The premise of The Night Manager is simple. Or might seem so.
Jonathan Pine, a former soldier now in a different kind of service as night manager of a luxury hotel, is drawn into a risky mission to bring down international arms dealer Richard Roper by posing as a fellow merchant of evil.
But this six-part miniseries (premiering on AMC tonight at 10) is based on the John le Carre spy thriller of the same name, which should strongly suggest this is no simple cloak-and-dagger affair.
Somehow The Night Manager manages to be as menacing and methodical as any film noir, yet at the same time teem with color, sweep and action cloaked in stillnesss.
Meanwhile, its brilliant co-stars, Hugh Laurie (who plays Roper) and Tom Hiddleston (the intrepid Pine) โ well, they speak for themselves. Literally.
The series, Hiddleston explained in a recent interview with them, โdeals with the more fascinating aspects of the psyche and identity and to what extent we tell lies to ourselves to justify who we are.โ
โI think that sums everything up,โ said Laurie, pretending to take his leave. โOur work is done.โ
Not quite.
Laurie said he had yearned to appear in a movie version โ even attempting to option the novel himself โ ever since its 1993 publication.
But the book seemed to resist being shoehorned into a feature-length film.
โThere is a pace and a density to the interior lives of the characters that makes it hard to do justice to (in a movie),โ said Laurie. โLe Carre is writing thoughts rather than deeds. Everything is oblique and concealed, and itโs the painstaking discovery thatโs the fascination of it.โ
Originally, Laurie saw himself as Pine, but when the chance arose to play Roper, โI fell to my knees in an indecent display of pleading.โ
Who indeed could resist playing anyone so charismatic yet so wicked that he is described as โthe worst man in the worldโ?
โThatโs quite a complicated metric to establish,โ Laurie acknowledged with a laugh, โbut clearly he qualifies for the semifinals. He does it with charm and skill and daring, and heโs fun to be around, the way one imagines the devil would be. If he was just a tattooed thug with โDevilโ on his forehead, weโd all give him a wide berth. Richard Roper is not like that.โ
In effect, Laurie spent two decades preparing for the role.
โFrom the moment I read the book, I felt like I could picture and hear and almost smell this character.โ
And from the moment viewers confront this character, Laurie, 56, guarantees with his performance they will forget his eight TV seasons on House M.D. playing the crusty yet lovable Dr. Gregory House.
As for the 35-year-old Hiddleston, whose past projects have included Thor, Woody Allenโs Midnight in Paris and the role of Hank Williams in the recent I Saw the Light, he described the first Night Manager script as โimmaculate.โ After reading it, he was in.
Infiltrating Roperโs world, Pine is a model of disarming polish and suave restraint.
โI wanted to do as little as possible,โ said Hiddleston, โand trust the audience to join the dots. I worried that I wasnโt doing enough, but thereโs something very active about the way Pine is passive. It was a fascinating challenge to try to communicate how deep those still waters run.โ
โThe tendency that all actors have,โ said Laurie, โis to constantly tell the story with every line and every look, and the audience very quickly reacts against it. But Tom is able to be, to simply be.
โThe audience wants to participate in the construction of the story. And often that requires an actor who has the confidence to just be. There probably arenโt more than a half-dozen actors who can accomplish that, and I couldnโt name the others. So letโs just say โoneโ โ and heโs sitting right there.โ
