OSS 117: Cairo - Nest of Spies (2008)



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Synopsis:
OSS 117: Cairo -- Nest of Spies constitutes the eighth installment in a long-running series of movies about OSS 117 (the government code name for Hubert Bonisseur de la Bath) -- a French super-spy and European equivalent of James Bond. The creation of author Jean Bruce, OSS eventually starred in over 265 novels and seven cinematizations through 1970. The first seven film outings were sober and straight-faced; the eighth go-round (the first after a 38-year lapse) does a 180 to shamelessly poke fun of the rules established by the genre. A glib yet intelligent spoof, it joins the ranks of Our Man Flint (1965), Aghaye Hallou (1970), Mad Mission 3: Our Man from Bond Street (1984), and other international pictures that glibly satirize the subgenre made infamous to Americans by Bond; like Mad Mission 3, it even packs in an OSS 117 (Jean Dujardin) with a startling resemblance to Sean Connery. The film's comic conceit involves making OSS 117 arrogant, conceited, culturally insensitive, chauvinistic, and thoroughly moronic (he pretends that various cultural institutions and religious practices, for instance, are nonexistent if he is unfamiliar with them); yet the character somehow manages to slide through outrageously dangerous situations unscathed, time and again. The teaser prologue finds OSS 117 in Berlin, where he outwits the Nazis by stealing vital documents from them, hijacks an Axis plane in mid-nosedive, and saves himself and the craft at the last yawning moment. Ten years later, he journeys from Rome to Cairo, where he investigates the death of a fellow agent, posing as the proprietor of a chicken farm. His "side" activities during this jaunt involve hammering out a peace arrangement for the Middle East, keeping tabs on the Suez Canal, and monitoring the Russians. Jean-François Halin scripted the film, maintaining an utterly deadpan tone throughout; Michel Hazanavicius directed.

~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide

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Full Cast & Crew

Theatrical Release
5/9/2008
Director Credit
Michel Hazanavicius Director
Cast Credit
Jean Dujardin Hubert Bonisseur de la Bath (aka OSS 117)
Bérénice Bejo Larmina El Akmar Betouche
Aure Atika Princess Al Tarouk
Philippe Lefebvre Jack Jefferson, OSS 283
Constantin Alexandrov Yevevni Setine
Said Amadis Egyptian minister
Laurent Bateau Nigel Gardenborough
Claude Brosset OSS Chief
Francois Damiens Raymond Pelletier
Youssef Hamid imam
Khalid Maadour phone booth man
Arsene Mosca Moktar
Abdallah Moundy Slimane
Eric Prat Plantieux
Richard Sammel Gerhard Moeller
Michael Hofland Colonel Hermann von Umsprung
Jean-François Halin Rubecht
Production Credits Credit
Patrick Quinet Associate Producer
Nicolas Altmayer Producer
Eric Altmayer Producer
Andre Logie Associate Producer
Gaetan David Associate Producer
Artémis Associate Producer
Art Department Credit
Maamar Ech-Cheik Art Director
Catherine Werner-Schmit Set Decorator
Casting Credit
Stephane Touitou Casting
Film Camera Credit
Guillaume Schiffman Cinematographer
Production Management Credit
Matthew Gledhill first Assistant Director
Grégoire Daure Location Manager
Driss Tahri Production Manager
Daniel Chevalier Production Manager
Sound Credit
Nadine Muse Supervising Sound Editor
Didier Sain Sound Recordist
Wardrobe Hair Makeup Credit
Charlotte David Costume Designer

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