Bullet to Beijing
The Ipcress File's Harry Palmer is back.... and the Cold War is heating up again!
When long-time British agent Harry Palmer loses his job because the Cold War is over, he's promptly approached by a Russian bossman, Alex. In St. Petersburg Alex tells Harry of his plan for Russia's future, which is threatened because a deadly biochemical weapon called the Red Death has been stolen from him. He'll pay Harry handsomely to retrieve it. An ex-spy friend tips Harry off that it's being sent to Beijing by train, aboard which we begin to learn whose side everyone's really on.
Cast

Michael Caine
Harry Palmer

Jason Connery
Nikolai Petrov

Mia Sara
Natasha Gradetsky

Michael Gambon
Alexei

Michael Sarrazin
Craig

Lev Prygunov
Gen. Gradsky

Patrick Allen
Colonel Wilson

Sue Lloyd
Jean

Burt Kwouk
Kim Soo

John Dunn-Hill
Louis

Anatoli Davydov
Yuri Stephanovich

Aleksandr Zavyalov
Sacha

Ivan Shvedoff
Peter Sergeyvich

Aleksandr Ilin
Ivan

Shaughan Seymour
Carruthers

Tamara Timofeeva
Elderly Woman

Ingolf Gorges
Andrei

Gregory Hlady
Police Inspector

Sergey Russkin
Pilot

Dmitriy Nagiev
Chechen terrorist
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
Michael Caine reprises his portrayal of the Len Deighton character "Harry Palmer" in this rather cheap and cheerful cold-war thriller. This time he joins forces with the handsome, but lightweight, Jason Connery ("Nick") as they work for the enigmatic "Alex" (an unlikely Russian Michael Gambon) to thwart a deadly plan to release a virus that has been pinched by some North Koreans. A few other familiar faces try their best to pep this along, but it's really just an amalgam of themes that is well past it's sell by date. Caine is there, but he isn't - maybe another swimming pool? The dialogue is really pretty pedestrian (though the "we're all getting a bit too old for this" byline does raise a smile now and again). It's got plenty of stylish location photography and the action scenes - of which there is a distinct paucity - are quite good fun when we get them. Otherwise, it's a mediocre television movie that I found placed the "Palmer' character in a series of fish-out-of-water scenarios that rather undermined the charm and novelty of his earlier outings. Caine can carry a film, his sheer weight of personality does that here - but this is certainly nobody's finest work.
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