The Kremlin Letter is an American noir film directed by John Huston, starring Richard Boone, Orson Welles, Max von Sydow, Bibi Andersson, Patrick O'Neal and George Sanders. It was released in February 1970 by 20th Century-Fox. The screenplay was co-written by Huston and Gladys Hill as a faithful adaptation of the novel by Noel Behn, who had worked for the United States Army's Counterintelligence Corps. Said by reviewers to be "beautifully" and "engagingly" photographed, the film is a highly complex and realistic tale of bitter intrigue and espionage set in the winter of 1969-1970 at the... height of the US-Soviet Cold War. The Kremlin Letter was a commercial failure and thinly reviewed in 1970, but the film has gathered steady praise from some critics throughout the decades since its release. French filmmaker Jean-Pierre Melville called The Kremlin Letter "masterly" and "saw it as establishing the standard for cinema." Late in 1969, a brilliant young United States Navy intelligence officer named Charles Rone finds his commission revoked so that he can be recruited into an espionage mission.
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| Release date: | 1970 |
| Directed by: | John Huston |
| Rated: |  |
| Runtime: | 120 Minutes |
| Producer: | Carter DeHaven |
| Screenplay by: | John Huston, Gladys Hill |
| Adapted from: | The Kremlin Letter |
| Genre: | Thriller |