An advertising executive sets out to find a woman for a new advertising campaign. His only clue to the woman is a photograph, and the search leads him into bewildering political ploys and ma... Read allAn advertising executive sets out to find a woman for a new advertising campaign. His only clue to the woman is a photograph, and the search leads him into bewildering political ploys and mayhem.An advertising executive sets out to find a woman for a new advertising campaign. His only clue to the woman is a photograph, and the search leads him into bewildering political ploys and mayhem.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaCrossplot (1969) was made by several production personnel who had worked on Sir Roger Moore's The Saint (1962) television series.
- GoofsAfter learning that Tarquin (Alexis Kanner) is, in fact, an earl Gary Fenn (Roger Moore) addresses him as 'Your Grace.' That would be correct only if Tarquin were a Duke, which is very commonplace, either as a humouristic gag to the newly realized Earl, or ---- just a common mistake, and not really a goof (It just shows that Moore's character doe not care).
- ConnectionsReferenced in Amicalement Votre, Hollywood au service de sa majesté (2017)
Featured review
Gary Fenn (Roger Moore) is a talented advertising executive who finds the perfect target and calculates the events which mean that only one girl will be good enough for his bosses. Things go wrong, when Gary meets a Hungarian refugee, Marla Kugash (Claudie Lange), and he is innocently entangled in an assassination attempt. Gary meets her among the anti-war movement in the bohemian depths of swinging London. She is in the company of a young man, Tarquin (Alexis Kanner), who is extremely protective of her and overtly aggressive to Fenn. Marla accompanies Fenn to a photo-shoot; however, she admits she is in fear of her life, and seems unsettled by the presence of her aunt Jo Grinling (Martha Hyer). When the mysterious Hungarian model begins to work for Gary's modeling agency, and he becomes romantically involved with her, the most disastrous events precipitate. This playboy has killer instincts !. He had to stop a murder - and someone had to stop him!
British thriller full of political intrigue, blackmail, murder, action-packed, chases and professionally directed by Alvin Rakoff, a specialist in productions for the small screen. This film with a modest budget is part of the fashion of films inaugurated by Sean Connery's James Bond in the early 60s. That's why 'Crossplot' falls into the 'Euro-Spy' genre that was very common in that decade and early seventies. Roger Moore and Bernard Lee are ironically cast as an advert exec and his client in this comedy thriller, four years before they meet again as Bond and his boss. They starred together: Live and Let Die (1973), The Man with the Golden Gun (1974), The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), and Moonraker (1979); this Crossplot (1969) is the only theatrical movie, outside of the Bond movies, that the two acted in together. Starring Roger Moore gives a likeable acting as a London modeling agency executive who involuntarily becomes an instrument of a terrorist organization that intends a political assassination. This film was the first top-billed lead starring role in an English language production for Sir Roger Moore. While the beautiful Belgian Claude Lange -who worked a lot in the Italian cinema- plays a young Hungarian, an illegal refugee who becomes involved with Moore and eventually falls in love for him. There's also various familiar faces from British cinema, among which the following are worth highlighting: Francis Matthews, Dudley Sutton, Ursula Howells, Michael Culver, Gabrielle Drake, Bernard Lee and the Hammer queen Veronica Carlson. Apart from its tense finale and some action set pieces as the helicopter relentlessly chasing the protagonists, the script is commonplace. There's some nice Eastmancolor cinematography by cameraman Brendan J Stafford a veteran -and one time director- of movies whose career went back to the earliest days of British soound cinema.
The motion picture was mediocrely directed by Alvin Rakoff and nothing special. Alvin directed episode of The Saint, titled: ¨The Ex-King of Diamonds¨ (1969), that's why he was hired by the producers, as well as several production personnel who had worked on Sir Roger Moore's television series. Alvin is a craftsman filmmaker, he's Canadian director both cinema and television. He directed more than 100 television, film and stage productions. As well as a producer of much of his screen and stage work, Alvin is also a prolific writer of original screenplays, adaptations, theatre musicals, plays, and three novels. He made all kinds of genres in films as: ¨Dirty Tricks¨ , ¨Death Ship¨, ¨Hoffman¨, ¨The Comedy Man¨,¨ The anniversary¨, ¨Long Distance¨, ¨Room 43¨, ¨Crossplot¨, and several others. ¨Crossplot¨ (1969) rating: 4.5/10. An average film, only for the very fans of Roger Moore and Euro-spy genre.
British thriller full of political intrigue, blackmail, murder, action-packed, chases and professionally directed by Alvin Rakoff, a specialist in productions for the small screen. This film with a modest budget is part of the fashion of films inaugurated by Sean Connery's James Bond in the early 60s. That's why 'Crossplot' falls into the 'Euro-Spy' genre that was very common in that decade and early seventies. Roger Moore and Bernard Lee are ironically cast as an advert exec and his client in this comedy thriller, four years before they meet again as Bond and his boss. They starred together: Live and Let Die (1973), The Man with the Golden Gun (1974), The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), and Moonraker (1979); this Crossplot (1969) is the only theatrical movie, outside of the Bond movies, that the two acted in together. Starring Roger Moore gives a likeable acting as a London modeling agency executive who involuntarily becomes an instrument of a terrorist organization that intends a political assassination. This film was the first top-billed lead starring role in an English language production for Sir Roger Moore. While the beautiful Belgian Claude Lange -who worked a lot in the Italian cinema- plays a young Hungarian, an illegal refugee who becomes involved with Moore and eventually falls in love for him. There's also various familiar faces from British cinema, among which the following are worth highlighting: Francis Matthews, Dudley Sutton, Ursula Howells, Michael Culver, Gabrielle Drake, Bernard Lee and the Hammer queen Veronica Carlson. Apart from its tense finale and some action set pieces as the helicopter relentlessly chasing the protagonists, the script is commonplace. There's some nice Eastmancolor cinematography by cameraman Brendan J Stafford a veteran -and one time director- of movies whose career went back to the earliest days of British soound cinema.
The motion picture was mediocrely directed by Alvin Rakoff and nothing special. Alvin directed episode of The Saint, titled: ¨The Ex-King of Diamonds¨ (1969), that's why he was hired by the producers, as well as several production personnel who had worked on Sir Roger Moore's television series. Alvin is a craftsman filmmaker, he's Canadian director both cinema and television. He directed more than 100 television, film and stage productions. As well as a producer of much of his screen and stage work, Alvin is also a prolific writer of original screenplays, adaptations, theatre musicals, plays, and three novels. He made all kinds of genres in films as: ¨Dirty Tricks¨ , ¨Death Ship¨, ¨Hoffman¨, ¨The Comedy Man¨,¨ The anniversary¨, ¨Long Distance¨, ¨Room 43¨, ¨Crossplot¨, and several others. ¨Crossplot¨ (1969) rating: 4.5/10. An average film, only for the very fans of Roger Moore and Euro-spy genre.
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Im Fadenkreuz des Todes
- Filming locations
- Chelsea Embankment, Chelsea, London, England, UK(Marla's houseboat)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $1,000,000 (estimated)
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