Bland, contrived, and almost laughably unhurried,
the Cold War-themed romantic comedy Catch
Me a Spy—sometimes marketed as Keep
Your Fingers Crossed or To Catch a
Spy—is the worst sort of international coproduction. The film’s American,
English, and French leading actors employ clashing performance styles, and the
episodic storyline seems as if it was designed to showcase as many European
locations as possible. Especially because the narrative is cobbled together
from elements viewers have encountered a million times before, Catch Me a Spy is as much of a
hodgepodge as its multinational DNA. A little Kirk Douglas here for the
American market, a little Marlène Jobert there to keep the Gallic crowd
interested, and some high-speed action skimming across the surfaces of Scottish
lakes for atmosphere. So, while Catch Me a Spy technically runs just 94
minutes, it feels much, much longer. The source of the movie’s problems, of
course, is a rotten script. Jobert plays a woman whose Englishman husband gets
arrested by Russian agents on espionage charges and extradited to the USSR, so
she entreats British officials to arrange a prisoner exchange. When that
endeavor fails (in the movie’s only truly funny scene), she tries to find
another spy whom the Brits can trade for her husband. After encountering him
several times under strange circumstances, she believes that Douglas’ character
is the guy for the job. What ensues is dull and ridiculous. Even as she
negotiates for her husband’s release, Jobert’s character spends endless amounts
of time hanging out with Douglas’ character, eventually surrendering to his
charms. Beyond questions of logic, where’s the danger, the excitement, the
urgency? Douglas grins a lot but otherwise applies a style far too heavy-handed
for this sort of piffle, while Jobert’s English is so tentative as to be
distracting. To no avail, supporting players Tom Courtenay, Trevor Howard, and
Patrick Mower all contribute work more interesting than that of the leads.
Catch
Me a Spy: LAME
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