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Post by wmcclain on May 8, 2020 23:16:25 GMT
The Ipcress File (1965), directed by Sidney J. Furie. His spymaster superiors don't much like cheeky, insubordinate Harry Palmer, but he seems to get results. In fact he's quickly in too deep. Brainwashed and disoriented, can he still locate and shoot the traitor in his own organization? This was intended as a darker, "not James Bond" spy thriller. In many ways that's true: Harry is a working class cockney recruited from an army prison. He hates the bosses who want to drown him in paperwork. The intelligence agencies waste their time spying on other. This is in gray rainy London, not sunny exotic locales. On the other hand, like 007, Harry can fight, shoot and find the bad guys. He's cultured and likes women and good food. The studio complained that he did his own cooking, which an action hero is not supposed to do. And why is he wearing glasses? And look who is making the film: one of the same producers as for Bond, same editor and art designers. Even John Barry for the score, with themes suggestive of the moodier Bond bits, and with what sounds like a cross between surf guitar and the zither from The Third Man (1949). Notes: - It made Michael Caine a star.
- A supermarket is called -- with disapproval -- "an American shopping method".
- The agencies waste a lot of time, but when needed they show clockwork spycraft, as when paying ransom for a kidnapped scientist.
There is no region A Blu-ray of this and although DVDs are in print (at least Amazon seems to have new copies) they are expensive. The thumbnails are from an all-region Blu-ray imported from the UK. The label is ITV, the encoding mpeg2, and the framerate the oddball 24.0hz. Black levels are not very good, but detail is acceptable given the large amount of grain in this one. 
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Post by teleadm on May 8, 2020 23:51:53 GMT
Albania is not the answer!
The anti-James Bond movie, this agent with a cockney accent (were are the subtitles now).
In my mind slightly better than The Spy who Came in from the Cold.
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Post by Prime etc. on May 9, 2020 0:04:18 GMT
In the sequel Funeral in Berlin, Harry Palmer says he has his portable Batman suit--supposedly referring to the British military uniform. But in Billion Dollar Brain, there is a picture of Batman and Robin on his office wall.
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Post by ZolotoyRetriever on May 9, 2020 6:23:29 GMT
The Harry Palmer films were great! (The first 3, that is... the last couple films, made many years later, left a little to be desired, but were still watchable.)
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Post by OldAussie on May 9, 2020 9:25:07 GMT
The Harry Palmer films were great! (The first 3, that is... the last couple films, made many years later, left a little to be desired, but were still watchable.) yeah...but I haven't seen the later ones.
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Post by The Herald Erjen on May 9, 2020 9:32:36 GMT
In the sequel Funeral in Berlin, Harry Palmer says he has his portable Batman suit--supposedly referring to the British military uniform. But in Billion Dollar Brain, there is a picture of Batman and Robin on his office wall. "I'm not killing anyone in cold blood." "Then provoke him....if it will satisfy your scuples." Absolutely classic! 
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Post by petrolino on May 9, 2020 10:18:19 GMT
A stylish affair. Martin Scorsese likes this movie.
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Post by london777 on May 9, 2020 12:29:59 GMT
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Post by wmcclain on May 9, 2020 12:36:24 GMT
You're welcome! If I have a review available I'll post it when a title is being discussed. Alfie and The Ipcress File were written years ago.
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Post by london777 on May 9, 2020 12:37:27 GMT
The Harry Palmer films were great! (The first 3, that is... the last couple films, made many years later, left a little to be desired, but were still watchable.) I did not realize there were any more. Please list them. IMDb no longer has its "character" search facility.
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Post by london777 on May 9, 2020 12:45:00 GMT
... this agent with a cockney accent (where are the subtitles now?). Wot's your problem, squire? Cockney is very similar to Ozspeak.
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Post by london777 on May 9, 2020 12:54:13 GMT
Two years later Sidney J Furie directed The Naked Runner (1967), another spy movie. It is unbelievably lame. The actors all seemed either comatose like Sinatra (was he sick at this time?) or stereotyped like Peter Vaughan. What a drop in standards in such a short time.
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Post by teleadm on May 9, 2020 13:58:32 GMT
Two years later Sidney J Furie directed The Naked Runner (1967), another spy movie. It is unbelievably lame. The actors all seemed either comatose like Sinatra (was he sick at this time?) or stereotyped like Peter Vaughan. What a drop in standards in such a short time. The Naked Runner and The Kissing Bandit could make a double bill of Sinatra's worst.
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Post by ZolotoyRetriever on May 10, 2020 2:00:34 GMT
The Harry Palmer films were great! (The first 3, that is... the last couple films, made many years later, left a little to be desired, but were still watchable.) I did not realize there were any more. Please list them. IMDb no longer has its "character" search facility. The two follow-on films that were made many years later - both featuring Michael Caine reprising his role as secret agent Harry Palmer - were Bullet to Beijing, and Midnight in Saint Petersburg. Both were made-for-TV movies, made in 1996.
Bullet to Beijing: www.imdb.com/title/tt0113633/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
Midnight in Saint Petersburg: www.imdb.com/title/tt0113634/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
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Post by london777 on May 10, 2020 2:03:17 GMT
I did not realize there were any more. Please list them. IMDb no longer has its "character" search facility. The two follow-on films that were made many years later - both featuring Michael Caine reprising his role as secret agent Harry Palmer - were Bullet to Beijing, and Midnight in Saint Petersburg. Both were made-for-TV movies, made in 1996.
Bullet to Beijing: www.imdb.com/title/tt0113633/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
Midnight in Saint Petersburg: www.imdb.com/title/tt0113634/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
Yes, I remember now you have listed them. Many thanks.
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Post by mikef6 on May 12, 2020 14:54:35 GMT
As Andy Rooney used to say, "Did you ever notice..." that an amazing death scene from The Ipcress File is echoed by a line in a John Lennon song two years later on the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper album?
"He blew his mind out in a car He didn't notice that the lights had changed."
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