Murderers' Row

Matt Helm outdoes Matt Helm in his new all-out adventure!

5.7
19661h 45m

The handsome top agent Matt dies a tragic death in his bath tub - the women mourn about the loss. However it's just faked for his latest top-secret mission: He shall find Dr. Solaris, inventor of the Helium laser beam, powerful enough to destroy a whole continent. It seems Dr. Solaris has been kidnapped by a criminal organization. The trace leads to the Cote D'Azur.

Production

Logo for Columbia Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Murderers' Row 1966 movie trailer

Murderers' Row 1966 movie trailer

Cast

Photo of Dean Martin

Dean Martin

Matt Helm

Photo of Ann-Margret

Ann-Margret

Suzie Solaris

Photo of Karl Malden

Karl Malden

Julian Wall

Photo of Camilla Sparv

Camilla Sparv

Coco Duquette

Photo of James Gregory

James Gregory

MacDonald

Photo of Beverly Adams

Beverly Adams

Lovey Kravezit

Photo of Richard Eastham

Richard Eastham

Dr. Norman Solaris

Photo of Tom Reese

Tom Reese

Ironhead

Photo of Marcel Hillaire

Marcel Hillaire

Police Capt. Deveraux

Photo of Jacqueline Fontaine

Jacqueline Fontaine

Singer at Wake (uncredited)

Photo of Soon-Tek Oh

Soon-Tek Oh

Tempura (uncredited)

Photo of Gary Lasdun

Gary Lasdun

Philippe (uncredited)

Photo of Amadee Chabot

Amadee Chabot

Miss March (uncredited)

Photo of Jan Watson

Jan Watson

Miss July (uncredited)

Photo of Mary Hughes

Mary Hughes

Miss September (uncredited)

Photo of Nadia Sanders

Nadia Sanders

Dominique (uncredited)

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Reviews

W

Wuchak

5/10

**_Britain has James Bond while America has (the inferior) Matt Helm_**

An American ICE agent (Dean Martin) fakes his own death and goes to the French Riviera to track down the creator of a device that uses the concentrated power of sunlight for mass destruction. A diabolical organization has taken the scientist captive with intent to use his weapon for world domination. Karl Malden plays the leader of BIG O.

"Murderer’s Row” (1966) was the second of four Matt Helm movies released in three years from winter, 1966, to winter, 1969. The franchise was obviously inspired by the great success of the first four James Bond flicks from 1962-1965. Unlike the books (and Bond), the tone is lighthearted and spoofy with Martin doing his wink-at-the-camera act, similar to the contemporaneous Derek Flint flicks with James Coburn, not to mention Raquel Welch’s “Fathom” (1967).

The tagline for the first film in the Helm series, “The Silencers,” was “guns, gadgets, girls,” but a more accurate description would be “guns, gadgets, girls and booze.” Naturally these are worthwhile flicks to experience the fun, colorful side of the 60s, but since the spy exploits are played as a low-key joke, there’s no sense of danger and, worse, the story simply isn’t compelling, at least in “Murderer’s Row.”

Yeah, there are several attractive females on hand with Ann-Margret being the most charismatic and alluring, but they’re all so thin and unshapely they’re kinda meh. Don’t get me wrong, Ann is a top-of-the-line beauty, as witnessed in Elvis’ “Viva Las Vegas” (1964), but she obviously lost weight in the two years leading up to this flick. It’s a shame because she lost her shapely appeal. However, if you prefer women with stick figures, you won’t have a problem.

These fun 007-imitation flicks from the 60s all came & went and are forgotten, while the James Bond franchise marches on decade after decade. There’s a reason for this.

The film runs 1 hour, 45 minutes. While second unit teams shot sequences in Villefranche-sur-Mer (France), Monte Carlo (Monaco) and the Isle of Wight for the hovercraft and helicopter scenes (England), Martin refused to go to Europe so all of his scenes were done in Hollywood.

GRADE: C

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