While the spy thriller The Courier is the true-life story of British businessman Greville Wynne (played with bravado by Benedict Cumberbatch), it is also the tale of a friendship between two men that transcends borders and political ideologies.
Set in the early 1960s, the film follows Wynne, who has been recruited by MI-6 and the CIA to partner with a high-ranking Soviet officer named Oleg Penkovsky (Merab Ninidze) to gather intelligence in an effort to defuse the Cuban Missile Crisis and avert an all-out nuclear war. Wynne is tasked by CIA operative Emily Donovan (Rachel Brosnahan) and MI-6 agent Dickie Franks (Angus Wright) to relay messages and state secrets between themselves and Penkovsky under the guise of the normal course of his regular business trips. Everything goes according to plan, that is until the KGB begins to suspect that something is afoot and the whole operation and the safety of its players are put at great risk.
What ends up being the most unique thing about the film is the complete and abrupt shift in tone that takes place around two-thirds of the way through the film, where it effortlessly segues from spy-thriller to a sort of survival story that proves every bit as engaging and emotional as that which preceded it.
Benedict Cumberbatch in “The Courier.”Director Dominic Cook, whose previous theatrical directorial outing was the 2017 drama On Chesil Beach, proves extremely capable of leading the audience through the labyrinthian machinations that comprise the world of espionage and personal sacrifices that the often expository, yet relatable, screenplay by Tom O’Connor is tasked with conveying to the viewer. Aided by the fine cinematography by Sean Bobbit as well as the crafty editing of Tariq Anwar and Gareth C. Scales, The Courier manages to become a sort of hybrid of various genres that ultimately succeeds at them all.
At the film’s heart though is the relationship between Wynne and Penkovsky and the depths each is willing to go and suffer for the other. That makes The Courier more of a tale of the human condition than an examination of political ideologies or practices. That is, at the core of everyone involved, they are simply people trying to make the world a better place for those whom they love.
Mike Tyrkus
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