| Photos (see all 5 | slideshow) |
| Roger Moore | ... | Simon Templar | |
| Ian Hendry | ... | Alessandro Destamio | |
| Rosemary Dexter | ... | Gina Destamio | |
| Aimi MacDonald | ... | Lily | |
| George Pastell | ... | Marco Ponti | |
| Marie Burke | ... | Donna Maria Destamio | |
| Finlay Currie | ... | Don Pasquale | |
| Fulton Mackay | ... | James Euston | |
| Alex Scott | ... | The Major | |
| Peter Madden | ... | Lo Zio | |
| Anthony Newlands | ... | The Doctor | |
| Guy Deghy | ... | Maresciallo | |
| Edward Evans | ... | The Bank Manager | |
| Eileen Way | ... | The Maid | |
| Peter Kristof | ... | Giorgio | |
| Steve Plytas | ... | Cirano | |
| Agath Angelos | ... | Doorman | |
| Gábor Baraker | ... | Barman (as Gabor Baraker) | |
| Steven Berkoff | ... | Bertoli | |
| Hal Galili | ... | Bus Driver | |
| Charles Houston | ... | Hotel Reception Clerk | |
| Gertan Klauber | ... | Renato | |
| Ricardo Montez | ... | Nino (as Richard Montez) | |
| Malya Nappi | ... | Woman Clerk | |
| Salmaan Peerzada | ... | Airline Clerk (as Salmaan Peer) | |
| Derek Sydney | ... | Maitre'D' | |
| Ernst Walder | ... | First Policeman | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Leslie Crawford | ... | Chauffeur (uncredited) | |
| Terence Plummer | ... | Gino Marriotti (uncredited) | |
Directed by | |||
| Jim O'Connolly | |||
Writing credits | ||
| Leslie Charteris | (novel) | |
| Harry W. Junkin | writer | |
| John Kruse | writer | |
Produced by | |||
| Robert S. Baker | .... | producer | |
| Johnny Goodman | .... | associate producer | |
| Roger Moore | .... | co-producer (uncredited) | |
Original Music by | |||
| Edwin Astley | |||
Cinematography by | |||
| Brendan J. Stafford | |||
Film Editing by | |||
| Bert Rule | |||
Casting by | |||
| Judith Jourd | |||
Art Direction by | |||
| Ivan King | |||
Set Decoration by | |||
| Pamela Cornell | |||
Makeup Department | |||
| Elsie Alder | .... | hair stylist | |
| George Blackler | .... | makeup supervisor | |
Production Management | |||
| Victor Peck | .... | production supervisor | |
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director | |||
| Gino Marotta | .... | assistant director | |
Sound Department | |||
| Len Abbott | .... | sound recordist | |
| A.W. Lumkin | .... | recording director | |
| Bill Rowe | .... | sound recordist (as Billy Rowe) | |
| Wilfred Thompson | .... | dubbing editor (as Wilf Thompson) | |
Camera and Electrical Department | |||
| Jack Lowin | .... | camera operator | |
| Mike Tomlin | .... | assistant camera | |
Costume and Wardrobe Department | |||
| Masada Wilmot | .... | wardrobe | |
Music Department | |||
| Edwin Astley | .... | conductor | |
| Leslie Charteris | .... | composer: Saint music theme | |
Other crew | |||
| Leslie Crawford | .... | fight arranger | |
| Josie Fulford | .... | continuity | |
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| Murder on the Orient Express | Death Wish | Assault | Sleeping Murder | The French Connection |
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| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
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Given director O’Connolly’s background in B-movies, he perhaps results in being more at ease with the low-budget requirements of this one (emanating from its TV origins): nevertheless, it effectively utilizes several European locations – including passing off Malta (even my hometown puts in a prominent appearance during a scuffle 20 minutes into the film!) as Palermo; incidentally, star Roger Moore would also come over here for the WWI adventure SHOUT AT THE DEVIL (1976) – incidentally, both films were made at a time when my country was still a British colony.
Anyway, the plot finds Simon Templar facing off with the Mafia – but, at the same time, aiding their cause by uncovering an imposter in their midst (at a rather precarious time for them, since they’re being assembled to elect a new Don). The accents throughout are fairly risible, though Ian Hendry is decent as a would-be mobster…but, then, Finlay Currie plays the dying Mafia head?! As was the case with THE FICTION-MAKERS (1968), The Saint is romanced and helped by a couple of girls – one of whom is Hendry’s moll and the other (played by lovely Rosemary Dexter) his niece. Despite her English-sounding name, the latter was actually Pakistani by birth and, curiously enough, most of her career was spent in Italian exploitation fare (her facial features looked familiar enough but, frankly, I had forgotten all about her appearance in Jess Franco’s MARQUIS DE SADE’S JUSTINE [1968] myself!).
Resolving itself into a number of confrontations and chases, the narrative obviously takes an altogether different route from its caper-type predecessor – and manages to be more involving by having the hero make a personal issue out of the case (hence the title). Even so, I have to admit that his characterization isn’t very clearly defined – certainly not in the way James Bond was (or would be for Moore when he took the role himself)…and it doesn’t help, either, that I haven’t watched the 1997 big-screen incarnation of Leslie Charteris’ creation directed by Phillip Noyce and starring Val Kilmer!