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The Spy Who Came In from the Cold Poster

The Spy Who Came In from the Cold

Brace yourself for greatness.
1965 | 112m | English

(20212 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

British agent Alec Leamas refuses to come in from the Cold War during the 1960s, choosing to face another mission, which may prove to be his final one.
Release Date: Dec 16, 1965
Director: Martin Ritt
Writer: John le Carré, Paul Dehn, Guy Trosper
Genres: Drama, Thriller
Keywords library, spy, cold war, iron curtain, cynicism, grocer, atheist, whiskey, tribunal, black and white, love affair, double cross, alcoholic, filing, credit, exhilarated
Production Companies Salem Films Limited
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Jul 14, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Richard Burton Alec Leamas
Claire Bloom Nan Perry
Oskar Werner Fiedler
Sam Wanamaker Peters
George Voskovec East German Defense Attorney
Rupert Davies George Smiley
Cyril Cusack Control
Peter van Eyck Hans-Dieter Mundt
Michael Hordern Ashe
Robert Hardy Dick Carlton
Bernard Lee Patmore
Beatrix Lehmann Tribunal President
Esmond Knight Old Judge
Niall MacGinnis German Checkpoint Guard
Scot Finch German Guide
Anne Blake Miss Crail
George Mikell German Checkpoint Guard
Richard Marner Vopo Captain
Warren Mitchell Mr. Zanfrello
Steve Plytas East German Judge
Tom Stern CIA Agent
Graham Armitage Pawson (uncredited)
David Bauer Young Judge (uncredited)
Richard Caldicot Mr. Pitt - Employment Officer (uncredited)
Marianne Deeming Frau Floerdke (uncredited)
Walter Gotell Holten (uncredited)
Edward Harvey Man in Shop (uncredited)
Geoffrey Keen British Sentry (Sgt.) at Checkpoint Charlie (uncredited)
Katherine Keeton Pussywillow Club Stripper (uncredited)
Philip Madoc Young German Officer (uncredited)
Henk Molenberg Dutch Customs Officer (uncredited)
Nancy Nevinson Mrs. Zanfrello - Grocery Customer (uncredited)
John Quentin Pawson (uncredited)
Michael Ripper Lofthouse - Library Assistant (uncredited)
Michael Rittermann Security Officer (uncredited)
Richard Shaw Guard (uncredited)
Terry Yorke Karl Riemeck (uncredited)
Name Job
Martin Ritt Director
John le Carré Novel
Paul Dehn Screenplay
Oswald Morris Director of Photography
Anthony Harvey Editor
Guy Trosper Screenplay
Edward Marshall Art Direction
Tambi Larsen Production Design
Hal Pereira Production Design
Josie MacAvin Set Dresser, Set Decoration
Sophie Devine Costume Designer, Costume Supervisor
Eric Allwright Makeup Artist
George Frost Makeup Artist
Joan Smallwood Hairstylist
James H. Ware Production Manager
Wim Lindner Production Manager
Sol Kaplan Original Music Composer
Barbara Gillett Wardrobe Master
John Cox Sound Recordist
John W. Mitchell Sound Recordist
Colin M. Brewer Assistant Director
Gordon Daniel ADR Editor
Brian West Camera Operator
Name Title
Martin Ritt Producer
Organization Category Person
Academy Awards Best Actor Richard Burton Won
Golden Globes Best Actor Richard Burton Won
Berlin International Film Festival Best Actor Richard Burton Nominated
Berlin International Film Festival Best Supporting Actress Claudia Cardinale Won
Cannes Film Festival Best Actor Richard Burton Won
BAFTA Awards Best Supporting Actor Oskar Werner Won
BAFTA Awards Best Supporting Actor Martin Balsam Nominated
Venice Film Festival Best Supporting Actress Claudia Cardinale Won
BAFTA Awards Best Supporting Actor Leonard Rossiter Nominated
BAFTA Awards Best Actor Richard Burton Won
BAFTA Awards Best Actress N/A Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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2024 5 17 26 10
2024 6 16 32 9
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2025 1 11 18 7
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2025 10 1 3 1

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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

Frosty reception assured. The Spy Who Came in from the Cold is directed by Martin Ritt and adapted to screenplay by Paul Dehn and Guy Trosper from the novel of the same name written by John le Carré. It stars Richard Burton, Claire Bloom, Oskar Werner, Peter van Eyck, Sam Wanamaker, Rupert Davies ... and Cyril Cusack. Music is by Sol Kaplan and cinematography by Oswald Morris. Disillusioned spy Alex Leamas (Burton) returns from Berlin and is required to "come in from the cold" and work in a stable everyday job environment. But this is just a small piece of a much bigger jigsaw… From start to finish this is a deliberate downer of a movie, the complete flipside to the spy adventures served up in other high energy filmic quarters. Filmed in coarse monochrome to set the mood, picture is often depressing, overtly talky and complex in its characterisations and narrative bent. However, those things are not hindrances, for this is undeniably adult stuff, oozing with intelligence and intricacies for the mature film fan, a clinically spun web of pawns, manipulations and distrustful men. The Cold War backdrop is marked as deathly cold, where the grey weather is only matched by the colourless complexion of Burton's depressed spy. As the twists rack up and the tension noose is tightened, Ritt and his cast of excellent performers are only interested in keeping it real, right up to, and including, the devastating finale. Not one to turn to when in need of a pick-me-up, or in fact a film you want to watch perennially, but certainly it's a piece of work that serves to remind us that intense well written and performed cinema is always available to view when the mood fits. 8/10

May 16, 2024
Wuchak
6.0

**_Talky, brooding B&W spy drama during the Cold War with Richard Burton_** In the early ’60s, an alcoholic British intelligence agent (Richard Burton) is sent behind the Iron Curtain to East Germany disguised as a defector, but intending to spread disinformation. Based on the 1963 novel by J ... ohn le Carré, "The Spy Who Came in From the Cold" (1965) is a realistic spy drama and NOT an action thriller in the mold of James Bond. It’s similar to another flick based on a le Carré book, “The Russian House” (1990), which ironically starred Sean Connery. Both movies are dialogue-driven and their depiction of intelligence work is decidedly mundane, static and cynical, which isn’t to say they’re not worth checking out for those interested. The tone is similar to “36 Hours” with James Garner from the year prior. Burton locked horns a bit with the director and the tense atmosphere on set was heightened by the presence of Elizabeth Taylor, Burton’s wife, likely due to costar Claire Bloom’s romantic history with Richard. Claire plays the librarian, Nan Perry. The movie runs 1 hour, 52 minutes, and was shot in Ireland’s Ardmore Studios and England's Shepperton Studios with exterior scenes done in Dublin; for instance, Smithfield, Dublin, was used as the location for the Berlin checkpoint at the opening. GRADE: B-

Mar 03, 2024
Geronimo1967
7.0

There's an authenticity about the performance from Richard Burton in this cold war thriller that, alongside some well paced direction from Martin Ritt really helps it hit home. His character ("Leamas") is assigned one final task, to deal with the duplicitous Peter van Eyck ("Mundt") who appears to b ... e systematically removing the West's reliable sources of information. What follows is a far more psychological cat-and-mouse game as he gets apprehended, and has to play a very dangerous game balancing the needs of his mission with his own survival instincts - all of this without much clue as to whom he can really trust and against a backdrop of thinly veiled prejudices. John le Carré's books were always packed with detail - and that detail carries well into this film, it offers a richness to the proceedings that ensures we are drawn into the plot like a mouse after the cheese. Claire Bloom adds a diversion to the intensity - but in a sophisticated fashion - maybe she's just innocent, or could she actually be involved? Oskar Werner, Robert Hardy, Michael Hordern and a rather menacing Beatrix Lehmann all play important cogs in the wheel too. It's a watch that requires a degree of concentration - like the story itself, blink and you might miss something... important!

Sep 05, 2024