Christopher Plummer Loots Safes and German Secrets in Triple Cross (1966)
Jewel thieving Christopher Plummer hires out to
the Germans, then sells espionage service to Allies for increased gain. One of
those rotter-take-all studies that so typified a 60's landscape. We're supposed
to admire Plummer's nihilist ways, and darned if we don't. Triple Cross has
odor of international co-producing, a United Nations of bloat, and maybe I
should thank Warner Archives for letting out the edited 126 minutes version
rather than 140 that were 1966-inflicted. Truculent spy Plummer moves among James
Bond cast refugees: Gert Frobe, Claudine Auger, and Anthony Dawson for three
--- they may have been reason some attended Triple Cross, especially as it
played between smashThunderballand much anticipatedYou Only Live Twice. The story
was based on truth: director Terence Young (another 007 alumnus) had worked
British Intelligence during WWII and knew real-life Eddie Chapman as amorally
sketched by Plummer here. There's a neat sense of war winding down in Triple
Cross, the fact of Chapman being a double agent not even mattering to German
high-commanders more interested in getting out from under defeat and reprisals.
Warner Archive's DVD is 1.85 and looks fine.
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