Funeral in Berlin (film)
Funeral in Berlin | |
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Directed by | Guy Hamilton |
Screenplay by | Evan Jones |
Based on | Funeral in Berlin by Len Deighton |
Produced by | Charles D. Kasher |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Otto Heller |
Edited by | John Bloom |
Music by | Konrad Elfers |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 102 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Funeral in Berlin is a 1966 British spy film directed by Guy Hamilton and based on the 1964 novel of the same name by Len Deighton. It is the second of three 1960s films starring Michael Caine as the character Harry Palmer that followed the characters from the initial film, The Ipcress File (1965). The third film was Billion Dollar Brain (1967).
Plot
[edit]British secret agent Harry Palmer is sent to Berlin by his superior Colonel Ross to arrange the defection of Colonel Stok, a prominent Soviet intelligence officer. Palmer is sceptical but links up with Johnny Vulkan, an old German friend and former criminal associate, who now runs the Berlin station for British intelligence.
Palmer makes a rendezvous with Stok in the Soviet zone of the divided city, finding him eccentric and likeable. Stok asks for the defection to be managed by Otto Kreutzmann, a West German criminal who has organised a number of recent escapes. When Palmer returns to the western sector he meets Samantha Steel, a model. He spends the night with her, but is suspicious of her forward manner. The next day he has his police contacts establish her identity and arranges for a criminal to burgle her apartment, where several different false passports are discovered.
Meanwhile, Palmer arranges a deal with Kreutzmann to bring Stok across the wall in return for £20,000 and a set of genuine documents meeting certain specifications. Palmer then returns to London to report. Ross is convinced that Stok's defection is genuine and dismisses Palmer's suspicions that Samantha Steel was a spy. Ross gives full authorisation for Palmer to return to Berlin to complete the deal; a man at Intelligence headquarters named Hallam provides the money and the documents, which are in the name of Paul Louis Broum.
The plan devised by Kreutzmann is to arrange a burial and bring the Colonel across the border in a coffin. When Palmer again meets Samantha, she admits that she is a Mossad spy and that she is in Berlin to hunt down Paul Louis Broum – a war criminal, now operating under an alias, who stole millions of pounds of Jewish gold during the Second World War.
Kreutzmann goes over to the East to supervise the important defection personally. Palmer waits with Kreutzmann's henchman on the western side of the border, where the coffin is delivered to an abandoned warehouse. When it is opened, however, Palmer finds Kreutzmann's dead body. Vulkan suddenly knocks Palmer unconscious and takes the Broum documents, but they are stolen in turn by Samantha and two other Israeli agents.
When Palmer informs Colonel Ross about the Broum documents, he is told that towards the end of the war, Broum murdered a resistance fighter called Johnny Vulkan at a concentration camp and assumed his identity. Ross got hold of the documents and used them to blackmail Broum into working for him. He now orders Palmer to kill Broum, but Palmer allows him to get away instead. Palmer later meets Stok, who is in West Berlin for a routine meeting with his Western counterparts. The Russian confirms that his supposed defection was just a trap to get rid of Kreutzmann. He even jokes that if Palmer ever wishes to defect to the East, he should ask Vulkan, who "knows the way".
Meanwhile, the supposed Vulkan goes to Samantha's flat, murders an Israeli agent, and gets the documents back; Palmer is blamed for this. Broum meets with Hallam, who realises Palmer had substituted forgeries for the documents. Hallam goes to Palmer, claiming he was sent by Ross to get the real documents back. Palmer forces him to admit that he is in league with Broum to get them out of London and that they now intend to use them in order to claim the Nazi loot that Broum deposited in a Swiss bank.
Palmer makes Hallam go with him to a quiet part of the Berlin Wall through which Broum and Hallam intend to slip into the East, but Broum kills Hallam and is subsequently mistaken for Palmer and killed by Israeli agents. Palmer then gives the Israelis the documents.
Back in London, Ross is satisfied that the dead "Vulkan" will be taken for another martyr shot while escaping to the West. Offered a bonus for his work, Palmer refuses and leaves.
Cast
[edit]- Michael Caine as Harry Palmer
- Paul Hubschmid as Johnny Vulkan/Paul Louis Broum
- Oskar Homolka as Colonel Stok
- Eva Renzi as Samantha Steel. The role was originally assigned to Anjanette Comer, but she had to be replaced due to illness. Renzi's voice is not heard in the film, as her part is dubbed.
- Guy Doleman as Colonel Ross
- Hugh Burden as Hallam
- Heinz Schubert as Aaron Levine
- Wolfgang Völz as Werner
- Thomas Holtzmann as Reinhardt
- Sarah Brackett as Babcock
- Günter Meisner as Otto Kreutzman
- Herbert Fux as Artur
- Rainer Brandt as Benjamin
- Rachel Gurney as Mrs. Ross
- John Abineri as Otto Rukel
- Marthe Keller as Brigit
- David Glover as Chico
Production
[edit]In a short documentary film entitled "Man at the Wall: The Making of Funeral in Berlin" produced by Paramount Pictures about the production of the movie, Michael Caine says that director Guy Hamilton – who directed Goldfinger and three later James Bond features – would make on-set improvisations to the script based on his own personal experiences working for British military intelligence during World War II.video
Home media
[edit]Funeral in Berlin was released as a Region 1 DVD on 14 August 2001. It was also released on Blu-ray on 26 May 2020.
External links
[edit]- 1966 films
- 1960s spy thriller films
- British sequel films
- British spy thriller films
- Films set in Berlin
- Films about the Berlin Wall
- Cold War spy films
- Films based on British novels
- Films based on works by Len Deighton
- Films directed by Guy Hamilton
- Films shot at Pinewood Studios
- Films produced by Harry Saltzman
- Films set in East Germany
- Films set in West Germany
- Films about the Mossad
- Paramount Pictures films
- 1960s English-language films
- 1960s British films
- English-language spy thriller films