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  1. Vendetta for the Saint

    Vendetta for the Saint

    1969 · Mystery · 1h 38m

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  1. Vendetta for the Saint is a 1964 mystery novel featuring the character of Simon Templar, alias "The Saint". Vendetta for the Saint was the first full-length Saint novel published since The Saint Sees it Through, 18 years earlier. A television adaptation of the novel was released as a theatrical film, also entitled Vendetta for the Saint, in 1969.

  2. Vendetta for the Saint: Directed by Jim O'Connolly. With Roger Moore, Ian Hendry, Rosemary Dexter, Aimi MacDonald. Set against an appealingly sunny Sicilian backdrop, this movie finds Simon Templar, an elegant thief and ethical busybody, outraged when a British banker is murdered after he recognizes an old colleague-turned-Mafia kingpin.

    • (392)
    • Action, Adventure, Crime
    • Jim O'Connolly
    • 1969-01-05
  3. Vendetta for the Saint: Part 1: Directed by Jim O'Connolly. With Roger Moore, Ian Hendry, Rosemary Dexter, Aimi MacDonald. Templar is having a drink at a bar in Naples when he witnesses a mêlée between two of the customers.

    • (290)
    • Action, Crime, Drama
    • Jim O'Connolly
    • 1969-01-05
  4. Vendetta for the Saint was the first full-length Saint novel published since The Saint Sees it Through, 18 years earlier. A television adaptation of the novel was released as a theatrical film, also entitled Vendetta for the Saint, in 1969.

  5. Vendetta for the Saint is a 1969 feature film re-edited from a two-part episode of the "Saint" TV series starring Roger Moore as Simon Templar. The episode in turn was based on the 1964 novel of the same name. While on holiday in Naples, the Saint is drawn into a Mafia war when an English...

  6. Overview. Simon Templar is on holiday in Naples when a small uproar on a lunch table draws his attention. An English tourist attempts to greet an Italian businessman as an old friend, but the Italian refuses to acknowledge the greeting and claims never to have met him. Jim O'Connolly. Director.

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  8. The film version was given a U certificate by the British Board of Film Censors (BBFC) on 29 September 1966. "Vendetta for the Saint" was made without provision for a TV edit and has no special halo sequence for part two; also part two has the film version's 'end' caption.

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