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Gorky Park
Year: 1983
Classification: Mystery / Suspense

Directed:

- Michael Apted

Actors/Actresses:

- William Hurt
- Lee Marvin




Don't settle for the Bravo Channel version

Behind some trees and under a fresh blanket of late-winter snow, Moscow police locate the bodies of three non-persons: literally, there identies have been grotesquely erased. Chief investigator Renko (William Hurt) wants to dump the case as soon as possible, knowing that grisly condition of the bodies, the apparent execution style used by the killer and the rapid appearance on the scene of the KGB (following Renko only by minutes) points to KGB involvement and certain death for anybody who holds onto the case for too long. His sense of self-preservation balanced by an innate sense of duty to bridge the chasm "between what is said and what exists", Renko presses on. His investigations take him from a sleezy "businessman" used by the KGB as informers to the Dacha of Moscow's chief prosecutor. Although figuring the KGB early on, Renko's snooping also draws him towards a rich American Jack Osborn (Lee Marvin) with connections thruought the Supreme Soviet, and we know that Renko's very Soviet self-rhiteousness won't be satisfied until he's not only linked Osborn to the murders, but placed his fingers on the gun.
"Gorky Park" the novel, like all of Smith's "Renko" novels, was heavy on detail, charachterization and nuance, probably more than the film's makers could hope to match. The TV version was heavily edited, destroying the passion between Renko and Irina (Joan Pacula), a friend of one of the victims, as well as Renko's cooperation with Kurwill (Brian Dennehy), an NYPD detective, and the brother of one of the faceless victims. Also missing were the nuances that made Renko's detective work more plausible. In fact, that Renko figured anything out had less to do with his expertise than the highly placed conspirators that Renko misses, an error that becomes more obvious due to the poor editing of the TV version, but more subtle and satisfying on this tape. If you read the book, you'll probably have to see the film, and that means you can either wait for it to come to premium cable or get this tape.


Murderer and Detective fight the coldest of wars

"Gorky Park" is based on the novel of the same name by Martin Cruz Smith. It's a flawed attempt, but otherwise excellent film. William Hurt plays the hero, Arkady "Arkasha" Renko, a righteous detective with the Moscow Militia, the Soviet capitol's local police force. His latest case involves three mutilated corpses discovered under a blanket of fresh snow in the woods of Gorky Park. Renko is barely on the scene when he's joined by KGB Col. Pribluda. "That could be you one day", the smiling killer tells Renko. With little doubt that the case "reeks of KGB" involvement, Renko at first seeks a way to dump the case, thinking it a trap laid against him by the KGB as revenge for Renko's earlier attempts to implicate the grinning KGB colonel in a multiple homicide. A dogged persistance won't let him drop the case, and he pursues leads that have nothing to do with the KGB - including a one-time student dissident (Joanna Pacula) whose name is scratched into the skates worn by one of the corpses, and Jack Osborne (Lee Marvin), a wealthy American tycoon with an interest in genuine Russian Sables. Soon, however, Renko finds himself the prey, when a mysterious American, who turns out to be a NYPD Detective (Brian Dennehy), arrives on the scene, convinced that his younger brother may be one of the victims and Renko one of his executioners. Unclear who he has to fear, especially when his men and his witnesses begin dying, and unsure who to trust, Renko goes practically underground, the American Detective his only real ally.
Flawed by a script that ambitiously tries to comprise all of Smith's multi-layered plot, "Park" makes a great go of it. With the help of the late and great Dennis Potter ("the Singing Detective", "Pennies from Heaven"), Michael Apted's superb cast goes a long way to realizing author Smith's vision. There is the amiably amoral Pribluda and Dennehy as the brutish Detective Kerwill. Joanna Paculla will break your heart while Lee Marvin is cheery as the rich American who smoothly reaffirms the Soviets' faith in the evil that is the United States. Hurt's duel of wits with Marvin (Renko wastes little time making the rich American a prime suspect) provides the most tension of the film. Renko tries to elicit Osbourne's response by comparing the murder of the faceless trio with the American's favorite hobby - a hunt for Sable. Their exchanges are key because they highlight Osbourne's amorality and his mastery over Renko and the systemic rot of the Soviet hierarchy. Even minor charachters like Alexi Sayle as Fedor Golodkin and Ian Mcdiarmid as Prof. Andreev are hard to forget. Golodkin is the cheerily slimy smuggler who informs on Pacula's charachter for the KGB while Andreev, a dry academician with no time for police forensics, reluctantly agrees to reconstruct identities of mutilitated corpses. Mcdarmid, for his screen time is also fun, especially when meeting Renko and the detective's high-mindedness for the first time. "I fear that you are no


A great spy flick !!!

Lotsa great performances here - William Hurt, Lee Marvin, etc. It's a gripping mystery that follows the efforts of Hurt as a Russian police detective tracking down vicious murders.






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