Shortly after the release of the 007 epic 'Thunderball' ( 1965 ), another secret agent was pulling big crowds into cinemas. 'Derek Flint' was unique in Bond imitators in that he was an original creation, not based on any literary source. Interviewed by the B.B.C. just before his death, star James Coburn said that the starting point of 'Flint' was 'Sherlock Holmes as it might have been written by Lewis Carroll'. He could have said instead 'James Bond as it might have been done by the makers of the 'Batman' television series'. The bright colours, the fast action, the sly humour, the sexy girls, all are redolent of that notorious '60's pop culture phenomenon. Bond was a fully-trained assassin, but Flint was more than that. He was multi-lingual, a crack shot, wrote scientific journals, taught ballet, and so on. He could even stop his heart from beating to feign death, reviving himself using a gadget in his wrist-watch. In fact Flint's expertise became a joke in itself.
The film begins with the world in grave peril; an unknown enemy has found a way to control the weather. The chiefs of staff of Z.O.W.I.E. ( Zonal Organisation World Intelligence Network ) meet in Washington to discuss the problem, deciding to let computers choose a leader up to the job of saving the world. To the disgust of 'Cramden' ( Lee J.Cobb ), they choose the same man - Derek Flint. He served under Cramden during the war, and the crabby intelligence boss knows him to be a stubborn character who won't take orders. When Z.O.W.I.E. men call on Flint, they find him engaged in combat exercises, and he won't even talk to them. Cramden tries, but even he fails. It is only when enemy agents 'Gruber' ( Michael St.Clair ) and the lovely 'Gila' ( Gila Golan ) try to kill Flint at a New York restaurant that he realises he has a job whether he wants it or not...
Hal Fimberg and Ben Starr's story moves from Marseilles to Rome and an uncharted volcanic island in the Pacific, belonging to the sinister GALAXY organisation, headed by 'Dr.Schneider' ( Bendon Fong ), 'Dr.Krupov' ( Rhys Williams ) and 'Dr.Wu' ( Peter Brocco ). Jack Pearl's novelisation indicates the script was written originally for a much bigger budget. We get to see the trap GALAXY set for Z.O.W.I.E. at the story's start, an attempt is made to kill Flint aboard his private Lear jet, and there is a lengthy chase sequence in Mexico City, culminating in Flint taking the place of a matador ( which explains the origins of the portrait seen in 'In Like Flint' ). The film was slightly ahead of its time in featuring martial arts fights - choreographed by Buzz Henry.
In Coburn, the producers had an actor the equal of Sean Connery; in one hilarious scene, Flint even beats up a Connery-lookalike called 'Triple-0 Eight' ( Robert Gunner )! The 'perfect world' GALAXY wants to create looks nice and shiny on the outside - even Flint seems enchanted by it - but has a nasty under surface; recreational drug taking, women brainwashed to serve as sex slaves, even aggressively racist animals. It looks a lot like the city of the future seen in a later Saul David production - 'Logan's Run' ( 1976 ).
Edward Mulhare makes a superbly caddish villain as 'Rodney' ( he has the heads of three black sheep for a family crest ), a pity he didn't return in the sequel.
The film opened to good reviews and excellent box office, though not on the scale of 'Thunderball'. Our hero reappeared a year later in the disappointing 'In Like Flint'. A third film ( entitled either 'Bride Of Flint' or 'F For Flint' ) went unmade. The character was briefly revived for television in the mid-'70's, starring Ray Danton, but bore little resemblance to the original, and was not developed into a series.
'Our Man Flint' is easily the best of the 007 imitators, and remains entertaining still. The cherry on the cake is the great soundtrack by the late, much-missed Jerry Goldsmith.