The Defector (film)

The Defector
Directed by Raoul Lévy
Produced by Raoul Lévy
Conrad von Molo
Written by Raoul Lévy
Robert Guenette
Montgomery Clift[n 1]
Peter Francke[n 1] [1]
Starring Montgomery Clift
Hardy Krüger
Roddy McDowall
Music by Serge Gainsbourg
Cinematography Raoul Coutard
Edited by Roger Dwyre
Albert Jurgenson
Distributed by Gaumont S.A.B.
Seven Arts Productions
Release dates
20 Oct 1966 (W. Germany)
16 Nov 1966 (USA)
24 Nov 1967 (Sweden)
17 May 1968 (Finland)
Running time
106 minutes
Country France
West Germany
Language English

The Defector is a 1966 thriller film, starring Montgomery Clift, Roddy McDowall and Macha Meril. It was directed by Belgian director/producer Raoul Lévy and based on the 1965 novel L'espion by Paul Thomas.

Plot

Professor Bower, an American physicist, is effectively blackmailed by a shady CIA agent named Adams to help the CIA obtain secret microfilm from a defecting Russian scientist. The reluctant Bower travels to East Germany undercover as an antiques collector where he encounters Heinzmann, an East German fellow physicist, who is also a secret agent. Heinzmann is aware of Bower's meeting with Adams and his intention to steal the microfilm, but their mutual respect for one another's tactics complicate the proceedings.

Cast

Notes

This was Clift's last film, and he only agreed to star in it so he could prepare himself for his next role in the 1967 film Reflections in a Golden Eye (the role went to actor Marlon Brando). Although obviously very ill (he died less than three months after most of the shooting was completed), he still managed to give a convincing performance in what has been termed a very moody and sombre film. This characterization is in stark contrast to the exuberance displayed by his love interest, who was played by Meril, an obviously more youthful woman.

On December 31, 1966, the director Lévy (1922-1966) committed suicide by shooting himself in the chest. Consequently, although the film was released before Levy's death, it was a posthumous showing for both its director and lead actor.

Critics' response

Critics were generally favorable to the film, but some were more specific, as Bosley Crowther of the New York Times said, "Mr. Clift is apt in this his last film — lonely, bewildered, courageous - it's just too bad it doesn't quite ring the bell."[2]

Notes

  1. 1 2 Uncredited.

References

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