“For the first time in a British film heroism is no longer the prerogative of a tight-lipped aristocracy imbued with the public-school ethos.”
Geoffrey Nowell-Smith, Sight & Sound, 1965
Bond co-producer Harry Saltzman aimed to establish Harry Palmer (Michael Caine in his first starring role) as the anti-007. To help him in this quest he hired composer John Barry, editor Peter Hunt and production designer Ken Adam, all key players in the Bond series.
While Bond gets to gad about the Caribbean, working-class culture nut Palmer remains stuck in shabby, dimly-lit London. More fall guy than super spy, he might even be called corrupt, although that would assume an integrity in his colleagues and superiors that is altogether absent.
Young Canadian director Sidney J Furie, working with veteran cinematographer Otto Heller, fills the wide screen with slabs of colour, cramming faces into odd parts of his frequently angular frame – an amusingly 1960s look that doesn’t obscure the fine work of a strong cast.
One of a string of moody mid-1960s European spy thrillers, it spawned two direct sequels, Funeral in Berlin (1966) and Billion Dollar Brain (1967).
The Ipcress File (1965)
In this stylish adaptation of Len Deighton’s thriller, secret agent Harry Palmer finds himself a pawn in a Cold War game.
- 1965 United Kingdom
- Directed by
- Sidney J. Furie
- Produced by
- Harry Saltzman
- Written by
- Bill Canaway, James Doran
- Featuring
- Michael Caine, Nigel Green, Guy Doleman
- Running time
- 109 minutes
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