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The Kremlin Letter

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The Kremlin Letter
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJohn Huston
Screenplay byJohn Huston
Gladys Hill
Based onThe Kremlin Letter
1966 novel
by Noel Behn
Produced byCarter DeHaven
Sam Wiesenthal
StarringBibi Andersson
Richard Boone
Nigel Green
Dean Jagger
Patrick O'Neal
George Sanders
Max von Sydow
Orson Welles
CinematographyEdward Scaife
Edited byRussell Lloyd
Music byRobert Jackson Drasnin
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release date
  • February 1, 1970 (1970-02-01)
Running time
121 minutes
CountryUnited States
Languages
  • English
  • Russian
Budget$6,095,000[1]

The Kremlin Letter is a 1970 American spy thriller film in Panavision[2] directed by John Huston and starring Richard Boone, Orson Welles, Max von Sydow, Bibi Andersson, Patrick O'Neal, and George Sanders. It was released in February 1970 by 20th Century-Fox.[3]

The screenplay by Huston and Gladys Hill was based on the 1966 novel of the same name by Noel Behn, who had worked for the United States Army's Counterintelligence Corps.[4] Said by reviewers to be "beautifully"[5] and "engagingly"[6] photographed, the film is a highly complex and amoral tale of bitter intrigue and espionage[6] set in the winter of 1969–1970 at the height of the US–Soviet Cold War.

The Kremlin Letter was a commercial failure and thinly reviewed in 1970, but the film has gathered steady praise from some critics throughout the decades since its release. French filmmaker Jean-Pierre Melville called The Kremlin Letter "masterly" and "...saw it as establishing the standard for cinema."[7]

Plot

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In 1969, "The Highwayman", the member of an old community of spies from World War II, recruits Charles Rone, a young United States Navy intelligence officer, for an important intelligence operation. The other new recruits are Janis, "The Whore", a drug dealer and panderer; "The Warlock", a culturally sophisticated homosexual; and B.A., a thief.

The group must retrieve a letter, written without proper authorization, that promises United States aid to the Soviet Union in destroying Chinese atomic weapons plants. The letter was solicited on behalf of a high-level Soviet official by Dmitri Polyakov. Polyakov had previously been selling Soviet secrets to the U.S. that he had obtained from the high-level official. Upon finding out about the letter, U.S. and British authorities arranged to buy it back from Polyakov. However, Polyakov then committed suicide after being apprehended by Soviet counterintelligence, under the direction of Colonel Yakov Kosnov.

The group blackmails Captain Potkin, the Soviet head of counterintelligence in the U.S., threatening his family to force him to allow them the use of his vacant apartment in Moscow. Once they arrive in the Soviet Union, the terminally ill Highwayman sacrifices his life, attempting to divert the attention of Soviet counterintelligence away from his team. Janis, The Warlock and B.A. later set out to establish themselves in various parts of Russian society while trying to ascertain the identity of Polyakov's contact.

Janis enters a partnership with a brothel operator, who mentions a Chinese man known as "The Kitai" as a possible source for names of officials and others to whom he can sell heroin, with which Janis already plans to keep the prostitutes addicted. Janis later discerns that the Kitai is also a spy and spots Kosnov leaving a night club with Erika Beck, who was Polyakov's devoted wife. She is now Kosnov's wife. Meanwhile, the Warlock integrates himself into a community of intellectual homosexuals, starting an affair with a university professor. One of the professor's students was Polyakov's former lover. The student says that Polyakov had a relationship with Vladimir Bresnavitch of the Soviet Central Committee.

Years before, Bresnavitch sought to oust Kosnov from his job, in favor of Robert Sturdevant, a primary operator in The Highwayman's old group. Prior to that time, Kosnov and Sturdevant had been friendly, with each one trusting the other to allow his agents to operate in the other's territory. However, with the pressure from Bresnavitch, Kosnov decided that he had to do "something spectacular" to keep his job. He betrayed Sturdevant's trust and captured his agents, earning the enmity of Sturdevant himself. Sturdevant eventually disappeared and presumably committed suicide.

Bresnavitch had used Polyakov to fence stolen art works in Paris, so Ward, an old partner of the Highwayman and a member of Rone's current group, decides to go there in search of leads. On the day of his return, the group's mission is destroyed when Potkin returns to the Soviet Union and informs Bresnavitch about the operation. Janis, B.A. and Ward are apprehended, while The Warlock commits suicide before being captured. Rone escapes and tries visiting the Kitai to arrange re-purchase of the letter. However, the Kitai responds by trying to kill Rone, who determines that the Chinese have possession of the letter.

Rone then turns to Erika, with whom he has been having an affair. Rone eventually realizes that Bresnavitch orchestrated the raid without the knowledge of Soviet counterintelligence, an indicator that he was Polyakov's traitorous Soviet official contact. Rone promises to help Erika escape to the West. She later reports that B.A. has taken poison and is expected to die, and Ward is being held captive.

Rone threatens to expose Bresnavitch unless Ward is released. Bresnavitch agrees, and Rone and Ward then arrange to leave the next day. Disapproving of Rone's plans to aid Erika, Ward kills her. Ward then approaches Kosnov. He begins listing the names of agents betrayed by Kosnov, says that the time has come for retribution and shoots Kosnov in the kneecap. Kosnov then seems to recognize Ward, who closes in on him. Kosnov begins screaming in torment.

As they head for a plane to leave the country, Rone shares with Ward his conclusions that Ward is actually Sturdevant and intends to stay, having made a deal with Bresnavitch to take over as the head of Soviet counterintelligence. Ward then reveals that B.A. is alive. He offers to release B.A. in exchange for a favor, handing Rone a note that reads, "Kill Potkin's wife and daughters or I kill the girl."

Cast

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Production

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This entrance gate of the Hispanic Society of America in New York was used for a location shot (Rone and B.A. walking into the Tillenger Foundation) and in this 2008 photograph, still looks much like it did in the film almost forty years earlier.

The film shows its characters speaking Russian without the use of English subtitles by either having the characters speaking Russian while supplying simultaneous voiced-over English translation or else beginning such scenes in Russian and then segueing into English.

The film was planned to be shot over 17 weeks, with 13 weeks at Dino De Laurentiis' studio in Rome, Italy; 2 weeks in Helsinki and one week in both Mexico and New York City.[8] As the producers were not able to film in Moscow, many of the scenes set in Moscow were filmed in the Finnish capital city of Helsinki which features neoclassical buildings similar to those in Leningrad. Filming locations in New York included the Hispanic Society of America, Central Park Zoo and Greenwich Village.[3][5] Mostly aerial stock footage from the summer of 1969 showing Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago and New York City is also seen in the film.

Reception

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Box office

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According to Fox records, the film required $10,100,000 in rentals to break even and by December 11, 1970, had made $3,425,000.[9] By September 1970, the studio recorded a loss of $3,939,000 on the film to the studio.[10]

Critical response

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The film was subject to criticism upon its release. Vincent Canby of The New York Times called the movie "depressing."[11] Variety had already noted in a pre-release review that The Kremlin Letter "...makes for valuable viewing, but with the piecing together [it is] another thing. Thus is this nastiness of the spy business graphically described. It is an engagingly photographed piece of business."[6] A much later TV Guide review said the film was "Beautifully photographed... [but] a hopelessly convoluted spy drama with so many intricate interweavings that you truly need a scorecard to keep track of the plotters."[5]

Much later, fan-author Jerry Kutner wrote "Among the films of 1970, John Huston's The Kremlin Letter was as unself-consciously noir as his '40s and '50s work."[12] Craig Butler of Allmovie wrote, "Although it has its partisans, most consider The Kremlin Letter to be a big disappointment... the plot of the novel upon which it is based is simply too dense to be translated to the screen in a film of normal length." Butler went on to note that "Richard Boone really shines, turning in a very fine performance that leaves the rest of the actors in the dust... there are those who will greatly enjoy Kremlin for its twisted plotting and cynicism..."[13] In 2005, UCLA scholar Bob Hudson noted in the journal Lingua Romana that French filmmaker Jean-Pierre Melville "...used the term magisterial in praise of John Huston's The Kremlin Letter (1970), which he had just viewed the night before the interview. Despite the commercial failure of the film, Melville saw it as establishing the standard for cinema, and explained his quest as an attempt to achieve such grandeur."[7] The Time Out Film Guide calls The Kremlin Letter "powerful... possibly the clearest statement of Huston's vision of a cruel and senseless world in operation."[14]

In 2009, the film was listed in 100 Greatest Spy Movies: A Special Collector's Edition from the Editors of American History [magazine].[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Solomon, Aubrey. Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History (The Scarecrow Filmmakers Series). Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1989. ISBN 978-0-8108-4244-1. p256
  2. ^ a b Seymour, Gene. "100 Greatest Spy Movies: A Special Collector's Edition from the Editors of American History. 2009. Weider History Group.
  3. ^ a b hollywood.com, The Kremlin Letter, retrieved 31 December 2008
  4. ^ https://nytimes.com, Noel Behn, 70, Novelist, Producer and Screenwriter, 31 July 1998, retrieved 31 December 2008
  5. ^ a b c tvguide.com, The Kremlin Letter, retrieved 31 December 2008
  6. ^ a b c variety.com, The Kremlin Letter, 1 January 1970, retrieved 31 December 2008
  7. ^ a b Hudson, Bob, "J.-P. Melville's Quest for the Absolute: Persistent Perfectionism and Realistic Obsession in His "Last" Films," Lingua Romana: A Journal of French, Italian, and Romanian Culture, Fall 2005 (Vol. 4, Issue 1), retrieved 28 April 2018
  8. ^ "Moscow 'Off-Limits' for 'Kremlin Letter'". Variety. March 5, 1969. p. 31.
  9. ^ Silverman, Stephen M (1988). The Fox That Got Away: The Last Days of the Zanuck Dynasty at Twentieth Century-Fox. L. Stuart. p. 329. ISBN 9780818404856.
  10. ^ Silverman p 259
  11. ^ Canby, Vincent, "Film of 'Kremlin Letter' Weaves Espionage Tale," The New York Times, 2 February 1970, retrieved 31 December 2008.
  12. ^ Kutner, Jerry C., Beyond the Golden Age - Film Noir Since the '50s, brightlightsfilm.com, 1994, 2006, retrieved 31 December 2008:
  13. ^ Butler, Craig, The Kremlin Letter, allmovie.com, retrieved 31 December 2008
  14. ^ timeout.com, The Kremlin Letter, retrieved 31 December 2008
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