The Dirty Game
The Dirty Game (German: Spione unter sich, French: Guerre secrète, Italian: La guerra segreta) is a 1965 anthology spy film starring Henry Fonda and Robert Ryan.[1] Robert Ryan as American General Bruce is the link between three different spy stories, helmed by different directors; original James Bond director Terence Young and co-director Werner Klingler for the sequences in Berlin, Christian-Jaque for the French sequences, and Carlo Lizzani for the Italian sequences.
| The Dirty Game | |
|---|---|
![]() American release film poster by Reynold Brown  | |
| Directed by | Christian-Jaque Werner Klingler Carlo Lizzani Terence Young  | 
| Written by | Philippe Bouvard Jacques Caborie Christian-Jaque Ennio De Concini Jo Eisinger Jacques Rémy  | 
| Produced by | Richard Hellman Eugène Tucherer  | 
| Starring | Henry Fonda | 
| Cinematography | Richard Angst | 
| Edited by | Franco Fraticelli | 
| Music by | Robert Mellin Gian Piero Reverberi  | 
Release date  | 
  | 
Running time  | 118 minutes | 
| Countries | United States West Germany France Italy  | 
| Language | English | 
Plot
    
A man tells of three different spy missions he took part in.
Cast
    
- Henry Fonda as Dimitri Koulov
 - Robert Ryan as General Bruce
 - Vittorio Gassman as Perego / Ferrari (French)
 - Annie Girardot as Suzette / Monique (French)
 - Bourvil as Lalande
 - Robert Hossein as Dupont
 - Peter van Eyck as Petchatkin
 - Maria Grazia Buccella as Natalia
 - Mario Adorf as Callaghan
 - Jacques Sernas as Sernas
 - Georges Marchal as Serge
 - Wolfgang Lukschy as Russian general
 - Louis Arbessier as Ivanov
 - Jackie Blanchot as Joe
 - Gabriel Gobin as O'Hara
 - Helmut Wildt as Perry
 - Violette Marceau as Lisa
 - Gabriella Giorgelli
 - Nino Crisman
 - Oreste Palella
 - Renato Terra
 - Klaus Kinski as Russian agent
 
References
    
- Hal Erickson (2011). "New York Times: The Dirty Game". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 20 May 2011. Retrieved 20 October 2008.
 
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