NEW SECRET AGENT FOR FILM FANS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110012-2
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
October 22, 2004
Sequence Number: 
12
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
September 29, 1965
Content Type: 
NSPR
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110012-2.pdf229.32 KB
Body: 
(rh THE PASSII1 S! 'vW By HARRY MacARTHUR Drama Critic of The Star James Bond now-has a rival in the secret agent trade, a fellow named Harry Palmer. As played by a relative newcomer named Michael Caine, Harry is being introduced to movie au- diences in "The Ipcress File," a corking British spy film at the Cinema. - Palmer has no better chance than SMERSH of putting Bond out of business, of course. He's neither suave, nor Superman and the ability to perform the unbelievable is not one of his weapons. He just does what any red-blooded British spy would do and he gets his lumps.for it. Harry likes girls and he is not as ready as some people to turn .one off when duty calls. His superiors, in fact, consider him an insubordinate type with criminal tendencies. He also likes Mozart and likes - to pre- pare gourmet meals, even when dining alone. He's near-sighted, too. None of these things makes him seem more trustworthy to the boss spies, but he does get his job done. In "The Ipcress File," direc- tor Sidney J. Furie has sur- rounded Harry with all the mood, atmosphere and sinister trappings an espionage film fan could ask. Filming it in London and color, the conventional camera angle . never serves Furie when he can think of a better one and he seems consist- ently to have, thought of better ones. He has made better use of the .subjective camera than has been seen in some time. Often you look through a slit or a crack in a door to see the fragment of a face or-scene that ,the sleuth peeking in is seeing. When he takes off his glasses a scene is blurred by the hero's myopia. The screenplay by Bill Cona- way and James Doran, from a novel by Len ? Deighton, is concocted of comedy, menace, suspense, violence and a smat- tering of sex. It may not be a model of clarity at every mo- ment and there are times when you are whisked from one scene to the next with such rapidity that you ask yourself what happened back there. But all the necessary ingredients are here and it's exciting. It seems that a prominent scientist has been kidnaped by the foe and the head of British military intelligence turns the problem of recovering him over to the head of civg> gence. The latter more I;nilitary than ' the former, "TILE IPCILESS FILE." a Univer- sal release of a Harry Saltzman pro- duction; from a novel by Len Deigh- inn; screenplay by Bill Conaway and Tames Doran; directed by Sidney J. Furie; music composed and conducted by John Barry; production designed by Hen Adam; photographed by Otte ]letter; art director. Peter Murton. At the Cinema. The Cast Harry Palmer .......... Michael Caine Darby ....... Nigel Green Ross ................... Guy Doleman .Tcan ......................... Sue Lloyd Carswell ............:. Gordon Jackson Radcliffe ........... Aubrey Richards Blucjay ................. Frank Gatliff Barney ............... Thomas Baptists Ifousemartin ....... Oliver MacGreevy Alice ................. Freda Bamford ramrod straight, with bristling mustache, a parade ground walk and a sharp tongue for underlings who make mistakes. The chase that follows moves through a variety of back- grounds-London clubs, high- ceilinged government offices where upper level affairs of state must go on, an abandoned warehouse, etc. It leads eventu- ally to a large deserted garage for a confrontation between. pursuers and pursued. The former turn over the 25,000- pound ransom and the latter the scientist. But don't get up to leave. The scientist turns out to have been brainwashed and can't remem- ber his work that was so impor- tant to the British cause. Harry Palmer, of course ("The Ipcress File" is suspense- packed, not surprise-packed), is the fellow who finally knows too much. He learns enough to suspect an inside job and winds up in the Ipcress establishment, brain-washing division. The procedure involves star- vation, lack of sleep and subjec- tion to assault by galloping color images on a 360-degree screen, accompanied by weird, ear-splitting sound. Furie has made this a masterpiece of special effects and camera and sound techniques. ? It's a mighty violent passage and you'd better be sure to resist or you'll wind up brain- washed yourself and you know what that leads to-a clean mind. Caine does a splendid job of playing the battered secret durable aan l t~hers~a " ' 'll t le ga he varied facets of the man's Michael Caine, producer Harry'. S?altzman's ' answer to James Bond, prepares to woo a girl with his culinary dexterity in "The 1peress. File," at the Cinema. personality into a completely, credible character. The two intelligence chiefs are played deftly for suspense by Nigel Green (civilian) and Guy Doleman ? (military). Gordon Jackson registers effectively, too, as a canny Scot crony of Palmer's, the first to find out too much 'about the' Ipcress file and be done in. Sue Lloyd comes through warmly as the fellow spy Pal- mer woos with gourmet meals at his bachelor digs. Woos her. without knowing which side she, is really on, at that. ~te cress Rgn!10 300110012-2 e ur u