À toi de faire... mignonne (Italian: L'agente federale Lemmy Caution), released in the US as Your Turn, Darling,[3] is a French-Italian thriller film based on the 1941 novel Your Deal, My Lovely by Peter Cheyney.[4] It came out ten years after La môme vert-de-gris which had been the first of film of this series.
Your Turn, Darling | |
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Directed by | Bernard Borderie |
Written by | Marc-Gilbert Sauvajon Screenplay Bernard Borderie Screenplay[1] |
Based on | Your Deal, My Lovely by Peter Cheyney |
Produced by | Henri Jaquillard |
Starring | Eddie Constantine Gaia Germani Guy Delorme |
Cinematography | Henri Persin |
Edited by | Christian Gaudin |
Music by | Paul Misraki |
Production company | Borderie/Euro International[2] |
Distributed by | Pathé Consortium Cinéma (France) Euro International Film (Italy) Constantin Film (W.Germany) |
Release date | 25 September 1963 |
Running time | 93 minutes |
Countries | France Italy |
Language | French |
It was shot at the Billancourt Studios in Paris and on location around the city. The film's sets were designed by the art director René Moulaert.
For the last time Bernard Borderie directed the popular actor Eddie Constantine in a Lemmy Caution adventure.
Guy Delorme, who in 1961 had been the Comte de Rochefort in Borderie's classic film version of The Three Musketeers, acts another time as a scheming bad guy.
Dr. Whitaker has disappeared after working hard on an innovation which could give either the West or the East an edge in the Cold War. Lemmy Caution, although currently otherwise busy, is assigned to return the scientist.
He is advised to start searching for him by finding in the first place Dr. Whitaker's attractive young fiancée Geraldine.
Of course Lemmy Caution finds the scientist, beats up the villains even while actually being hopelessly outnumbered, puts everything right and gets the girl.
David Deal judges in "The Eurospy Guide" the film was "not an outright spoof", yet he objects director Bernard Borderie sporting slapstick moments ("silly") during the final showdown in a dairy.[5]
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