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» » 077 intrigue à Lisbonne (1965)

Short summary

An international gang pretends to have the means to destroy a small country in 30 seconds. The authorities have reason to believe this may be true, and the spying battle is on.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Rgia
    Like b-westerns, many 60's European spy films have a number of interchangeable elements--from this film's opening scene of the hero in bed with a lovely lady and getting a phone call from the head of the spy service for whom he works, to the inevitable electronic gadget or invention of some eccentric scientist the intelligence services must protect, to the double-and-triple crosses where we aren't sure who is working for whom until the explanatory denouement. Director Tulio Demicheli was responsible two of my favorite Italian Westerns: THE BIG GUNDOWN with Lee Van Cleef and Tomas Milian, and GUNMEN OF THE RIO GRANDE with Guy Madison (in GREAT FORM!!!) as Wyatt Earp, and he's effective here although this film does not reach the heights of those two. Brett Halsey is an actor with a lot of charm, and he is perfect for the smirking yet tough role of agent "George Farrell." I won't go into further details except to say that I, unlike the other reviewer, enjoyed the music (the lounge-flavored organ improvisations are Walter Wanderly-like, and there are a few fine bossa-nova pieces worked into the club scenes), and there are some lovely location shots of Lisbon included. If you like this kind of fare, ESPIONAGE IN LISBON is an above-average entry, with a colorful and attractive star. If you don't like dubbed 60's European spy films, you probably wouldn't have read this far already. Check it out if you are a fan of the genre.
  • comment
    • Author: Kann
    Brett Halsey is George Farrell, agent 077. (There were at least ten spy films made in the sixties having to do with agent 077, some explicitly titled as such, some not so, that starred several different actors in the role. In this one, someone writes `0-7-7' on a piece of paper during a casino scene. Clue!) Halsey is literally dragged out of bed, where he was entertaining a lady, and sent to Lisbon to find a missing scientist. He never does find him but it's a lot of fun anyway as he and fellow agent Terry Brown (Marilu Tolo) put the pieces of the puzzle together.

    The score by Daniel White is pretty bland big band jazz stuff and is sometimes grossly inappropriate to the action, like having organ music as men with guns are chasing our hero. A good score is one thing this film lacks. There are a few gadgets used by both sides, some more successfully pulled off than others.

    There's a fun sequence when Tolo finds a dead double agent in her hotel room and Halsey helps her get rid of him by taking him through the raucous party next door. There are some genuine laughs here. We never see the party, only hear it, but an extra treat is the unbilled cameo by George Nader as a drunk who stumbles into the bathroom and mistakes the corpse as a fellow inebriate.

    The film runs a bit long, like this review, and culminates in a gun battle with really bad foley effects for the guns used by Halsey and Tolo. Anyway, I recommend this film by director Tulio Demicheli (The Killer Lacks a Name) as a good teaming of Halsey and Tolo despite its shortcomings.
  • comment
    • Author: Arashitilar
    There are some offbeat elements in "Espionage In Lisbon" (like a teenage girl on a bicycle following the leads' car around - turns out she just wanted to deliver a message to the woman; there is also a "bug" who is just that - a flying bug!). There are some confusing elements as well (when Brett Halsey is informed about the case at the beginning, only one female agent - on the same side - is mentioned to him. So when Marilù Tolo appears, as a second female agent, you wonder where she turned up from and how Halsey got that picture of her). Overall it's entertaining spy thriller, a bit more serious than most, despite Halsey's occasional comic asides. Marilù Tolo has a scorching musical number, but I was hoping she would get to off more than one bad guy in total. Fernando Rey is always good value as the villain, and the Lisbon locations are effectively used (the climax is set at an abandoned monastery). If you like the genre, this is worth seeing. **1/2 out of 4.
  • Credited cast:
    Brett Halsey Brett Halsey - George Farrell, agent 077
    Marilù Tolo Marilù Tolo - Terry Brown, 077's partner
    Fernando Rey Fernando Rey - Agent of the New World Organization
    Jeanne Valérie Jeanne Valérie - Olga
    Alfredo Mayo Alfredo Mayo - Losky
    Daniel Ceccaldi Daniel Ceccaldi - Robert Scott
    Francesca Rosano Francesca Rosano
    Irán Eory Irán Eory - Moira
    Barbara Nelli Barbara Nelli - Pamela
    Erika Blanc Erika Blanc - Ragazza in bikini (as Erica Bianchi)
    Ángel Terrón Ángel Terrón
    Rafael Bardem Rafael Bardem
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Miguel Palenzuela Miguel Palenzuela
    María de la Riva María de la Riva
    María Rivas María Rivas
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