23 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :- Amazing, 23 May 2003
Author:
Matt Day (mattsday) from England
The BBC has once again shown that they can still create top quality
drama.
While there may be some historical issues with the script, one has to
admire
the fact that the characters are portrayed accurately and convincingly.
Having just seen the last of the four-part series, I can comment that for
entertainment value it is top notch.
Sure, some may argue the historical facts are inaccurate, or that the
light
spun upon the situation is somewhat different to how it was at the time,
but
much information about the infamous Cambridge spies is uncertain at
best -
in particular Kim Philby (Toby Stephens) is somewhat a mystery even
today.
Do not be fooled into thinking that this series is a documentary, it
isn't.
However, you will be forgiven for thinking that you are watching the
actual
events, with the locations, pieces and acting all first
class.
Watch it with an open mind, as if it is fictional. You will be greatly
rewarded, excited and even humoured at how four masterminds underplayed
the
archaic MI6 for their principals. I'd certainly recommend
it.
Overall: 9/10 - Losing the ultimate 1 mark for seeming rushed in parts
and
sometimes making it hard to understand the relationships between the very
complex characters - particularly at the start of the series.
20 out of 23 people found the following comment useful :- Spy Story for Sunday Night, 6 July 2003
Author:
Philby-3 from Sydney, Australia
This is a lightly fictionalised account of how four tewwibly well
brought up English boys betrayed their country to the Soviet Union.
Philby's father had been a distinguished diplomat and Arabist and
McLean's a cabinet minister. All had public school educations and had
been undergraduates at the same Cambridge college. They set off into
promising careers in the foreign office and security services and were
Soviet agents from the start. Their great coup was to give the Soviets
enough details about the atomic bomb to speed up their program to build
one by a couple of years, but it was at the expense of blowing McLean
and Burgess's cover (they escaped to Moscow in 1951), and Philby being
fired from MI6. He joined them in Moscow in 1963. Blunt, by now the
Keeper of the Queen's Pictures was then interrogated; he confessed, and
was let go.
It's one of the really great spy stories of the 20th century. This
version concentrates on the personal dynamics. The amount of contact
the spies had with each other after Cambridge seems to be much
exaggerated (pretty bad security), but gives us the picture of the gang
of four against the Establishment. The women are interesting too.
Philby was a ladies' man to whom Donald McLean's American wife Melinda
(Anne-Louise Plowman) was attracted. They later lived together in
Moscow. Blunt and Burgess were both gay, but friends rather than
lovers.
The Establishment, in the person of Lord Halifax (James Fox),
Ambassador to Washington, found it difficult to believe that 'people
like us' could do such things and started looking for the atomic spy in
the embassy kitchens. One or two western counter-intelligence
operatives including the CIA's formidable James Jesus Angleton nearly
nabbed them, but with Philby tipping them off (and duchessing
Angleton), Burgess and McLean made it safely to Moscow.
With four hours to play with all the characters are richly drawn. Tom
Hollander's Guy Burgess is a drunken dirty little sod who somehow
manages to be witty and charming as well. It was great cover for a spy.
As Donald McLean, Rupert Penry-Jones is the Golden Boy who feels
himself unworthy, and sees communism as the way to redemption. Toby
Stephens as Kim Philby gives us the cleverness, the deviousness and the
angst as well, especially in the Spanish episode.(I'm afraid us Philbys
are a devious lot, but we bleed, we bleed). Samuel West's Blunt has the
occasional hint of emotion, but basically is a cold fish. Art, it seems
is his life. He does get on tewwibly well with the Queen.
Seventy years on, it's not so much why they did it, but why they kept
it up that mystifies. Given their location close to the heart of
British Intelligence and hence knowing as much as anybody outside about
what really went on the Soviet Union, it's extraordinary that Philby
and McLean in particular continued on right up to 1951 (Blunt was more
or less inactive after 1945). It is suggested here that Ms McLean did
try to get her husband to give up spying but there's no real
explanation as to why he persisted. Perhaps he still believed. Anyway,
truth or fiction is hardly the point here - Sunday night is not for
history lessons. This is a familiar tale well told, visually splendid
and not too taxing. The real story, I suspect, is far too complex for
even the most adroit (or left) TV producer. An earlier TV
account,"Philby Burgess and McLean" (1977) is also worth watching, if
you can find it.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Beautiful period piece mini-series, excellent acting!, 20 June 2005
Author:
gazebo from New York City
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I almost didn't watch this when I found out the story behind the
"Cambridge Spies", but I'm so glad I did.
This mini-series almost authentically captures the feel of the 1930s in
Europe. It's a beautiful looking mini-series. The actors who played the
infamous four spies were all very good and they each held their own.
They made you care about them even though you know they are all
traitors to their country. I enjoyed it very much. One of the best
parts also, coming from the DVD, is the interesting documentary on the
Cambridge Spies. It's a fascinating, well acted show.
Take a close look at the guy who plays Guy Burgess. He's a lot of fun
to watch and strangely enough, looks almost exactly like the real Guy
Burgess.
Very good show! Worth watching a second time!
6 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Very entertaining, 18 May 2003
Author:
angelonline from London, England
Cambridge Spies is glamorous, intelligent and exciting - a winning
formula!
The acting is brilliant and the editing very stylish. The plot is
slightly
hard to catch at times, but it doesn't matter as the locations are
stunning
and performances touching. Great TV!
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Cambridge Spies is excellent, 23 July 2006
Author:
aussiebrisguy from Australia
What a superb series the BBC has made in Cambridge Spies! The cast are
really fantastic. My favourite actor has to be Imelda Staunton as the
late Queen Mother. She has some of the best lines and delivers them so
well. The leads are cast very well indeed. Tom Hollander is suitably
seedy as Guy Burgess, Samuel West is very starchy and upper class as
Blunt, Rupert Penry-Jones is wonderful as the handsome but flawed
Donald Maclean and Toby Stephens is delightfully dislikable as Kim
Philby. These characters are thoroughly entertaining and horrible in
the extreme in their betrayal of King and Country. The cloak and dagger
feel of the piece is wonderful. The settings are really great too.
Cambridge is so beautiful. The writers should be congratulated in
keeping the pace moving so well. All in all BBC you have done it again.
I wish we saw more quality drama like Cambridge Spies!
6 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- First Class TV, 19 May 2003
Author:
glasslens from London
High production values and a great story drive this excellent show along
at
just the right pace. Never rushed or drawn-out. A few oddities with the
script - some things don't seem to flow right but minor. Perhaps the
editor
put a few bits of film in the wrong place! David Higgs' photography is a
joy
to watch - it would almost be worth watching without any sound! Aspiring
DPs
(directors of photography)should look at his lighting, framing and camera
movement. Lovely use of long lenses to separate the characters from the
background. Older DPs should start to worry!
5 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Gripping, 16 May 2003
Author:
shellemk from Milton Keynes
Only halfway through the 4-part series so far but Cambridge Spies has
definitely lived up to my expectations. Much impressed by the excellent
Toby Stephens, having seen how versatile he can be from: Tenant of
Wildfell
Hall, Sunset Heights, Great Gatsby and of course Die Another Day! I have
to
say what a superb actor Tom Holland is too. Putting aside historical
inaccuracies (this has never claimed to be a documentary anyway) in favour
of sheer entertainment value, this is proving to be a fast-moving, truly
gripping drama. I'm hooked!
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- BBC Production of the highest class, 27 February 2008
Author:
john-3285 from United Kingdom
This BBC presentation is, like the 4 spies involved, quintessentially
British. The settings are supreme, particularly the depictions of life
at Cambridge as an undergraduate, which is where we first meet the 4
characters whose effect on 20th century history, may never be fully
appreciated. The story follows their lives and adventures up until
Burgess and McLean defect in 1951. The settings apart, what lifts this
production out of the ordinary and into the sublime, is the casting and
the performances from everyone involved. The 4 leads played by Samuel
West as Blunt, Toby Stephens as Philby, Tom Hollander as Burgess,
Rupert Penry-Jones as McLean are, all of them, perfectly cast.
And.............. there are also memorable contributions from Anthony
Andrews, moving and dignified as King George VI, Imelda Staunton,
wonderfully cryptic and tart as the late queen mother, John Light as
the outsmarted and frustrated James Angleton and not least Marcel Lures
as the dignified KGB officer who acted as contact to the four. I have
already watched this twice and will do so again as there is so much to
enjoy with repeated viewings. Particularly memorable scenes include
their outrageous celebrations on their last day at Cambridge, Philby
getting himself and his companions out of a jam in Vienna by dint of
his unshakable belief in the power of his British Passport (One of many
delicious ironies), McLean's unconventional courting of future wife
Melinda, Blunt's scenes with the Royals and unforgettably, Burgess' way
of getting himself declared "persona-non-grata" in USA. Hollander's
"God Bless America" scene is one of the many highlights in the
production and is as good a piece of bravura acting as anything that
might come from a Brando, a Pacino or a De Niro. But there are goodies
everywhere. You will not need to be a History Buff to enjoy this, but
you will conclude as I did, that yet again,
"Nobody comes close to doing this kind of thing quite as well as the
Beeb."
4 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- Cambridge Spies, 16 August 2005
Author:
(vincentdrummer@gmail.com) from Netherlands
I saw Cambridge Spies with a friend of mine. I believe I have seen it
for about three times by now. I find it brilliant. It is honestly the
best thing I have ever seen in my life. It may be that I like it that
much because I love the opinions and thoughts of the actors in the
movie. (they are communist) But the film has so much very (very very)
excellent:
-acting (actors)
-conversations (you wouldn't want to miss any of them)
-filming
-beautiful locations
-great atmosphere
-perfect storyline (it has really happened)
-twists and changes in the storyline that keep you interested through
the whole four hours of the movie. (even when you watch it for the
third time)
I think you can gather much relevant information from it, and even
important life-lessons. If you are an anti-fascist of any kind, you
must have seen this film. You can get great inspiration out of it. I
would rate this 10 out of 10.
3 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- brilliant, 12 May 2003
Author:
m_elgersma from leeuwarden,the netherlands
Although have only seen part one of this brilliant series, am
delighted.
Performances of lead actor very good indeed, very nice photographed in
period, am looking forward to next episodes
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Cambridge Spies (2003) (TV)
23 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :-

Amazing, 23 May 2003
Author: Matt Day (mattsday) from England
The BBC has once again shown that they can still create top quality drama. While there may be some historical issues with the script, one has to admire the fact that the characters are portrayed accurately and convincingly. Having just seen the last of the four-part series, I can comment that for entertainment value it is top notch.
Sure, some may argue the historical facts are inaccurate, or that the light spun upon the situation is somewhat different to how it was at the time, but much information about the infamous Cambridge spies is uncertain at best - in particular Kim Philby (Toby Stephens) is somewhat a mystery even today. Do not be fooled into thinking that this series is a documentary, it isn't. However, you will be forgiven for thinking that you are watching the actual events, with the locations, pieces and acting all first class.
Watch it with an open mind, as if it is fictional. You will be greatly rewarded, excited and even humoured at how four masterminds underplayed the archaic MI6 for their principals. I'd certainly recommend it.
Overall: 9/10 - Losing the ultimate 1 mark for seeming rushed in parts and sometimes making it hard to understand the relationships between the very complex characters - particularly at the start of the series.
20 out of 23 people found the following comment useful :-

Spy Story for Sunday Night, 6 July 2003
Author: Philby-3 from Sydney, Australia
This is a lightly fictionalised account of how four tewwibly well brought up English boys betrayed their country to the Soviet Union. Philby's father had been a distinguished diplomat and Arabist and McLean's a cabinet minister. All had public school educations and had been undergraduates at the same Cambridge college. They set off into promising careers in the foreign office and security services and were Soviet agents from the start. Their great coup was to give the Soviets enough details about the atomic bomb to speed up their program to build one by a couple of years, but it was at the expense of blowing McLean and Burgess's cover (they escaped to Moscow in 1951), and Philby being fired from MI6. He joined them in Moscow in 1963. Blunt, by now the Keeper of the Queen's Pictures was then interrogated; he confessed, and was let go.
It's one of the really great spy stories of the 20th century. This version concentrates on the personal dynamics. The amount of contact the spies had with each other after Cambridge seems to be much exaggerated (pretty bad security), but gives us the picture of the gang of four against the Establishment. The women are interesting too. Philby was a ladies' man to whom Donald McLean's American wife Melinda (Anne-Louise Plowman) was attracted. They later lived together in Moscow. Blunt and Burgess were both gay, but friends rather than lovers.
The Establishment, in the person of Lord Halifax (James Fox), Ambassador to Washington, found it difficult to believe that 'people like us' could do such things and started looking for the atomic spy in the embassy kitchens. One or two western counter-intelligence operatives including the CIA's formidable James Jesus Angleton nearly nabbed them, but with Philby tipping them off (and duchessing Angleton), Burgess and McLean made it safely to Moscow.
With four hours to play with all the characters are richly drawn. Tom Hollander's Guy Burgess is a drunken dirty little sod who somehow manages to be witty and charming as well. It was great cover for a spy. As Donald McLean, Rupert Penry-Jones is the Golden Boy who feels himself unworthy, and sees communism as the way to redemption. Toby Stephens as Kim Philby gives us the cleverness, the deviousness and the angst as well, especially in the Spanish episode.(I'm afraid us Philbys are a devious lot, but we bleed, we bleed). Samuel West's Blunt has the occasional hint of emotion, but basically is a cold fish. Art, it seems is his life. He does get on tewwibly well with the Queen.
Seventy years on, it's not so much why they did it, but why they kept it up that mystifies. Given their location close to the heart of British Intelligence and hence knowing as much as anybody outside about what really went on the Soviet Union, it's extraordinary that Philby and McLean in particular continued on right up to 1951 (Blunt was more or less inactive after 1945). It is suggested here that Ms McLean did try to get her husband to give up spying but there's no real explanation as to why he persisted. Perhaps he still believed. Anyway, truth or fiction is hardly the point here - Sunday night is not for history lessons. This is a familiar tale well told, visually splendid and not too taxing. The real story, I suspect, is far too complex for even the most adroit (or left) TV producer. An earlier TV account,"Philby Burgess and McLean" (1977) is also worth watching, if you can find it.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

Beautiful period piece mini-series, excellent acting!, 20 June 2005
Author: gazebo from New York City
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I almost didn't watch this when I found out the story behind the "Cambridge Spies", but I'm so glad I did.
This mini-series almost authentically captures the feel of the 1930s in Europe. It's a beautiful looking mini-series. The actors who played the infamous four spies were all very good and they each held their own. They made you care about them even though you know they are all traitors to their country. I enjoyed it very much. One of the best parts also, coming from the DVD, is the interesting documentary on the Cambridge Spies. It's a fascinating, well acted show.
Take a close look at the guy who plays Guy Burgess. He's a lot of fun to watch and strangely enough, looks almost exactly like the real Guy Burgess.
Very good show! Worth watching a second time!
6 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-
Very entertaining, 18 May 2003
Author: angelonline from London, England
Cambridge Spies is glamorous, intelligent and exciting - a winning formula! The acting is brilliant and the editing very stylish. The plot is slightly hard to catch at times, but it doesn't matter as the locations are stunning and performances touching. Great TV!
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

Cambridge Spies is excellent, 23 July 2006
Author: aussiebrisguy from Australia
What a superb series the BBC has made in Cambridge Spies! The cast are really fantastic. My favourite actor has to be Imelda Staunton as the late Queen Mother. She has some of the best lines and delivers them so well. The leads are cast very well indeed. Tom Hollander is suitably seedy as Guy Burgess, Samuel West is very starchy and upper class as Blunt, Rupert Penry-Jones is wonderful as the handsome but flawed Donald Maclean and Toby Stephens is delightfully dislikable as Kim Philby. These characters are thoroughly entertaining and horrible in the extreme in their betrayal of King and Country. The cloak and dagger feel of the piece is wonderful. The settings are really great too. Cambridge is so beautiful. The writers should be congratulated in keeping the pace moving so well. All in all BBC you have done it again. I wish we saw more quality drama like Cambridge Spies!
6 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-
First Class TV, 19 May 2003
Author: glasslens from London
High production values and a great story drive this excellent show along at just the right pace. Never rushed or drawn-out. A few oddities with the script - some things don't seem to flow right but minor. Perhaps the editor put a few bits of film in the wrong place! David Higgs' photography is a joy to watch - it would almost be worth watching without any sound! Aspiring DPs (directors of photography)should look at his lighting, framing and camera movement. Lovely use of long lenses to separate the characters from the background. Older DPs should start to worry!
5 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

Gripping, 16 May 2003
Author: shellemk from Milton Keynes
Only halfway through the 4-part series so far but Cambridge Spies has definitely lived up to my expectations. Much impressed by the excellent Toby Stephens, having seen how versatile he can be from: Tenant of Wildfell Hall, Sunset Heights, Great Gatsby and of course Die Another Day! I have to say what a superb actor Tom Holland is too. Putting aside historical inaccuracies (this has never claimed to be a documentary anyway) in favour of sheer entertainment value, this is proving to be a fast-moving, truly gripping drama. I'm hooked!
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

BBC Production of the highest class, 27 February 2008
Author: john-3285 from United Kingdom
This BBC presentation is, like the 4 spies involved, quintessentially British. The settings are supreme, particularly the depictions of life at Cambridge as an undergraduate, which is where we first meet the 4 characters whose effect on 20th century history, may never be fully appreciated. The story follows their lives and adventures up until Burgess and McLean defect in 1951. The settings apart, what lifts this production out of the ordinary and into the sublime, is the casting and the performances from everyone involved. The 4 leads played by Samuel West as Blunt, Toby Stephens as Philby, Tom Hollander as Burgess, Rupert Penry-Jones as McLean are, all of them, perfectly cast. And.............. there are also memorable contributions from Anthony Andrews, moving and dignified as King George VI, Imelda Staunton, wonderfully cryptic and tart as the late queen mother, John Light as the outsmarted and frustrated James Angleton and not least Marcel Lures as the dignified KGB officer who acted as contact to the four. I have already watched this twice and will do so again as there is so much to enjoy with repeated viewings. Particularly memorable scenes include their outrageous celebrations on their last day at Cambridge, Philby getting himself and his companions out of a jam in Vienna by dint of his unshakable belief in the power of his British Passport (One of many delicious ironies), McLean's unconventional courting of future wife Melinda, Blunt's scenes with the Royals and unforgettably, Burgess' way of getting himself declared "persona-non-grata" in USA. Hollander's "God Bless America" scene is one of the many highlights in the production and is as good a piece of bravura acting as anything that might come from a Brando, a Pacino or a De Niro. But there are goodies everywhere. You will not need to be a History Buff to enjoy this, but you will conclude as I did, that yet again,
"Nobody comes close to doing this kind of thing quite as well as the Beeb."
4 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-

Cambridge Spies, 16 August 2005
Author: (vincentdrummer@gmail.com) from Netherlands
I saw Cambridge Spies with a friend of mine. I believe I have seen it for about three times by now. I find it brilliant. It is honestly the best thing I have ever seen in my life. It may be that I like it that much because I love the opinions and thoughts of the actors in the movie. (they are communist) But the film has so much very (very very) excellent:
-acting (actors)
-conversations (you wouldn't want to miss any of them)
-filming
-beautiful locations
-great atmosphere
-perfect storyline (it has really happened)
-twists and changes in the storyline that keep you interested through the whole four hours of the movie. (even when you watch it for the third time)
I think you can gather much relevant information from it, and even important life-lessons. If you are an anti-fascist of any kind, you must have seen this film. You can get great inspiration out of it. I would rate this 10 out of 10.
3 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-

brilliant, 12 May 2003
Author: m_elgersma from leeuwarden,the netherlands
Although have only seen part one of this brilliant series, am delighted. Performances of lead actor very good indeed, very nice photographed in period, am looking forward to next episodes
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