Innocent Bystanders (1972) Poster

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7/10
A pretty good spy movie
Courier25 April 1999
This one came in kind of late in that period of all the 007-imitation movies. Some of them were terrible, like "Operation Kid Brother" (which starred Sean Connery's brother Neil!). And some were pretty good, like "Innocent Bystanders". It is well-directed and its cinematography is excellent. Its rapid editing is really neat at first, but it gets kind of annoying after a while. Baker is excellent as a cold-blooded agent who has been double-crossed by his own people. I was amused by the constant bickering of Baker's two rival agents. "Innocent Bystanders" also has a couple alumni from the 007 movies: Donald Pleasence from "You Only Live Twice" (the original Dr. Evil!) and Vladek Sheybal from "From Russia With Love". If you in the mood for a dark spy adventure, "Innocent Bystanders" is for you.
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6/10
A loss leader Bashi Bazook
bkoganbing24 May 2016
I think Stanley Baker was starting to show some of the ravages of the cancer that eventually killed him. Still as always he's tough as nails starring in Innocent Bystanders.

Baker stars as a compromised spy who spymaster Donald Pleasance feels will crack under the pressure. So he sends him out as a sort of decoy while a couple of other agents are to do the real assignment which is getting a hold of a defecting Russian scientist who has escaped from a Siberian gulag and is now in Turkey somewhere.

Of course when Baker finds out he's a British version of a Bashi- Bazook, expendable troops you put in the front line expecting them to be killed, he doesn't take it kindly and goes into business for himself. Along the way Baker acquires Geraldine Chaplin who is in the title role of the Innocent Bystander.

I'm told in the book that Innocent Bystander the lead character does have the exaggerated mustache that Baker sports. I really can't buy that since part of espionage is the ability to blend into the background.

Pleasance who is always in his films having evil intent is no different here. Dana Andrews makes an appearance here as the American spy chief who has contracted out this assignment.

As it turns out there are others who want the scientist for more than matters of geopolitics.

Fans of Stanley Baker will like Innocent Bystanders.
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7/10
Stanley Baker's Bond
TheFearmakers24 March 2021
Iron-jawed British actor Stanley Baker was "considered" for James Bond... ironically he resembles Sean Connery and starred in HELL DRIVERS that a young Connery began in...

Skip over a decade later, after a now-legendary Connery left the role, Baker starred in a movie so Bondish that, by hearing the flauntingly jazzy, repetitive score, you'd think INNOCENT BYSTANDERS was yet another 007 entry...

Including power-hungry villains, led by the most famous of Bond foes, Donald Pleasence, danging a carrot to lesser corporate heavy Dana Andrews...

The first who Baker's agent/assassin John Craig works for, sent on what's basically a suicide mission to retrieve a Jewish scientist, making the action-packed scenes where he's in the dark the best...

And ITALIAN JOB director Peter Collinson wields enough signature 1970's zooms to put a dozen Kung Fu flicks to shame... BYSTANDERS even includes a few karate fights between "Craig" and scene-stealing mercenary couple Darren Nesbitt and Sue Lloyd, who call him "old man" and needed more overall screen-time...

Instead, the INNOCENT character in Geraldine Chaplin's mousy ingenue, conveniently kidnapped and along for the ride, from England to Turkey, slows both the pace and Baker's no-nonsense tough guy, who ultimately becomes so pitifully vulnerable, anyone expecting daring-do adventure from a daring-do adventurer will soon tire of the poor guy getting captured, and recaptured.
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5/10
Reasonably entertaining...
JasparLamarCrabb3 September 2014
Warning: Spoilers
A reasonably entertaining spy thriller but certainly not the swinging fun the poster would have you believe. Stanley Baker, 44 years old but looking very long in the tooth, is a once great British spy about to be put out to pasture by nasty boss Donald Pleasence. He's given one last assignment (tracking down an ex-Russian POW who may or may not be a traitor) to prove he still has some life left him. Baker beats up about a 1/2 dozen men along the way, kidnaps Geraldine Chaplin and allows for the shooting death of a colleague. This is not a particularly nice movie. Baker does journeyman work in a role that could easily have been played by Sean Connery. Chaplin, not who she appears to be, is given little to do. Dana Andrews is an American CIA boss and Pleasence's chief adversary. It's directed by Peter Collinson, who brings none of the wit or style he showed with the earlier classic THE Italian JOB.
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9/10
"My name is Craig, John Craig!"
ShadeGrenade8 September 2008
Warning: Spoilers
The late James Mitchell is best remembered as the creator of 'Callan', a long-running television spy series that starred Edward Woodward. Not so well remembered is a quartet of novels he wrote featuring another spy - John Craig of 'Department K'. These were 'The Man Who Sold Death', 'Die Rich Die Happy', 'The Money That Money Can't Buy' and 'The Innocent Bystanders'. The latter was filmed in 1972, starring my fellow countryman, the late, great Stanley Baker.

A scientist called Kaplan has escaped from a Siberian work-camp, and gone to ground in Turkey. Kaplan is close to perfecting a means of transforming arid desert into tropical rain-forests. U.S. Intelligence agency Group Three wants him but, fearing a security leak, cannot use its own men, so its head Blake ( Dana Andrews ) calls on Loomis ( Donald Pleasence ) of Britain's 'Department K'.

Loomis sends for John Craig, a tough, hard-as-nails agent who suffered torture on his last mission and is now considered expendable. He uses Craig as a decoy, while two other agents, Royce ( Derren Nesbitt ) and Benson ( Sue Lloyd ) carry out the assignment.

Craig's first inkling that something is badly wrong comes when he visits New York and finds that the gun he had been promised by Loomis has not been provided. At the apartment block where Kaplan's brother's lives, he is brutally attacked. Then Group Three pick up Craig and subject him to a mock torture session. Craig is so psychologically disturbed that he cracks even though he is experiencing no physical pain. A Group Three agent ( Cec Linder ) comes up with an interesting analogy: "You can take a knife and sharpen it and sharpen it until it will cut anything, including silk scarves. Then one day you drop it on a stone floor. The knife still cuts, but the silk scarves are safe.".

'Innocent Bystanders' begins rather like 'A Day In The Life Of Ivan Denisovitch', but following a pitched gun battle moves to London. As Loomis and Blake stroll through the city, they exchange information, and this is intercut with shots of Craig and Benson firing at targets. This change in styles is rather disconcerting, but fun. Good editing by Alan Patillo, best known for his work on Gerry Anderson's television shows.

As John Craig, Baker is reminiscent of another with that surname - Daniel. Like the most recent incarnation of 007, Craig is good at his job, but not infallible. He was a karate black belt in the books but that is not mentioned here. The fights in this movie are Bond-like. I wish the producers had resisted the temptation to trendify Craig though. His white suits, long hair and 'Yosser Hughes'-style moustache would doubtless make this film a hilarious experience for modern audiences.

Geraldine Chaplin is a surprising choice for the role of 'Miriam Loman', the American girl whom Craig kidnaps and takes with to Turkey. I say surprising because, how can I put this, she is rather...plain. The glamour is provided by Sue Lloyd as 'Benson'. As 'Loomis', the late Donald Pleasence gives a chilling performance, even his request for gooseberry fool and custard sounds unnerving. Derren Nesbitt's 'Royce' seems to have been modelled on 'Toby Meres' from 'Callan'. Like Meres, Royce is young, hot-headed, and keen to show his superiority over the older man Craig. Warren Mitchell plays another of his funny foreigners, an Australian barman named 'Omar', who habitually refers to Craig as 'pommy bastard'.

The director was Peter Collinson, responsible for the original ( and best ) version of 'The Italian Job'. He keeps the whole thing moving nicely, sprinting from one exciting set-piece to another.

This is not a Bond-style adventure as such ( no gadgets etc. ), but John Keating's music at times evokes Bond. When Craig enters a bank vault, for example, you think that the title theme from 'Thunderball' is about to intrude on the soundtrack. The song - 'What Makes The Man?' - is in the middle of the film, and would have worked had it not been 'sung' by its lyricist, the late Norman 'Hurricane' Smith, the world's worst vocalist.

'Innocent Bystanders' is hard to come by, but for fans of Stanley Baker and '70's spy thrillers is worth seeking out. As are the James Mitchell books ( credited to James Munro ). One wishes that they had also been filmed, with Baker again as 'Craig'.
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