The Spy Who Loved Flowers | |
Director: | Umberto Lenzi |
Starring: | Roger Browne |
Music: | Angelo Francesco Lavagnino Armando Trovajoli |
Cinematography: | Augusto Tiezzi |
Language: | Italian |
Runtime: | 93 minutes |
Producer: | Fortunato Misiano |
The Spy Who Loved Flowers (it|Le spie amano i fiori, also known as Hell Cats) is a 1966 Italian/Spanish co-production science fiction-Eurospy film written and directed by Umberto Lenzi (here credited as "Hubert Humphry"). Set in Paris, Geneva and Athens, it is the sequel to Super Seven Calling Cairo (1965).[1] [2] It starred Roger Browne and Yoko Tani.
British agent Martin Stevens is assigned to assassinate three foreign operatives who collaborated with a deceased scientist whose weaponized invention the agent himself has recovered. Halfway through the mission, Stevens discovers that the enemy has been targeting him instead and knows his every move, thus developing suspicion that there is a traitor in their midst.
The Spy Who Loved Flowers was released in France on 21 December 1966 as Des fleurs pour un espion.[3]