A British Intelligence Agent must track down a fellow spy suspected of being a double agent.A British Intelligence Agent must track down a fellow spy suspected of being a double agent.A British Intelligence Agent must track down a fellow spy suspected of being a double agent.
Lewis Alexander
- Country House Party Guest
- (uncredited)
Jack Arrow
- Restaurant Patron
- (uncredited)
Jimmy Charters
- Pub Customer
- (uncredited)
Peter Evans
- Restaurant Patron
- (uncredited)
Stefan Gryff
- Shay cell group surrvior
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
very unremarkable B movie
Unremarkable B British movie. I don't know if it is the director or the acting, but there is no energy in it. It is watchable (once). You can see a glimmer of the charisma Joan Collins can bring to a nighttime soap opera. The blonde girl was a bit whiny for my taste. The dresses for she and Joan Collins were outstanding. I saw a blue number I wouldn't mind wearing myself. The movie had potential, if in the right hands. It was relatively painless, but kind of flat. You didn't feel you were at the Parthenon even though they splurged on location shooting. The movie cover looks far more exciting than the movie itself. There were areas where there should have been music to set the mood, but there was silence. In the proper hands this movie could have been a classic.
Ho Hum
Espionage dramas which depend on bureaucratic characters engaged in prolonged conversations rarely make good movies and this is no exception. It's competent but never sparks any real interest and the plot seems a bit muddled.
There are a number of good names in the cast and they do the best they can with pedestrian material. Top billing goes to George Peppard who plays an Englishman but his American accent is explained by saying that he grew up in the United States. He's involved, in a vaguely romantic way, with two different women -- Joan Collins and Judy Geeson -- but not much comes of this. The ads hint at some hot bedroom action between Peppard and Collins but most of these scenes must have been left on the cutting room floor.
Location work in Greece and Istanbul is, like the rest of the movie, strictly routine.
There are a number of good names in the cast and they do the best they can with pedestrian material. Top billing goes to George Peppard who plays an Englishman but his American accent is explained by saying that he grew up in the United States. He's involved, in a vaguely romantic way, with two different women -- Joan Collins and Judy Geeson -- but not much comes of this. The ads hint at some hot bedroom action between Peppard and Collins but most of these scenes must have been left on the cutting room floor.
Location work in Greece and Istanbul is, like the rest of the movie, strictly routine.
Classic but overlooked espionage film
Deep in plot factors and to some perhaps slow in development (but layered spy films need to "develop" to set the story in play). But steeped in cold war motivations and sensibilities of the time. Peppard is driven to do his job well, with concern for protecting those things and people he values. Twists and turns confront him, but he resolves the factors. But then there is that final and jaw-dropping question which is the final line of the film!
His former controller offers him a position of command within the British espionage structure from which George Peppard has left. Disgusted with the way in which the prior situation was handled (set up by his overseers) Peppard might be presumed to say NO, but my presumption is that the answer would have been YES.
Watch the film and screw your head on tight, no exits to bathroom without pause button pushed, this is not a trivial action film.
His former controller offers him a position of command within the British espionage structure from which George Peppard has left. Disgusted with the way in which the prior situation was handled (set up by his overseers) Peppard might be presumed to say NO, but my presumption is that the answer would have been YES.
Watch the film and screw your head on tight, no exits to bathroom without pause button pushed, this is not a trivial action film.
Interesting, dour spy thriller set largely in post-swinging London. Nothing like as violent as the title suggests. Peppard is excellent.
A dour little spy thriller which acts as a corrective to the James Bond school of spy movies, and benefits from an excellent performance by George Peppard as an exhausted, stressed out Ango-US agent searching for a mole in British Intelligence (just the one?). The atmosphere of post-swinging London is interesting from a modern standpoint, as is the unusual flashback plot structure.
Trivia for Gerry Anderson fans: Both Paul Maxwell (the voice of Steve Zodiac in Fireball XL5) and Peter Dyneley (the voice of Jeff Tracy in Thunderbirds) have quite major roles in The Executioner.
Trivia for Gerry Anderson fans: Both Paul Maxwell (the voice of Steve Zodiac in Fireball XL5) and Peter Dyneley (the voice of Jeff Tracy in Thunderbirds) have quite major roles in The Executioner.
A complex and somewhat slow Euro-spy movie with a great British cast.
Results when British Intelligence Agent John Shay (George Peppard) suspects Adam Booth (Keith Michell), a colleague, of being a double-agent. So the British spy must prove that his former colleague is a double agent. Although Shay's superiors (Nigel Patrick, Charles Gray) warn him against an investigation, he travels to Istambul (Turkey), Athens (Greece) and Corfu (Greece) in order to check out his suspicions. There, Shay becomes involved with the beautiful Sarah (Dame Joan Collins), who was once his lover, and is now Booth's wife. Soon after, Shay realizes that he is being used as a Communist pawn, and has fallen into grave danger. Every day he lives, somebody else dies!
An exciting espionage and spy thriller with action , suspense , intriguing events twits and turns. A passable thriller with explosive international intrigue in which elements of backstabbing, betrayal and espionage abound. George Peppard gives a passable acting as a British Intelligence Agent must track down a fellow spy suspected of being a double agent. In this film, a great British cast stands out, made up of the best performers of that country at the time, just as Joan Collins, Judy Geeson, Charles Gray, Nigel Patrick, Keith Michell, George Baker, Alexander Scourby, Peter Bull, while Peppard is the only North American actor.
It displays a colorful and brilliant cinematography by Denys Coop. Shot in various sightseeing locations in Corfu, Greece Villa Sylva, Kanoni, Corfu, Greece, Athens, Greece, Trafalgar Square, St James's, London. Likewise, a tense and suspenseful musical score by Ron Goddwin. The motion picture was professionally directed by Sam Wanamaker. He was a notorious secondary actor and occassionally director as cinema as TV, such as: Catlow, Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger, The legend of Custer ,The File of the Golden Goose, The killing of Randy Webster, The Champions, Cimarron , Custer Hawk, Columbo . Rating: 5.5/10. Average but acceptable.
An exciting espionage and spy thriller with action , suspense , intriguing events twits and turns. A passable thriller with explosive international intrigue in which elements of backstabbing, betrayal and espionage abound. George Peppard gives a passable acting as a British Intelligence Agent must track down a fellow spy suspected of being a double agent. In this film, a great British cast stands out, made up of the best performers of that country at the time, just as Joan Collins, Judy Geeson, Charles Gray, Nigel Patrick, Keith Michell, George Baker, Alexander Scourby, Peter Bull, while Peppard is the only North American actor.
It displays a colorful and brilliant cinematography by Denys Coop. Shot in various sightseeing locations in Corfu, Greece Villa Sylva, Kanoni, Corfu, Greece, Athens, Greece, Trafalgar Square, St James's, London. Likewise, a tense and suspenseful musical score by Ron Goddwin. The motion picture was professionally directed by Sam Wanamaker. He was a notorious secondary actor and occassionally director as cinema as TV, such as: Catlow, Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger, The legend of Custer ,The File of the Golden Goose, The killing of Randy Webster, The Champions, Cimarron , Custer Hawk, Columbo . Rating: 5.5/10. Average but acceptable.
Did you know
- TriviaOne of seven espionage movies that Charles Gray made around the mid to late 60s and early 70s, the others being Masquerade (1965), You Only Live Twice (1967) , The Man Outside (1967), Diamonds Are Forever (1971), The File of the Golden Goose (1969), and When Eight Bells Toll (1971), (Gray does not appear in the last-named of these films, but does speak on the soundtrack, dubbing all the lines for Jack Hawkins).
- GoofsAt the start of the film one of the dead victims lying by the empty swimming pool is startled and moves when the car explodes, with his head and arm moving.
- Crazy creditsDuring the closing credits, in the background is the final scene showing a tower with a light that rotates, shining alternately green and white light. The credits change colors repeatedly as if the tower light is shining on them.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Hilariously Awful Movie Fights (2016)
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Der Vollstrecker
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 47m(107 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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