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Synopsis

Shinoda’s Spy Sorge is probably the most exhaustive film account to date of the life of Richard Sorge, a person so interesting that I’m surprised more movies haven’t been made about him. Wounded fighting for the Kaiser in World War I, Sorge, the son of a German father and a Russian mother, became a committed Marxist during his convalescence. Undercover as a German news correspondent, he gathered intelligence for the Soviets in Shanghai in the early ’30s, then was sent to Japan, where he kept Moscow informed about Japan’s foreign policy. In 1941, he passed on to his masters the news that Japan had no intention of attacking the Soviet Union. This information enabled the Soviets to redeploy enough troops from Siberia to repel the German invasion. (Earlier, Sorge had got wind of Hitler’s plans to invade Russia and warned Moscow, but Stalin ignored him.) In October 1941, he was arrested by the Japanese secret service; he was hanged in 1944.

In Spy Sorge, Shinoda shows all this and more, mostly in the form of a long flashback narrated by Sorge after his capture. The best thing about the movie is its obsession with historical detail, which extends to its CGI-laden re-creation of Tokyo in the 1930s. This scrupulousness becomes, however, a drawback, since it leads Shinoda to underdramatize his story. Iain Glen’s low-key portrayal of Sorge as a rueful rogue would have been more impressive if he had been given more to build it on than stray hints of alcoholism, womanizing, and feelings of guilt. Sorge’s most prominent associates, Japanese journalist Hotsumi Ozaki and American radical Agnes Smedley, are potentially fascinating figures who come across as ciphers. Even at its three-hour length, the film feels truncated: many short scenes lead nowhere, as if they were the vestiges of subplots that had got discarded somewhere between first rewrite and final cut. I wouldn’t mind German and Russian characters all speaking English if the dialogue weren’t so stilted. —Chris Fujiwara

Director

Original

Masahiro Shinoda

Masahiro Shinoda is one of the most prominent filmmakers of the Japanese New Wave, along with Nagisa Oshima and Shohei Imamura. While Oshima’s films were often a venue for political provocation and Imamura’s work seemed to be a bawdy refutation of Yasujiro Ozu’s refined passivity, Shinoda’s movies detail the spiritual emptiness of post-war Japanese life and search for some essence of the Japanese character.

Shinoda was born into one of the most illustrious families in central Gifu Prefecture in 1931. His ancestors were large landowners and village leaders of a small town that is now part of Gifu City. They also had a long literary and cultural heritage. His great uncle was the model for the main character in one of Toson Shimazaki’s novels, and Shinoda’s cousin is one of Japan’s leading abstract calligraphers. As a child, Shinoda was studious, applying himself to mathematics and physics; but by the end of World War II, he experienced the same sort of bitter disillusionment as… read more

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