CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.2/10
566
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA US secret agent is sent to Berlin to pretend to be a spy for the USSR.A US secret agent is sent to Berlin to pretend to be a spy for the USSR.A US secret agent is sent to Berlin to pretend to be a spy for the USSR.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Jimmy Bates
- Russian Student Spy
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Based on the real life story of Boris Morros who was a musician instead of a film producer, Man on a String comes at the tale end of the Cold War espionage thrillers where there was absolutely no doubt as to who the good guys and bad guys were on the screen.
I can understand the reason for renaming the lead character that Ernest Borgnine plays Boris Mitrov and changing his occupation even, for dramatic purposes to give the character more scope. But for the life of me was anyone fooled when the agency he worked for was renamed the Central Bureau of Intelligence?
Borris Morros has his own page on IMDb and you can see the rather astonishing list of film credits he had, working on the scoring of a whole lot of films, some of them classics like Stagecoach. His own life gives a lie to the notion that there were no Communists in Hollywood. The blunderbuss approach taken by the House Un-American Activities Committee is another issue altogether.
The Mitrov character we see here isn't exactly stealing the atomic secrets, in fact he's not really doing any spying at all so to speak. As the Russian agent says, all they're doing with him is buying his good name to gain entrée into other places.
Our own CIA knows that and turns him into a double agent where he does perform useful work in identifying Soviet agents here. In real life it wasn't quite as dramatic as shown in Man on a String.
One thing that is of interest is that Man on a String, made as it was in 1960 in the wake of Nikita Khruschev's boast about how he would bury America. That is their attitude, that victory for them was inevitable because Marx said that's how history was flowing. It's interesting to watch this film now in the light of the fall of the Soviet Union. And it fell because it's economy couldn't keep spending militarily and provide its citizens with basic necessities.
Man on a String is a Cold War relic, but interesting viewing nonetheless.
I can understand the reason for renaming the lead character that Ernest Borgnine plays Boris Mitrov and changing his occupation even, for dramatic purposes to give the character more scope. But for the life of me was anyone fooled when the agency he worked for was renamed the Central Bureau of Intelligence?
Borris Morros has his own page on IMDb and you can see the rather astonishing list of film credits he had, working on the scoring of a whole lot of films, some of them classics like Stagecoach. His own life gives a lie to the notion that there were no Communists in Hollywood. The blunderbuss approach taken by the House Un-American Activities Committee is another issue altogether.
The Mitrov character we see here isn't exactly stealing the atomic secrets, in fact he's not really doing any spying at all so to speak. As the Russian agent says, all they're doing with him is buying his good name to gain entrée into other places.
Our own CIA knows that and turns him into a double agent where he does perform useful work in identifying Soviet agents here. In real life it wasn't quite as dramatic as shown in Man on a String.
One thing that is of interest is that Man on a String, made as it was in 1960 in the wake of Nikita Khruschev's boast about how he would bury America. That is their attitude, that victory for them was inevitable because Marx said that's how history was flowing. It's interesting to watch this film now in the light of the fall of the Soviet Union. And it fell because it's economy couldn't keep spending militarily and provide its citizens with basic necessities.
Man on a String is a Cold War relic, but interesting viewing nonetheless.
"Man on a String" stars the great Ernest Borgnine ("The Wild Bunch") as Boris Mitrov, a character inspired by the real-life Borris Morros. Boris is a Russian-born American citizen running a film studio who is essentially blackmailed into becoming a counter-spy. This will see him travel to both Berlin and Moscow to gather information for the amusingly dubbed "C. B. I." (the "Central Bureau of Intelligence"!).
"Man on a String" is largely notable for taking a documentary-style approach, complete with narration, by both Clete Roberts ("The Swinger") and Borgnine himself. The Roberts narration mostly tells us things we can already see for ourselves, while Borgnines' voice-over is more interesting as he observes the progress of his homeland and its citizens decades later. Overall, the film is generally entertaining, although it's largely dialogue and performance driven, only working in some action and suspense during the finale. But this finale is quite good, as we see the unarmed Boris running for his life and we wonder *how* he can possibly get out of a life-or-death situation.
Borgnine is thoroughly engaging here, and is ably supported by fantasy star Kerwin Mathews ("The 7th Voyage of Sinbad") here wearing a suit and tie as Boris' "assistant" at the studio. The excellent supporting cast also includes Colleen Dewhurst ("The Dead Zone"), Alexander Scourby ("The Big Heat"), Glenn Corbett ("Chisum"), Russian-born character actor Vladimir Sokoloff ("The Magnificent Seven"), who's endearing as Boris' father, and Ed Prentiss ('Trackdown').
Partly working as a travelogue, the globe-hopping also helps to make this espionage thriller decent entertainment, and in fact the film employed four different cinematographers for its four main settings. The efficient direction is courtesy of Hungarian-born Andre De Toth, who made his mark as a filmmaker with such efforts as the original "House of Wax" and the film noir classic "Crime Wave".
Seven out of 10.
"Man on a String" is largely notable for taking a documentary-style approach, complete with narration, by both Clete Roberts ("The Swinger") and Borgnine himself. The Roberts narration mostly tells us things we can already see for ourselves, while Borgnines' voice-over is more interesting as he observes the progress of his homeland and its citizens decades later. Overall, the film is generally entertaining, although it's largely dialogue and performance driven, only working in some action and suspense during the finale. But this finale is quite good, as we see the unarmed Boris running for his life and we wonder *how* he can possibly get out of a life-or-death situation.
Borgnine is thoroughly engaging here, and is ably supported by fantasy star Kerwin Mathews ("The 7th Voyage of Sinbad") here wearing a suit and tie as Boris' "assistant" at the studio. The excellent supporting cast also includes Colleen Dewhurst ("The Dead Zone"), Alexander Scourby ("The Big Heat"), Glenn Corbett ("Chisum"), Russian-born character actor Vladimir Sokoloff ("The Magnificent Seven"), who's endearing as Boris' father, and Ed Prentiss ('Trackdown').
Partly working as a travelogue, the globe-hopping also helps to make this espionage thriller decent entertainment, and in fact the film employed four different cinematographers for its four main settings. The efficient direction is courtesy of Hungarian-born Andre De Toth, who made his mark as a filmmaker with such efforts as the original "House of Wax" and the film noir classic "Crime Wave".
Seven out of 10.
I saw also directed by André De Toth "The Mongols" (1961)I mongoli (original title) with the one and only Jack Palance, a movie I liked when I was a teenager. Here in "Man on a String" we have the one and only Ernest Borgnine, another excellent actor, who delighted me in many films, especially in "Emperor of the North" (1973), with the great Lee Marvin, "The Wild Bunch" (1969), "All Quiet on the Western Front" (1979). I've seen him also in the excellent "Marty" (1955), with which he won the Oscar. Here he plays another complex role, in fact, a double role... All the other actors are very good, Kerwin Mathews probably in his best role, Colleen Dewhurst, very good too, etc. all of them. Just watch and judge for yourself!
This is a decent Cold War film about a Russian film director working in the United States. While he is not a Communist, his "friends" are and while he tells himself he isn't working for them, he has accepted favors and naively thinks it will all somehow work out. However, when he is confronted by the CBI(?) (a fictional US government agency), he realizes he's become a Communist stooge and agrees to help the US in a counter-espionage mission behind the Iron Curtain.
While the film is a decent enough time-passer and the last 1/3 of the film is pretty exciting, it has one giant problem and a few small ones. Oddly, they decided to cast Ernest Borgnine as the Russian Director yet he never even sounds the least bit Russian and you can STILL detect his New York accent. This makes the entire film seem rather cheesy and very tough to believe. Had they recast the film and perhaps punched up the first 1/3, it could have been an exciting spy yarn. Oddly, just a few years later, Borgnine was cast as a Russian in ICE STATION ZEBRA and he was able to do a decent Russian accent! Additionally, when Borgnine's character went to Moscow, it looked like a bad travelogue with all the stock footage inserted rather haphazzardly into the movie. As it is, it's just passable entertainment and a mildly interesting curio of the Cold War.
By the way, don't get the idea I hate Cold War films--I am a history teacher and naturally love a good espionage film and could recommend several good ones such as I MARRIED A COMMUNIST and ASSIGNMENT Paris.
While the film is a decent enough time-passer and the last 1/3 of the film is pretty exciting, it has one giant problem and a few small ones. Oddly, they decided to cast Ernest Borgnine as the Russian Director yet he never even sounds the least bit Russian and you can STILL detect his New York accent. This makes the entire film seem rather cheesy and very tough to believe. Had they recast the film and perhaps punched up the first 1/3, it could have been an exciting spy yarn. Oddly, just a few years later, Borgnine was cast as a Russian in ICE STATION ZEBRA and he was able to do a decent Russian accent! Additionally, when Borgnine's character went to Moscow, it looked like a bad travelogue with all the stock footage inserted rather haphazzardly into the movie. As it is, it's just passable entertainment and a mildly interesting curio of the Cold War.
By the way, don't get the idea I hate Cold War films--I am a history teacher and naturally love a good espionage film and could recommend several good ones such as I MARRIED A COMMUNIST and ASSIGNMENT Paris.
Well, that's not an authentic red scare period film, as were BIG JIM MC LAIN, INVASION USA, WHIP HAND, and so many US propaganda films that spread during the fifties. It speaks of the war between Western authorities and Behind the iron Curtain forces, the "evil" ones, but in a smart, sensitive, and brilliant way. It is purely espionage, spy scheme, as there were so many in the sixties, and even after. Ernest Borgnine is excellent in this ambivalent role, for whom the audiences of this era, who were more used to be on the good American side, for once, could feel a bit discomfortable with such an unusual lead character. Solid Andre De Toth directing.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaFilm debut of Ted Knight.
- ErroresThe K-9s look straight at the cameras and even move towards them, instead of walking with the actors who are meant to be their handlers.
- ConexionesReferenced in Going Attractions: The Definitive Story of the Movie Palace (2019)
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- How long is Man on a String?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 32 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Secretos de contraespionaje (1960) officially released in India in English?
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