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Espionage in Tangiers (1965)

User reviews

Espionage in Tangiers

10 reviews
5/10

Spy Tracks Down Disintegrating Ray

When a gang of crooks steal a disintegrating ray gun -- unlike the cartoons, it disintegrates what it's aimed at, not itself -- the authorities call in the right man for the job: a handsome man who has lots of sex with the ladies and drives a nice sports car, Luis Dávila.

This Italian-French co-production has a lot of bad stuntwork, although the tyically distracting dubbing may well have some effect on my reaction. There are lots of pretty girls -- including one of the lead villains -- some decent camerawork by Alvaro Mancori and Rafael Pacheco, and a certain amount of slapping around and torture by all hands. Not as elaborate or, really, as funny as the James Bond stuff, it has a lot of energy.
  • boblipton
  • Mar 16, 2021
  • Permalink
5/10

Superficial Sci-fi Actioneer with Spies

  • zardoz-13
  • Feb 14, 2022
  • Permalink
6/10

FAST PACED AND EXITING EURO-SPY TRILLER

  • larryanderson
  • Apr 9, 2020
  • Permalink

Primo Bond rip-off

This is a wonderful example of the Super Spy genre, where a secret agent must reclaim a dangerous 'invisibility ray' from a gang of criminal masterminds. Everything you want is here: beautiful Continental women, outrageous cars, spy gadgets, and fistfights galore (not to mention a rather uncomfortable looking belt tightening sequence). Films like this were once staples of late night TV, and now thanks to AMC's more adventurous programming policy we can see them again, widescreen to boot. Recommended.
  • JohnSeal
  • Jan 15, 2000
  • Permalink
3/10

Good jazz and fake Bond

  • BandSAboutMovies
  • Apr 1, 2020
  • Permalink
10/10

One-time Bond George Lazenby in 60's Bond spoof

This is an entertaining and amusing Bond rip-off from the 60's. The characters are laughable and the plot is like something out of an Austin Powers movie. And just when you think this old 60's Bond spoof can't get any more hilarious, along comes George Lazenby in the film. This is one of the classic Bond spoofs without a doubt.
  • prince_baron_007
  • Nov 20, 2003
  • Permalink

Likable flick with a classic non-ending

This short film, the English-dubbed print only runs about an hour, is by-the-numbers spy stuff but it is never boring. It doesn't have time to be! Luis Davila (Ypotron, Make Your Bets Ladies, The Viscount) is agent Mike Murphy (for us English speakers) and he's after a ray gun that completely disintegrates whatever gets in the way of its blue beam.

The ratio of action per minute is way up there. Four people are killed in the first five minutes! The last of these is unfortunate enough to have his head caught in a car window and is then dragged down the street! There are plenty of fights (contrary to the short blurb on the back of SWV's tape box, the fights are actually pretty well staged and exciting), car chases, gun battles, torture, and people getting slapped around.

You could actually do a lot worse than this little adventure, believe me. Director Gregg Tallas (Assignment Skybolt) has made a pretty fun no-budget thriller that falls into the so-bad-it's-good category.
  • vjetorix
  • Feb 4, 2003
  • Permalink
10/10

So this is what Bond star George Lazenby did before he was 007.

Wow, interesting, an Italian made Bond-rip-off, made around the Goldfinger/Thunderball Bond mania days. This spy film is certainly one of the best of all of the Bond spy rip-offs made in the 60's, maybe the best.

It is one of the ones you should see if you like those types of films, if for nothing more than it features former James Bond star George Lazenby in a small role before he became Bond.
  • pierce_brosnan_o_o_7
  • Aug 10, 2003
  • Permalink

Fun For Lovers of 60s Kitsch and Euro-Spy Antics

The uncut version of Espionage In Tangiers is now available as part of Dark Sky Films' Drive-In Double Feature series. Coupled with Assassination In Rome, which stars Cyd Charisse (!) and Hugh O' Brien, these two unpretentious, old-fashioned flicks make for an entertaining double bill of 60s kitsch. Espionage is a Bond-influenced, convoluted, low-rent Euro-spy pot boiler, while Asassination is more in the spirit of Charade, although it's more of a mystery/thriller than a caper.

Espionage is surprisingly violent; the producers clearly embraced the amorality, casual sadism and misogyny of the early Connery Bonds but failed to grasp the wit of the 007 movies (Mark Murphy, "Agent 077," our "hero," thinks it's funny to throw a knife into the throat of a would-be assassin, for example). The film has its slow moments but there's a constant flow of fights involving groin kicking, throat chopping, and even a torture scene Jack Bauer would approve of, all set to a groovy jazz soundtrack. All in all, not a bad way to spend 90 minutes -- especially as the two-film disc comes with drive-in material including concession ads for hot dogs and pizza and two sets of trailers of coming attractions.

Assassination In Rome is a much slower film, but is superbly shot.

Thanks to Dark Sky, who are consistently delivering when it comes to restored, remastered editions of old B movies (e.g. their recent release of Slaughter of the Vampires), both films look and sound better than a pair of obscure 42 year-old flicks deserve.
  • zardoz74_2000
  • Feb 12, 2007
  • Permalink
8/10

Solid Euro spy but the plot is all over the place.

Argentinian star Luis Davila wears the Euro spy suit well, has some funny quips and has a bunch of hotties who'd love to kill him and kill to love him, Jose Greci and Perla Cristal. He repeatedly slaps good bad girl Greci in the face around the bedroom before screwing her in a scene no one would film these woke days. The disintegration gun routine was also used in From The Orient With Fury with spy movie regular Ken "077" Clark. The print I watched recently was streamed on Tub and is in great shape. The quality of the euro spy movies uploaded on Youtube is the worst garbage imaginable.
  • elliotjames2
  • Mar 28, 2022
  • Permalink

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