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Pas de roses pour O.S.S. 117

Original title: Niente rose per OSS 117
  • 1968
  • GP
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
368
YOUR RATING
John Gavin in Pas de roses pour O.S.S. 117 (1968)
SpyActionDramaThriller

Agent OSS 117 infiltrates an organization that specializes in political assassinations, by assuming the identity of one of its top assassins.Agent OSS 117 infiltrates an organization that specializes in political assassinations, by assuming the identity of one of its top assassins.Agent OSS 117 infiltrates an organization that specializes in political assassinations, by assuming the identity of one of its top assassins.

  • Directors
    • Renzo Cerrato
    • Jean-Pierre Desagnat
    • André Hunebelle
  • Writers
    • Jean Bruce
    • Renzo Cerrato
    • Jean-Pierre Desagnat
  • Stars
    • John Gavin
    • Margaret Lee
    • Curd Jürgens
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    368
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Renzo Cerrato
      • Jean-Pierre Desagnat
      • André Hunebelle
    • Writers
      • Jean Bruce
      • Renzo Cerrato
      • Jean-Pierre Desagnat
    • Stars
      • John Gavin
      • Margaret Lee
      • Curd Jürgens
    • 13User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos87

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    Top cast19

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    John Gavin
    John Gavin
    • Hubert Bonisseur de La Bath, alias OSS 117
    Margaret Lee
    Margaret Lee
    • Aïcha Melik
    Curd Jürgens
    Curd Jürgens
    • Il Maggiore
    Luciana Paluzzi
    Luciana Paluzzi
    • Maud
    Robert Hossein
    Robert Hossein
    • Dr. J. Ben Saadi
    Rosalba Neri
    Rosalba Neri
    • Conchita Esteban
    George Eastman
    George Eastman
    • Karas
    Guido Alberti
    • Faruk Melik
    Piero Lulli
    • Heindrich van Dyck
    Renato Baldini
    Renato Baldini
    • MacLeod
    Luciano Bonanni
    • Un poliziotto
    Romano Moschini
    Raf Baldassarre
    Raf Baldassarre
    Seyna Seyn
    Seyna Seyn
    • La réceptionniste
    Giovanni Pallavicino
    Roberto Messina
    Emilio Messina
    Emilio Messina
    Ragni Malcolmsson
    • Pretty girl
    • Directors
      • Renzo Cerrato
      • Jean-Pierre Desagnat
      • André Hunebelle
    • Writers
      • Jean Bruce
      • Renzo Cerrato
      • Jean-Pierre Desagnat
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    5.3368
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    Featured reviews

    MegaSuperstar

    B-Bond à l'Européenne

    James Bond style film made in Europe -that is professionally made but without the Hollywood touch that gave James Bond series or -in a minor way- Matt Helm ones their lust. Maybe John Gavin was not the best choice for the role -even him seems to think he is miscast- and his acting is unconvincing. Curd Jürgens is totally wasted as the villain with only a couple of scenes and not much to do with them. Margaret Lee with her limited acting abilities does not convince as the lady in distress. The film also lacks of some humoresque touches and when -scarcely- they do appear seem to be out of place.Fight scenes are rather bad (maybe with the exception of the last one on the mansion roof). They could have got the most out of the poison/antidot matter: it is supposed that a so experienced secret agent would surely expect some trick about it and consequently had a better plan far than expecting a last minute antidot that could finally not be such so. Plot is rather poor and characters too plain to succeed. Maybe a better script and dialogues and a more talented director's work would have made a better film but that's something we will never know. By the way, the blu ray edition is really nice: bright colors emphasizing fab. locations and high definition image that sometimes give the impresion of watching a 3D movie. The OSS117 series had two enjoyable same style remake versions in 2006 (OSS117: Le Caire nid d'espions) & 2009( OSS117: Rio ne répond plus), both directed by Michel Hazanavizius with Jean DuJardin as Hubert Bonisseur de La Bath -same team that did The Artist.
    7ZeddaZogenau

    French EuroSpy Movie with John GAVIN, Luciana PALUZZI and Curd JÜRGENS

    The "French James Bond" OSS 117 and his fifth mission - this time with John Gavin

    In the EuroSpy film series about OSS 117 released by the French mini-major GAUMONT, the main actors took the lead. After Kerwin Mathews and Frederick Stafford, Hollywood smartie John Gavin (Psycho) was already the third OSS 117. The Golden Globe winner (Time to Live, Time to Die) did so well that he was seriously considered James Bond -The successor to George Lazenby, who left the company, was traded. The attractive John Gavin would also have cut a good figure as 007. Under the direction of experienced director Andre Hunebelle, filming took place in Rome (gorgeous images of the Eternal City) and Tunisia.

    This time OSS 117 has to deal with a gang that hires out hitmen and is called "The Organization". To get in there, the super agent with a freshly operated face (that's how the change in actors is explained in the film) pretends to be a bad bank robber who likes to shoot tons of people. This brings him to the attention of the organization and quickly frees him from the clutches of the police, who were able to arrest him after an hour with the lovely dancer Conchita Esteban (Rosalba Neri). He is prepared for his work in a strange villa. The beautiful doctor Maud (Bond villain Luciana Paluzzi) is responsible for his physical needs, including in bed, of course! There (in the villa, not in bed!) he also gets to know the boss of the gang, called the Major (strangely slippery: Curd Jürgens), and his tall assistant Karas (George Eastman). Soon we're off to the Orient for our first job, which is fraught with all sorts of complications. Love is once again not neglected (Margaret Lee as Aicha), but there is also a really nasty colleague (Robert Hossein as Dr. Saadi) of the cuddly Maud. Will OSS 117 succeed in preventing the planned assassination attempt on the scientist van Dyck? Will the Major's gang of criminals be defeated?

    Beautiful ladies who tie the attractive hero to the bed in rows, lively fistfights (including with George Eastman), beautiful pictures and a humorous plot - you can't expect more from a EuroSpy classic. 316,000 tickets were still sold in West German cinemas; the heyday for this type of film was certainly over. This film is still fun to watch in the home theater today.
    6gridoon2025

    Above-average spy thriller

    This is one of the later entries in the Eurospy, and more specifically in the OSS 117, cycle, and it's probably one of the better ones as well. The two main reasons for that are: 1) The cast. John Gavin is one of the most capable "pseudo-Bonds" of the era, with a good comic flair; you can see why he actually came very close to being the REAL Bond once, in 1971, before Sean Connery changed his mind and came back for "Diamonds Are Forever", Margaret Lee is playfully attractive, Curt Jurgens makes a suitable villain (just like he would a decade later in "The Spy Who Loved Me"), Robert Hossein plays another soft-spoken evil doctor (just like he did in "OSS 117: Panic In Bangkok"), and even the luscious Luciana Paluzzi of "Thunderball" fame is around, though only for about 10 minutes and then she vanishes. 2) Unlike many Eurospy films, this one is not driven by fight scenes at every opportunity. There are some fights, to be sure, and they're pretty good, but most of the time the film is just trying to tell a story. Admittedly the climactic fall of the criminal "Organization" should have been more spectacular - maybe the producers ran out of budget by that point? **1/2 out of 4.
    4JohnSeal

    So so spy thriller

    James Bond rip-offs were all the rage in mid-60s cinema, and here's a fairly good one. John Gavin is OSS 117, America's greatest secret agent, who must foil the attempted assassination of a peace broker. Apparently, 'billions' of dollars of arms sales are at risk, even though the warring 'tribes' apparently consist of about two dozen besworded Arabs. Nonetheless, Gavin is off on a mid-East jaunt, where he is pitted against...not much in the way of villains, really. He meets the beautiful daughter of a local mucky-muck, played by a most attractive Margaret Lee, and in between wooing her and killing the odd bad guy he manages to save the day.

    This review is based on the Media Home Entertainment video of almost 20 years ago, and as would be expected, the print quality is fair to poor. Obvious screen compression ruins a number of shots and we can only look forward to the day when Anchor Bay chooses to restore this film to all its widescreen splendour.
    6kevinolzak

    John Gavin one and done as OSS 117

    1968's French-Italian "OSS 117 Double Agent" aka "OSS 117 Murder for Sale" (Pas de Roses pour OSS 117 or No Roses for OSS 117) was the 5th entry in the 60s OSS series, director Andre Hunebelle at the helm for the 4th time, location shooting in Rome and Tunisia. The first two actors cast as Hubert Bonisseur de La Bath aka OSS 117, Kerwin Mathews and Frederick Stafford, both played the role twice, the latter unavailable as he was busy filming Alfred Hitchcock's "Topaz." By sheer coincidence, the one chosen to replace Stafford for this lone entry was "Psycho" leading man John Gavin, just good enough to catch the attention of producer Albert Broccoli until Sean Connery returned to the 007 fold for "Diamonds Are Forever." Perhaps the finest cast assembled for any OSS title begins with luscious Luciana Paluzzi, only three years removed from the biggest Bond blockbuster, "Thunderball," Curt Jurgens still a decade away from Roger Moore's "The Spy Who Loved Me," add Margaret Lee as leading lady and a regrettably brief naked cameo from Rosalba Neri for additional eye candy, plus the welcome return of villainous Robert Hossein (from "Shadow of Evil"), and there are the makings of a film almost as good as Stafford's "OSS 117 Mission for a Killer." Hubert impersonates a notorious assassin to infiltrate 'The Organization,' keeping their paid killers in line via a slow acting poison, for without the antidote administered by Hossein's cold hearted Dr. Saadi they are certain to perish. Curt Jurgens is in familiar form as the criminal mastermind known as 'The Major,' George Eastman his main henchman, assisted by beautiful doctor Luciana Paluzzi, who sadly vanishes from the picture after the phony 'vaccine.' Hubert's assignment is to cause a rift between warring tribes eager to sign a peace treaty, foiling the plot by kidnapping the intended victim and replacing his 'corpse' prior to the fatal explosion, Margaret Lee a delightful love interest and damsel in distress (apparently on loan from Harry Alan Towers). The plot tends to move in fits and starts, one impressive early scene with Hubert forced to fight while preserving his unclothed modesty, the climactic rooftop skirmish falling short much like its wicked protagonist (a soft jazzy music score is no help either). This 60s series could not lay claim to be classics but they weren't cheap ripoffs either, just diverting enough to offer solid fare for undiscriminating viewers.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      John Gavin played secret agent OSS 117 in this Eurospy picture and when it came to re-cast the character of James Bond after George Lazenby's departure from the part after Au service secret de Sa Majesté (1969), Gavin initially won the role of James Bond to first appear in Les diamants sont éternels (1971). At the last minute Sean Connery agreed to return as Bond for the sixth time in a two-picture deal and at an astronomical salary for the time. Producer Albert R. Broccoli insisted that Gavin be paid the full salary called for in his contract.
    • Alternate versions
      The film has an Italian and a French versions by two directors, working under the supervision of Andre Hunebelle.
    • Connections
      Followed by OSS 117 prend des vacances (1970)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 28, 1968 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • French
      • English
    • Also known as
      • OSS 117 Murder for Sale
    • Filming locations
      • Villa Parisi, Frascati, Rome, Lazio, Italy(The villa of Maggiore)
    • Production companies
      • Da.Ma. Cinematografica
      • Production Artistique et Cinématographique (PAC)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 45m(105 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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