Interpol

This Is A Picture About DOPE!

6.4
19571h 32m

Spurred on by the death of his drug-addicted sister at the hands of ruthless narcotics kingpin Frank McNally, U.S. drug enforcement agent Charles Sturgis embarks on an investigation that takes him from New York to London, Lisbon, Rome, Naples and finally Athens in pursuit of McNally's shapely associate, Gina Broger.

Production

Logo for Columbia Pictures

Cast

Photo of Victor Mature

Victor Mature

Charles Sturgis

Photo of Anita Ekberg

Anita Ekberg

Gina Broger

Photo of Trevor Howard

Trevor Howard

Frank McNally

Photo of André Morell

André Morell

Commissioner Breckner

Photo of Martin Benson

Martin Benson

Captain Varolli

Photo of Eric Pohlmann

Eric Pohlmann

Etienne Fayala

Photo of Peter Illing

Peter Illing

Capt. Baris

Photo of Danny Green

Danny Green

Second Bartender

Photo of Sidney James

Sidney James

Joe - First Bartender

Photo of Marne Maitland

Marne Maitland

Guido Martinelli

Photo of Charles Lloyd Pack

Charles Lloyd Pack

English Tourist

Photo of Al Mulock

Al Mulock

Interrogator

Photo of Alfred Burke

Alfred Burke

Vincent Cashling

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

This has got quite a field of recognisable talent, but the story is a bit thin. "Frank McNally" (Trevor Howard) is a ruthless drug dealer who makes a bit of a mockery of the efforts of Interpol to track him down. It's only when he kills the sister of US agent "Sturgis" (Victor Mature) that he finds a foe worthy of him. This fellow is much more determined, and quickly alights on the mule of the operation "Gina" (Anita Ekberg) trailing her all around Europe before finally honing in on his prey as “McNally” plots an huge job in New York. The format of the storyline takes a bit of a travelogue style and though that does give it some pace, it means we spend way too much time on planes, at airports and touring the sites rather than developing any characters of even a substantial plot. Neither Mature nor Howard really engage, Ekberg has practically no dialogue until the very end and the best effort comes from grifter Bonar Colleano's ("Amalio") who seems way more adept at tracking "McNally" than his policeman buddy. The ending is weak - it's more of a testament to the effectiveness of global policing and communications that it is to a thriller, and I felt the whole thing just lacked oomph.

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