The Spy movie genre is dominated by James Bond. The franchise’s one liners, action sequences, campy humor, evil villains and their conspiracies to control the world have become almost synonymous with the Spy genre. But James Bond doesn’t quite have a complete monopoly on the spy film genre. Here are 8 Spy Movies from around the world that share some of the iconic motifs of the James Bond franchise to expand the range of your spy film viewing.


8 Great Spy Movies from Around the World

The Lives of Others

The Lives of Others (Germany)

Actual Spy, Historical

The Lives of Others definitely doesn’t feature your James Bond style spy. Instead of an attractive womanizing action figure, the lead spy in this film is a balding loner that wiretaps a playwright in East Germany to spy on him for the Stasi (East German Secret Police). He’s the villain of this historical drama, and whilst he’s not a popular character like James Bond, there’s a more in-depth examination of his character and the morality of his work. Plus you’ll also get a realistic portrayal of what life in the former GDR looked like.


The Spy Gone North

The Spy Gone North (South Korea)

Actual Spy, In Disguise, Historical, Conspiracy

Like The Lives of Others, The Spy Gone North, is set within a real historical context. In this case, East Germany is switched for North Korea as one South Korean is hired by the government to infiltrate a North Korean nuclear power plant posing as a money-hungry businessman. The focus in this film is on how the spy builds and maintains his disguise is some pretty high pressure situations as well as the political conspiracy behind his mission. So expect to see more diplomacy and tension and less action than your typical Bond film.


The Killer

The Killer (Hong Kong)

Stylish Action, One Liners, Romance

You can probably remember the great action scenes from your favorite spy movies. Maybe it’s the crane parkour scene from Casino Royale or one of Tom Cruise’s many stunts from the Mission Impossible series. In The Killer the whole film gives 100% – the action scenes, romantic storyline, brotherhood, and style are all pure over-the-top cinematic entertainment. For all of this and more (every explosion is worth two of those in James Bond movies), The Killer is must see.


Mole Agent

Mole Agent (Chile)

Documentary, Actual Spy

This Documentary is the wild card on this list as it features no action scenes, no attractive actors, and no suave comedy. Instead the spy in Mole Agent is a pensioner sent undercover into a retirement home to track the treatment of the other retirees. Mole Agent shows that you’re never too old for a new assignment even if you might not be able to pull it off like James Bond could.


The Bloodettes

The Bloodettes (Cameroon)

Stylish Action, Conspiracy, Evil Villain

Like James Bond movies, The Bloodettes has some stylish action and evil villains with grand conspiracies. But that’s where the similarities end. Firstly, the two agents in this film are women. Secondly, it looks and sounds like a nightclub with neon lighting and a thumping soundtrack. Plus, there’s also vampires. The Bloodettes is one of the most original films I’ve seen from Africa. It’s Cameroon in the future.

Read our full review here.


Castle of Cagliostro

Castle of Cagliostro (Japan)

Technology, Evil Villain, Villain's Lair

You may be familiar with some of Hayao Miyazaki’s Studio Ghibli animations. But maybe you missed his very first directorial feature, Castle of Cagliostro. Set within an animated whimsical Italy, Castle of Cagliostro follows a thief that stumbles on an evil villain and his castle lair – complete with secret doors and some fantastic machines (a consistent motif in Miyazaki’s work) – to rescue the princess imprisoned there. The villain and his castle are just like Scaramanga’s island hideout in Man with the Golden Gun and breaking into the villain’s castle is just as fun as the breakout.


Ashakara

Ashakara (Togo)

Conspiracy, Evil Villain, Technology

In Ashakara, a French multinational sends a spy to Togo to steal the recipe for a magical cure that has been used for years by a rural medicine doctor. The spy takes a metal case with remote video-calling technology (very futuristic for 1991 when this movie was made) to stay in touch with his ‘evil villain’ boss whilst he treks through the country. The Togolese are no pushovers though as the medicine doctors fight back against the French imperialist intentions and the money-greedy capitalists.

Read our full review here.


Enter the Dragon

Enter the Dragon (Hong Kong)

Stylish Action, Evil Villain, Villain's Lair, One Liners, In Disguise

Enter the Dragon is a perfect gateway to Bruce Lee movies, it has his iconic martial arts moves plus a James Bond-esque plot with a few Blaxploitation themes thrown in. In the film Lee is sent undercover to an island to compete at a martial arts competition hosted by a suspected Hong Kong crime lord. Like James Bond movies, he and the ‘evil villain’ engage in mind games leading up to the film’s climax. The ‘evil villain,’ secret hideout, undercover identity, and stylish action, make this a perfect alternative to the early James Bond movies.


If you think we’ve missed a film from the list, please get in touch on Twitter or by email to share some more spy movies from around the world.

For the first time in my life, I watched an Indian Blockbuster in a cinema. Whilst it wasn’t the full experience I had imagined, the cinema is the only place you should see RRR‘s bombastic stunts and melodramatic bromance.


The Experience

In hindsight, choosing to watch RRR as a Sunday matinee wasn’t the best choice. The Cinemark 18 + XD in Los Angeles was almost as empty as the mall it sits within, which is itself a forgotten mall, across the 405 from the much more popular Fox Hills Westfield Mall. There’s no real need for this mall or the Cinemark itself, as the theater chain has since built a more modern location in Playa Vista just 2 miles away. However, the distinguishing factor of this Cinemark location is that it has become the only theater on the West Side of Los Angeles (Cinemark or otherwise) that consistently screens new Indian releases each week. So if you want to watch Indian films in the city on the big screen and don’t reside in the Valleys or the O.C., this is your best option.

The theater was screening RRR in each of the languages it had dialogue specially written for (Telugu, Hindi, and Tamil), but as Telugu was the original production, we went for that screening. I’m not sure how widely each of the languages are spoken in Los Angeles, so not sure if the Tamil or Hindi screenings might have been more busy, but the Telugu Sunday matinee screening was almost empty. There were just a few families with toddlers and infants for company. As a result, we never heard an audience response to the movie, apart from applause at the end. The only sounds coming from the audience that we could hear were from the kids’ tablets that their parents had given them after they announced they wanted to go home around 30 minutes before the intermission (this film is not for everyone). However, this was never much of a problem for us, because, to the probable detriment to our ears, this film was blasted through the speakers at a noticeably higher decibel level than your typical Hollywood screening. The loud but empty cinema made it feel like we’d arrived early to a music concert. With a crowd, this would have been special.


The FIlm

Despite the small crowd, the film itself was completely at home on the big screen. It’s an action film that the Superhero addicted Hollywood studios have become afraid to make: a completely original story with a big budget. But to be fair to Hollywood, this film wasn’t made by just anyone. It was made by S.S. Rajamouli, one of the biggest name directors in India. He’s the guy that made the #2 and #8 highest grossing Indian films in Baahubali 1 and 2.

Costing $72M, RRR is the second most expensive Indian film ever made (behind S. Shankar’s 2.0). The high budget is evident in the incredible action scenes and CGI – which, whilst still slightly behind the quality of the Hollywood CGI, already looks much better than the Baahubali films. If this is what $72M makes, imagine what the budget of the $356M Avengers Endgame could produce. That is if you can imagine anything being more action-packed and epic than RRR.

There’s so many big moments in this film. It starts with three hard-hitting chapters which introduce ‘The Story,’ ‘The Fire,’ and ‘The Water.’ The Story is the premise – a child from rural India gets ‘bought’ by the English colonial governor to the heart-break of their mother and village. The Fire is the introduction to our villain – a loyal and determined member of the colonial police that single handedly takes on an entire mob of around 1,000 people in one of the film’s best action scenes. The Water introduces us to the kidnapped girls hope at rescue – a man from the forest that protects those that inhabit it. He demonstrates his action chops by taking down a tiger. Even though each of these scenes hits hard and gives you an adrenaline shot to kick start this 3 hour action bromance, neither are the film’s best action scenes. There are just too many action scenes to highlight, which we’ll leave for you to experience.

The only moments that took me out of the zone were the intermission and the ‘Naatu Naatu’ dance scene which both doesn’t fit the period or the serious action/cheesy tone that the film had already established. Plus the nod to Black culture by tokenizing a Black drummer (the only Black character in the film) just feels awkward. But luckily the film quickly resumes the melodrama and action pretty soon after both scenes to build the adrenaline and emotional connection back up. This is the ultimate ‘Theme Park‘ movie that needs to be seen on the big screen.


The Future

Before the pandemic, there was a John Woo double feature at The Aero in Santa Monica. It featured The Killer and Hardboiled, two stylish (and often cheesy) classics of the action-film genre. They’re both incredibly fun films to watch, and it was even more fun to watch them with a full audience that responded to the film’s iconic moment with cheers and shouts of appreciation. I believe S.S. Rajamouli deserves the same love that The Aero afforded John Woo. It may sound strange saying this as S.S. Rajamouli is a hugely popular director around the world that has drawn a relatively massive box-office total. But, whilst his films are massive in India, they haven’t found much of a cross-over audience amongst film fans in the U.S. Like John Woo, his films are iconic, melodramatic, action films that are best experienced with friends or a crowd. They should be seen by all action and superhero film fans, but I’ll be happy if they manage to form a cult corner like John Woo managed to do, and screen to sell-out shows in Art-House cinemas in the not too distant future.