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Les corrompus

Original title: Die Hölle von Macao
  • 1967
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
260
YOUR RATING
Les corrompus (1967)
AdventureCrimeDrama

Spy accidentally gets an ancient treasure. Several corrupt groups try to steal it from him.Spy accidentally gets an ancient treasure. Several corrupt groups try to steal it from him.Spy accidentally gets an ancient treasure. Several corrupt groups try to steal it from him.

  • Director
    • James Hill
  • Writers
    • Ladislas Fodor
    • Brian Clemens
    • Harald Bloom
  • Stars
    • Robert Stack
    • Elke Sommer
    • Nancy Kwan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    260
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • James Hill
    • Writers
      • Ladislas Fodor
      • Brian Clemens
      • Harald Bloom
    • Stars
      • Robert Stack
      • Elke Sommer
      • Nancy Kwan
    • 11User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos20

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    Top cast13

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    Robert Stack
    Robert Stack
    • Cliff Wilder
    Elke Sommer
    Elke Sommer
    • Lilly Mancini
    Nancy Kwan
    Nancy Kwan
    • Tina
    Christian Marquand
    Christian Marquand
    • Brandon
    Maurizio Arena
    Maurizio Arena
    • Danny
    Richard Haller
    • Kua-Song
    Hans Heyde
    • Hugo
    • (as Dean Heyde)
    Ah Yue Lou
    • Chow
    • (as Ah-Yue Lou)
    Marisa Merlini
    Marisa Merlini
    • Madame Vulcano
    Rosemarie Stack
    Rosemarie Stack
    • Bar Patron
    • (as Rosemary Bowe)
    Werner Peters
    Werner Peters
    • Pinto
    Heidy Bohlen
    Heidy Bohlen
    • Jasmine
    • (uncredited)
    Maria Minh
    Maria Minh
    • Choo Minh
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • James Hill
    • Writers
      • Ladislas Fodor
      • Brian Clemens
      • Harald Bloom
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    5.7260
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    Featured reviews

    7Alan-89

    Great Time Waster

    "The Corrupt Ones" is a Cold War-era adventure story about a chase for the Peking Medallion, which is the key to an ancient Chinese treasure. The stars are Robert Stack and Elke Sommer, but, as is usual in this type of film, the villains, of whom Nancy Kwan is the chief, are more colorful. The film starts with a fight for the medallion on board a train, and the pace rarely lets up from there. It's a great time waster, if you've got the time to waste. Of course, this particular genre was done practically to death by the Indian Jones series, but, if you can get past the low budget, there's a lot to enjoy here, not the least of which is Dusty Springfield's singing of the title tune. It's one of those multi-country productions, and that makes for an appealing supporting cast, but someone ought to have been shot for dubbing Elke Sommer's beautiful voice in English. She sounds like a real simp. Citizens of Macao, by the way, must have been shocked by the tagline: "The Deadliest City in the World Is about to Get Deadlier!"
    7seveb-25179

    The Peking Medallion

    (above is the only one of its several titles which actually reflects the nature and style of the film)

    After a mediocre movie career Robert Stack finally made it big on television in "The Untouchables", after which he returned to the big screen for a second go-round, during which he appeared in this hybrid

    In this one the Germans give us an unusual combination of Eurospy and "Indiana Jones" style treasure hunt, but it works well enough and is quite entertaining.

    Robert is a freelance photographer who stumbles into a struggle for possession of an ancient medallion, which in turn can point the way to a hidden trove There are already four interested parties before Robert arrives on the scene, a Tong led by Nancy Kwan, a gambling gang led by Christian Marquand, Werner Peters, a corrupt police chief who can call on the manpower of the local constabulary to do his bidding, and "International Man Of Mystery" Maurizio Arena, along with his wife, Eurospy veteran Elke Sommer (perhaps the real reason behind how this movie came to be made).

    Robert looks the part and brings his distinctive voice to proceedings, as well as his rather limited acting ability, but, this being a Eurospy, that is no more than par for the course and not a deal-breaker. As a romancer Robert repeatedly fails "James Bond bedroom etiquette 101". Every time a female tries to use her "womanly wiles" on him, just at the point things are about to get interesting, he always chooses to reveal to her that he knows what she's up to, which makes her angry and thus terminates the tryst. He makes the same rookie mistake with Heidi Bohlen, Nany and Elke. Now the way it's supposed to be done is, as Sean Connery or Sonny Chiba could explain to him, first you go along with the charade and bed the woman, then you tell her you know what she's up to and make her angry.

    In the first two thirds of the film they do a good job of catching the flavour of Eurospy, with many colourful sets, including an elaborate bordello brothel, a casino club built atop a barge and a Tong mansion headquarters equipped with a torture chamber worthy of a Bond movie. Shades of "Get Smart" as a one piece garage door, disguised as an elaborate oriental wall panel slides slowly up and back, next, behind that, a set of wrought iron gates move aside to the left and right, revealing the torture alcove. The victim is tied to a thick wooden "T" with arms stretched out on either side, which can be pivoted up to an angle that allows the audience to see the suffering better. Then a grotesque metallic oriental demon head is lowered over the victim while acid is dripped onto them from its mouth.

    Torture is something of a feature of this film, as, apart from two visits to the Tong torture chamber (first a failed henchman and later Elke), there is also some torture of Maurizio with a blow torch, and another nicely lit outdoor night torture scene, which involves dragging the Robert around the harbour behind a fizz boat. So this is a must see movie for any sadists out there.

    The film is set in Macao (according to the German title, "The Hell Of Macao") but those who know identify all the location footage as being in Hong Kong. In any case it's a colonial city that borders on Mao era China.

    Dusty Springfield sings the theme song, which is another plus and the music overall is good, assisting to create the appropriate mood of each scene, rather than undermining it.

    The fight scenes are decently choreographed and the action is distributed evenly throughout.

    The main weakness of the film is the middle third, which consists of nothing more than Robert wandering into ambush after ambush, never seeming to consider if it's an intelligent course of action. A strategy of "shaking the tree" is one thing, but wilful stupidity is another. Fortunately for him there are four sets of allies / antagonists who take turns at saving him from each other.

    The final third of the movie goes full "Indy / National Treasure / Da Vinci Code" after Robert suddenly decides to make use an enormous mechanical gadget that he has clamped to a table in his hotel room, to decipher the medallion (I'm not sure what to call it, or how Robert managed to fit it in his luggage). Eventually the various interested parties pursue each other to the customary hidden cavern beneath the ancient temple and engage in the usual round of double crossing, which leads inevitably to a catastrophic cave in and the loss of all the booty.

    Just time for a rom-com epilogue, where Robert, Elke (and Werner) commiserate, before running off together, frolicking toward the beach, while Dusty sings them out.

    Bondesque quips

    Nancy - "What are you doing?"

    Robert - "You know what I'm doing, the point is, how am I doing?"

    Heidi - "I don't get many visitors"

    Robert - "Oh come now"

    Heidi - "Well, not many that I'd like to know better"

    Robert - "The least I can do is help restore your confidence"
    7larryanderson

    A BIG BUDGET REMAKE OF AN EARLIER MOVIE

    I knew this title from many years ago but never bothered to watch it until now. After I watched it, I realized that the Italians had made many "similar" movies a couple of years earlier. Just to name a few: HONG KONG, HOT HARBOUR, BLACK PANTHER OF RATANA, MYSTERY OF THE RED JUNGLE, SECRET OF THE CHINESE CARNATION, MISSION TO HELL...etc. All with similar plot twists and action but none of which had the elaborate budget that The Corrupt Ones had. But all were made a few years earlier. So why bother making The Corrupt ones in 1967 when so many similar stories already existed? I guess some producer had money to burn. The Corrupt Ones is still worth watching, but do check out the other titles. Larry Anderson.
    5lee_eisenberg

    This is an Elke Sommer movie. What more do you need to know?

    I guess that "Die Holle von Macao" (called "The Corrupt Ones" in the US) is the sort of movie that you can only find in Movie Madness here in Portland. Cliff Wilder (Robert Stack) is an American spy in Hong Kong who gets hold of an ancient medallion and finds himself the target of various and sundry groups. His only escape is gorgeous Lilly Mancini (Elke Sommer). Meanwhile...

    Oh come on folks. THIS IS AN ELKE SOMMER MOVIE!!!!!!!!! You don't watch this sort of movie to have a life-changing experience; you watch it to see her, uh, features. Some people may claim that this movie's just trying to be a James Bond movie. SO WHAT?!!!!!!! It's Elke Sommer, people! Who cares about a decrepit old right-winger like Robert Stack dodging bullets when you've got her hot features on the screen? I know. You say that my infatuation with her is inane, immature, pathetic, and non-respectable, given that she mostly starred in skin flicks in the '60s and hasn't done much since then. Well too bad. I've always found her hotter than the likes of Julia Roberts. In fact, that's why I gave this movie 5/10 stars: the plot is pretty routine, but her presence makes it worthwhile. If I was going to make a movie, I'd do everything possible to try and get her a role, even if it was the same kind of role with which she's always been associated. Hubba hubba...
    7odresel

    Interesting relic of 60s Hong Kong, despite its obvious flaws

    Nothing to add, really, to the earlier reviews except to clarify some things about the film. The location is never really stated explicitly in the film, except that it is somewhere on the border of 'Red China' where foreigners are safe. In 1967 that is either Hong Kong or Macau. Since there is legal gambling shown going on, it has to be notionally Macau. Except that I cannot detect a single scene shot in Macau. Many of the interiors look like they were done on a European sound stage as well.

    All the street signs, for example, have Chinese and English text (= Hong Kong; in Macau it is Chinese and Portuguese.) There are identifiable shooting locations in Hong Kong. The opening train sequence is shot on the Kowloon-Canton Railway tracks somewhere in the vicinity of Taipo. There is a back-projected car ride down Nathan Road, Kowloon, and one can see the wall and gate of St. Andrew's Church for a second or two. Earlier, there's a car ride shot in Wanchai. There are several scenes shots in Aberdeen, and a little booth selling tickets for the "Ap Lei Chau Ferry" (this was before there was a bridge there.) Some of the waterfront/speedboat shots appear to have been done in Clear Water Bay or Sai Kung, probably because of the proximity of the Shaw Brothers Studio which might have offered some advice. Perhaps most amusing is the 'Temple of the Bells' under which the treasure is buried, which is actually the exterior of the Roman Catholic Diocesan Seminary at Wong Chuk Hang! For me it's actually these shots of a run-down but livable Hong Kong in the Vietnam War era that are most interesting, a document that preserves a lot of footage of a place that has now completely disappeared under 20 years of 'Red Chinese' rule.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Heidy Bohlen's debut.
    • Quotes

      Cliff Wilder: Thanks.

      Danny: For what? It's my boat I was looking after, not you.

      Cliff Wilder: That figures.

    • Connections
      Referenced in L'hôtel New Hampshire (1984)
    • Soundtracks
      The Corrupt Ones
      Lyrics by Buddy Kaye

      Music by Georges Garvarentz

      Sung by Dusty Springfield

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 8, 1967 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Italy
      • West Germany
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Corrupt Ones
    • Filming locations
      • CCC-Atelier, Spandau, Berlin, Germany
    • Production companies
      • Central Cinema Company Film (CCC)
      • Critérion Film
      • Franca Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 33 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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