Stamford Advocate

‘The Courier’ is a throwback to the kind of solid yet fun spy thriller they don’t make anymore

- By Ann Hornaday

“The Courier” Rated: PG-13 for violence, partial nudity, brief strong language and smoking throughout. Running time: 111 minutes. ★★★ (out of four)

Benedict Cumberbatc­h delivers an appealing, technicall­y tricky performanc­e in “The Courier,” in which he plays Greville Wynne, a British salesman who in the 1960s became an improbable player in Cold War tradecraft at its most high-stakes.

Wynne really did exist, a fact that bears noting because his story is often too wildly dramatic to believe. In “The Courier,” Cumberbatc­h plays him with sodden, people-pleasing bonhomie; he’s a decent bloke but a bit of a lightweigh­t, simply interested in making his next sale and getting home for cocktails with his witty, pretty wife, Sheila (Jessie Buckley), and their adorable 10-year-old son.

When Wynne is approached by CIA operative Emily Donovan (Rachel Brosnahan) and her opposite number at MI6 (Angus Wright), Wynne is nonplussed: He’s not a spy. But that’s the point. He’s above suspicion, with his only job being to travel to Moscow, do what he would usually do trying to drum up trade with a foreign market, and - oh yeah, make the acquaintan­ce of a Soviet official and World War II hero named Oleg Penkovsky (Merab Ninidze), who wants to avoid the nuclear confrontat­ion he is certain Nikita Khrushchev is about to unleash.

Directed by Dominic Cooke from a script by Tom O’Connor, “The Courier” is enormous fun in its first hour and a half, while Cumberbatc­h makes the most of his good-humored character, who develops a genuine friendship with Penkovsky, portrayed by Ninidze with touching soulfulnes­s. The filmmakers use Prague as a convincing stand-in for Moscow’s drab postwar brutalism. Fans of the wonderful “Dear Comrades!” will appreciate seeing another side to the same period, as Wynne is entertaine­d with seemingly endless supplies of vodka, caviar and ballet. When Penkovsky informs him that his remit hinges on the ability to hold his liquor, Wynne replies with a twinkle: “It’s my one true gift.”

Cumberbatc­h delivers that line with the same jaunty, self-aware tone that gives “The Courier” its lift and high spirits, at least until the story takes a far darker and more drastic turn. That emotional shift isn’t always quite as graceful as what’s gone before, with Cumberbatc­h at one point literally overplayin­g his hand to portray Wynne at a terrifying mental and physical breaking point.

Still, “The Courier” makes a smart, stylish stand for the kind of oldfashion­ed period spy thriller that is increasing­ly being turned into bingeable series for streaming services. Its modesty and carefully managed ambitions define its strong suit at a time when such films are scarcer every day. “The Courier” isn’t a great movie, but it’s a good one. And right now, that’s enough.

 ?? Liam Daniel / Lionsgate and Roadside Attraction­s ?? Benedict Cumberbatc­h, left, plays real-life Cold War spy Greville Wynne in “The Courier.”
Liam Daniel / Lionsgate and Roadside Attraction­s Benedict Cumberbatc­h, left, plays real-life Cold War spy Greville Wynne in “The Courier.”

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