IMDb RATING
7.0/10
24K
YOUR RATING
Secret agent OSS 117 foils Nazis, beds local beauties, and brings peace to the Middle East.Secret agent OSS 117 foils Nazis, beds local beauties, and brings peace to the Middle East.Secret agent OSS 117 foils Nazis, beds local beauties, and brings peace to the Middle East.
- Awards
- 4 wins & 7 nominations
Arsène Mosca
- Loktar
- (as Arsene Mosca)
Aleksandrov Konstantin
- Setine
- (as Constantin Alexandrov)
Saïd Amadis
- Le ministre égyptien
- (as Said Amadis)
Abdellah Moundy
- Slimane
- (as Abdallah Moundy)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe German title of this film, "OSS 117 --- Der Spion, der sich liebte," is a prank on the James Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me (1977). It literally means "OSS 117 --- The Spy Who Loved Himself."
- GoofsWhen OSS 117 learns to count in Arabic, Larmina coaches him: "Wahed, Jouj...". She should be counting in Egyptian Arabic, but instead she uses Moroccan Arabic. An Egyptian would not use (or understand) "Jouj" for two. The word is "Itnayn".
- Quotes
Moeller: Mr. Bramard... a cigarette?
Hubert Bonisseur de La Bath, alias OSS 117: Thanks. I'm trying to start.
- ConnectionsFollowed by OSS 117: Lost in Rio (2009)
Featured review
OSS: 117 (2006)
I wish for a couple hours I was French, because I'm sure there were twice as many gags as I could get as an American reading subtitles. Even so, what a funny funny movie. It's not quite as zany as a spoof like "Airplane" (nor quite as funny, which of course is hard to do), but it takes the Sean Connery vintage James Bond film model and really does a parody worthy of 007. And of the franchise, which of course is bigger than Bond, bigger than Ian Fleming could have ever dreamed.
But hold your horses--this is a parody of the real OSS:117. Yes, a French author created a Bond-like spy in the 1950s, and this movie and its 2009 sequel are really playing a double-edged game. They bring the old French spy to life (the original was a French-speaking American, bizarrely enough), and they make fun of him, of Bond, and of 1960s super slick sexist movies all around.
The star here, the Sean Connery of this spoof (he even looks a bit like the Scottish actor), is Jean Dujardin. He's brilliant. He's funny, campy, silly, serious, and subtle about it all. He plays the role with a kind of oblivious self-ridicule that Woody Allen and Peter Sellers were so good at. It's great stuff.
And he's backed up by a strong, if somewhat predictable, assortment of international thugs, beauties, and oddballs. There are shades of "Charade" here as well as the original "Pink Panther" movies. The scoring is amazing, composed with that Henry Mancini flair to a T and recorded with the familiar bright, echoey sound studio fullness of the time. Equally authentic are the opening credits, which were so convincing I had to double check when the movie came out. I was thinking, wow, a lost 1960s gem.
But it's a brand new gem, or almost gem. Time will tell if this will hold up over the years, but it's a kind of must-see now for anyone into Bond films, the 60s, French humor, or just a well made movie with lots of gags. Like the gag where the noisy chickens go silent when the lights go off, and so our hero delights in turning the lights on, and off, and on, and off. Just wait and listen. It'll slay you.
I wish for a couple hours I was French, because I'm sure there were twice as many gags as I could get as an American reading subtitles. Even so, what a funny funny movie. It's not quite as zany as a spoof like "Airplane" (nor quite as funny, which of course is hard to do), but it takes the Sean Connery vintage James Bond film model and really does a parody worthy of 007. And of the franchise, which of course is bigger than Bond, bigger than Ian Fleming could have ever dreamed.
But hold your horses--this is a parody of the real OSS:117. Yes, a French author created a Bond-like spy in the 1950s, and this movie and its 2009 sequel are really playing a double-edged game. They bring the old French spy to life (the original was a French-speaking American, bizarrely enough), and they make fun of him, of Bond, and of 1960s super slick sexist movies all around.
The star here, the Sean Connery of this spoof (he even looks a bit like the Scottish actor), is Jean Dujardin. He's brilliant. He's funny, campy, silly, serious, and subtle about it all. He plays the role with a kind of oblivious self-ridicule that Woody Allen and Peter Sellers were so good at. It's great stuff.
And he's backed up by a strong, if somewhat predictable, assortment of international thugs, beauties, and oddballs. There are shades of "Charade" here as well as the original "Pink Panther" movies. The scoring is amazing, composed with that Henry Mancini flair to a T and recorded with the familiar bright, echoey sound studio fullness of the time. Equally authentic are the opening credits, which were so convincing I had to double check when the movie came out. I was thinking, wow, a lost 1960s gem.
But it's a brand new gem, or almost gem. Time will tell if this will hold up over the years, but it's a kind of must-see now for anyone into Bond films, the 60s, French humor, or just a well made movie with lots of gags. Like the gag where the noisy chickens go silent when the lights go off, and so our hero delights in turning the lights on, and off, and on, and off. Just wait and listen. It'll slay you.
- secondtake
- Sep 13, 2011
- Permalink
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- OSS 117 - Cairo: Nest of Spies
- Filming locations
- Devant l'hôtel Mamora, avenue Hassan II, Kenitra, Morocco(Moeller joins OSS to take him to the pyramids)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- €14,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $303,543
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $31,418
- May 11, 2008
- Gross worldwide
- $23,055,884
- Runtime1 hour 39 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was OSS 117: Cairo, Nest of Spies (2006) officially released in India in English?
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