The Intelligence Men

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The Intelligence Men
File:The Intelligence Men.jpg
DVD cover
Directed byRobert Asher
Written byDick Hills and Sid Green
StarringEric Morecambe
Ernie Wise
William Franklyn
April Olrich
CinematographyJack Asher
Edited byGerry Hambling
Music byPhilip Green
Distributed byRank (UK)
Walter Reade Organization (US)
Release date
  • 1965 (1965)
Running time
104 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

The Intelligence Men is a 1965 comedy film starring the British comic duo Eric Morecambe and Ernie Wise. In the US, it was retitled Spylarks.[1] It is subtitled "M.I.5 plus 2 equals 0".

The film was successful enough to enable Morecambe and Wise to make two further films, That Riviera Touch and The Magnificent Two.

Plot

Eric (Eric Morecambe), in his London coffee bar, is happily serving black coffee to a sinister-looking man (Tutte Lemkow) when the man tries to persuade him to remember a tune. Unfortunately, Eric is tone-deaf. Ernie Sage (Ernie Wise) enters the coffee bar and Eric tries to get him to identify the tune, without much success. Eventually, Sage realises that this could be something to do with a forthcoming visit by a Russian trade delegation and an assassination attempt by an organisation known as "SCHLECHT"[2] to sabotage this mission.

He reports this to his superiors in Military Intelligence (although he is little more than an office-boy), and they reluctantly agree that only Eric, having heard the tune, will be able to lead them to the centre of the plot. Eric is persuaded to pose as a British agent – the recently deceased Major Cavendish – who had managed to infiltrate SCHLECHT. After a few set-piece comedy interludes, the tune is identified and the plot switches to a performance of Swan Lake at the projected venue for the assassination, where the star Russian ballerina Madame Petrovna (April Olrich) is in grave danger.

This section provides some of the funniest moments of the film: for example, Eric, masquerading as a Russian, adopts a broad Scottish highland accent; and during the ballet performance itself, Eric and Ernie, dressed in Egyptian costumes, get mixed up in the "Dance of the Little Swans". Finally, however, the villain is unmasked and all ends happily.

Cast

Reception

Critic Leslie Halliwell awarded the film no stars, describing it as an "inept and rather embarrassing big-screen debut for two excellent television comedians".[3]

The film was one of the 12 most popular movies at the British box office in 1965.[4]

Notes

  1. ^ http://www.ebay.com/itm/SPYLARKS-Eric-Morecambe-Ernie-Wise-MI5-UK-SPY-COMEDY-Vintage-US-Movie-Flyer-/311389748652
  2. ^ this is German for "bad" or "evil", although there is little evidence of German involvement
  3. ^ Halliwell, Leslie (1997). Halliwell's Film and Video Guide. Harper Collins. p. 379. ISBN 0-00-638779-9.
  4. ^ "Most Popular Film Star." Times [London, England] 31 Dec. 1965: 13. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 11 July 2012.

External links