Hubert Bonisseur de La Bath, alias OSS 117
Jean Dujardin
Hubert Bonisseur de La Bath, alias OSS 117

Set in 1955, French secret agent Hubert Bonisseur de La Bath/OSS 117 is sent to Cairo to investigate the disappearance of his best friend and fellow spy Jack Jefferson, only to stumble into a web of international intrigue.
OSS 117: Cairo, Nest of Spies - Trailer
Hubert Bonisseur de La Bath, alias OSS 117
Jean Dujardin
Hubert Bonisseur de La Bath, alias OSS 117
Larmina El Akmar Betouche
Bérénice Bejo
Larmina El Akmar Betouche
La princesse Al Tarouk
Aure Atika
La princesse Al Tarouk
Jack Jefferson
Philippe Lefebvre
Jack Jefferson
Setine
Konstantin Aleksandrov
Setine
Le ministre égyptien
Saïd Amadis
Le ministre égyptien
Gardenborough
Laurent Bateau
Gardenborough
Le patron
Claude Brosset
Le patron
Raymond Pelletier
François Damiens
Raymond Pelletier
L'imam
Youssef Hamid
L'imam
Le suiveur
Khalid Maadour
Le suiveur
Loktar
Arsène Mosca
Loktar
This was a solid debut for Hazanavicius and a very fun film. There's uneven pacing, but I was very pleased with this, which seemed an interesting hybrid between the James Bond and Pink Panther film series. I loved the scoring and cinematography as well. Dujardin's character was a bit strange and the pacing was a tad uneven, but those are small flaws. This is the first of Hazanavicius' films I have seen, though I have 'The Artist' on blu. I've heard that in the sequel, he jumps a decade to the 60's--it would be interesting, if they decide to eventually continue the series, if each film could be of following decades, straight through to the present day. It was clever of the writers, through parallelism, to subconsciously suggest a linkage of the Nazis to radical Arab terrorists, so soon after 9/11, and, six years before 'Skyfall', what anyone knowing anything about espionage and counterintelligence would undoubtedly know--that all agents would probably be bisexual. I look forward to checking out Hazanavicius' other films, and hope there are eventually more in this series, for I have loved all kinds of spy films and spoofs of them, in the history of cinema.
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