Casablanca, Nest of Spies explained

Casablanca, Nest of Spies
Director:Henri Decoin
Starring:Sara Montiel
Music:Gregorio Garcia Segura
Cinematography:Christian Matras

Casablanca, Nest of Spies (French: Casablanca, nid d'espions, Spanish; Castilian: Noches de Casablanca, Italian: Spionaggio a Casablanca) is a 1963 French-Spanish-Italian spy film directed by Henri Decoin and starring Sara Montiel, Maurice Ronet and Franco Fabrizi.[1] Set in 1942 in Casablanca, it was shot in Alicante.[2]

Plot

In 1942, a small group of French Resistance members devises a plan to attack in the Moroccan city of Casablanca, aiming to undermine Nazi Germany's power there. While the French police officer Maurice Desjardins is enjoying himself with some girls, the Resistance group shoots a man in the port, seizing a briefcase containing crucial documents about the Third Reich. Nearby, Andre Kuhn observes the entire operation through his binoculars. Although he pretends to be a businessman, he is actually a spy for the Germans, a fact unknown to his girlfriend Teresa Villar, an attractive Spanish singer who works at the El Dorado nightclub and unwittingly becomes embroiled in the scheme.

Cast

Notes and References

  1. Book: Roberto Poppi, Mario Pecorari. Dizionario del cinema italiano. I film. Gremese Editore, 2007. 8884405033.
  2. Marco Giusti. 007 all'italiana. Isbn Edizioni, 2010. .