FindKey

FindKeyは、100万件を超える映画・ドラマ作品、そして数百万人の人物データと独自の16類型CTI診断を統合した、日本初の感情特化型映画レコメンドエンジンです。

Find (見つける) + Key (鍵・正解)

映画に限らず、人生のヒントを見つける場所です。

FindKeyについてロケ地 (試験中)利用規約プライバシーポリシーお問い合わせ
© 2026 Bennu Inc.TMDB Logo

本サービスはTMDB APIを利用していますが、TMDBによる推奨・認定を受けたものではありません。

地下道の鳩 〜ジョン・ル・カレ回想録〜
地下道の鳩 〜ジョン・ル・カレ回想録〜

地下道の鳩 〜ジョン・ル・カレ回想録〜

“スパイ小説の巨匠、その生涯を語る。”

20231h 32m★ 6.6ドキュメンタリー
Apple TV
Apple TV Amazon Channel

あらすじ

文壇でジョン・ル・カレとして知られた元スパイ、デビッド・コーンウェルの人生とキャリアを、アカデミー賞監督エロール・モリスが明かす

作品考察・見どころ

AIが作品の魅力を深く読み解いています

口コミ

あなたの評価を記録する

予告・トレイラー

配信サービス

サブスクリプション

Apple TV
Apple TV Amazon Channel

キャスト

ジョン・ル・カレ
ジョン・ル・カレ
Self
Jake Dove
Jake Dove
Teenage David Cornwell
Charlotte Hamblin
Charlotte Hamblin
Olive Cornwell
Garry Cooper
Garry Cooper
Ronnie Cornwell
Simon Harrison
Simon Harrison
Kim Philby
Douglas Rankine
Douglas Rankine
Rudolf Hess
No Image
Dominik Dervaics
Tony Cornwell
Mike Noble
Mike Noble
Adult David Cornwell

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: エロール・モリス

脚本: エロール・モリス

音楽: ポール・レナード=モーガン / Philip Glass

制作: エロール・モリス / Dominic Crossley-Holland / ホセイン・アミニ

制作会社: The Ink Factory / Fourth Floor Productions / Storyteller Productions / Jago Films / 127 Wall / The Ink Factory

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 7

Did you know that "The Spy Who Came in from the Cold" by a certain David Cromwell (aka John Le Carré) sold between 12-15 million physical copies? That's before Richard Burton took on the mantle of "Lemeas" from that novel and long before Sir Alec Guinness took on the part of the forensic super-spy "George Smiley" in "Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy" and that gives us quite an indication as the phenomenal success of this writer who basically bares his soul here in a one-to-one with Errol Morris. Spurred on only sparingly by the director, we are left with what is an succinct and informative retrospective on the life of a man who might not have seemed obviously destined for literary greatness. We start with his childhood where he was largely brought up by his con-man father (after his mother got fed up of the crooks and the mistresses and fled when he was five) and follows his education through Oxford, his recruitment into and ultimately boredom of the the British Intelligence community before turning his hand to bringing all of this experience to life in over twenty published novels. This isn't a treatise on how to write a thriller. It's an enjoyably structured lesson on how a little bit of experience, an understanding of human nature and a vidid imagination can create works of fiction that enthral and captivate. He delivers this with candour, humour, a tiny bit of self-deprecation but most notably - truthfulness. You need to have your thinking cap on, too. He uses language eruditely and in a considered fashion that I could listen to all day. You won't learn much about how to write a spy story, but you will learn something of this fascinating and engaging human being. It's an Apple TV production so might get only a limited cinema release (though the BBC seem to have supplied quite a bit of archive, so perhaps they secured a tx as a quid pro quo?) and it's most definitely worth a watch if you are remotely interested in the genre, in writing - or in just listening to an interesting man.

Brent Marchant
Brent Marchant
★ 6

Getting inside the head of a spy is undoubtedly challenging; getting inside the head of a novelist who was once a spy who now writes about that enigmatic profession is nearly impossible. And that’s one of the hurdles that hampers this profile of former MI5 and MI6 operative David Cornwell, better known to the world by his pen name, John le Carré (1931-2020). Based on the author’s memoir of the same name, the latest from documentarian Errol Morris puts the best-selling espionage novelist under the microscope, seeking to discover who le Carré is, what factors impacted his life and writings, and how his novels mirror those influences in terms of content and themes. Through discussions of books like “The Spy Who Came in from the Cold,” “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy,” “Smiley’s People,” “A Perfect Spy” and “The Looking Glass War,” backed by clips of film and television adaptations of these works, le Carré and Morris ruminate on the writer’s objectives in bringing them to life, some of them personal in nature and some of them expressions of his feelings about the murky underworld he left behind and brought to life on the printed page. Much of what the author consequently discusses comes across as dark, cryptic, and characterized by rampant intrigue and betrayal, not unlike the life he left behind (as well as the dismal upbringing he underwent at the knee of his untrustworthy father, a professional swindler adept at plying his craft). The insights, to say the least, are rather depressing and disquieting. But that unsettling material is further compounded by a string of often-perplexing observations about le Carré’s existential outlooks and literary intentions, some of which seemingly amount to little more than oh so much navel gazing and intellectual masturbation, overstated attempts at encapsulating his perspectives on human nature and human relations as reflected through his works. I can imagine that there’s probably a market for a film like this among Anglophiles captivated by the writer’s works, the spy novel genre in general and PBS/BBC television dramas, but it really didn’t do much for me, especially since this offering pales in comparison to many of Morris’s other better productions. Thankfully, the picture’s merciful 1:32:00 runtime proved to be its saving grace (even though the picture admittedly improves once it gets past an overly long, excessively detailed prologue). Ironically, le Carré notes in the film that he sees his novels as an antidote to the James Bond books and movies, but, from where I stand, I’ll take 007 over this any day.

おすすめの作品