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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Plot  





2 Cast  





3 Production  





4 Critical reception  





5 See also  





6 References  





7 Bibliography  





8 External links  














To Catch a Spy






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To Catch a Spy
Original British quad poster by Arnaldo Putzu
Directed byDick Clement
Written byDick Clement
Ian La Frenais
Based onCatch Me a Spy by George Marton & Tibor Méray
Produced byPierre Braunberger
Steven Pallos
StarringKirk Douglas
Marlène Jobert
Trevor Howard
Tom Courtenay
CinematographyChristopher Challis
Edited byJohn Bloom
Music byClaude Bolling

Production
companies

  • Ludgate Films
  • Capitole Films
  • Les Films de la Pléiade
  • Distributed byRank Film Distributors

    Release date

    • 6 September 1971 (1971-09-06)

    Running time

    94 minutes
    CountriesUnited Kingdom
    France
    United States
    LanguageEnglish

    To Catch a Spy is a 1971 comedy spy film directed by Dick Clement and starring Kirk Douglas, Marlène Jobert, Trevor Howard, Richard Pearson, Garfield Morgan, Angharad Rees and Robert Raglan.[1] It was written by Clement and Ian La Frenais. The story is based on the 1969 novel Catch Me a Spy by George Marton and Tibor Méray.

    It was a co-production between Britain, the United States and France, which was filmed in Bucharest, Romania. It was also part filmed on Loch Awe and Loch Etive, Scotland, where the gunboat scenes were filmed, and featured Kirk Douglas running through a herd of Highland cattle which were owned by David Fellowes.[2] It was also released as Catch Me a Spy and Keep Your Fingers Crossed.

    Plot[edit]

    Fabienne, a young French-born British schoolteacher marries and heads to Bucharest in the Eastern Bloc for their honeymoon. Her husband is arrested by secret police and soon turns out to have been detained by Soviet intelligence as a spy.[3] She intends to head to Moscow to try and help him, but instead is drugged and sent on a plane back to England by a seemingly suspicious waiter.

    Back in London she lobbies her uncle, the Shadow Foreign Secretary and his friend the head of British Intelligence, to help get her husband back. He explains that they have deliberately arrested her husband in order to have a bargaining chip to exchange for a top Soviet agent who has recently been unmasked by the British. Unbeknownst to Fabienne her husband, a corrupt businessman, is in league with the Soviet intelligence and has married her on their instructions. The exchange in Germany goes wrong, however, when during the handover the Soviet spy - laden down with capitalist consumer goods from the West - sinks through the ice and drowns.

    As the British now have nobody to exchange for her husband, Fabienne sets out to capture an enemy agent on her own initiative. She manages to trap a man in a trench coat who has been following her all day, only for him to prove to be an incompetent British agent ordered to trail her for her own security by his chiefs. When Andrej the Bucharest waiter remerges, having been caught rummaging through her room and demanding she hand over a microfilm that he inserted into her luggage when he had her drugged in Bucharest, she decides he will be the ideal person to exchange. However, before she can take action they both end up being abducted by enemy agents, only escaping in the Scottish countryside. He reveals to her that he is not really a spy, but he makes money smuggling manuscripts of books by Soviet dissidents to the West.

    Because the Soviets want to get their hands on him, they plant evidence in his hotel room indicating that he is one of their spies. Special Branch arrest him and agree to a new prisoner exchange, over Fabienne's protests. The final exchange on a lake on the East German border descends into chaos and a motor boat chase.

    Cast[edit]

    Production[edit]

    It was shot at Twickenham Studios and on locationinLondon, Loch Leven and in Bucharest. The school football match was shot at Vincent Square.[4] The film's sets were designed by the art director Carmen Dillon. It was made as a co-production between several companies including Kirk Douglas's own Bryna Productions.

    The "gunboats" in the film were:- Lalage, a 70 ft WW2 Fairmile harbor defense launch, the East German boat, and the Calshot Salar, a 60 ft WW2 Royal Air Force "three leg" pinnace, the British boat.

    Lalage was owned and operated by Captain Jack Glover of Dumbarton, who in addition was an extra in the film, as was his brother Hans Glover. Tragically, Captain Glover drowned in 1982 while undertaking a boat salvage operation in the river Leven. Lalage eventually foundered off the Little Cubrae island after striking rocks during a severe storm and became a total loss.[5]

    Calshot Salar, was owned by Dr W."Bill" Souter and operated during filming by a Canadian, Captain Robin Blair-Crawford,[6] who also had a position as an actor[7] in the movie and in addition was the lead safety diver at Loch Etive. At the insistence of her owner Calshot Salar had her original RAF number painted on the hull for the movie. After numerous adventures in both home and overseas waters Calshot Salar was sold and eventually became a houseboat at Shoreham.[8]

    Critical reception[edit]

    TV Guide wrote the film "features a good cast, an exciting speedboat chase, a few chuckles, and every spy cliche in the book";[9] and Radio Times noted "a sometimes clever and witty script by the ace TV team of Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais. However, it's rather let down by Clement's uncertain direction. Another problem is that, as a Bucharest waiter who is actually a spy, Kirk Douglas's peculiar intensity isn't best suited to a comedy. Trevor Howard and Tom Courtenay seem more at home with the spy spoof material."[10]

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "Keep Your Fingers Crossed". 3 September 1971 – via IMDb.
  • ^ "To Catch a Spy - Scotland the Movie Location Guide". www.scotlandthemovie.com.
  • ^ "Catch Me a Spy (1972)". Archived from the original on 13 January 2009.
  • ^ James p.99
  • ^ Heaney, Bill (22 January 2017). "Memory Lane: Star spotting on Dumbarton Quay". Daily Record.
  • ^ "Member Profile: Robin Blair-Crawford - Find A Grave". www.findagrave.com.
  • ^ https://www.imdb.com/name/nm13468471/ [user-generated source]
  • ^ "Calshot Salar". BMPT Forum.
  • ^ "Catch Me a Spy". TVGuide.com.
  • ^ "Catch Me a Spy (1971)". Radio Times.
  • Bibliography[edit]

    External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=To_Catch_a_Spy&oldid=1225398331"

    Categories: 
    1971 films
    1970s spy comedy films
    American spy comedy films
    British spy comedy films
    Bryna Productions films
    Cold War spy films
    Films based on British novels
    Films set in London
    Films set in East Germany
    Films set in West Germany
    Films set in Scotland
    Films set in Bucharest
    Films shot in London
    Films shot in Bucharest
    Films shot in Scotland
    Films shot at Twickenham Film Studios
    French spy comedy films
    Films produced by Kirk Douglas
    English-language French films
    Films with screenplays by Dick Clement
    Films directed by Dick Clement
    Films with screenplays by Ian La Frenais
    1971 comedy films
    Films scored by Claude Bolling
    Films about educators
    Films about vacationing
    Films about marriage
    1970s English-language films
    1970s American films
    1970s British films
    1970s French films
    English-language spy comedy films
    Hidden categories: 
    Accuracy disputes from May 2022
    Use dmy dates from June 2016
    Use British English from June 2016
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Template film date with 1 release date
     



    This page was last edited on 24 May 2024, at 05:58 (UTC).

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