Triple Cross: La fantastique histoire vraie d'Eddie Chapman
- 1966
- Tous publics
- 2h 20min
Pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, Eddie Chapman, un voleur de banque condamné, devient un agent triple travaillant à la fois pour les Britanniques et les Allemands.Pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, Eddie Chapman, un voleur de banque condamné, devient un agent triple travaillant à la fois pour les Britanniques et les Allemands.Pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, Eddie Chapman, un voleur de banque condamné, devient un agent triple travaillant à la fois pour les Britanniques et les Allemands.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 nomination au total
- Colonel Steinhager
- (as Gert Froebe)
- Luftwaffe General
- (as Jean Rene Caussimon)
- Major Stillman
- (as Tony Dawson)
Avis à la une
The main character of the drama however is not Chapman/Christopher Plummer but Yul Brunner as his main employer in Germany, the Baron von Grunen, who has no illusions about the war and admits defeat when there is one. Gert Frobe is another, an honest policeman who survives by his honesty and sticking to it, even when it could be argued away. Romy Schneider is the one woman of some realism who also admits defeat and recognizes a fatal farewell and accepts it even when there is one too many. All actors are good but none outstanding, because a complicated story like this admits no stars, and the grim reality and circumstances of the intrigue play of a war like this lets no star shine through. Only in the end, after the war, when Christopher Plummer finally is able to relax at a pub home in London there is finally room for an ego when it has got through it all alive and kicking after all, – but it took many difficult twists and turns to get there.
Director Terence Young of 1960s James Bond films fame brings together an ensemble cast like a Bond alumni. Lead by Christopher Plummer who plays his role adequately but a pound shop Sean Connery from said Bond films.
The film drags in places and with better direction and casting could have been a great war film. As it is, what we have is a very average film of a story deserving a classic film. A shame because in places the story is suspenseful, makes you think as Chapman crosses the English to the Nazi's, then vice versa all for personal gain as well as for King and country? A film that is crying out to be remade?
Compared with, say, "Five Fingers" or "I Was Monty's Double", "Triple Cross" is sluggish. It's a European co-production, always a difficult diplomatic problem, and the cast is a mini-United Nations: a Canadian as the secret agent, a British spy master, Germans, an Austrian love interest and Yul Brynner, whose origins (like those of the slab in "2001") were still a total mystery.
Christopher Plummer is sleek and sardonic as Eddie Chapman, a master safe cracker and in reality a working class charmer from North East England who had been a Guardsman; here he seems more of a toff, like Raffles or Bond. The bare bones of his story were true and incredible enough not to need polishing.
Eddie was in jail in the Channel Island of Jersey when the Germans occupied it in 1940 (by air, not as shown here from ships docked directly under Chapman's cell). He offered himself as a Nazi spy to get back to England. There he immediately re-ratted and got sent to Germany, where he trained other agents whom the British caught and turned. The unsuspecting Nazis were so pleased with his apparent perfidy that he was given the Iron Cross. Hence the film's title.
Brynner is a "good German" colonel, an anti-Nazi aristo who pays the price of involvement in the Hitler assassination plot. Among other heel-clickers who think they are controlling Chapman is Gert Frobe-- so that's what Goldfinger was up to before he became a card sharp in Miami. Trevor Howard sports an ugly little ginger beard. Romy Schneider, no longer the plump little ingenue of the Sissi trilogy, is sharp-jawed and wan as Eddie's aristocratic girlfriend.
Their lack of chemistry underscores Plummer's lack of sex appeal. He was losing the kudos he had gained as Baron von Trapp-- maybe he'd have felt more at ease in Brynner's part-- and his stellar status was as brief as Julie Andrews's. Eddie Chapman fared better. Given a blanket amnesty at the war's end, he married and lived long, prosperously and respectably.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesGert Fröbe plays a man called "Steinhäger". In Germany Steinhäger is a alcoholic drink with a minimum of 38% ABV and is distilled in Steinhagen.
- GaffesNear the beginning of this film set in 1939 Christopher Plummer is reading a 1966 newspaper with the front page headline "New Concord Cost Shock"
- Citations
Eddie Chapman: I want the German commandant!
Jersey Prison Warder: Oh, *that* again...!
Eddie Chapman: Yes, "that again"... and tell him that I *don't* like to be kept *waiting*!
Jersey Prison Warder: You're a cocky one!
Eddie Chapman: Look, if we don't push *ourselves*, no one else ever will! And let me tell you something: the more scared you are, *talk louder*! You'll get away with *murder*!
[shouting]
Eddie Chapman: Now go and tell the commandant I want to see him!
- ConnexionsReferenced in Terence Young: Bond Vivant (2000)
- Bandes originalesTriple Cross Main Title
(uncredited)
Written by Georges Garvarentz
Performed by The Roland Shaw Orchestra directed by Roland Shaw
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Triple Cross?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Triple Cross - La verdadera historia de Eddie Chapman
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 2h 20min(140 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.66 : 1