Yes, Hubert Bonisseur de la Bath is based on novels by Jean De Bruce. However, he is so similar to Ian Fleming's very well known English spy James Bond who is, by the way, funnier and more advanced.
In this Bond-ish movie, the action is not so good, it's average. The direction is not that well done; you'll watch the camera more than once (in the glass of some bus, and in the bathroom's mirror of the submarine..), plus the stunt man's face was visible too, and so on. The music isn't any fine. Frederick Stafford is trying to be, or forced to be, another Connery, and that dubbed voice was unfunny, but I think with some other director and writer, he would've done much better work.
You won't have a lot of exciting spying devices; only a little microphone and sunglasses which had a camera in it. And although it's French-Italian production, but it's not BIG one by all means, especially when all of the events take place just in Tokyo. The writing was mediocre, or maybe the surprises of 1966 are corny in 2007. For instance, someone shot Hubert in his bed to discover that it wasn't him; it was a doll under the blanket. Then, chasing Hubert to discover later that he was a harmless policeman.. etc.
The positive points were 2. The cinematography by Marcel Grignon, which was the classic rich shooting of the era. And Marina Vlady who stole the show despite not being the lead.
All in all, this movie is poor when you compare it to Bond movies. But if you measure it by its own desire to be amusing, then you'll find that it's a nice humble espionage movie, not too boring, silly or bad.
However, most of the global taste or mood will innately compare that French spy to the original English one, hence he'll be some sort of the fool cousin from France who imitates desperately his uncle's famous clever son!
Atout coeur à Tokyo pour OSS 117
1966 [FRENCH]
Action / Crime / Thriller
Plot summary
After an American Navy base is annihilated by a secret weapon, Agent OSS 117 is sent to Japan to investigate the organization that's claiming responsibility, and threatening the US with another attack, if they don't pay.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
November 25, 2023 at 08:29 AM
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117 Is The Rookie Cousin Of 007 !
"I never trust a woman with a beauty spot on her right hip."
As the countdown to the ICM French Film Challenge ending begun,I looked for a last-minute flick to view. Recently watching the OK OSS 117: Mission for a Killer (1965-also reviewed) I decided to join OSS 117 on another mission.
View on the film:
Bringing in Terence Young (and an uncredited Claude Sautet) to join the returning duo of Pierre Foucaud and Marcel Mithois in adapting Jean Bruce,the new writers give the franchise a sparkling Euro Spy makeover. Keeping OSS's mission straight-lined, the writers tune in an exciting fish out of water espionage tale, with OSS being unable to fully trust the Japanese secret service,and running into 007-style henchmen trying to put 0SS on the end of their swords. Mostly filmed in Tokyo and new to the series, director Michel Boisrond & returning cinematographer Marcel Grignon join in giving a new found energy for the franchise, with the bright lights and night clubs of Japan giving it a Euro Spy sheen,along with panning shots catching sight-gags of OSS being spied on. Karate-chopping him into action,Boisrond gives the action set-pieces a wonderfully over the top quality, from the gigantic henchmen knocking down walls to OSS hanging a baddie with a phone wire. Joining a returning Frederick Stafford as OSS, Marina Vlady gives the series a touch of Euro spy glamour as icy Wilson,who leads OSS with a Tokyo drifter.