'Our Kind of Traitor' is diverting but not the best adaptation of Le Carr茅
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John Le Carr茅鈥檚 novels have been adapted so many times, sometimes superlatively, for the movies and television that each new arrival seems to conjure up all the others. 鈥淥ur Kind of Traitor,鈥 directed by Susanna White from a script by Hossein Amini and starring Ewan McGregor and Stellan聽Skarsg氓rd, is in the midrange in quality: better than a few, not nearly up to, say, 鈥淭he Spy Who Came In From the Cold," "The Russia House,鈥 or the TV miniseries 鈥淭inker Tailor Soldier Spy.鈥 Which is not to say the movie is anything less than diverting. It鈥檚 just that diverting is often聽all聽it is.
McGregor plays Perry, a British academic vacationing in Marrakesh with his lawyer wife, Gail (Naomie Harris), as they attempt to patch up their marriage. There they encounter Dima (Skarsg氓rd), a wealthy, boisterous Russian with mob connections who, it turns out, wants Perry to persuade the British government to secure his family鈥檚 escape in exchange for proof that a British MP (Jeremy Northam, in a bit role) is laundering dirty money for the Russians.
It鈥檚 all far-fetched in a way that only international spy thrillers 鈥 bless their hearts 鈥 can be. Perhaps the most far-fetched thing about it is聽Skarsg氓rd鈥檚 Russian accent. But he strikes a sympathetic note as a man whose obstreperousness cannot disguise his ferocious love for his family. McGregor, by contrast, seems a bit miscast as an addled academic who must locate his inner ninja. Grade: B (Rated R for violence, language throughout, some sexuality, nudity and brief drug use.)