The Reluctant Spy

Summary

The Reluctant Spy (French: L'honorable Stanislas, agent secret, Italian: Spionaggio senza frontiere, also known as How to Be a Spy Without Even Trying) is a French-Italian spy-comedy film from 1963, directed by Jean-Charles Dudrumet, written by Michel Cousin, starring Jean Marais and Geneviève Page.[2][3]

The Reluctant Spy
Directed byJean-Charles Dudrumet
Written byMichel Cousin
Jean-Charles Dudrumet
Produced byFilms de la Licorne, Italgamma
StarringJean Marais
Geneviève Page
Music byGeorges Delerue
Release date
4 September 1963 (France)
Running time
91 minutes
CountriesFrance, Italy
LanguageFrench
Box office1,803,068 admissions (France)[1]

It is a parody of espionage films.[2] It was followed by sequel Pleins feux sur Stanislas.[2]

Plot edit

Stanislas Dubois is an ordinary businessman. When he meets a woman on a date in a restaurant, he takes off his coat. Upon leaving he confuses a similar coat with his own. Following this mix-up he becomes increasingly aware that something about him is attracting peculiar people. Hidden in his new coat is a microfilm which interests more than one secret service. After being drawn into the world of international espionage, a secret service of his own country hires him to lure enemy spies into a trap.

Cast edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Box Office Figures for Jean Marais films". Box Office Story.
  2. ^ a b c Marco Giusti. 007 all'italiana. Isbn Edizioni, 2010. ISBN 9788876381874.
  3. ^ L’Honorable Stanislas, agent secret (1963) at the Films de France

External links edit

  • The Reluctant Spy at IMDb  
  • L’Honorable Stanislas, agent secret (1963) at the Films de France