Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWhile under attack by German forces, a French army unit discovers there is a traitor in their midst, feeding the Germans information.While under attack by German forces, a French army unit discovers there is a traitor in their midst, feeding the Germans information.While under attack by German forces, a French army unit discovers there is a traitor in their midst, feeding the Germans information.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
William F. Leicester
- Capt. Hughes
- (as William Leicester)
Harry Arnie
- Maquis
- (non crédité)
Baynes Barron
- Henri
- (non crédité)
Gregg Barton
- Sentry
- (non crédité)
John Beattie
- Radio Operator
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
I hate when I read about a film and learn that it was based LOOSELY on a real life person. This means you have no idea what's fact and what's fiction...and if the person's life is exciting enough to merit a film, why fictionalize it?! Apparently, this is what they did in "Operation Secret" as it's based loosely on the WWII exploits of Colonel Peter Julien Ortiz.
The story is told through a series of flashbacks at a hearing. Apparently, Peter Forrester (Cornel Wilde) is accused of murdering someone in the French underground during the war...and now that it's over, his loyalty is in some doubt. The story you see is about the French underground and Forrester's exploits....all of which are very exciting.
The movie is quite enjoyable and shows it's Cold War roots, as the film is not only anti-Fascist but anti-Communist as well. My only complaints are very minor...such as the overused of some archive footage. In one case, it also was used poorly, as you see an early model Me-163 rocket plane turn into a later model mid-flight....and the two planes are extremely dissimilar...so much so that non-airplane nuts would see the difference as well. But this is minor...and the film quite enjoyable and worth seeing.
The story is told through a series of flashbacks at a hearing. Apparently, Peter Forrester (Cornel Wilde) is accused of murdering someone in the French underground during the war...and now that it's over, his loyalty is in some doubt. The story you see is about the French underground and Forrester's exploits....all of which are very exciting.
The movie is quite enjoyable and shows it's Cold War roots, as the film is not only anti-Fascist but anti-Communist as well. My only complaints are very minor...such as the overused of some archive footage. In one case, it also was used poorly, as you see an early model Me-163 rocket plane turn into a later model mid-flight....and the two planes are extremely dissimilar...so much so that non-airplane nuts would see the difference as well. But this is minor...and the film quite enjoyable and worth seeing.
What a wonderful movie and what a surprise! I didn't expect much from this and the unimaginative title didn't help. I decided to give it a try because a couple of my favourite actors were in it, Steve Cochran and Karl Malden.
First a rundown of the plot. In the opening we see a couple of passenger planes converging on Paris, one from New York and one from Germany. The date is a few years after WWII and a trial is being held in Paris for the murder of a Maquis member during the war. The accused person is absent, the character played by Cornel Wilde. The witnesses are being assembled from all points of the compass, including Cochran, Malden and others, all belonging to the same French Resistance group as Wilde. From here we get a series of flashbacks as each witness tells how he or she met Wilde and their experiences during the war years. Cochran tells first how he met Wilde when they were all cornered by the Germans in 1940 in a house outside Paris. Cochran is in the French army, Wilde (an American) and Malden are Foreign Legionaries. The order from the government for French soldiers to lay down their arms and surrender comes over the radio. From this pivotal point the plot proceeds through twists and turns, always gripping us and always surprising us.
As the final titles came up I realised I'd just viewed one of the best B movies I'd ever seen. I highly recommend it to all, a brilliant little film with the ensemble cast at the top of their form. A well-deserved 8/10.
First a rundown of the plot. In the opening we see a couple of passenger planes converging on Paris, one from New York and one from Germany. The date is a few years after WWII and a trial is being held in Paris for the murder of a Maquis member during the war. The accused person is absent, the character played by Cornel Wilde. The witnesses are being assembled from all points of the compass, including Cochran, Malden and others, all belonging to the same French Resistance group as Wilde. From here we get a series of flashbacks as each witness tells how he or she met Wilde and their experiences during the war years. Cochran tells first how he met Wilde when they were all cornered by the Germans in 1940 in a house outside Paris. Cochran is in the French army, Wilde (an American) and Malden are Foreign Legionaries. The order from the government for French soldiers to lay down their arms and surrender comes over the radio. From this pivotal point the plot proceeds through twists and turns, always gripping us and always surprising us.
As the final titles came up I realised I'd just viewed one of the best B movies I'd ever seen. I highly recommend it to all, a brilliant little film with the ensemble cast at the top of their form. A well-deserved 8/10.
This is a WWII swashbuckler!
I remember seeing it as the second half of the double bill at the Avalon in Brooklyn in 1952. The feature was something "serious" like Winchester '73. Anyway, as the film progressed, I said more than once: " This is really a good movie!" I was 15.
Forrester (Cornel Wilde) is the man of mystery. He is a Marine who does a stint with the French Foreign Legion. This was all in the European Theater. He is recruited by, maybe, the OSS to parachute into Nazi territory and check on the devastation wrought by our B 17's.
With the help of a phony nun (Phyllis Thaxter) he is able to secure films of a German top secret weapon. These real weapon films are truly fascinating. Even the combat footage of the 17's is better than average. The whole thing ends with a shoot out on a beach where the main characters are to be picked up by a submarine. We then pan to an executive board type hearing to find out ---- Who is Forrester?
Phyllis Thaxter was beautiful. Cornel Wilde was adequate but quite dashing. Karl Malden, as the Legion's Maj. Latrec, shows some of the charisma that would blossom into his great talent.
Yes. It was a B black and white movie. It WAS a good one!
I remember seeing it as the second half of the double bill at the Avalon in Brooklyn in 1952. The feature was something "serious" like Winchester '73. Anyway, as the film progressed, I said more than once: " This is really a good movie!" I was 15.
Forrester (Cornel Wilde) is the man of mystery. He is a Marine who does a stint with the French Foreign Legion. This was all in the European Theater. He is recruited by, maybe, the OSS to parachute into Nazi territory and check on the devastation wrought by our B 17's.
With the help of a phony nun (Phyllis Thaxter) he is able to secure films of a German top secret weapon. These real weapon films are truly fascinating. Even the combat footage of the 17's is better than average. The whole thing ends with a shoot out on a beach where the main characters are to be picked up by a submarine. We then pan to an executive board type hearing to find out ---- Who is Forrester?
Phyllis Thaxter was beautiful. Cornel Wilde was adequate but quite dashing. Karl Malden, as the Legion's Maj. Latrec, shows some of the charisma that would blossom into his great talent.
Yes. It was a B black and white movie. It WAS a good one!
I watched "Operation Secret" on the Fast32 streaming service (which is an excellent source of Western and war films) and was very impressed. Cornel Wilde was good enough, but Karl Malden stole the acting honours, with Steve Cochran doing well as the French resistance leader.
A couple of minor gripes: there was no way that the Resistance fighters could have filmed such close-up footage of the V1 bomber and the tunnel into the cliffs was very brightly illuminated.
Being released in 1952 the makers couldn't resist the temptation to include some anti-Communist propaganda.
But overall one of the best Resistance "B" films I've ever seen.
A couple of minor gripes: there was no way that the Resistance fighters could have filmed such close-up footage of the V1 bomber and the tunnel into the cliffs was very brightly illuminated.
Being released in 1952 the makers couldn't resist the temptation to include some anti-Communist propaganda.
But overall one of the best Resistance "B" films I've ever seen.
Cornel Wilde stars in this World War II drama Operation Secret in which most of the film is done in flashback by witnesses at a post war French tribunal. The object of the inquiry is to determine who killed Maquis resistance leader Paul Picerni.
This film was about the only Marine who may have served in the European Theater of World War II. Wilde is quite the colorful character and what a background he has. He does a hitch in the Marine Corps during peacetime and then enlists in the French Foreign Legion where he and fellow Legionaire Karl Malden just simply refuse to surrender until wounded and ordered to by Captain Steve Cochran. After a stint in a Prison Camp he's repatriated back to France whereupon he flees to Great Britain and tries to enlist in the Marines again. The Marines take him, but rather than send him to the Pacific, Wilde is given spy training and sent back to France where he eventually hooks up with the Maquis.
That the Maquis had a lot of Communists in it is a given fact. But remember this was the beginning of the Cold War so some anti-Communism gets worked into the plot. Many members of the Resistance do not want to give plans for the new Nazi jet airplanes to the Americans and British. That sets up the conflict as Wilde has to deal with both Germans and people in the Maquis who want to do him in.
To say the least I found the whole premise quite bizarre. But I've always liked Cornel Wilde on the screen and this is far from the worst film he ever did. In fact his portrayal of a spy who has to think fast on his feet is quite good.
Tstifying at the tribunal are Malden, Cochran, Jay Novello playing a former Gestapo man, and an ersatz nun played by Phyllis Thaxter. Eventually the murder of Picerni is solved and the perpetrator faces French justice.
Why they had to invent such a wild (no pun intended)background for Wilde is beyond me. If they had just made him a Frenchman in the first place it would have made more sense. Not like Wilde never did a French accent effectively on the screen.
This film was about the only Marine who may have served in the European Theater of World War II. Wilde is quite the colorful character and what a background he has. He does a hitch in the Marine Corps during peacetime and then enlists in the French Foreign Legion where he and fellow Legionaire Karl Malden just simply refuse to surrender until wounded and ordered to by Captain Steve Cochran. After a stint in a Prison Camp he's repatriated back to France whereupon he flees to Great Britain and tries to enlist in the Marines again. The Marines take him, but rather than send him to the Pacific, Wilde is given spy training and sent back to France where he eventually hooks up with the Maquis.
That the Maquis had a lot of Communists in it is a given fact. But remember this was the beginning of the Cold War so some anti-Communism gets worked into the plot. Many members of the Resistance do not want to give plans for the new Nazi jet airplanes to the Americans and British. That sets up the conflict as Wilde has to deal with both Germans and people in the Maquis who want to do him in.
To say the least I found the whole premise quite bizarre. But I've always liked Cornel Wilde on the screen and this is far from the worst film he ever did. In fact his portrayal of a spy who has to think fast on his feet is quite good.
Tstifying at the tribunal are Malden, Cochran, Jay Novello playing a former Gestapo man, and an ersatz nun played by Phyllis Thaxter. Eventually the murder of Picerni is solved and the perpetrator faces French justice.
Why they had to invent such a wild (no pun intended)background for Wilde is beyond me. If they had just made him a Frenchman in the first place it would have made more sense. Not like Wilde never did a French accent effectively on the screen.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis film and also "13 Rue Madeleine" are loosely based on the real exploits of one of the few US Marines to serve in combat in the European Theater, WW2. A former Foreign Legionnaire, Colonel Peter Julien Ortiz, USMC Ret, was an officer with the OSS and led Operations Union I & II in southern France training, supplying and leading the Resistance against the Germans in 1944-45. His actual adventures earned him two Navy Crosses and were so incredible you'd hardly believe them in a movie.
- GaffesAt the 1 hour mark, the getaway car is abandoned on a railway line. A train approaches and is obviously an American built locomotive, not French. The train and car crash is obviously not filmed in France.
Most of the cars used in the film are also American, including the cars used by the Gestapo and other German officers, when they would more likely use European cars.
- Citations
Peter Forrester: Well, they say war is full of surprises and, ah... lost opportunities.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Cinema: Alguns Cortes - Censura II (2014)
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- How long is Operation Secret?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 48 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Opération secrète (1952) officially released in India in English?
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