The Sentinel-Record

Greek govt upset as spy show denied access to ancient temple

- ELENA BECATOROS DEREK GATOPOULOS

ATHENS, Greece — A highly anticipate­d television series adapting spy novelist John le Carre’s “The Little Drummer Girl” will not include scenes from an ancient site near Athens after a panel of archaeolog­ists turned down an access request by the BBC and the U.S.-based cable network AMC.

Greece’s powerful Central Archaeolog­ical Council denied the one-day access request to the 2,500-years old Temple of Poseidon at Cape Sounion next month, saying the site would be closed to visitors for too many hours and the production team would be too large.

The decision triggered a furious reaction from Greece’s government, which launched a campaign three days ago to attract film production­s to Greece with a series of incentives. The government says overseas production­s could be a key growth area in the country that is emerging from eight years of crippling financial crisis.

“We have declared that Greece is now film-friendly. A few days later, another institutio­n is contradict­ing this, not us but the hopes and ambitions of artists, technician­s and thousands of profession­als that are a part of this industry. It is an internatio­nal embarrassm­ent,” Lefteris Kretsos, general secretary at the government’s media and communicat­ion department, said Thursday.

The decision, he said, “once again highlights the issues we have as a country.”

Filming at Greek archaeolog­ical sites, whether for commercial production­s or news reporting, requires a permit from archaeolog­ists that is often near impossible and very costly to obtain.

The six-part series is due for global release next year and stars Swedish actor Alexander Skarsgard and Britain’s Florence Pugh, while South Korean filmmaker Park Chan-wook will make his television debut with the project.

In the 1983 novel, an Israeli spy chief hunts a Palestinia­n bomber around Europe, recruiting a young English actress to try and expose him.

Ten of Le Carre’s novels have been adapted to movies. His work is also widely known from the BBC TV series “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy” and “Smiley’s People,” starring Alec Guinness as Cold War intelligen­ce officer George Smiley.

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