A petty thief on the run is drawn into a high-stakes game of espionage.A petty thief on the run is drawn into a high-stakes game of espionage.A petty thief on the run is drawn into a high-stakes game of espionage.
- Anna
- (as Maria Bucella)
- Van Joost
- (as Alan Collins)
- Daine's Assistant
- (as Dean Heyde)
- Drink seller
- (uncredited)
- Henchman #2
- (uncredited)
- Henchman #5
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Christian-Jaque, director of one of the segments of The Dirty Game, pulls all the elements together this time; a first rate score by Gerard Calvi, a great and varied cast, an excellent script, and appealing locations result in a minor gem. Dutch camera angles abound as we chase the European winter in Berlin, Lucerne, Paris, and Vienna. The look of the film manages to stay just this side of drab, the natural light is weak but the feeling isn't one of hopelessness, rather it's a sort of dignified gloom.
If you're looking for a well-crafted piece of espionage drama that treads the fine line between humor and bleakness, and features a stellar cast at their best, you just found it. As Georges Geret remarks halfway through the film `Spying is no job, it's a profession,' and this is a very professional look at it indeed.
Dead Run is a nice little Eurospy film that I don't think I'd ever heard of before watching it the other night. IMDb lists the film as a drama/thriller, but there's also a bit of comedy thrown in that I found appealing. The plot is interesting, but maybe a little more complicated that it needed to be. The location shots are fabulous as everyone races across Europe. I always love a film filled with 60s era European locations. The film stars Peter Lawford. While he's not what I envision when I think 60s spy movie, the light-hearted tone of Dead Run fit his style fairly well. He's joined by a rock-solid cast featuring the gorgeous (and often quite funny) Ira von Furstenberg, the even more gorgeous Maria Grazia Buccella, and a host of well-known German actors, including Werner Peters, Wolfgang Preiss, and the menacing Horst Frank. I really enjoyed the way Lawford and von Furstenberg played off each other. I felt some real chemistry. But the real star is Georges Geret as Carlos, the man with the stolen documents. He's an interesting character - fun to watching in some instances, tragic in others. Overall, it's a better cast that I would have expected.
My only complaint (and the main reason I'm not rating Dead Run any higher) is that I felt the movie ran out of steam about halfway through. After a fantastic and interesting start, the movie slowed down a bit too much for my liking.
6/10
In the sixties (and seventies) there were two commendable works "La Tulipe Noire" and "Le Repas des Fauves" ,both featuring Henri Jeanson's incomparable lines.
After 1965,he had no idea what he was doing:poor suspense films ("la Seconde Verite" ),dismal remakes ("Les Amours de Lady Hamilton" ),coarse comedies ("les Petroleuses" ) and of course spy thrillers("The Saint" well before the Val Kilmer version,"Doctor Justice " and the movie I'm writing about)
"Deux Billets Pour Mexico" (French title)has an international cast :Peter Lawford (US),Georges Guéret and Jean Tissier (France) ,Ira Furstenberg and Horst Frank (Germany),Maria Bucella (Spain)....It's pleasant at best (notably the scene with the antique dealer ),trite at worst.It's essentially a chase movie but it displays nothing of what French people liked in Christian-Jaque's best films:his pacifism,his faith in Man and in a better world .
Did you know
- Quotes
Stephen Daine: My name's Stephen Daine.
Suzanne Belmont: Oh, how thrilling.
Stephen Daine: I work for the C.I.A.
Suzanne Belmont: The 'C' who?
Stephen Daine: Central Intelligence Agency.
Suzanne Belmont: But what's that got to do with me?
Stephen Daine: I don't know Miss Belmont. It has something to do with counter-espionage.
Suzanne Belmont: Ohh, you chase spies!
Stephen Daine: Yeah, how'd you guess? Oh, by the way, there's a reservation for you on the next plane. Just need you for an hour to identify the man you saw, the man who ran so fast.
Suzanne Belmont: How exciting! Do you have a wristwatch that shoots bullets?
Stephen Daine: No. It just tells time.
Suzanne Belmont: Well do you use a glass eye that's bugged or a pen that goes bang?
Stephen Daine: Well, no. I work without special equipment.
Suzanne Belmont: Oh, that's too bad.
Stephen Daine: I don't really need it. You see, I'm a frogman, a parachutist and I can do the supersonic war cry that kills at 63 feet. I speak 10 languages and 12 dialects. I'm a walking computer; 10,000 criminals and a card for each one.
Suzanne Belmont: They must pay you the earth for that.
Stephen Daine: I'm about priceless.
Suzanne Belmont: That's strange, it doesn't show at all.
- Crazy creditsThe MPAA seal appears on the Universal logo instead of during the credits where it usually appears.
- ConnectionsReferences Le Troisième Homme (1949)
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- 2 billets pour Mexico
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 32 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1