|
Sue Lloyd | Jean Courtney | |
Michael Caine | Harry Palmer | |
Nigel Green | Major Dalby | |
Guy Doleman | Colonel Ross | |
Gordon Jackson | Carswell | |
Aubrey Richards | Dr. Radcliffe | |
Frank Gatliff | Bluejay | |
Thomas Baptiste | Barney | |
Oliver MacGreevy | Housemartin | |
Freda Bamford | Alice | |
Pauline Winter | Charlady | |
Anthony Blackshaw | Edwards | |
Barry Raymond | Gray | |
David Glover | Chilcott-Oakes | |
Stanley Meadows | Inspector Keightley |
Director |
|
||
Producer | Harry Saltzman
Charles D. Kasher Ronald Kinnoch |
||
Writer | Bill Canaway
James Doran Len Deighton |
||
Cinematography | Otto Heller
|
||
Musician | John Barry
|
|
Top Secret From the producer of Goldfinger comes a film widely recognized as one of the greatest spy thriller of all time. The Ipcress file is the first film in the series of Harry Palmer mysteries, based on the bestseller by Len Deighton, that made Michael Caine a star. It is the height of the cold war, and ex-thief Harry Palmer (Michael Caine), now reluctantly working as a secret agent, has been called in to investigate a strange occurrence among a number of leading scientists. It seems the scientists have been kidnapped, but reappear only days after the kidnapping, brainwashed and useless. During the course of the investigation, a tape is uncovered with the word “Ipcress” on it. |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Features
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||