7/10
French EuroSpy Movie with John GAVIN, Luciana PALUZZI and Curd JÜRGENS
5 January 2024
The "French James Bond" OSS 117 and his fifth mission - this time with John Gavin

In the EuroSpy film series about OSS 117 released by the French mini-major GAUMONT, the main actors took the lead. After Kerwin Mathews and Frederick Stafford, Hollywood smartie John Gavin (Psycho) was already the third OSS 117. The Golden Globe winner (Time to Live, Time to Die) did so well that he was seriously considered James Bond -The successor to George Lazenby, who left the company, was traded. The attractive John Gavin would also have cut a good figure as 007. Under the direction of experienced director Andre Hunebelle, filming took place in Rome (gorgeous images of the Eternal City) and Tunisia.

This time OSS 117 has to deal with a gang that hires out hitmen and is called "The Organization". To get in there, the super agent with a freshly operated face (that's how the change in actors is explained in the film) pretends to be a bad bank robber who likes to shoot tons of people. This brings him to the attention of the organization and quickly frees him from the clutches of the police, who were able to arrest him after an hour with the lovely dancer Conchita Esteban (Rosalba Neri). He is prepared for his work in a strange villa. The beautiful doctor Maud (Bond villain Luciana Paluzzi) is responsible for his physical needs, including in bed, of course! There (in the villa, not in bed!) he also gets to know the boss of the gang, called the Major (strangely slippery: Curd Jürgens), and his tall assistant Karas (George Eastman). Soon we're off to the Orient for our first job, which is fraught with all sorts of complications. Love is once again not neglected (Margaret Lee as Aicha), but there is also a really nasty colleague (Robert Hossein as Dr. Saadi) of the cuddly Maud. Will OSS 117 succeed in preventing the planned assassination attempt on the scientist van Dyck? Will the Major's gang of criminals be defeated?

Beautiful ladies who tie the attractive hero to the bed in rows, lively fistfights (including with George Eastman), beautiful pictures and a humorous plot - you can't expect more from a EuroSpy classic. 316,000 tickets were still sold in West German cinemas; the heyday for this type of film was certainly over. This film is still fun to watch in the home theater today.
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