The Dirty Game

The Dirty Game (German: Spione unter sich, French: Guerre secrète, Italian: La guerra segreta) is a 1965 anthology spy film starring Henry Fonda and Robert Ryan.[1] Robert Ryan as American General Bruce is the link between three different spy stories, helmed by different directors; original James Bond director Terence Young and co-director Werner Klingler for the sequences in Berlin, Christian-Jaque for the French sequences, and Carlo Lizzani for the Italian sequences.

The Dirty Game
American release film poster by Reynold Brown
Directed byChristian-Jaque
Werner Klingler
Carlo Lizzani
Terence Young
Produced byRichard Hellman
Eugène Tucherer
Written byPhilippe Bouvard
Jacques Caborie
Christian-Jaque
Ennio De Concini
Jo Eisinger
Jacques Rémy
StarringHenry Fonda
Music byRobert Mellin, Gian Piero Reverberi
CinematographyRichard Angst
Edited byFranco Fraticelli
Release date
  • 23 June 1965 (1965-06-23)
Running time
118 minutes
CountryUnited States
West Germany
France
Italy
LanguageEnglish

Plot

A man tells of three different spy missions he took part in.

Cast

gollark: > "surveillance" also happens when one researches documents available to general public.Yes, it does, and your rather passive-aggressive claim about how "there would be no need for NSA to exist" doesn't invalidate this. You can spy on people using information which is available for regular people to access with some work.
gollark: Because you might be an alt.
gollark: Yes, nobody was banned.
gollark: It's hard to have "proof" on things which are basically just... convoluted ethical/semantic arguments.
gollark: Doing probably rule-violatey or against some ethical standards things, I think he *has* done that.

See also

References

  1. "New York Times: The Dirty Game". NY Times. Retrieved 20 October 2008.


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