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Orders to Kill

Orders to Kill (1958)

July. 25,1958
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7
| Drama Thriller War

A grounded American fighter pilot is switched to espionage on a special job in which he must kill a small-time Paris lawyer suspected of double-crossing France by selling out radio operators to the Nazis.

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Reviews

ReaderKenka
1958/07/25

Let's be realistic.

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Limerculer
1958/07/26

A waste of 90 minutes of my life

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Livestonth
1958/07/27

I am only giving this movie a 1 for the great cast, though I can't imagine what any of them were thinking. This movie was horrible

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Mathilde the Guild
1958/07/28

Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.

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gordonl56
1958/07/29

Ordre d'execution – 1958 There has been a leak in a French Underground network ran by the U.S. Army intelligence service. Several agents have been killed after meeting with a member of the network. The U.S. decides that the man, Leslie French, must be a double agent working for the Germans. They decide that the leak needs to be sealed and Mr. French eliminated. It is only a month till D-Day and the Allies cannot take any chances.They draft in a French speaking pilot from the Air Force. The man, Paul Massie, just happens to have lived in the same area of Paris where French lives. They give Massie a crash course on how to act etc once he is dropped in country. They also teach him various ways of killing quietly.One of training officers, Eddie Albert, is not quite sure that Massie is the right man. While dropping bombs on a more or less unseen enemy is OK, will Massie be able to do the deed, face to face? Albert's boss, Johnny Crawford sees no problem and orders the training to carry on. "Lives are at risk!" Crawford says.Massie is soon ready and dropped outside Paris. He is to meet with an Underground contact, Irene Worth, who will put him up etc. He as papers as an electrical engineer which allows him more or less free movement through the streets.He then spends several days casing the run down building where French has his lawyer offices. While having a drink in the downstairs café, Massie bumps right into French. French seems like a nice sort, and warns him not to order the rabbit stew as it is really cat. French then warns him that the Police and the Germans will be raiding the area in an hour. Massie best hideout, or he will be grabbed up and shipped to Germany as forced labour. French offers the man a room in his office upstairs to hide in.Sure enough, the raid happens and several men are grabbed up and hauled away. Massie spends the night in French's office looking for evidence he is a turncoat. He finds none. French returns the next morning and invites Massie to dine with his wife and daughter that evening. Massie accepts the invite. Massie is finding that the more time he spends with his target, the more convinced he is that French is innocent.Massie contact's Worth and asks what he should do?. ''Do your job!'' Is her response. The next morning Massie returns to French's office. When French turns his back to brew up some tea, Massie, belts him with a handy blunt object on the back of the head. The blow was not hard enough and Massie is forced to make a mess of the job with a knife. He cleans up as best he can and takes off into the streets.Several days after the Allies have liberated Paris. A MP patrol brings in a drunken man who says he is a U.S. pilot. The name is run through the records and Eddie Albert gets the call. He visits Massie in the hospital and finds that the man is being eaten up by guilt over killing French. He has been drunk ever since the hit.Now Col. Crawford shows up, he tells Massie that he is a hero and his actions saved hundreds of lives. Once Crawford has left, Massie asks Albert for the truth. He can't go the rest of his life wondering about it. Albert tells him that French turned out to be innocent. Also in the cast, are James Robertson Justice, Sandra Dorne, Lionel Jefferies and Lillian Gish.Canadian Paul Massie won a BAFTA Award for his role in this film. Though the film builds slowly, it is worth staying till the pay off. The film was nominated for the Palme dÒr at the Cannes Film Festival.The director was Anthony Asquith. His work includes, THE BROWNING VERSION, COTTAGE TO LET, FANNY BY GASLIGHT, THE WOMAN IN QUESTION, THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST, CARRINGTON V.C. and LIBEL.

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RanchoTuVu
1958/07/30

As the Allies are preparing the D-Day invasion, an American bomber pilot (Paul Massie) is recruited to be sent to occupied France to kill a member of the Resistance (Leslie French) who is suspected of supplying the names of fighters to the Germans. Each part of the film, the recruiting, training and the mission itself, is expertly done. There is expert drama in both his recruitment and training under James Robertson Justice, whose expertise in these matters is brilliantly portrayed. The film shows the excellent acting of Eddie Albert who plays an American officer who monitors Massie's training and then his deployment on a night flight to be parachuted into occupied France, where he is to be on his own except for his one contact played by Irene Worth, whose part turns out to be the best one in the film. The title pretty much sums up the dilemma that faces Massie as he's the one ordered to carry out the execution.

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mandrake62
1958/07/31

Spoiler alertWhat I remember most about this film is the way the idealistic young soldier in manipulated by a wheeler-dealer senior officer who is essentially a self serving bureaucrat. It rings so true of what can when the patriotism and of an innocent young man can be manipulated. The mission is based on flawed intelligence. The mission is poorly planned and puts the young operative at greater than necessary risk. In a way it is a microcosm of larger events with which we are all too familiar. As it turns out in the film, an innocent man is killed, a young man must live with having killed an innocent harmless man in cold blood. As for the senior officer who issued the orders, it is just a bureaucratic error. Not really anyone's fault he assures the guilt ridden young man. Besides he is very preoccupied with getting his fat butt over to Paris as soon as it is liberated to enjoy its I think it would be very This is a beneficial for young people to see to help them recognize one of the more subtle forms of evil so well represented. Maybe that is one of the true benefits of film art, it broadens our experience without the negative consequences that can result. As for the young man in the film, he had to learn the hard way. It is available on Amazon in new and used copies mostly shipped from UK but also new copies fulfilled by AmazonPrime at a higher price. All copies are Region 2 format.

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cmwatson
1958/08/01

I saw this move perhaps 40 years ago, during the height of my interest in espionage and spy tradecraft. I remember being mesmerized by the gritty reality of this movie and the fine portrayal of the agent/assassin as played by Eddie Albert. It remains what is perhaps one of his most serious roles, and the film reveals a side of his talent rarely revealed in his other movies. Every detail of the film, from mission preparation through to the conclusion, was exceptionally well done. I would love to find a copy of this somewhere; it remains a personal favorite.

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