The Venetian Affair

1967 "Vaughn! Venice! Vooom!"
5.3| 1h29m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 18 January 1967 Released
Producted By: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

Former CIA man, Bill Fenner, now a downbeat, loner journalist, is sent to Venice to investigate the shock suicide bombing by an American diplomat at a peace conference.

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Reviews

Reptileenbu Did you people see the same film I saw?
Glucedee It's hard to see any effort in the film. There's no comedy to speak of, no real drama and, worst of all.
Sabah Hensley This is a dark and sometimes deeply uncomfortable drama
Deanna There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.
robert-temple-1 Any resemblance between this film and reality is purely coincidental. Much of it is shot in the attractive location of Venice, and whereas it is always nice to see canals, it is better still to see a film which is not complete nonsense. So many British films of the sixties were as empty and idiotic as this, and are best forgotten. Robert Vaughn is the star in this meaningless foray into ersatz intrigue. Various people are spies, one does not always know for whom, and they are plotting against each other and killing each other. Elke Sommer and Felicia Farr are the 'dames', with impossible sixties hair-does, false eyelashes longer than a tall tale, and puffy pouty lips (how did they do that before botox?). Sommer keeps telling Vaughn she loves him, quite suitable as she had once been married to him before leaving him without a word two years before, and despite being a Soviet spy, or whatever it is she really is, which is never made clear. Farr loves him. Everybody loves him except those who want to kill him. Why do they want to kill him exactly? He is supposed to work for a 'wire service' but never files a story. Then we are told he has been 'set up'. Then various people are told they can 'never escape from Venice'. Well, I felt I might never escape from that film. Mind control drugs are being used to turn people into 'robots' who will blow themselves up in diplomatic meetings and stop nuclear treaties from being signed. I think the bad guys got to the producer and director and screenwriter first, turned them into mental robots, and ordered them to make this film while in a mindless state. Product warning: May Damage Your Faith in the Cinema.
bkoganbing Two things are noteworthy about The Venetian Affair. One was that Robert Vaughn tried to break out into the big screen like such television contemporaries as James Garner and Steve McQueen without the success that they had. The second was that this was the last film Boris Karloff did that was not related to the horror genre.The film begins with a bang. An American diplomat is given a bomb and it detonates in a disarmament conference in Venice. No one can figure out why, but you can bet the USA does not want to be held responsible when forensics prove it was our guy who was the suicide bomber.Our man in Venice for the CIA Edward Asner sends for former agent Robert Vaughn who is now an alcoholic newspaperman working for a wire service. They suspect his ex-wife Elke Sommer has something to do with it and he's the best at finding her. She's also the reason that he's no longer with the CIA.Boris Karloff plays an elderly man of geopolitical mystery. He knows what's going on, but some sinister folks are controlling him.The Venetian Affair is a pedestrian affair moving at a paint drying pace and Vaughn after being television's urbane Napoleon Solo in The Man From UNCLE never quite got his teeth in this part. Karl Boehm is a good villain and only at the very end do we find out who he is working for. As for the reason why the diplomat did the foul deed, that you watch The Venetian Affair for.
JasparLamarCrabb NOT a compilation of MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E. episodes, THE VENETIAN AFFAIR is an exciting spy film starring Robert Vaughn and Karl Böhm. Vaughn is an ex-CIA agent lured back into work by cranky former superior Ed Asner. Trying to figure out why a US diplomat set off a bomb, blowing himself up along with 13 others, Vaughn runs into the likes of Elke Sommmer (as a shifty triple agent), Boris Karloff and Böhm, who plays a certifiable madman. The plot involves cold war espionage and mind-control and it's handled well by Jerry Thorpe, an episodic television director making a rare foray into features. The location work in Venice helps a lot. Vaughn is very Napoleon Solo-like (minus even a hint of humor) and he's well teamed with Roger C. Carmel as a paranoid co-worker. Lalo Schifrin provided the fun music score.
gridoon2018 A rather mild spy tale, kept painless by a good cast, the uniquely atmospheric - and 100% authentic - Venice locations, and Lalo Schifrin's appropriate music score. However, the "good cast" needs some clarification: most of them are very good indeed, but Robert Vaughn, sporting a perpetually drowsy unshaven look, does not make for a very inspiring lead in this case; also, if you are drawn to the prospect of seeing two of the most beautiful AND experienced in the spy genre European actresses (Elke "Deadlier Than The Male" Sommer & Luciana "Thunderball" Paluzzi) together in the same movie, you're outta luck: Paluzzi has little more than a cameo, appearing for a total of no more than 3 minutes.The film tries to combine a serious tone with an over-the-top mind-control premise; it mostly works, except for the silly scene where Vaughn has to pretend that he is mortally afraid of a rat! ** out of 4.