Watching a bunch of 60s movies for a "60s Top 100" poll. Decided to take on the original Harry Palmer trilogy, which I hadn't seen in its entirety before: The Ipcress File, Funeral in Berlin and Billion Dollar Brain. They're all pretty dull, but the first one has a certain dry charm. Low-rent spy movies obviously(?) trying to cash in on the popularity of the Bond franchise (even though I'm not sure about the exact chronology of the two series, which are both based partly on books). But at the same time they're the anti-Bond spy thrillers, from the droll hero to the settings - when the producers decide to take the action to an exotic location they go to East Berlin and Helsinki rather than the West Indies or Japan. The movies get progressively worse, and Brain is particularly awful, with a confusing plot which is almost impossible to follow. For movie buffs it's pretty ripe with trivia bits though - it features Karl Malden as a sauna-loving, triple-crossing spy, and Ed Begley in full ham-and-cheese mode as a right-wing Texas general with a private army and a super computer. Also for some reason it was executive produced by Andre de Toth(!); and perhaps most bizarrely, it's directed by Ken Russell.