Status

Released

original language

English

Budget

$ 21800000

Revenue

$ 22997992

Top Billed Cast

Sean Connery

Bartholomew 'Barley' Scott Blair

Michelle Pfeiffer

Katya Orlova

Roy Scheider

Russell

James Fox

Ned

John Mahoney

Brady

Michael Kitchen

Clive

J. T. Walsh

Colonel Quinn

Ken Russell

Walter

David Threlfall

Wicklow

Klaus Maria Brandauer

Dante

Mac McDonald

Bob

Nicholas Woodeson

Niki Landau

Martin Clunes

Brock

Ian McNeice

Merrydew

Colin Stinton

Henziger

Denys Hawthorne

Paddy

George Roth

Cy

Peter Marinker

U.S. Scientist

Ellen Hurst

Anna

Peter Knupffer

Sergey

Николай Пастухов

Uncle Matvey

Jason Salkey

Johnny

Eric Anzumonyln

Nasayan

Daniel Woźniak

Zapadny

Giorgi Anjaparidze

Yuri

Vladek Nikiforov

Tout

Christopher Lawford

Larry

Mark LaMura

Todd

Blu Mankuma

Merv

Tuck Milligan

Stanley

Jay Benedict

Spikey

David Timson

George

Yelena Stroyeva

Anastasia

Фёдор Смирнов

Watcher

Павел Сиротин

Watcher

Paul Jutkevitch

Misha

David Henry

Jr. Minister - Whitehall

Martin Wenner

Scientist - Whitehall

Paul Rattee

Army Officer - Whitehall

Simon Templeman

Psychoanalyst - Whitehall

Gina Nikiforov

Russian Guest

Раиса Рязанова

Russian Guest

Kate Lock

Jacky

Charlotte Cornwell

Charlotte

Craig Crosbie

Technician

Keith Edwards

Hoover

Michael Fitzpatrick

Hoover

Rob Freeman

Hoover

Gennady Venov

Katya's Father

Александр Яцко

Russian Writer

Vladimir Zunetov

Dan

Jack Raymond

Lev

David Ryall

Colonial Type

Николай Дик

major of KGB

Alexei Jawdokimov

Arkady

Constantine Gregory

KGB Interviewer

Сергей Реусенко

KGB Man

Yegueshe Tsturvan

Flute Player

Jonty Reason

Delegate (uncredited)

Владимир Кузнецов

company representative (uncredited)

Владимир Сидоров

an officer of the Leningrad police

Similar Movies

Movie Reviews

A review by Wuchak

Written by Wuchak on 2020-12-16

_**Artistic production with Sean Connery and Michelle Pfeiffer, but uninteresting spy story**_ A few years before the fall of the Soviet Union, a boozy English publisher named Barley (Sean Connery) is sent a mysterious manuscript via a beautiful Russian editor named Katya (Michelle Pfeiffer), but it’s intercepted by British intelligence and Barley is coerced into going to Moscow & Leningrad to meet with Katya and the writer of the documents (Klaus Maria Brandauer), which contain technical data that calls into question the quality of the Soviet defense weaponry. Meanwhile both British and American agents (Roy Scheider, James Fox, et al.) surveil Barley’s activities. Based on John le Carre's novel, "The Russia House" (1990) is a spy drama/romance and NOT an action thriller in the mold of James Bond. Its considerable attributes include spectacular (and rare) on-location work in Russia (shot just a couple years before the fall of the USSR), Jerry Goldsmith's sumptuous jazzy score with Branford Marsalis playing soprano sax and, of course, the notable cast. The film is aesthetically pleasing and the love story is effective, especially its culmination, but the spy yarn didn’t interest me. This may because I didn’t utilize the subtitles and therefore missed a lot of the highly accented verbiage, which is a mistake when a movie is dialogue-driven, like this one. The depiction of intelligence work is presumably realistic (as opposed to 007), but static, boring, cynical and with little human decency. Next time I watch it I’ll be sure to use the subtitles. The film runs 2 hour, 3 minutes, and was shot in Moscow & Leningrad and points nearby; as well as Lisbon, Portugal (Barley’s flat); Bowen Island, British Columbia (American Intelligence 'safe house'); and London (book fair & jazz concert), as well as nearby Pinewood Studios. GRADE: C+/B-

A review by Geronimo1967

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2024-12-08

Sean Connery at least looks like he's having some fun in this otherwise rather dry adaptation of the John Le Carré tale of Cold War espionage. He's "Barley", a publisher who is recruited by MI5 to investigate a secret document sent from the USSR purporting to itemise their nuclear arsenal. Needless to say both the British and their CIA counterparts are wetting themselves at the very thought of this being real, but that needs to be verified - and that's where they recruit "Barley". He travels to Moscow to meet the author, codenamed "Dante" (Klaus Maria Brandauer) and it's whilst there he becomes increasingly distracted by his "editor" (Michelle Pfeiffer) - a woman whom his source claims never to have met! As the plot develops, it becomes clear that strings are being pulled but also that "Barley" is beginning to think on his own, and not necessarily with his brain either. Will he stick to the plan or will he throw a spanner in the works of his Western handlers? It's a solid enough story but it's padded out far too thinly. There's no chemistry between the characters from Connery and Pfeiffer (and her ropey accent) and though there are plenty of red herrings to fuel the intrigue, that's all delivered in a remarkably sterile and disjointed fashion. Le Carré's stories always focussed on detail and this film rather skirts over that in favour of developing the burgeoning romance, and that rather neuters the sense of suspense that's also not really helped by the blandness of James Fox and Roy Scheider. It's watchable, but nobody's finest two hours.