Coup 53 review – riveting documentary on a very British coup

Taghi Amirani’s gripping film about the move against Iran’s prime minister highlights an inglorious chapter of history

This powerful and authoritative documentary by the Iranian film-maker Taghi Amirani is as gripping as any thriller. Coup 53 is about a vitally important historical event and horribly inglorious chapter in the postwar UK and US: the story of how, in 1953, Britain and the US teamed up to unseat the Iranian prime minister Mohammad Mosaddegh – who had nationalised British oil interests – and replace him with the skittish, preening and very biddable Shah of Iran. This cataclysmic meddling was the Book of Genesis in the bible of dirty tricks.

The coup emboldened the British to try the same in Egypt against Gamal Abdel Nasser over the Suez canal, and their humiliation there taught them that this sort of thing could not be attempted without a green light from the real imperial power: the US. The triumph in Iran was treated by the US as the equivalent of cold fusion. A miraculous and apparently risk-free way had been discovered to assert American interests without warfare and boots on the ground. The Mosaddegh coup inspired them to destabilise governments all over the world. As for the British, the Iran coup was Britain’s last gasp of imperial power, yet the official position is that this was an American show, and it has faded from the collective memory. Amirani doesn’t mention it in his film, but Channel 4 journalist Jon Snow has revealed in his conversations with Tony Blair that it was plain the former prime minister had no idea who Mosaddegh was.

Coup 53 is the result of years of sleuthing from Amirani, and he has been helped by the legendary editor and sound editor Walter Murch, who is co-writer. Also on board is actor Ralph Fiennes. In a dramatic reconstruction, he plays real-life MI6 agent Norman Derbyshire, who in 1985 gave an interview to the Granada TV documentary End of Empire in which he rashly asserted that the whole thing was effectively being run by the British – by him, in fact. Coup 53 concludes that his appearance was cut at MI6’s insistence but the transcript survived. Fiennes cleverly plays this amazing interviewee, as a kind of bluff Le Carré character. In fact, Amirani’s film is rather reliant on the footage from that documentary, with its parade of plummy-voiced British establishment fossils, urbanely conceding that they did chuck out the Persians’ tiresome democratically elected politician. But he also includes plenty of great interview footage of his own. If I had a criticism of this film, it is that – like so many historians of spies and spying – the director gets a little overexcited about the archive details. Still, what a riveting story: a grim curtain-raiser to today’s tragedies.

• This article was amended on 27 August 2020 to make clear that the suggestion UK authorities intervened to “cut” the Norman Darbyshire interview is the conclusion drawn by Coup 53; the producers of End of Empire maintain it was never intended for the MI6 agent to appear on camera.

Contributor

Peter Bradshaw

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
My English Cousin review – searching doc about a man between two worlds
This charming but opaque documentary about an Algerian migrant returning to his homeland doesn’t challenge its subject – or itself

Peter Bradshaw

09, Mar, 2021 @5:00 PM

Article image
Gaza review – heartfelt chronicle of life under political siege
This sombre, angry documentary captures a sense of ordinary life in the strip bordered by Egypt, Israel and the sea

Peter Bradshaw

08, Aug, 2019 @10:00 AM

Article image
The Cave review – horror and hope in a Syrian hospital battered by war
This powerful, immensely moving documentary follows the courageous medical staff who must treat injured children as bombs fall around them

Cath Clarke

06, Dec, 2019 @12:00 PM

Article image
Hit the Road review – irrepressible defiance in beautifully composed debut feature
Directed by Panah Panahi, the son of jailed Iranian film-maker Jafar Panahi, this tense family drama is drenched in a subtle but urgent political meaning

Peter Bradshaw

27, Jul, 2022 @8:00 AM

Article image
A Hero review – Asghar Farhadi’s realist tale is just too messy and unsatisfactory
Plot holes trip up the Iranian director’s drama of a slippery man’s desperate efforts to trick his way out of debtors’ prison

Peter Bradshaw

13, Jul, 2021 @3:50 PM

Article image
Sabaya review – extraordinary documentary shows struggle to free women kidnapped by Isis
Hogir Hirori’s film follows Mahmud as he and his team of volunteers infiltrate the dangerous al-Hawl camp in Syria to liberate Yazidi women trafficked as sex slaves

Phuong Le

18, Aug, 2021 @1:00 PM

Article image
Poly Styrene: I Am a Cliché review – riveting take on British punk heroine
The X-Ray Spex singer is revealed as a mystic, rebellious working-class woman of colour in this valuable film

Peter Bradshaw

05, Mar, 2021 @9:00 AM

Article image
Eleven Days in May review – heart-wrenching documentary on the grimness of life in Gaza
Michael Winterbottom’s film focuses on human cost of 11 days of bombing that killed more than 60 Palestinian children

Peter Bradshaw

04, May, 2022 @12:00 PM

Article image
Sing Me a Song review – sombre Bhutanese internet love story
French documentarian Thomas Balmès checks in with the Himalayan monk he filmed back in 2013 to find him addicted to online romance

Peter Bradshaw

29, Dec, 2020 @4:00 PM

Article image
Normal review – lawyers in bikinis to dogma in the doll's house
Adele Tulli’s elegantly deadpan documentary challenges the sexual stereotypes that prevail across the generations

Peter Bradshaw

25, Sep, 2019 @11:00 AM