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  • “The Innocent” (1993): When John Schlesinger Tries Sonic Missile, Ends Up With a Defective Firecracker

“The Innocent” (1993): When John Schlesinger Tries Sonic Missile, Ends Up With a Defective Firecracker

Posted on July 20, 2025 By admin No Comments on “The Innocent” (1993): When John Schlesinger Tries Sonic Missile, Ends Up With a Defective Firecracker
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John Schlesinger, the guy who gave us Midnight Cowboy and Darling, aimed for political thrill with The Innocent—a Cold War espionage drama that promised eerie intrigue and moral riddles. What we got instead was a snooze in Armani, pocked by awkward attraction and international dullness. It’s the cinematic equivalent of ordering caviar and getting a soggy cracker.

🎬 The Premise: James Bond Meets Awkward Small Talk

Set against the Berlin Wall’s gray backdrop, The Innocent follows British spy Philip (Campbell Scott), whose specialty seems to be looking concerned in chilly rain. He meets Russian translator Katya (Isabella Rossellini), and sparks fly—though more like fizzling sparklers than fireworks. Their romance is about as combustible as stale bread. Sparks should leap amid espionage tension, but instead we get polite coughs and excuses to lean in for prolonged eye contact.

Enter espionage: coded messages, dead drops, a possible mole—all hinted at with the same rhythm as a tax tutorial. The stakes? Ambiguous. The tension? MIA. We tumble through secret rendezvous and half-baked spy talk, only to realize the film probably forgot to place the secret in secret agent.


🧭 Campbell Scott’s Philip: Brooding in Business Casual

Scott plays Philip like he just missed his Uber, and the Cold War only made his ride extra-long. He’s stiff, intense, and apparently allergic to charisma. When asked to smile or charm, his face twitches with the kind of shock one gets from abruptly unplugging a toaster.

His moral conflict—should he betray Katya to save his country?—is the kind of dilemma that requires emotional investment. The film never grants us that. We see Philip panic at dialogues, furrow his brow like he’s resisting a sneeze, then shrug and walk away. It’s basically espionage with a side of existential disappointment.


🧩 Isabella Rossellini’s Katya: Frosted Enigma, Uncooked

Rossellini is undeniably elegant—think Soviet chic crossed with a smirk. But her Katya is underwritten, ghosted, and airbrushed to the point of nonexistence. She’s a cipher: mysterious, angry, occasionally flirty, but never humanized.

Katya assists Philip, flirts maybe, vanishes, reappears in a café, whispers something vague, then disappears again. The film treats her like a prop—an embroidered shawl with no backstory or feelings sewn in. We care about her almost as much as we care about subtitles during grainy Cold War news clips.


🕵️‍♂️ Supporting Espionage Cast: Gaggle of Gray Suits

Colonel Dutch (Patrick Malahide) acts as Philip’s superior—delivering lecture pointlessly before vanishing with the same urgency as government funding. The rest are screen-filler: anonymous agents, suspicious East Germans, and barked orders that never come through. No one leaves an impression aside from “grey suit,” “raincoat,” or “man who complains but never yells.”

There’s a possible mole, but the film can’t decide who. Each character flickers in shadow and disappears, leaving behind the question: what was the point of introducing you?


⏱ Pacing & Plot: Cold War at Sleep Curfew

Clocking in at 96 minutes, The Innocent unfolds like a nap during a thunderstorm—promises of oomph, but it’s mostly dark and damp. Scenes drift: Philip attending a dinner, Philip taking a walk, Philip typing code, Philip leaning suspiciously toward Katya. Repeat with Russian breeze and melancholy flute music.

You start to wonder if you accidentally pressed the slow-forward button. The film hints at danger, but doles it out like an anxious embarrassment. When someone finally should pull a gun—cue friendly head shake and fade to black. By the time the climax arrives, you’re rooting for death by boredom.


🎭 Tone: Supposedly Tense, Actually Tepid

The tone whipsaws between solemn Cold War weight and half-hearted romance. Vienna cafes, Berlin checkpoints, and sleet-drenched train stations are tastefully shot—but stylistic sheen doesn’t equal story substance.

Writers leave clues off-screen, then ambush us with revelations in deadpan monologues. There’s no mystery rehearsal, no payoff. Just revelations delivered like audition lines read off a cue card. If Schlesinger aimed to vibe Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, he ended up more like Tinker Napper Story Nap.


😂 Dark Humor: Accidental Coziness

If you squint, the film has comedic moments—but not intentionally. Try these lines on for size:

  • Philip earnestly says, “I can’t risk you.” Katya replies with the cinematic weight of a paper napkin.

  • A secret rendezvous—then, absurd silence, like both forgot the spy language.

  • A climactic chase that looks like someone jogging awkwardly through a gray parking lot. Not even cars care enough to honk.

It’s humorous not because it wants to be, but because it can’t stop being politely uninspired.


🛡 Visuals, Music, and Atmosphere: Finesse Over Fire

Here it’s ironically strongest. Cinematographer nails the Cold War aesthetic—muted tones, cracked walls, rain-slick pavements. Berlin and Vienna look ghostly and cinematic. The score throbs with orchestral sadness and minor key bleeps, screaming “serious espionage” while the actors whisper over it like library patrons.

Yet you emerge from the movie confused: what just happened? The staging is beautiful, the substance all too blurry.


🔚 The Climax: A Fizzle, Not a Bang

In the “thrilling” finale, Philip must choose between loyalty to country or heart. He steers toward heartbreak—then, music fades, train departs, title card appears. Was there moral victory? Fail? Betrayal? The film never bothers to say.

It’s ambiguity-by-default. The end credits are the only time something clearly happens—which is why you mutter “finally” under your breath.


🚦 Final Verdict: Cold War Cinema on Valve Inflation

The Innocent isn’t actively painful—it just hovers in a safe zone for dull thrillers. It’s competent but anemic, moody but pointless, slow but never immersive.

It may appeal to espionage tourists who collect rainy bulletpoints. But if you want intrigue, stakes, emotional impact—or just a movie that feels like something happened—this is your wrong exit.


✅ Watch It If You:

  • Love gray-suited, rain-slick espionage aesthetic.

  • Want an example of “what could have been” written all over production design.

  • Enjoy slow cinema that doubles as a lullaby.

🚫 Skip It If You:

  • Expect intelligence, tension, chemistry, or payoff.

  • Hate romance with the emotional range of stale toast.

  • Need your spy flick to hold a gun—or your attention.


Rating: 1.5 out of 5 Cold Perches
The Innocent is a film that mistakes atmosphere for story, and leaves you longing for a bullet point summary instead of a script. Schlesinger loses the spark here, delivering an espionage tale that’s more innocent of tension than innocent of crimes.

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Next Post: The Next Best Thing (2000): When Madonna and Schlesinger Killed the Rom-Com, and Buried It with a Yoga Mat ❯

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