The Fourth Protocol
If the Fourth Protocol is ever breached, there would be no warning, just a nuclear explosion from a bedsitter... The unthinkable has just begun.
Led by Kim Philby, Plan Aurora is a plan that breaches the top-secret Fourth Protocol and turns the fears that shaped it into a living nightmare. A crack Soviet agent, placed under cover in a quiet English country town, begins to assemble a nuclear bomb, whilst an MI5 agent attempts to prevent its detonation.
Trailers & Videos

Vintage Trailer
Cast

Michael Caine
John Preston

Pierce Brosnan
Valeri Petrofsky / James Edward Ross

Ned Beatty
Borisov

Joanna Cassidy
Irina Vassilievna

Julian Glover
Brian Harcourt-Smith

Michael Gough
Sir Bernard Hemmings

Ray McAnally
General Karpov

Ian Richardson
Sir Nigel Irvine

Anton Rodgers
George Berenson

Caroline Blakiston
Angela Berenson

Betsy Brantley
Eileen McWirther

Matt Frewer
Tom

Matthew Marsh
Barry Banks

Ronald Pickup
Wynne-Evans

Philip Jackson
Burkinshaw

Sean Chapman
Captain Lyndhurst

Joseph Brady
Carmichael

Michael J. Jackson
Major Pavlov

Alan North
Govershin

Julia Verdin
Jill Dunkley
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
There is something plausible abut Michael Caine's performance here. He ("Preston") is the antithesis of Sir Alec Guinness's "George Smiley" - a hard nosed, blunt spy catcher who hates toeing the line with his bosses. After a bit of clandestine activity, he is on his way out and is sidelined until a seemingly straightforward fatal accident gets his alarm bells ringing. Meantime, KGB agent "Petrofsky" (Pierce Brosnan) arrives in the UK and - eventually - takes up residence near an American Air Force base equipped with nuclear missiles. What's he up to and can "Preston" find out and thwart his dastardly plan? This is one of Frederick Forsyth's better stories. The plot is clear to the audience, but the two characters exist in isolation (from each other) for much of the drama as neither know of the other's existence! Despite being experienced and pretty well known, the supporting cast isn't the most effective - I struggled a bit with Ned Beatty's "Borisov"; but both Caine and Brosnan work well to build up a sense of menace as the nature of the mission becomes clear and director John Mackenzie develops a tightly constructed and well paced plot into a denouement that goes down to the wire. It's dated a little, and maybe serendipity plays a wee bit too much of a part at times, but it's still very much at the better end of those cold war stories and is still well worth a watch.
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