does quite well keeping viewer's attention.

    Having had a very small, very minor background in all this in the mid-1960s, plus being an avid reader of stories by W. Somersr Maughan to Ian Fleming to Len Deighton, among several others, I give this movie portrayal of the 'game' two thumbs up. It's only fictional fantasy but it is very enjoyable fiction all the same.

    Unless one purchases this movie, though the cable channels occassionally give it some play, The Quiller Memorandum can be a rather difficult movie to catch up with. Buth carching up with it on Turner Classic Movies is still worth the watching.

    Semper Fi.

    Formula spy stuff but very well done 5 Star Review
    2008-08-30 - Imagine two great armies in a fog. Each looking for the other's HQ.
    In the middle is Quiller who must get close enough to the enemy to signal the location of their HQ but not give way the location of his.

    Modern day Germany (1960's) we see a resurgence of citizens that want the country to be strong. A hand full of citizens is acting on those sentiments. Seems the British Intelligence Pol (Alec Guinness) is a little queasy. They want to identify these people apparently lead by someone called October (Max von Sydow) and nip it in the bud. To this purpose they have issued agents that are now being mysteriously dispatched. Looks like it is time to bring in Quiller (George Segal); he has his own methods of detection and is not quite as paranoid as Pol when it comes to who is in the right.

    Will Quiller succeed where others have failed?
    Or is it curtains for this overconfident loner?

    We get to share in his triumphs and setbacks as he probes the opposing forces and in the process meets a beautiful elementary school teacher Inge Lindt (Senta Berger) whom goes from innocent to entwined.

    It was a nice touch to find the Quiller could speak German and was nice enough in the film to use textbook German so we could follow the conversation with out scratching our heads.

    Again it is not as much the story as the execution that gives this movie the value.

    The Odessa File

    very poor 1 Star Review
    2008-05-15 - I bought this based on the actors. This is early in their careers and they do a poor performance. The audio commentary is equally poor. I am an amateur historian of this period and found the commentators very ill informed. I agree with the commentators that this should have been in black and white.

    As far as the quality of the script, it is no where near that of The Third Man or The Spy Who Came in From the Cold.

    It is one of many poor me toos cashing in on the success of early spy movies. Many professional critics also think that this is a poor movie.










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