Spy Game Review

Spy Game
Nathan Muir is the veteran spy who, armed with only a phone, must battle CIA politics to rescue former pupil Tom Bishop, who has been captured by the Chinese.

by William Thomas |
Published on
Release Date:

01 Jan 2002

Running Time:

127 minutes

Certificate:

15

Original Title:

Spy Game

For some weeks, the most interesting thing about Spy Game was its MIA status. Normally, this might suggest a movie in trouble, but although Tony Scott’s political thriller — equal parts Tom Clancy and John Le Carré — fails to break any new ground, it is solid, intelligent entertainment boasting real star power. Redford is the veteran spy who, armed with only a phone, must battle CIA politics to rescue former pupil Pitt, who has been captured by the Chinese. Taken as a companion piece to Scott’s Enemy Of The State (that was the FBI, this is the CIA), Spy Game lacks the simple, dramatic urgency of the earlier movie — we are on the clock here, but still we still find time for three flashbacks? However, Scott’s visual style fashions distinct geo-political regions, while the global reach is high on ambition and actually accrues resonance in the current climate.

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