Filmed on location in Normandy, Marseille, New York, Singapore and Australia, The Nuclear Conspiracy is a thriller that is worth a peek, and is enjoyable enough if expectations are not too high.
At home in her London apartment, Susan Galloway (Doll) receives a panicky phone call from her journalist fiancé. Fearing that he has been injured or worse, she and her daughter take off to retrace his footsteps. Aided and abetted by a reprobate of a photo journalist, and monitored all the time by mainly unseen pursuers, they eventually uncover a high level conspiracy and a secret nuke dump in the Australian desert.
The film is somewhat marred by languid pacing and a bad English post dub but is engaging nevertheless.
An attempt on the heroine's life in an underground car park is particularly well handled, as is the frequent sinister appearances of a character called Aunt Ruth.
At home in her London apartment, Susan Galloway (Doll) receives a panicky phone call from her journalist fiancé. Fearing that he has been injured or worse, she and her daughter take off to retrace his footsteps. Aided and abetted by a reprobate of a photo journalist, and monitored all the time by mainly unseen pursuers, they eventually uncover a high level conspiracy and a secret nuke dump in the Australian desert.
The film is somewhat marred by languid pacing and a bad English post dub but is engaging nevertheless.
An attempt on the heroine's life in an underground car park is particularly well handled, as is the frequent sinister appearances of a character called Aunt Ruth.