I love this movie so much
That was an excellent one.
Pretty good movie overall. First half was nothing special but it got better as it went along.
View MoreThere's a more than satisfactory amount of boom-boom in the movie's trim running time.
View MoreThis isn't so much a feature film but rather two episodes of the popular TV series THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E. strung together to make a feature-length production. The result is just the same as watching the television series but only longer. The production is light and breezy, emphasising comedy over drama and with plenty of action in the style of the James Bond films and their ilk from the period. Any fan of the series will find the template familiar: secret agents Robert Vaughn and David McCallum are sent to stop a ruthless madman, who operates off the coast of Italy, from destroying the atmosphere of the earth with the aid of an evil scientist. Of course what it all boils down to in the end are explosions, grenades, lots of fist-fights and gun-battles with armed guards, plus tons of romance and everyone overacting as best they can.Vaughn and McCallum have by now settled comfortably into their respective roles, with McCallum as a dedicated action man and Vaughn as the Lothario, whose escapades with a pretty Italian girl lead to much of the Italian mafia coming after him! The supporting cast is very good with lots of comedic performances from the old timers, even Elisha Cook appears. Villain Jack Palance chews the scenery as only he can and is great fun as the baddie, whilst Janet Leigh has a great role as a female killer who gets a kinky thrill every time she kills or tortures a guy! The film is strong with sexual suggestion and pretty racy in parts, and in addition the plentiful action sequences are both fun and engaging (even if the stuntmen are a little obvious at times). I really enjoyed the finale which includes a fight in a flooding room. A bright and breezy spoof of the popular "spy" clichés of the decade, this is an unassuming and fun affair that passes an afternoon nicely in a lighthearted way.
View MoreAnything to get the word "spy" into the title! Actually I think this was the only "U.N.C.L.E." "movie" I'd not seen so it was a welcome watch for me. A fine colourful romp it was too, taking in the two main locations for 20th Century criminal activity in the western world, Sicily and Chicago and a fun plot involving an ex-Nazi inventor, a group of veteran Mafiosi and best of all, Hollywood stars Jack Palance and Janet Leigh who really enter into the spirit of things as top T.H.R.U.S.H. operatives. Solo and Kuryakin are as debonair and efficient (respectively) as ever, while Mr Waverley as ever is a soft-centred grouch. Starting off in sunny Sicily, the dynamic duo get separated when attempting to intercept the Nazi professor, Solo, typically ending up in a pretty Sicilian girl's bedroom and Kuryakin chained up and on the end of shock treatment administered by Leigh in a Rosa Klebb type role. The action shifts to the States taking in a shoot-out at a Chicago night-club, before the usual beat-the-clock climax at bad guy Palance's weapons depot. As ever, it's lightweight, knockabout stuff, although there are hints of some more risqué direction than usual not only in some unusual camera-shots from above and below, but in the campy, kinky depiction of Leigh's knife-toting Miss Diketon (what's in a name?) and Palance's campy, excitable boss Strago, while some scenes, like Solo's peeping-Tom initial meet-up with Letitia Roman in her bedroom, Leigh seemingly getting aroused when either massaging Palance or administering death by flying daggers and most outré of all, a table-top fight between the two women seem more out there than previously, perhaps riffing of recent, racy spoofs like "Our Man Flint" and Dean Martin's Matt Helm misadventures.With some good jokes thrown in too if at other times a bit too much Italian stereotyping, this was a highly entertaining caper and probably the best of the five movies adapted from the original TV series.
View MoreAll told five full-length feature films were made by the MGM studio from spliced together episodes of The Man From Uncle. "The Spy In The Green Hat" is, in my opinion, the best of them. This is no small part due to Jack Palance who plays a terrific villain Louis Strago & Janet Leigh who plays Strago's secretary Miss Diketon. Janet Leigh was 39 years old when she played this role & looks really hot. Miss Diketon takes pleasure in killing people at her boss Strago's behest & Janet Leigh found herself a really juicy "bad girl" role here that she makes the most of. Despite her surname having lesbian overtones she is secretly in love with her boss Strago but his feelings for her are not reciprocated. In their very first scene together she is shown breathing heavily whilst massaging his back for which Strago rebukes her. Later he tries to get her transferred out of his department & she turns against him. The other female interest sees Leticia Roman playing Pia Monteri the daughter of an Italian Mafia mobster whom Napoleon Solo is almost forced into marrying. Later in the movie there is a very entertaining fight between her & Miss Diketon. All in all, this is not a movie to be taken too seriously, & it was never intended to be, but is very entertaining.
View MoreThe Spy In The Green Hat was the first UNCLE film that was only released in the overseas market. The previous four outings had been released theatrically in America, but US audiences weren't prepared to pay to see in the cinema what they had already seen on television. The Spy In The Green Hat was made up from the season three two-parter "The Concrete Overcoat Affair", (episode 1: 25/11/1966), (episode 2: 2/12/1966). These were not transmitted in the countries where the film version was released so there it would be a completely new story. This was the case for most of the other UNCLE films.Napoleon Solo and Illya Kuriyakin fail to capture Dr Von Kronen the world's most wanted Nazi criminal who joins forces with THRUSH agent Louis Strago (Jack Palance) in order to develop of series of missiles to divert the gulf stream thus altering the world's weather patterns and giving THRUSH what it always wanted - control of the world!Out of the eight films released to cash in on the success of the TV series, The Spy In The Green Hat is probably one of the best. The supporting cast is good with Jack Palance on fanatical form as meglomaniac Louis Strago, Janet Leigh as his psychotic secretary and Eduardo Cianelli, Allen Jenkins and Jack La Rue are fun as the aging 1930's Italian gangsters who are pursuing Solo in order to force him to marry their young niece after he spent the night in her room hiding from Strago's henchmen. Robert Vaughn and David McCallam are their usual irreplacable selves and not forgetting the always reliable Leo G Carroll as UNCLE chief Mr Waverley.The American TV version has been released on VHS in the UK but has long since been deleted. We can only hope for a DVD release in the future.
View More