Friday, February 7, 2025

The Assassination Bureau

Basil Dearden's The Assassination Bureau opens with a montage of public muders. Sonia Winter (Diana Rigg) quickly figures out they're all connected, and she's determined to dismantle the very organization responsible for the killings. How? By ordering the death of its chairman Ivan Dragomiloff (Oliver Reed).

Dragomiloff is intrigued by Miss Winter's commission so he issues a challenge to his organization of assassins: kill him or he'll kill them. What ensues is a mad dash across Europe as Dragomiloff and Miss Winter try to beat out the other killers. But what else awaits them?

Based on an unfinished Jack London novel (it was finished decades later by another writer), The Assassination Bureau was made amid the public interest for espionage and intrigue courtesy of James Bond. (Amusingly, three actors in this would go on to have major roles in the franchise.) But as is the cases with imitators, they seldom match up with the original.

It's clear that Dearden is trying to emulate the Bond movies with The Asassination Bureau. The problem is that when one adapts an unfinished work that was completed by someone else, it'll still feel incomplete. And that's one of several flaws on display here.

The Assassination Bureau tries too hard in both being its own thing and tackling various elements at once. And as such, it feels longer than it actually is to get through. Yes, Reed and Rigg do have solid chemistry (even if they very much didn't behind the scenes) but even then that just barely keeps the film afloat. All in all, it's not a complete write-off but it isn't something worth recommending either.

My Rating: ***1/2

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