The first of four British made-for-TV
movies starring Dennis Waterman (The Sweeny, New Tricks) as former SAS
operative turned MI5 agent John Neil is identified on screen only as “Circle of
Deceit.” I suspect it was originally filmed as a one-off, then did well enough
to justify a series at which point the title was apparently retroactively
changed to Circles of Deceit: The Wolves are Howling. That’s how it’s
identified on Acorn’s Circles of Deceit DVD set at any rate.
Director Geoffrey Sax (Fawlty
Towers, Framed, Spice World) apparently likes to set a challenge for himself,
so he begins his movie with flashbacks to a circus tragedy, an odd and outdated
movie cliché so overused that it was hilariously sent up in OSS 117: Lost in Rio. Yet here Sax more or less pulls it off. Despite that beginning, he
delivers a really good drama. Such a beginning, in fact, proves entirely
appropriate, because Circles of Deceit: The Wolves Are Howling trades on clichés of this nature, yet
handles them all so well that it really doesn’t matter. This movie doesn’t
bring anything new to the spy genre, the ex-soldier genre or the IRA
infiltrator genre, but it makes an incredibly solid example of all three. And,
personally, sometimes that’s exactly what I want out of a genre movie.
John Neil is an SAS Falklands
vet who lost his wife and child two years earlier in an IRA bombing at a circus in
Germany. This event provoked his retirement, and he’s been a drunken recluse
ever since. Then an amazing coincidence occurs. (The plot hinges on a couple
such coincidences, but gets away with it.) An Irishman named Jackie O’Connell
dies in a car accident. He was born in Belfast, but has lived in London for the
last twenty years or more. And he bears an uncanny resemblance to John Neil. This
is too good an opportunity for MI5 spymaster Randal (Derek Jacobi, playing a
typically sleazy bureaucrat) to pass up. While O’Connell was not himself a
terrorist, he has an estranged brother in Belfast who’s a priest in a parish
dominated by IRA soldiers. It’s a rare and perfect chance to place an
infiltrator in their midst. With a little prodding from Randal (who isn’t above
playing on Neil’s past and hatred for the IRA because of what they did to his
family), Neil is lured out of retirement and given a crash course in the
Belfast neighborhood he’ll claim to be from and its mostly nefarious
denizens.
Foremost among them is Liam
McAuley, a high-ranking IRA mastermind and patriarch of a whole IRA family.
Liam is played by stalwart ITC veteran Peter Vaughan (Hammerhead, The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes, Codename: Kyril, various Avengers, etc.). His accent sometimes fails him, but
overall Vaughan delivers his usual screen-filling, utterly captivating
performance.
Neil makes his entrance at the
wake for one of McAuley’s sons, freshly killed by British soldiers. He introduces
himself as Jackie to Jackie’s brother, the parish priest, Father Fergal.
Fergal gives him a few tests which Neil’s cramming enables him to pass and then
readily accepts him as his long-lost brother. Fergal is a sympathetic character,
well played by Ian McElhinney. He wants to see the best in everyone and he clearly
wants to believe that Jackie has returned, so he’s easily fooled. Naturally,
Neil feels guilty for taking advantage of the optimistic man of God, and he may
even find a real kinship of sorts with him. But Fergal does not approve of the
McAuleys or their methods, and therefore loses faith in the man he believes is
Jackie when he starts (per orders) associating with them. One can only imagine
how betrayed he’ll feel when it comes out that Neil isn’t Jackie at all, but a
British soldier. (A patriotic Irishman to the core, Fergal has even less love
for the British than he does for the IRA.) Unfortunately (or perhaps
fortunately, as it spares the audience some excruciating discomfort), we never
get to see his reaction to that revelation, as the story has moved in other
directions by then.
Through Fergal, Neil is
introduced to the McAuley clan and even accepted. When Neil hits it off with
Liam’s pacifist daughter, Eilish (who shares her family’s cause, but not their
methods), Randal orders him to use that connection to get close to Liam.
Naturally, Neil develops strong feelings of his own for the passionate Eilish
(a very appealing Clare Higgins). He starts to fall in love with her, a turn of
events which regular viewers of this sort of drama will know can only end in
tragedy. Yes, The Wolves Are Howling is ticking formulaic boxes, but it’s ticking
them well.
Waterman is quite good as John
Neil, imbuing his every action with enough of a haunted past that we really
didn’t need the circus flashbacks. The score by Tim Souster is particularly
effective, and melds well with the performances, the settings and the direction
to create a suitably gloomy Irish feel. It’s the atmosphere more than the story
that stuck with me after watching this, and it’s largely that same atmosphere
that makes it feel more like a one-off drama than an entry in (or beginning to)
a series.
There is a budget here, enough
for convincing location filming and some small-scale military action including
helicopters. But that doesn’t make The Wolves Are Howling an action movie. I was
expecting action just based on that ex-SAS premise, since action is usually
what that premise delivers. Neil himself only does one little bit of fighting,
but in true SAS form, it’s a single, lighting-quick surprise move that kills in
one blow. No, The Wolves Are Howling is a drama—and a very good one. The story beats
aren’t new and the characters are familiar. But the performances are engaging,
as is the overall bleak tenor of the piece. (It kind of reminded me of the
Patrick McGoohan/Lee Van Cleef IRA drama The Hard Way, another deliberately paced
drama whose identity comes from its tone rather than its familiar one-last-job
assassin plot.)
Undercover dramas of this nature
are inherently heartbreaking, because you know all along that the hero must
betray all of the relationships he forms. And you can’t help feeling sorry for
some of the people he’ll betray. While the IRA are clearly bad guys here, this
telefilm doesn’t really take sides in the conflict. Instead, it questions the
methods of both parties. And ultimately it lays the blame at the feet of the
English for perpetuating the circle of violence—somewhat surprisingly for
something made for British television. Yet just as Circles of Deceit: The Wolves Are Howling isn’t an action
movie, it’s also not a political movie. It’s a character-driven drama, and one
I found very compelling. While this movie works perfectly well as a standalone, I'm looking forward to seeing where this series—and the character of John Neil—goes from here.
Excellent review and a DVD I might pick up. However, I am STILL struggling to remember this here in the UK.
ReplyDeleteI think it's fair to assume there isn't going to be any sort of follow up movie though. Waterman looks noticeably older now (and a bit haggard at times....a legacy of his lifelong smoking maybe?)and in any case is busy with the long runing BBC series NEW TRICKS.
Oh, no, there were already three follow-ups, all of which were included in Acorn's R1 DVD set! I guess I was unclear there at the end; I just meant I was looking forward to watching the other movies in the set. And watching them I have been! I'll have reviews of all of them soon enough... probably another one later today, in fact! Check back later...
ReplyDeleteAnd thanks for the comment. Glad you liked this review!
I remember this TV movie. It was screened in New Zealand at an obscure time, but it has stayed in my mind - coming up 20 years ago! Didn't know there was more that one movie made.
ReplyDelete