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  • Warning: Spoilers
    "The Big Gundown" director Sergio Sollima's "Agent 3S3: Passport to Hell" with George Ardisson ranks as a reasonable but not exceptional example of the parade of European spy sagas that sought to clone the success of the James Bond films in the middle 1960s. "Passport to Hell" was somewhat successful because it spawned a sequel, 1966's "Agent 3S3, Massacre in the Sun," with Ardisson and Sollima encoring respectively as star and director. Not only was this Sollima's initial outing in the spy genre, but it also was his second feature at the helm. Sollima made more of a name for himself in spaghetti westerns with "The Big Gundown" starring Lee Van Cleef & Tomas Milian, a sequel without Van Cleef, "The Big Gundown 2" with Tomas Milian and then "Face to Face" with Tomas Milian, William Berger and Gian Maria Volontè. Afterward, he helmed the Charles Bronson & Telly Savalas crime melodrama "The Family." "Agent 3S3: Passport to Hell" is a relatively low-budget epic that benefits from Sollima's tight sense of pacing and a surprise or two as a resourceful spy (Giorgio Ardisson of "Massacre at Grand Canyon") searches for an elusive World War II espionage agent who has gone rogue and threatens the security of both NATO countries as well as the Warsaw Pact countries. George Ardisson is ideal for the role as a rough and tumble secret agent, but the lack of a flamboyant villain with a dastardly scheme to destroy the world undercuts this realistic film. The dubbed dialogue sounds pretty stilted, but at least the lips match the words.

    A beautiful but desperate woman clad in only a bathrobe, Elisa von Sloot (Béatrice Altariba of Roger Corman's "The Young Racers") flees frantically into a brightly lighted car tunnel at night. An automobile pulls up in front of her and a man emerges to help her. The young Dutch woman—a C.I.A. agent as we learn later—explains that she is running away from two thugs who invaded her house while she was asleep and tried to kill her. No sooner has the poor girl told the gentleman, "I'm so glad you here," than he pulls a pistol and blows a hole in her stomach, killing her instantly, as the two men she spoke up wheel up behind her. As it turns out, the helpful gentleman rebukes his two henchmen and then removes a spool of microfilm from her corpse. He orders them to dispose of her body.

    The scene shifts to the Soviet Embassy as C.I.A honcho, Major Taylor (Tom Felleghy of "Atlas Against the Czar"), meets with his counterpart in Soviet Intelligence, Colonel Dolukin (Fernando Sancho of "A Pistol for Ringo"), to discuss the death of Elisa. Dolukin reveals that 'the organization' killed Elisa. This 'organization," as he calls it, is "a private spy association" that has knocked off its share of Soviet agents, too. Taylor agrees with Dolukin, "Now, I think their dangerousness has been underestimated." Dolukin adds that he decided to call the meeting because "The more time you expend on the 'organization' the less you will have for Russia." Taylor dismisses Dolukin's optimism and the scene shifts to C.I.A. HQ where the superiors choose the man most qualified to undertake this deadly mission from Third Special Division. Agent 3S3 Walter Ross (George Ardisson) can shoot and kick his way out of any tight spot and proves it.

    Walter Ross' superiors want him to find Irmgard von Wittstein (Barbara Simon of "Gunfight at Red Sands") because she is Henry Dvorak's daughter. According to Major Taylor, they suspect Dvorak is the mastermind behind the 'Organization.' The C.I.A.'s codename for Dvorak is 'Mr. A,' one of the greatest spies of World War II that helped bring about the destruction of the Third Reich. They want Ross to learn the whereabouts of Dvorak from the daughter and they authorize him to do whatever it takes to complete the mission. Ross' boss says, "It's your job to get to know her. You can make love to her, torture her, blackmail her, even marry her, but you must absolutely succeed." Nevertheless, they warn Ross that he will be up against the cream of the 'Organization's crop of killers. Ross learns for himself what kind of danger that he has plunged himself in after he contacts the daughter. While he drives away from his first rendezvous with her, he finds himself boxed in by two heavy trucks that ram his vehicle unless he leaps from it.

    "Agent 3S3: Passport to Hell" boasts enough action, intrigue, and surprises to keep you interested. The on-location lensing in Beirut, Lebanon, as well as snow-swept Austria, certainly adds to its scenic grandeur. One nefarious wench relies on a special make-up compact that fires deadly darts and there's an interesting bar scene where rivals arm wrestle with a glass of beer clutched between them. It is always interesting to see Spanish actor Fernando Sancho cast as a character other than a fat, stereotypical Mexican bandit, but the absence of a strong villain undermines this more than adequate thriller.
  • This exciting but so-so picture turns out to be a mediocre European co-production dealing with secret agents taking on a dangerous Organization and an international conspiracy. The film concerns an American agent (George Ardisson) assigned to a deadly operation . The film starts with US Major Taylor (Tom Felleghy ) , meets with his counterpart in Soviet Intelligence, Colonel Dolukin (Fernando Sancho), to discuss the previous death of an American agent . The real culprit seems to be a private spy association nicknamed ¨The Organization¨ that has knocked off both , C. I. A and KGB agents . American HQ chooses the most qualified agent to undertake this risked mission from Third Special Division : Agent 3S3 Walter Ross (George Ardisson) who can shoot and kick his way out of any tight spot and efficiently demonstrates it . The hero's mission is to discover and take down the head of a sinister worldwide spy organization . Another agent Ahmed (José Marco) will equally help him to find out the killer gang . The clues lead to Irmgard von Wittstein (Barbara Simon) , that's why she is Henry Dvorak's daughter. According to high-command , they suspect Dvorak is the mastermind behind the 'Organization.'

    This is a nail-biting and messy thriller with plenty of emotion, noisy action , car crashes , pursuits , twists and turns . The movie is a Spanish-Italian co-production about secret agents , a sub-genre called ¨Euro-spy¨ , very usual at that time in the 60s . The origin of this sub-genre results to be the ¨James Bond¨ series , especially : ¨Terence Young's James versus Dr. No¨, ¨From Russia with Love¨and ¨Thunderball¨ that caused an authentic flood of copies, imitations and rip offs , each time more and more awful . The film is fast-movement ; besides , being developed in various scenarios , though specially on Lebanon and a snow-swept Austria . However, the movie is a bit boring and there are situations and images that are ridiculous and embarrassing . The film, in its entirety , is a kind of nonsense , George Ardisson does not impress with anything, Georges Rivière in the role of villain is a little better . In the picture appears habitual actors of co-productions : the great Fernando Sancho , Francisco Sanz and José Marco , all of them were players of numerous Paella Westerns . Furthermore , two gorgeous Eurotrash actresses : Barbara Simons and Seyna Seyn . In addition , appearing other prolific secondaries such as Sal Borgese, Tom Felleghy, Ugo Sasso, Jeff Cameron, Dakar , Pietro Torrisi or Peter McCoy , all of them customary actors of this kinds of genres as Spaghetti Western , Peplum , Giallo or Euro-spy . Followed by a sequel in similar style : ¨Agent 3S3, Massacre in the Sun¨ (Sergio Sollima 1966) in which our starring set out in rescue a scientific (Eduardo Fajardo) abducted in Saint Felipe Island (South America) by a tyrant named Siqueiros (Fernando Sancho) , being also starred by Sal Borgese, Luis Undini, and Luz Marquez .

    Agente 3S3: Passaporto per l'inferno (1965) displays a thrilling and fitted to action musical score by Piero Umiliani . As well as an atmospheric cinematography by Carlo Carli , though a perfect remastering being necessary . The evocative on-location lensing in international countries as Lebanon, Beirut , Austria, Vienna and Balcazar studios, Barcelona , Spain. The motion picture produced by Alfonso Balcazar was regularly directed by Sergio Sollima who made some classic Spaghetti Westerns as the ¨Cuchillo¨ trilogy starred by Tomas Milian . Sergio Sollima's direction is regularly crafted, here he's less cynical and more inclined toward violence , fights and too much action . Sergio wrote and directed all kinds of genres such as Pirate films as ¨ Sandokan ¨ and the ¨ Black Corsario ¨ ; Peplum : ¨Rocha¨ , "Spartacus and the Ten Gladiators" , "Triumph of the Ten Gladiators" , ¨Ursus¨ "Goliath Against the Giants" ; Euro-spy : "Requiem for a Secret Agent" , "Agent 3S3: Hunter from the Unknown" , ¨Tanger 67¨ ; being especially known for his ¨Cuchillo trilogy¨ : ¨Run Cuchillo run¨, ¨Face to Face¨ , ¨The big Gundown¨ and a Poliziesco : ¨Revolver¨ at his best . This is a mildly satisfying and thrilling Euro-spy flick that only avid fans of the sub-genre will love . Average but entertaining.
  • American secret agent 3S3 is assigned to "blackmail, torture, maybe even marry" the daughter of the head of an international crime organization in order to locate his present whereabouts. His mission ultimately takes him to Lebanon, where most of the action is set. This is one of those spy films that could only have been made in the 1960s (and I mean that as a compliment). I appreciated its "feel" in general and its Oriental-flavored music score in particular, but I was also bored sometimes by its slow pace. George Ardisson actually looks a bit like Sean Connery from certain angles, and is pretty good with the karate chops, but the fight scenes are often clumsily staged and poorly edited. Barbara Simon is pretty but rather bland, while Seyna Seyn is a way cool, but also way underused villainess. ** out of 4.
  • First part of the trilogy about agent 3S3 with Giorgio Ardisson

    After his particularly raunchy episode in the erotic episodic film "Erotica" (1962), Sergio Sollima (1921-2015) directed a feature-length film for the first time. He had previously been a screenwriter, for example, for the Brad Harris sandal films "Die Irrfahrten des Herkules" (1961) and "Samson: Befreier der Versklavten" (1962). Sollima's most famous works would be "Brutale Stadt" (1970) with Charles Bronson and "Revolver - Die Perfekte Erpressung" (1973) with Oliver Reed and Fabio Testi.

    With the invention of Walter Ross, the agent 3S3 (3rd agent from the 3rd special unit), Sollima followed on from the successful James Bond films and became a co-founder of the EuroSpy wave.

    The main actor was the Italian actor Giorgio Ardisson (1931-2014), who was previously known from sandal films such as "Vampire gegen Heracles" (1961). The well-trained sports ace was able to film many fight scenes himself and was nicknamed the "Italian James Bond".

    In the first use, things get off to a good start for 3S3. His car is basically crushed like a sandwich by two truck drivers. Of course the hero escapes safely. From then on, Agent 3S3 has adventures in Beirut, Vienna, Rome and Spain. He is after a mysterious criminal organization that will of course stop at nothing. He meets beautiful women (Seyna Seyn, Liliane Fernani and Barbara Simon/Bruna Smionato), who of course cannot resist his charm. He happily beats up other men (such as Sal Borgese and Pietro Torrisi in a Viennese bar) until he meets the beefy Dakar (1920-2004, was also there alongside Steve Reeves in "Die schwarzen Piraten von Malaysia") as his toughest opponent . The well-deserved happy ending with the beautiful Barbara Simon is of course in jeopardy due to another mission. The hero just has to move on. Other roles include Jose Marco, Georges Riviere, Fernando Sancho, Jeff Cameron and Franco Andrei.

    The spy thriller is by no means reinvented here. You can also tell that this film is basically the enjoyable B-side to the elaborate James Bond productions. But the fights are good, the locations are varied and the enormous wear and tear on women is wonderfully raunchy. Sergio Sollima did a lot of things right in his feature film debut and was rewarded with a sequel.
  • This is the first of George Ardisson's spy flicks and it's a darn good beginning. He followed this up with Inferno in Caracas, Operation Counterspy, and another 3S3 adventure, Hunter of the Unknown, all released in 1966. Ardisson made his share of spaghetti westerns, was in several of Mario Bava's costume epics and even had a bit in Fellini's Juliet of the Spirits! Here he plays Walter Ross, agent 3S3, a designation meaning secret agent number 3 of the 3rd Special Division, and he pretty much kicks butt. Ardisson was an excellent fighter and he has plenty of chances to show off those skills including a particularly brutal match up against Dakar, a man twice his size.

    We are treated to a terrific Piero Umiliani jazzy soundtrack that kicks in with the cool credit sequence and barely lets up the rest of the way. This was also director Sergio Sollima's (credited here as Simon Sterling) first spy flick and he keeps things tight and on the move throughout. Sollima also directed Hunter of the Unknown and Requiem For a Secret Agent with lesser results.

    Fun things include the winter Vienna locations, the unusual geographical and architectural locations in Lebanon, arm wrestling with a glass of beer between the combatants, litmus paper that can be used to detect poison in one's drink, a pendant transmitter with the receiver in a pair of eyeglasses, and a needle-shooting compact case. The script is good without a lot of nonsense and one line that sticks with this viewer is spoken by Jackie Yen: `I hate violence when it's used against myself.' Don't we all.

    The real attraction here is of the tailor-made role for Ardisson. He's a snappy dresser and doesn't come across as your typical smarmy secret agent. Rather, he's in control and doesn't need a lot of gadgets to get the job done. He's worth watching the film for even if it wasn't as good as it happens to be. Recommended.