The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Judi Dench plays idealistic spy in the true story ‘Red Joan’

- By Michael O’Sullivan

JUDI Dench is the one marquee name associated with the movie “Red Joan.” But really, with her on board, who needs more than one?

Yet as good as she is, the actress is little more than the framing device for this polished and morally provocativ­e - yet hardly pulse-pounding - tale, loosely based on the life of English spy Melita Norwood. (In her 80s, Norwood, hardly a household name, was exposed for handing atomic secrets to the Russians, dating back to World War II.)

Opening with the 2000 arrest of Dench’s fictionali­sed Joan Stanley, and structured as a series of police interrogat­ions, the story is largely told in flashbacks, beginning in 1938, as a young Joan (Sophie Cookson) is gradually radicalise­d by her Communist lover, Leo (Tom Hughes), and recruited by the KGB.

“My little comrade,” Leo calls her, over and over.

Cookson and Hughes both deliver fine performanc­es, under the irreproach­able staging of theatre director Trevor Nunn, working from Lindsay Shapero’s adaptation of Jennie Rooney’s 2013 novel. But the action (if that’s the right word) moves pretty darn slowly, with Joan, who takes a job working with British nuclear scientists on the code-named “tube alloys” project, hesitating to even dip her toe into espionage until after the United States has already developed - and dropped - its bomb on Japan.

The film argues, persuasive­ly, if somewhat one-sidedly, that Joan wanted to even the playing field, assisting Russia in the developmen­t of its own nuclear weapons as a way to deter any single nation from using them.

Such ethical nuance will not necessaril­y convince everyone. Joan’s grown son (Ben Miles), a lawyer, represents the skeptical side of things, denouncing his mother as a traitor, after he gets over his shock and disbelief. But even he eventually comes around.

“Red Joan” is ostensibly a spy drama - “thriller” may be overstatin­g it - but at heart it’s more like an antiwar film. Much of the story concerns Joan’s romantic relationsh­ips: first with Leo, and then later with her boss (Stephen Campbell Moore). But Joan’s true passion - and the film’s, which it proudly wears on its sleeve - is for peace, even at the cost of patriotism.

Or at least as that word is traditiona­lly defined. “I love my country,” the elder Joan says, with a fervour approachin­g defensiven­ess. As delivered by Dench, those words don’t land like the rationalis­ation of a turncoat.

Two and one-half stars. Rated R. Contains brief sexuality, nudity and some mature thematic material. 141 minutes. — WPBloomber­g

“Red Joan” is ostensibly a spy drama - “thriller” but at heart it’s more like an antiwar film. Much of the story concerns Joan’s romantic relationsh­ips: first with Leo, and then later with her boss. But Joan’s true passion - and the film’s, which it proudly wears on its sleeve - is for peace, even at the cost of patriotism.

 ??  ?? Sophie Cookson, left, and Stephen Campbell Moore star in “Red Joan” and (below) Judi Dench in “Red Joan” — Nick Wall, IFC Films photo
Sophie Cookson, left, and Stephen Campbell Moore star in “Red Joan” and (below) Judi Dench in “Red Joan” — Nick Wall, IFC Films photo

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