Mexican Slayride (1967) Poster

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4/10
In the wake of James Bond
dbdumonteil5 February 2005
England had James Bond.France had OSS117 and Coplan,and SAS for those whose taste runs that way.None of them became an international star as Ian Fleming's hero did.

Riccardo Freda is the entertainment director par excellence.He did horror movies,swashbucklers,sword and sandals ,melodramas ..and spy thrillers in the wake of James Bond.This one is not bad ,in spite of a budget which you cannot compare to Salzman/Broccoli productions.The scene when Coplan discovers his own coffin in the hacienda might be a nod to the prologue of "Thunderball".The cold room scene is good suspense too.The rest is business as usual
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5/10
Arty, but forgettable
gridoon202416 May 2014
Warning: Spoilers
This is one of several "Coplan" movies made in the 1960s, all of them with a different male lead in the title role. This one stars Lang Jeffries, who is one of the best actors to work regularly in this genre, and it also frequently tries to be arty and ambitious (the scene of the discovery of the first corpse is almost Hitchcockian), but on the whole it is quite formulaic and forgettable. I will admit, though, that the villains' master plan may be far-fetched, but it is also quite logical in a comic-book way. Finally, I may be spoiling the film by saying that the English title - "Mexican Slayride" - is very accurate; at the end Coplan may be the only important character in the film left alive! ** out of 4.
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4/10
Mexican SLAYRIDE (Riccardo Freda, 1967) **
Bunuel197622 February 2010
Even given my general lack of enthusiasm for the "Eurospy" genre, I was all the more disappointed with this one in view of the involvement of director Freda, yet another major figure of Italian cult cinema (even if both Spain and France seem to have had bigger stakes in the film's production). Apparently, this was one of a series of low-brow efforts – obviously intended to emulate the James Bond extravaganzas – made featuring the protagonist (a secret agent named Coplan), blandly played by Lang Jeffries. A measure of the undistinguished results in this case is the fact that a mere five days after my viewing of the picture, I can barely recall what it was about: I do know that it opens with a jeep being blown up, an auction of some Rembrandt painting occurs early on, a damsel in distress eventually proves duplicitous (even disposing of the hero's associate), ditto a wheel-chair bound man (harboring both a passion for classical music and a pet snake) is revealed to have been faking it all along, while somewhere along the line there is an attempt to replace the American President with a double (or was that last ploy from KISS, KISS…BANG, BANG [1966], which I watched a couple of days prior to this one?!). As usual, there are some particularly animated fist-fights along the way, with a bit of romance on the side…but none of it is remotely memorable, and not even all that engaging while it is on (which rather gives credence to the allegation that Freda often took on projects simply to feed his gambling habit!).
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