OSS 117: Cairo, Nest of Spies

    OSS 117: Cairo, Nest of Spies
    2006

    Synopsis

    Secret agent OSS 117 foils Nazis, beds local beauties, and brings peace to the Middle East.

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    Cast

    • Jean DujardinHubert Bonisseur de La Bath, alias OSS 117
    • Bérénice BejoLarmina El Akmar Betouche
    • Aure AtikaLa princesse Al Tarouk
    • Philippe LefebvreJack Jefferson
    • Constantin AlexandrovSetine
    • Saïd AmadisLe ministre égyptien
    • Laurent BateauGardenborough
    • Claude BrossetLe patron
    • François DamiensRaymond Pelletier
    • Youssef HamidL'imam

    Recommendations

    • 91

      Seattle Post-Intelligencer

      The real joy here is the performance of Jean Dujardin, who, besides being very funny as the Gallic Maxwell Smart, is also enormously charismatic and is made to look uncannily (and I do mean uncannily) like the young Sean Connery of "Dr. No" and "Goldfinger."
    • 75

      TV Guide Magazine

      A huge hit in France, Michel Hazanavicius' straight-faced spy spoof unleashes a French operative of incomparable incompetence on the volatile Middle East of 1955.
    • 75

      San Francisco Chronicle

      A giddy French comedy.
    • 70

      Variety

      A spy spoof that -- rarity of rarities -- represents a remake actually worth making. Current comic fave Jean Dujardin plays title character OSS 117 as a kind of James Bond crossed with Maxwell Smart.
    • 70

      Village Voice

      A frequently uproarious send-up of Jean Bruce's long-running series of spy novels.
    • 70

      Los Angeles Times

      Light and fun, if also a little slight, OSS 117: Cairo, Nest of Spies is like a pleasant sorbet to wash away the aftertaste of the pre-summer clunkers.
    • 70

      Salon

      Director Michel Hazanavicius captures the jet-age atmosphere, form-fitting wardrobes, jazz-ethnic soundtrack and bouffant hairdos of JFK/de Gaulle-era espionage films in perfect detail, but it's Dujardin's performance as the suave, confident and utterly clueless Hubert Bonisseur de la Bath (to Francophones, a name that drips with phony aristocratic pretension) that gives "OSS 117" its edge.
    • 63

      Premiere

      It hardly adds up to much, but it doesn't mean to, and it'll leave you with a cleaner conscience than an Austin Powers picture.

    Loved by

    • nougat