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Cold Sweat is a 1970 French-Italian international co-production starring Charles Bronson and directed by Terence Young. It is based on the 1959 novel Ride the Nightmare by Richard Matheson. It was filmed in and around Beaulieu-sur-Mer.
- June 14, 1970
- Robert Dorfmann, Maurice Jacquin
Cold Sweat: Directed by Terence Young. With Charles Bronson, Liv Ullmann, James Mason, Jill Ireland. With his wife and daughter being held hostage, a seasoned ex-military man is involved in a shady smuggling operation to save his family.
- (2.9K)
- Action, Crime, Drama
- Terence Young
- 1974-06
Under a new name and a new identity, the seasoned former military man, Joe Martin, tries to live a simple life with his wife Fabienne and their twelve-year-old daughter, Michèle, running a fishing-boat business for tourists, somewhere in the South of France.
Overview. During the Korean War, Joe Moran, is convicted for striking a colonel. Imprisoned in Germany he encounters his former company commander Captain Ross, jailed for black marketeering. Together with Ross' cohorts Joe agrees to escape with them, but things go wrong and a policeman is killed.
An American expatriate's (Charles Bronson) wife (Liv Ullmann) and daughter are kidnapped in France by a drug smuggler (James Mason) from his past.
- (16)
- Terence Young
- PG
- Charles Bronson
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During the Korean War, Joe Moran, is convicted for striking a colonel. Imprisoned in Germany he encounters his former company commander Captain Ross, jailed for black marketeering. Together with Ross' cohorts Joe agrees to escape with them, but things go wrong and a policeman is killed.
Though proudly billed as Terence Young's COLD SWEAT, this turned out to be a below-average international concoction: the plot is formulaic albeit adapted from a novel by Richard Matheson one that Bronson often returned to, of a man whose past catches up with him (in fact, I recently watched Sergio Sollima's similar but superior VIOLENT CITY ...