ONE IN A MILIONI

You can always bank on Andress.


Colpo da 500 milioni alla National Bank was originally made in England as Perfect Friday, and as you can see from the poster, it starred the Swiss vision known as Ursula Andress. That makes it a must watch, and what you get is the type of erotic caper Andress made more than once, as this time she becomes the center of a plot to rob a London bank of £200,000. Her partners are her husband and the deputy bank manager, and she’s playing both ends against the middle, so to speak—i.e. doing the nasty with both while telling neither. The heist develops as heists always do, but the real question becomes who she’ll choose to run away with in the end.

Andress must have loved making these films. If they weren’t the easiest money in cinema history they sure look like it. Every time she got one of these scripts we imagine her going, “Ker-ching.” All she had to do was work in various European capitals, be charming and sophisticated, speak in that impossibly sexy Germanic rasp of hers—and of course strip. In that respect Andress was as reliable as government bonds. Getting naked isn’t easy for some, let alone doing it in front of twenty people, but she had a pretty insouciant attitude about it, once saying, “I have no problem with nudity. I can look at myself. I like walking around nude. It doesn’t bother me.”

Of course, the anti-nudity set in today’s new age of prudishness would claim she said that because it was expected/demanded of her. Well, we have only her words to go by. When a person’s own statements are ignored, that makes it mighty easy to turn them into whatever one wishes. There’s a lot of that going around today. But we’ll show her some respect and assume she said what she she meant. Her face and body got her in the door and kept her at the party, and she was aware of that. While she was a solid actress, she wasn’t about to win any awards. At least not with these scripts. Colpo da 500 milioni alla National Bank is a silly little movie but it shows Andress at her best—in every way. For her fans it’s mandatory. It had its world premiere in Italy today in 1970.
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HISTORY REWIND

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This awesome cover art is by Tommy Shoemaker, a new talent to us, but not to more experienced paperback illustration aficionados.
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Sam Peffer cover art for Jonathan Latimer's Solomon's Vineyard, originally published in 1941.

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