During a Caribbean holiday, a British civil servant finds herself falling in love with a Russian agent.

Judith Farrow

Feodor Sverdlov

Jack Loder

Fergus Stephenson

Margaret Stephenson

General Golitsyn

George MacLeod

Rachel Paterson

Colonel Moreau

Sandy Mitchell

Anna Skriabina

Dimitri Memenov

1st KGB Agent

Igor Kalinin

Embassy Section Head
From the very first few bars of the opening John Barry theme and the obvious Maurice Binder titles, you could be forgiven for thinking you were about to watch a "Bond" movie... However, what we are presented with is an overly-complicated espionage drama that could very easily trip over it's own feet. A charming and debonaire Omar Sharif is taking a holiday on Barbados where he makes friends with fellow holiday-maker Julie Andrews. As luck would have it - he is a top level Soviet spy and she works for a top UK Home Office civil servant. Anthony Quayle is the British Spymaster convinced he is trying to turn her; Oskar Homolka the Soviet general convinced the contrary in on the cards. Well, it takes quite a long 2 hours of this rather plodding romantic thriller for us to find out which... The last 15 minutes are quite unpredictable, and the cast are all proficient enough - especially a rather untypical role from Sylvia Syms - but the story is just over-padded-out, I'm afraid.
July 11, 1974

Judith Farrow

Feodor Sverdlov

Jack Loder

Fergus Stephenson

Margaret Stephenson

General Golitsyn

George MacLeod

Rachel Paterson

Colonel Moreau

Sandy Mitchell

Anna Skriabina

Dimitri Memenov

1st KGB Agent

Igor Kalinin

Embassy Section Head
From the very first few bars of the opening John Barry theme and the obvious Maurice Binder titles, you could be forgiven for thinking you were about to watch a "Bond" movie... However, what we are presented with is an overly-complicated espionage drama that could very easily trip over it's own feet. A charming and debonaire Omar Sharif is taking a holiday on Barbados where he makes friends with fellow holiday-maker Julie Andrews. As luck would have it - he is a top level Soviet spy and she works for a top UK Home Office civil servant. Anthony Quayle is the British Spymaster convinced he is trying to turn her; Oskar Homolka the Soviet general convinced the contrary in on the cards. Well, it takes quite a long 2 hours of this rather plodding romantic thriller for us to find out which... The last 15 minutes are quite unpredictable, and the cast are all proficient enough - especially a rather untypical role from Sylvia Syms - but the story is just over-padded-out, I'm afraid.
