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Interview: more coffee-shop espionage than derring-do as Martin Freeman does Mossad

Actor Martin Freeman speaks to James Mottram about his latest role as an Israeli spy

November 13, 2019 09:58
Martin Freeman

ByJames Mottram, james mottram

2 min read

Martin Freeman has never been an actor to jump into a role for the sake of it. “If I don’t like the story, if I’m not engaged in the story, then I won’t do it, even if the character is interesting,” he says.

It goes some way to explaining why he fell for his latest film The Operative, a tough-as-nails espionage thriller from Israeli writer-director Yuval Adler that receives its British premiere in this month’s UK Jewish Film Festival.

“I liked the pace of the script,” Mr Freeman says. “One of the things I said to Yuval early on was that the screenplay wasn’t begging to be liked, actually. It wasn’t full of bombs and car chases. It seems — not having ever been an agent or a handler — probably about as close to the reality of that life as anything I’ve read.”

Mr Adler’s film is based on the novel The English Teacher, written by Yiftach Reicher Atir and inspired by his experiences as a military intelligence officer in Mossad (revelations that, according to Mr Adler, were partly “censored in Israel”). It follows the life of an undercover operative, Rachel (Diane Kruger), recruited by Mossad to work undercover in Tehran.