Other Titles • In Like Flint • Derek Flint - hart wie Feuerstein (1967)
Synopses for In Like Flint (1967)
1.
IN LIKE FLINT, a sequel to the popular OUR MAN FLINT, features James Coburn in a reprise of his role as the dashing title character. In this amusing parody of spy films, the American president has been replaced by an actor ("An actor? As president?"), and a group of beautiful and powerful renegade women, led by the lovely Helena (Hanna Landy), plot to take over the world. They wish to create a race of female soldiers by brainwashing women with a device planted inside beauty salon hair dryers. Flint, the super secret agent and supreme ladies' man, really has his hands full trying to foil their plot. (Austin Powers would be proud.)
(50 votes)
2.
The Original Man of Mystery!
007 is a great number. And Austin has his powers, but nobody is really "In Like Flint!" He's back, in the ultimate spy spoof, this time going head-to-head with a group of wealthy and powerful female tycoons who have discovered a way to brainwash women through beauty salon hairdryers! And if that's not enough, they then replace the President with their surgically reproduced clone as a part of their super-evil plan to take over the world. In this outrageous adventure where the bad guys are girls, Flint must infiltrate the women's secret lair- a lush and lavish tropical spa called Fabulous Face- before the gals wreak more havoc.
(50 votes)
3.
There was bound to be a Flint sequel, and this one delivers the same kind of zany fun as its predecessor, Our Man Flint. Flint is recruited once again by Lee J. Cobb to be the government's top secret agent, this time to solve a mishap involving the President. Turns out, the Chief Executive has been replaced by an evil duplicate. The new plan for world domination involves feminine aggression, and Flint, with his overpowering charisma, is just the man to turn the hostile forces around. In Like Flint is still over the top, but some of the novelty has worn off, and it doesn't have quite the same edge as the original. Even Jerry Goldsmith's score is a bit more subdued. But the film still has James Coburn and that funny phone. --Bill Desowitz
(46 votes)
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