A South American police captain surreptitously engages Simon Templar into a crooked arms deal.A South American police captain surreptitously engages Simon Templar into a crooked arms deal.A South American police captain surreptitously engages Simon Templar into a crooked arms deal.
Photos
Eric Pohlmann
- Carlos Xavier
- (as Eric Pohlman)
Ed Bishop
- Sherm Inkler
- (as Edward Bishop)
Hal Galili
- Vincente
- (as Hal Gallili)
Ricardo Montez
- Immigration Officer
- (as Richard Montez)
Paul Beradi
- Man watching Hi-Li
- (uncredited)
Billy Dean
- Man in Restaurant
- (uncredited)
Michael Dempsey
- Man watching Hi-Li
- (uncredited)
Keith Denny
- Man watching Hi-Li
- (uncredited)
Walter Henry
- Man watching Hi-Li
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaRoger Moore as The Saint started giving money to UNICEF long before he was appointed a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador on August 9, 1991. In 2012, he was awarded the UNICEF UK Lifetime Achievement Award. He was a strong supporter of this group until his death; May 23, 2017.
- SoundtracksOut to Get You
by Chris Andrews
Featured review
Never Watch an Episode Set in South America
The Saint gets involved in a convoluted plot by two Americans to sell guns to revolutionaries in a vaguely South American country. But is all as it seems? C'mon, it's "The Saint." This road is full of twists.
Whether it's "The Saint" or "Danger Man/Secret Agent" or whatever, I despise episodes set in this milieu due to bad South American accents. This episode is no exception. I'm not one of those people guilty of ageism, insisting people are "too old" for a part; all I want are good performances. I don't think an actor needs to chain-saw his legs off to get a role in a wheelchair. I don't think an actor has to come from a region he's pretending to be to give a worthy performance. But in the 1960s Brit shows the South American accents are painful.
Co-star (and frequent guest) Suzanne Lloyd is indisputably beautiful, but she can't act. I dread to see her coming.
Peter Arne, on the other hand, us always welcome. He's usually Mr. Sleaze and he's great at it. But his accent is dreadful.
A nice, twisty script, but low marks.
Whether it's "The Saint" or "Danger Man/Secret Agent" or whatever, I despise episodes set in this milieu due to bad South American accents. This episode is no exception. I'm not one of those people guilty of ageism, insisting people are "too old" for a part; all I want are good performances. I don't think an actor needs to chain-saw his legs off to get a role in a wheelchair. I don't think an actor has to come from a region he's pretending to be to give a worthy performance. But in the 1960s Brit shows the South American accents are painful.
Co-star (and frequent guest) Suzanne Lloyd is indisputably beautiful, but she can't act. I dread to see her coming.
Peter Arne, on the other hand, us always welcome. He's usually Mr. Sleaze and he's great at it. But his accent is dreadful.
A nice, twisty script, but low marks.
helpful•00
- aramis-112-804880
- Dec 14, 2023
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime50 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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