UK
TV movie Saigon: Year of the Cat might be most notable today for what many of
its key personnel went on to do, but it’s worth a watch as a sad historical spy
movie, and does a good job conveying a strong sense of its titular time and
place on a low budget. Frederick Forrest (The Conversation) plays CIA officer
Bob Chesneau, stationed at the U.S. embassy in Saigon during the final weeks
before the city fell to the North Vietnamese. Judi Dench (a decade before
GoldenEye) plays the English bank employee, Barbara Dean, who falls in love
with him at this inopportune time. The versatile Stephen Frears (who has a
strange Bond connection, in that he was attached to direct the Die Another Day
spinoff movie, Jinx, that ultimately fell apart) directs, from a script by
playwright David Hare (who went on to write the excellent Page Eight spy
thrillers). Frears frames the film as a star-crossed love story, opening with a
retro-style title card and dramatic music that seem intended to evoke
Casablanca, but the spy plot is far more interesting.
Chesneau
receives intelligence from a good local asset, whose past record is
unblemished, that the North will invade the city within three weeks. He tries
desperately to convince his boss of the intel’s validity, but the station chief
toes the line of official U.S. policy, insisting that an invasion is not
imminent and refusing to make obvious evacuation preparations for fear of
setting off a panic in the city. When the invasion does, inevitably, come, the
evacuation is rushed and haphazard. Chesneau tries desperately to arrange to
get all of his assets out of the country, which he had promised in good faith
to do. Since the evacuation is a matter of historical record, it doesn’t seem
too much of a spoiler to say that that doesn’t happen, and scenes of file cards
with agents’ photos on them left in the embassy for North Vietnamese soldiers
to discover, or bands of loyal South Vietnamese assets waiting nervously at their
pre-appointed rendezvous points for American helicopters that will never come
carry a heartbreaking, le Carré-esque sense of doom.
The love story, of course,
is similarly doomed, as Barbara does what she can to get her own local bank
employees out before the Communist influx, even attempting to offer up her own
spot on a helicopter. While the movie is mainly talky and stagey (not totally
surprising, coming from a playwright and made for Thames Television), it
becomes surprisingly exciting in its final act. Hundreds of extras swarm the
streets as Vietnamese refugees try in vain to gain access to the U.S. embassy,
escaping personnel pack themselves onto helicopters, and embassy staff
furiously push as many documents as they can into industrial shredders and
furnaces. There is nothing groundbreaking in Saigon: Year of the Cat, but it’s
still a fairly compelling drama set against a fairly unique historical
backdrop. Roger Rees (If Looks Could Kill), Wallace Shawn (The Princess Bride),
and E.G. Marshall (The Poppy is Also a Flower) round out the impressive cast.
Saigon: Year of the Cat is available on a quality DVD from Network in the UK, and in America, where it seems to be in the public domain, on various budget DVDs and compilations, as well as streaming on Amazon (free for Prime members).
Never heard of this one. And no way can I believe Forrest and Dench in a romance. The cover art doesn't instill any desire to see this one. Forrest looks sleepy, Dench looks confused.
ReplyDeleteStill, Stephen Frears, you say. AND David Hare.