I’ve seen a lot of action movies, but not many of them were particularly good. So I’m on the hunt for the best of the best. Preferably pure action or spy movies, although some sci-fi/horror/drama is ok.
In case you care, this is being done as research for a Spycraft D20 game I’m running soon.
I think this post belongs on Cafe Society, and I’m sure a mod would happily move it for you. You’ll get more responses there, for sure.
But no list of action movies is complete without The Killer and Hard Boiled by John Woo. The last really good spy movie I saw was The Bourne Identity–much better than any recent James Bond films!
I thought Spy Game with Robert Redford and Brad Pitt was pretty good. I agree with the Bourne Identity too. I love the Connery Bond movies, but they’ve gotten pretty ridiculous recently. Yeah, I know, but the Roger Moore Bonds were supposed to be ridiculous.
A different kind of spy movie that I adore is Hopscotch.
Made in 1980/1ish. A well seasoned CIA feild agent with 30 years experience is given a desk assignment as punishment for letting a KGB spy go. Literally. (You will understand his motives.)
Instead of being benched, the spy destroys his paper files(this is before computer stuff.) and decides to go walk about trying to figure out what to do with his life.
He decides to write his tell all memoirs of the dirty secrets of the CIA. And he sends off one chapter at a time to the KGB, CIA, Interpol and Scotland Yard…leading a merry chase hopscotching about the globe one step ahead of the CIA.
In the end, you are happy for him and how he takes care of his wonderfully egotistical boss.
Walter Matthau plays the Agent. Sam Waterstone , a very young San Waterstone ( or whatever his name is from Law & Order) has a lovely little part. The Boss Who Gets His Comeuppence is the ever evil Ned Beatty.
I remember thinking very highly of The Fourth Protocol, starring Michael Caine as a British secret agent and Pierce Brosnan as a Russian spy. It’s from 1987 or so.
The Tailor of Panama started out good but fell apart, IMO. I’d recommend the film based on the novel le Carre was paying homage to Our Man In Havana starring Alec Guinness.
How can we have gotten this far without a mention of the classic of classics, The Third Man?
For recent HK action in the vein of The Killer and Hard Boiled (a personal favortie of mine) find Tsui Hark’s Time and Tide. The gun battle/ rappeling chase in the apartment building must be seen.
Other spy/action movies I’d recommend:
The President’s Analyst - a spoof, but a clever one Seven Days In May - cold war era Frankenheimer conspiracy/coup film. Winterkills - like a conspiracy theorist’s wet dream The Assassination Bureau - starring Oliver Reed and Diana Rigg. Very broadly “based” on an unfinished Jack London work, but a good mix of action comedy. The Day of the Jackal - the 1973 version, not that Bruce Willis mess. Clear and Present Danger - probably the film closest to the Boy Scout patriotic spirit and techno jargon fetish of the Tom Clancy novels.
First, I had no idea that The Spy who came in from the Cold was made into a movie; given how great the book is, I’m torn between eagerness and reluctance to see the movie. It has some high expectations to live up to.
Hitchcock’s spy movies are never as good as I’m hoping they’ll be. Notorious and Topaz were big fat disappointments for me. North by Northwest, however, is a gem. Is that the one with the drunk driving scene?
For silly over-the-top action, I’m partial to Once Upon a Time in Mexico: the carnage is so ridiculous that you can’t take it seriously, and the gadgets o’ death are great for giggling.
I’m thinking that movies as inspiration for games will be good for:
Gadgets
Locations, both large (The New Zealand rainforests) and small (a Moroccan street-market). The more exotic, the better. The more things to destroy in a frenetic fight, the better.
The Manchurian Candidate (1962) is one of the best spy thrillers around. (No, not the remake. Please boycott everyone involved!) I heard somewhere around the time it was re-released that Frank Sinatra was so impressed by the book that he bought the rights, but the studio thought it was “too controversial”, so he called his buddy John Kennedy to explain the plot. Then the studio boss got a call from the President of the US saying “Make the movie!” Not long after it’s original release, Kennedy was shot, and the movie sat in the vault for years before coming out again.
There’s a scene in there that will put you right off hydrangeas.