Home > Action >

OSS 117: Panic in Bangkok

Watch on
View All Sources

OSS 117: Panic in Bangkok (1966)

January. 01,1966
|
5.4
|
NR
| Action Crime
Watch on
View All Sources

A secret agent sets out to stop an evil scientist who is about to unleash on the world a virulent biological strain he has developed during experiments on rats.

...

Watch Trailer

Free Trial Channels

AD
Show More

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

Supelice
1966/01/01

Dreadfully Boring

More
Dynamixor
1966/01/02

The performances transcend the film's tropes, grounding it in characters that feel more complete than this subgenre often produces.

More
Janae Milner
1966/01/03

Easily the biggest piece of Right wing non sense propaganda I ever saw.

More
Bob
1966/01/04

This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.

More
Wizard-8
1966/01/05

After the 1963 French secret agent movie "OSS 117 Is Unleashed" became a world wide hit, several follow-ups were churned out in the next few years, this movie being the first of them. In some aspects, this first sequel is an improvement over the original. It clearly had a bigger budget, which gives the movie some pleasant eye candy with color photography, on location filming in Thailand, and better set design. However, the good look of the movie doesn't compensate for the fact that the movie is pretty boring for the most part. When it comes to action, the movie is really lacking; for example, there is only ONE scene that can be safely labelled an action scene in the first hour of the movie. And neither this action scene or the few others in the movie really stir the blood and get the audience excited. A bigger problem is that the movie is directed in a manner that generates absolutely no tension, mystery, or suspense; spying has never been so routine and dull, and you'll never feel that anyone is in any danger. It doesn't help that at nearly two hours in length, the movie is too long for its own good. Hopefully I will find the next entries in this movie series to be much better.

More
dbdumonteil
1966/01/06

Based on Jean Bruce 's "Lila De Calcutta" ,which ,as the title reads ,took place in India ,the action was transposed to Thailand whilst keeping the subject :plague bacillus injected by "the chosen ones " to eliminate the shameful human race who destroys the world with their atomic bomb.After exploiting the swashbucklers,in the wake of James Bond ,Hunebelle made his first (black and white) OSS 117 in 1963 ("OSS 117 Se Déchaine ",also starring Matthews as the lead).For his second effort in the field ,Prodis productions granted color , composer Michel Magne - less inspired than in the Angelique saga- and filming on location.In fact ,only 25% of the film was filmed in Thailand.Kerwin Matthews and Pier Angeli were able to combine business with pleasure ,but Robert Hossein and Dominique Wilms never left Paris where they did all their scenes in Boulogne-Billancourt studios.This is the kind of movie in which the scenery ,at a time when people would not travel much, is the real star.Robert Hossein (who would also play a doctor in Hunebelle ' s last attempt "Pas De Roses Pour OSS 117"(1968)) gives a restrained performance as the villain doctor Sinn (sic),the best thing to do when a clever actor has to work with ,say, very average material.Kerwin Matthews lacks Connery's charisma and humor and Pier Angeli is pretty but bland .Having said that,the best OSS 117 Hunebelle made was certainly his third one "Furia A Bahia Pour OSS 117",(1965)starring Frederick Stafford and Mylene Demongeot.

More
vjetorix
1966/01/07

Despite the bad rap this OSS 117 adventure has taken over the years, a recent reevaluation suggests that kinder words be spoken about it. The U.S. re-titling, Shadow of Evil, turns out to be quite appropriate for a low-key adventure that relies more on atmosphere than action. This is not to say that the film is a resounding success but neither is it one of the genre entries that should be passed by entirely.Director Andre Hunebelle, credited on this print as Cyril Grize, made four OSS 117 movies in the sixties of which this is the second. One might argue that Hunebelle's familiarity with the character of Hubert Bonnisseur de la Bath aka OSS 117, lead to his experimenting with different approaches in filming his adventures.Hunebelle takes a noir approach, at least visually, to large sections of the film. Much of the action takes place at night with plenty of shadows in which our characters can hover about. Contrary to what the film's detractors say, this is a good looking film even if experienced as a bad VHS dupe. The score by Michel Magne, credited here as Garry Sherman, uses eastern influences to good effect in creating soundscapes rather than themes, an unusual approach for the genre.Shadow of Evil is not a failure but neither will it land at the top of most people's list. Make up your own mind.

More
sundar-2
1966/01/08

Jean Bruce's Hubert Bonnisseur le Bath was France's answer to James Bond. Like Ian Fleming, Jean Bruce became rich thanks to his best-selling novels featuring OSS 117, i.e., Hubert Bath. Despite the French name inherited from his Gallic ancestors, Hubert Bath is an American who is a secret agent for the OSS, the predecessor of the CIA. Jean Bruce's books were turned into movies. Apparently popular in France at that time, they never found an international audience. Watching "Banco a Bangkok pour OSS 117" (English title: Panic in Bangkok), one understands why. The production values are quite bad. OSS 117 seems to be a carbon copy of James Bond. He is irresistible to women; he is good at fisticuffs, etc, etc. Kerwin Mathews who plays the lead role tries to be suave. Of course, he does not have Sean Connery's charisma or presence. The story is formulaic though it anticipates Moonraker, the James Bond flick. An evil Indian doctor, Dr.Guna Sinn (the name does not sound Indian) working in Thailand has developed a biological weapon that will reduce the world's population in accordance with his eugenicist beliefs. OSS 117 has to stop him with the help of a Thai sidekick and seduce the Indian doctor's sister Lila while he is at it.I watched this movie as a boy many years ago. At that time, it seemed that the acting was adequate. I am sure that I won't think so now. Jean Bruce's books which have been translated into English were far superior to the OSS 117 flicks. Quite the opposite of Ian Fleming, whose books can't hold a candle to the films they engendered. Indeed Jean Bruce was a better writer than Ian Fleming. Read the OSS 117 books. Avoid the movies.(Reviewed by Sundar Narayan)

More

Watch Now Online

Prime VideoWatch Now