High Season for Spies

High Season for Spies (German: Sechs Pistolen jagen Professor Z, lit. 'Six Pistols to Hunt Professor Z') is a 1966 Eurospy film directed by Julio Coll and starring Antonio Vilar, Letícia Román and Peter van Eyck. It was made as a co-production between Portugal, Spain and West Germany. The film's action takes place around Lisbon, and concerns attempts by various secret agents to steal a formula.[1]

High Season for Spies
Directed byJulio Coll
Produced by
  • Alfons Carcasona
  • Antonio Vilar
Written by
  • Julio Coll
  • Helmut Harun
  • Dick Haskins
  • José Germán Huici
Starring
Music byJosé Luis Navarro
Cinematography
  • Pedro Martín
  • Mario Pacheco
Edited byRosa G. Salgado
Production
company
  • Hispamer Films
  • International Germania Film
  • Producciones A.V.
Distributed byConstantin Film (Germany)
Release date
29 July 1966
Running time
86 minutes
Country
  • Portugual
  • Spain West Germany
LanguageGerman

Plot

Cast

  • Antonio Vilar as Pierre Genet / Dick
  • Letícia Román as Ethel / Ellen Green
  • Peter van Eyck as Kramer / Jack Haskins
  • Américo Coimbra as Mike Danham / João
  • Mikaela as Anne Bardot
  • Artur Semedo as Mr. Bardot
  • Klausjürgen Wussow as Johansson / Bonnard
  • Corny Collins as Jenny Renoir
  • Ricardo Rubinstein as Kommissar Oliveira
  • José Cardoso as Professor Zandor
  • Ricardo Valle as Agent Andrade
  • Frank Braña
  • Antonio Pica
  • Mario Barros as Bob
  • Hermann Greegh as Peterson
  • Richard Wall as Antonio
gollark: Are you aware of the brief proliferation of x86-based tablets?
gollark: Which is disabled by default now.
gollark: CSM is disabled by default and such.
gollark: I thought they used EFI and did not in fact boot like they were 8086 now?
gollark: I don't want to use Python because it'd just devolve into the incomprehensible mess which Minoteaur and RSAPI are. Rust is, and as previously mentioned. Nim would require me to copypaste my random utility libraries all over the place and they'd be bad.

References

  1. Cowie & Elley p.154

Bibliography

  • Peter Cowie & Derek Elley. World Filmography: 1967. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1977.
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