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VariableValue
Edit count of the user (user_editcount)
null
Name of the user account (user_name)
'94.117.150.183'
Age of the user account (user_age)
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Groups (including implicit) the user is in (user_groups)
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Page title without namespace (page_title)
'Billion Dollar Brain'
Full page title (page_prefixedtitle)
'Billion Dollar Brain'
Last ten users to contribute to the page (page_recent_contributors)
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Action (action)
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Old page wikitext, before the edit (old_wikitext)
'{{EngvarB|date=September 2013}} {{Use dmy dates|date=September 2013}} {{For|the source novel|Billion-Dollar Brain}} {{Infobox film | name = Billion Dollar Brain | image = Billion Dollar Brain poster.jpg | image_size = | caption = original film poster | director = [[Ken Russell]] | producer = [[Harry Saltzman]] | writer = [[Len Deighton]] ''(novel)''<br>John McGrath | starring = [[Michael Caine]]<br>[[Karl Malden]]<br>[[Ed Begley]]<br>[[Oscar Homolka]]<br>[[Françoise Dorléac]] | music = [[Richard Rodney Bennett]] | cinematography = [[Billy Williams (cinematographer)|Billy Williams]] | editing = Alan Osbiston | studio = Jovera S.A.<br>Lowndes Productions Limited | distributor = [[United Artists]] | released = 20 December 1967 ''(US)'' | country = United Kingdom | language = English | runtime = 111 minutes | budget = | gross = $1,500,000 (US/ Canada)<ref>"Big Rental Films of 1968", ''Variety'', 8 January 1969 p 15. Please note this figure is a rental accruing to distributors.</ref> }} '''''Billion Dollar Brain''''' is a 1967 British [[spy film|espionage film]] directed by [[Ken Russell]] and based on the [[Billion-Dollar Brain|novel of the same name]] by [[Len Deighton]]. The film features [[Michael Caine]] as secret agent [[Harry Palmer]], the [[anti-hero]] protagonist. The "brain" of the title is a sophisticated computer<ref>The [[system console|computer console]]s in the film are [[Honeywell 200]] mainframe consoles.</ref> with which an ultra-right-wing organisation controls its worldwide [[anti-Soviet]] spy network. ''Billion Dollar Brain'' is the third of the Harry Palmer film series, preceded by ''[[The Ipcress File (film)|The Ipcress File]]'' (1965) and ''[[Funeral in Berlin (film)|Funeral in Berlin]]'' (1966). It is the only film in which [[Ken Russell]] worked as a mainstream 'director-for-hire', and the last film to feature actress [[Françoise Dorléac]]. A fourth film in the series, an adaptation of ''[[Horse Under Water]]'', also to be released by United Artists, was tentatively planned<ref>The film daily – Volume 129 – Page 90, 1966 http://books.google.ca/books?id=cQUPAQAAIAAJ</ref> but never made. However, Caine played Palmer in two later films, ''[[Bullet to Beijing]]'' and ''[[Midnight in Saint Petersburg]]''. ==Plot== Harry Palmer ([[Michael Caine]]), who has left [[MI5|MI-5]] to work as a private investigator, is told by a mechanical voice on the phone to take a package to [[Helsinki]]. The package contains six virus-laden eggs that have been stolen from the [[British government]]'s research facility at [[Porton Down]]. In [[Helsinki]], he is met by Anya ([[Françoise Dorléac]]) who takes him to meet her handler, Harry's old friend Leo Newbigen ([[Karl Malden]]). Leo is in love with Anya, but Harry knows that she is only pretending to reciprocate. Leo takes Harry to a secret room where a computer issues daily instructions to Leo and Anya. The computer speaks in the same voice as the one which summoned Harry to Helsinki. After determining that he cannot trust either Leo or Anya, Harry is abducted by his former [[MI5]] superior, Colonel Ross ([[Guy Doleman]]), who coerces him into working once more for the British government in pursuing the conspiracy. Harry is ordered to [[Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic|Latvia]] where he embeds with some rebels to obtain intelligence for Leo's operation. After being captured and left for dead, Harry is extracted from Russia by Colonel Stok ([[Oskar Homolka]]), an old acquaintance from the [[KGB]]. Back in Helsinki, Anya tries to kill Harry while seducing him, then confesses that the computer told her to kill him. Harry locks her in a room and waits for Leo at the computer's location. Leo offers to pay off Harry for his trouble, but Harry insists on half of the money Leo is getting from whatever the conspiracy is all about. The pair go to [[Texas]], where Harry meets oil tycoon General Midwinter ([[Ed Begley]]). The General proudly displays his billion-dollar 'brain', a room full of computers that dispenses orders to his agents around the world. The General is in the midst of planning a rebellion in [[Latvia]] which he thinks will trigger the fall of the [[Soviet Union]]. His plan is to infect the Red Army with the viruses, while using his Latvian agents to begin a rebellion as his own private army invades. Meanwhile, Leo subverts the General's computer orders and escapes with the eggs. The General realises Harry is a double agent, but Harry convinces him that he can track Leo down. Back in Helsinki, Leo and Anya board a train for the [[Soviet Union]] with the eggs, but Harry, accompanied by two of Midwinter's men, intercepts them and escorts Leo off the train with the eggs. Anya shoots Harry's bodyguards as the train pulls away from the station. Leo runs after the train and hands the eggs to Anya. As he tries to pull himself up, Anya pushes him off the train and shrugs as he looks at her in bewilderment. "She used me," Leo tells Harry. He then offers to help Harry stop the General's insane plan, which could trigger [[World War III]]. In personnel carriers made from oil tanker trucks from his company, the General leads his private army across the frozen [[Baltic Sea]] into Latvia. Harry and Leo attempt to catch up with the General, but he orders their car to be fired upon and Leo is killed. Meanwhile, Col. Stok is fully aware of the invasion and orders jets to intercept the convoy. Rather than firing directly on the convoy, the jets simply fire at the ice in the convey's path, breaking it. The entire convoy plunges into the freezing water, and all the vehicles and soldiers—including the General himself—sink below the ice to a cold, watery, Baltic grave. Harry awakes alone on an ice floe. Col. Stok arrives in a helicopter with Anya and the eggs. He gives the eggs to Harry. "We don't need them," he says, "We have our own ideas." Stok confirms that Anya is one of his spies. Back in London, Harry delivers the eggs to Colonel Ross, who agrees to reward Harry with a promotion. However, when he opens the package to inspect the eggs, he finds they have hatched and the box is full of baby chicks. ==Cast== {{div col}} * [[Michael Caine]] as [[Harry Palmer]] * [[Karl Malden]] as Leo Newbigen * [[Ed Begley]] as General Midwinter * [[Oskar Homolka]] as Colonel Stok * [[Françoise Dorléac]] as Anya * [[Guy Doleman]] as [[Colonel Ross]] * [[Vladek Sheybal]] as Doctor Eiwort * [[Milo Sperber]] as Basil {{div col end}} <!--spacing please do not remove--> '''Cast notes:''' * [[Donald Sutherland]] has a very small appearance as the computer technician who asks Karl Malden "What's going on?"; Sutherland also appears as the mechanical voice on the phone at the beginning of the film. * Actress [[Susan George (actress)|Susan George]] makes an early appearance as a young Latvian girl on a train who offers her copy of [[Isvestia]] to Michael Caine. ==Production== Location filming for ''Billion Dollar Brain'' took place in [[Greater Helsinki|Helsinki]] and other parts of [[Finland]], including [[Turku]]. The [[Riga]] scenes were filmed in [[Porvoo]]. The remainder of the film was shot at [[Pinewood Studios]]. Scenes involving "The Brain" were filmed in [[Honeywell]] facilities and featured a [[Honeywell 200]] mini-computer. [[Otto Heller]] – who had photographed the first two Harry Palmer films – was supposed to shoot the film but would not submit to a medical examination and so the production could not hire him.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ellis|first=David A.|title=Conversations with Cinematographers|publisher=[[Rowman & Littlefield|Scarecrow Press]]|year=2012|page=5|isbn=9780810881266}}</ref> Principal Photography occurred from 30 January to the tail-end of May 1967.<ref>http://www.varietyultimate.com/search/?page=2&startYear=1967&endYear=1967&search=Billion+Dollar+Brain&searchType=&sortBy=DATE&searchDate=&showAll=</ref> Approximately five weeks later, on 26 June, Françoise Dorléac was killed in an automobile accident in Nice, France. It is unclear whether or not her voice was dubbed by another actress, due to her death. ==Reception== Author and critic Anne Billson calls this "by far" the best film of the series, noting that critics and audiences did not like it on first release.<ref>{{cite book|title=My Name is Michael Caine|last=Billson|first=Anne|publisher=Muller|year=1991|page=37|isbn=9780091750558}}</ref> ==Soundtrack== The score is by [[Richard Rodney Bennett]]. To create a relentless, harsh mood, he left out sweet-sounding instruments like violins and [[flutes]] and relied mainly on [[brass instruments|brass]] and percussion<ref>Interview on [[Film Score Monthly]], quoted [http://filmscoremonthly.com/board/posts.cfm?threadID=30786&forumID=1&archive=1 here].</ref> including three pianos, which are featured prominently in the main theme, and later, together with the percussion, create sonorities similar to [[Stravinsky]]'s ''[[Les Noces]]''. The score is basically monothematic, constantly varying the main theme. For more romantic moods, it features the [[ondes Martenot]], an early electronic instrument, played by its most prominent soloist, [[Jeanne Loriod]]. Thus, even the tender moments have an eerie undertone. Later on, Harry Palmer attends the end of a symphony concert, which is supposed to feature [[Dmitri Shostakovich]]'s [[Symphony No. 7 (Shostakovich)|"Leningrad" Symphony]], written in 1941 during the siege of [[Leningrad]]. What we hear, however, is the end of Shostakovich's [[Symphony No. 11 (Shostakovich)|11th Symphony]] "The Year 1905". Yet, music from the "Leningrad" symphony is featured later on during Midwinter's speech to his soldiers in Finland and during the final battle on the ice. ==Miscellany== *The film contains an ''homage'' to the ice battle in [[Sergei Eisenstein]]'s film ''[[Alexander Nevsky (film)|Alexander Nevsky]]'' (1938).<ref>[http://www.timeout.com/film/reviews/67824/Billion_Dollar_Brain.html/ ''Billion Dollar Brain'', Time Out, London, Film Guide]. Retrieved 3 August 2008.</ref> *In the credits, the title is first shown in numerals, and then in written format as "$1,000,000,000,000,000,000.00" and "BILLION DOLLAR BRAIN" – but 1 followed by 18 zeros is not one billion in either the [[Long and short scales|short]] (North American, modern British) or [[Long and short scales|long]] (European, older British) [[Names of large numbers|scales]]. In the short scale it would be one quintillion and in the long scale it would be one trillion. ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== * {{IMDb title|0061405}} * {{tcmdb title|17451}} * {{Amg movie|85075}} *[http://trailersfromhell.com/billion-dollar-brain/ ''Billion Dollar Brain''] at [[Trailers from Hell]] {{Len Deighton films}} {{Ken Russell}} {{Harry Saltzman|state=autocollapse}} [[Category:1967 films]] [[Category:1960s thriller films]] [[Category:English-language films]] [[Category:British films]] [[Category:British spy films]] [[Category:Cold War spy films]] [[Category:Films based on British novels]] [[Category:Films directed by Ken Russell]] [[Category:Pinewood Studios films]] [[Category:United Artists films]] [[Category:Films set in Finland]]'
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext)
'{{EngvarB|date=September 2013}} {{Use dmy dates|date=September 2013}} {{For|the source novel|Billion-Dollar Brain}} {{Infobox film | name = Billion Dollar Brain | image = Billion Dollar Brain poster.jpg | image_size = | caption = original film poster | director = [[Ken Russell]] | producer = [[Harry Saltzman]] | writer = [[Len Deighton]] ''(novel)''<br>John McGrath | starring = [[Michael Caine]]<br>[[Karl Malden]]<br>[[Ed Begley]]<br>[[Oscar Homolka]]<br>[[Françoise Dorléac]] | music = [[Richard Rodney Bennett]] | cinematography = [[Billy Williams (cinematographer)|Billy Williams]] | editing = Alan Osbiston | studio = Jovera S.A.<br>Lowndes Productions Limited | distributor = [[United Artists]] | released = 20 December 1967 ''(US)'' | country = United Kingdom | language = English | runtime = 111 minutes | budget = | gross = $1,500,000 (US/ Canada)<ref>"Big Rental Films of 1968", ''Variety'', 8 January 1969 p 15. Please note this figure is a rental accruing to distributors.</ref> }} '''''Billion Dollar Brain''''' is a 1967 British [[spy film|espionage film]] directed by [[Ken Russell]] and based on the [[Billion-Dollar Brain|novel of the same name]] by [[Len Deighton]]. The film features [[Michael Caine]] as secret agent [[Harry Palmer]], the [[anti-hero]] protagonist. The "brain" of the title is a sophisticated computer<ref>The [[system console|computer console]]s in the film are [[Honeywell 200]] mainframe consoles.</ref> with which an ultra-right-wing organisation controls its worldwide [[anti-Soviet]] spy network. ''Billion Dollar Brain'' is the third of the Harry Palmer film series, preceded by ''[[The Ipcress File (film)|The Ipcress File]]'' (1965) and ''[[Funeral in Berlin (film)|Funeral in Berlin]]'' (1966). It is the only film in which [[Ken Russell]] worked as a mainstream 'director-for-hire', and the last film to feature actress [[Françoise Dorléac]]. A fourth film in the series, an adaptation of ''[[Horse Under Water]]'', also to be released by United Artists, was tentatively planned<ref>The film daily – Volume 129 – Page 90, 1966 http://books.google.ca/books?id=cQUPAQAAIAAJ</ref> but never made. However, Caine played Palmer in two later films, ''[[Bullet to Beijing]]'' and ''[[Midnight in Saint Petersburg]]''. ==Plot== Harry Palmer ([[Michael Caine]]), who has left [[MI5]] to work as a private investigator, is told by a mechanical voice on the phone to take a package to [[Helsinki]]. The package contains six virus-laden eggs that have been stolen from the [[British government]]'s research facility at [[Porton Down]]. In [[Helsinki]], he is met by Anya ([[Françoise Dorléac]]) who takes him to meet her handler, Harry's old friend Leo Newbigen ([[Karl Malden]]). Leo is in love with Anya, but Harry knows that she is only pretending to reciprocate. Leo takes Harry to a secret room where a computer issues daily instructions to Leo and Anya. The computer speaks in the same voice as the one which summoned Harry to Helsinki. After determining that he cannot trust either Leo or Anya, Harry is abducted by his former [[MI5]] superior, Colonel Ross ([[Guy Doleman]]), who coerces him into working once more for the British government in pursuing the conspiracy. Harry is ordered to [[Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic|Latvia]] where he embeds with some rebels to obtain intelligence for Leo's operation. After being captured and left for dead, Harry is extracted from Russia by Colonel Stok ([[Oskar Homolka]]), an old acquaintance from the [[KGB]]. Back in Helsinki, Anya tries to kill Harry while seducing him, then confesses that the computer told her to kill him. Harry locks her in a room and waits for Leo at the computer's location. Leo offers to pay off Harry for his trouble, but Harry insists on half of the money Leo is getting from whatever the conspiracy is all about. The pair go to [[Texas]], where Harry meets oil tycoon General Midwinter ([[Ed Begley]]). The General proudly displays his billion-dollar 'brain', a room full of computers that dispenses orders to his agents around the world. The General is in the midst of planning a rebellion in [[Latvia]] which he thinks will trigger the fall of the [[Soviet Union]]. His plan is to infect the Red Army with the viruses, while using his Latvian agents to begin a rebellion as his own private army invades. Meanwhile, Leo subverts the General's computer orders and escapes with the eggs. The General realises Harry is a double agent, but Harry convinces him that he can track Leo down. Back in Helsinki, Leo and Anya board a train for the [[Soviet Union]] with the eggs, but Harry, accompanied by two of Midwinter's men, intercepts them and escorts Leo off the train with the eggs. Anya shoots Harry's bodyguards as the train pulls away from the station. Leo runs after the train and hands the eggs to Anya. As he tries to pull himself up, Anya pushes him off the train and shrugs as he looks at her in bewilderment. "She used me," Leo tells Harry. He then offers to help Harry stop the General's insane plan, which could trigger [[World War III]]. In personnel carriers made from oil tanker trucks from his company, the General leads his private army across the frozen [[Baltic Sea]] into Latvia. Harry and Leo attempt to catch up with the General, but he orders their car to be fired upon and Leo is killed. Meanwhile, Col. Stok is fully aware of the invasion and orders jets to intercept the convoy. Rather than firing directly on the convoy, the jets simply fire at the ice in the convey's path, breaking it. The entire convoy plunges into the freezing water, and all the vehicles and soldiers—including the General himself—sink below the ice to a cold, watery, Baltic grave. Harry awakes alone on an ice floe. Col. Stok arrives in a helicopter with Anya and the eggs. He gives the eggs to Harry. "We don't need them," he says, "We have our own ideas." Stok confirms that Anya is one of his spies. Back in London, Harry delivers the eggs to Colonel Ross, who agrees to reward Harry with a promotion. However, when he opens the package to inspect the eggs, he finds they have hatched and the box is full of baby chicks. ==Cast== {{div col}} * [[Michael Caine]] as [[Harry Palmer]] * [[Karl Malden]] as Leo Newbigen * [[Ed Begley]] as General Midwinter * [[Oskar Homolka]] as Colonel Stok * [[Françoise Dorléac]] as Anya * [[Guy Doleman]] as [[Colonel Ross]] * [[Vladek Sheybal]] as Doctor Eiwort * [[Milo Sperber]] as Basil {{div col end}} <!--spacing please do not remove--> '''Cast notes:''' * [[Donald Sutherland]] has a very small appearance as the computer technician who asks Karl Malden "What's going on?"; Sutherland also appears as the mechanical voice on the phone at the beginning of the film. * Actress [[Susan George (actress)|Susan George]] makes an early appearance as a young Latvian girl on a train who offers her copy of [[Isvestia]] to Michael Caine. ==Production== Location filming for ''Billion Dollar Brain'' took place in [[Greater Helsinki|Helsinki]] and other parts of [[Finland]], including [[Turku]]. The [[Riga]] scenes were filmed in [[Porvoo]]. The remainder of the film was shot at [[Pinewood Studios]]. Scenes involving "The Brain" were filmed in [[Honeywell]] facilities and featured a [[Honeywell 200]] mini-computer. [[Otto Heller]] – who had photographed the first two Harry Palmer films – was supposed to shoot the film but would not submit to a medical examination and so the production could not hire him.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ellis|first=David A.|title=Conversations with Cinematographers|publisher=[[Rowman & Littlefield|Scarecrow Press]]|year=2012|page=5|isbn=9780810881266}}</ref> Principal Photography occurred from 30 January to the tail-end of May 1967.<ref>http://www.varietyultimate.com/search/?page=2&startYear=1967&endYear=1967&search=Billion+Dollar+Brain&searchType=&sortBy=DATE&searchDate=&showAll=</ref> Approximately five weeks later, on 26 June, Françoise Dorléac was killed in an automobile accident in Nice, France. It is unclear whether or not her voice was dubbed by another actress, due to her death. ==Reception== Author and critic Anne Billson calls this "by far" the best film of the series, noting that critics and audiences did not like it on first release.<ref>{{cite book|title=My Name is Michael Caine|last=Billson|first=Anne|publisher=Muller|year=1991|page=37|isbn=9780091750558}}</ref> ==Soundtrack== The score is by [[Richard Rodney Bennett]]. To create a relentless, harsh mood, he left out sweet-sounding instruments like violins and [[flutes]] and relied mainly on [[brass instruments|brass]] and percussion<ref>Interview on [[Film Score Monthly]], quoted [http://filmscoremonthly.com/board/posts.cfm?threadID=30786&forumID=1&archive=1 here].</ref> including three pianos, which are featured prominently in the main theme, and later, together with the percussion, create sonorities similar to [[Stravinsky]]'s ''[[Les Noces]]''. The score is basically monothematic, constantly varying the main theme. For more romantic moods, it features the [[ondes Martenot]], an early electronic instrument, played by its most prominent soloist, [[Jeanne Loriod]]. Thus, even the tender moments have an eerie undertone. Later on, Harry Palmer attends the end of a symphony concert, which is supposed to feature [[Dmitri Shostakovich]]'s [[Symphony No. 7 (Shostakovich)|"Leningrad" Symphony]], written in 1941 during the siege of [[Leningrad]]. What we hear, however, is the end of Shostakovich's [[Symphony No. 11 (Shostakovich)|11th Symphony]] "The Year 1905". Yet, music from the "Leningrad" symphony is featured later on during Midwinter's speech to his soldiers in Finland and during the final battle on the ice. ==Miscellany== *The film contains an ''homage'' to the ice battle in [[Sergei Eisenstein]]'s film ''[[Alexander Nevsky (film)|Alexander Nevsky]]'' (1938).<ref>[http://www.timeout.com/film/reviews/67824/Billion_Dollar_Brain.html/ ''Billion Dollar Brain'', Time Out, London, Film Guide]. Retrieved 3 August 2008.</ref> *In the credits, the title is first shown in numerals, and then in written format as "$1,000,000,000,000,000,000.00" and "BILLION DOLLAR BRAIN" – but 1 followed by 18 zeros is not one billion in either the [[Long and short scales|short]] (North American, modern British) or [[Long and short scales|long]] (European, older British) [[Names of large numbers|scales]]. In the short scale it would be one quintillion and in the long scale it would be one trillion. ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== * {{IMDb title|0061405}} * {{tcmdb title|17451}} * {{Amg movie|85075}} *[http://trailersfromhell.com/billion-dollar-brain/ ''Billion Dollar Brain''] at [[Trailers from Hell]] {{Len Deighton films}} {{Ken Russell}} {{Harry Saltzman|state=autocollapse}} [[Category:1967 films]] [[Category:1960s thriller films]] [[Category:English-language films]] [[Category:British films]] [[Category:British spy films]] [[Category:Cold War spy films]] [[Category:Films based on British novels]] [[Category:Films directed by Ken Russell]] [[Category:Pinewood Studios films]] [[Category:United Artists films]] [[Category:Films set in Finland]]'
Unified diff of changes made by edit (edit_diff)
'@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ A fourth film in the series, an adaptation of ''[[Horse Under Water]]'', also to be released by United Artists, was tentatively planned<ref>The film daily – Volume 129 – Page 90, 1966 http://books.google.ca/books?id=cQUPAQAAIAAJ</ref> but never made. However, Caine played Palmer in two later films, ''[[Bullet to Beijing]]'' and ''[[Midnight in Saint Petersburg]]''. ==Plot== -Harry Palmer ([[Michael Caine]]), who has left [[MI5|MI-5]] to work as a private investigator, is told by a mechanical voice on the phone to take a package to [[Helsinki]]. The package contains six virus-laden eggs that have been stolen from the [[British government]]'s research facility at [[Porton Down]]. In [[Helsinki]], he is met by Anya ([[Françoise Dorléac]]) who takes him to meet her handler, Harry's old friend Leo Newbigen ([[Karl Malden]]). Leo is in love with Anya, but Harry knows that she is only pretending to reciprocate. Leo takes Harry to a secret room where a computer issues daily instructions to Leo and Anya. The computer speaks in the same voice as the one which summoned Harry to Helsinki. +Harry Palmer ([[Michael Caine]]), who has left [[MI5]] to work as a private investigator, is told by a mechanical voice on the phone to take a package to [[Helsinki]]. The package contains six virus-laden eggs that have been stolen from the [[British government]]'s research facility at [[Porton Down]]. In [[Helsinki]], he is met by Anya ([[Françoise Dorléac]]) who takes him to meet her handler, Harry's old friend Leo Newbigen ([[Karl Malden]]). Leo is in love with Anya, but Harry knows that she is only pretending to reciprocate. Leo takes Harry to a secret room where a computer issues daily instructions to Leo and Anya. The computer speaks in the same voice as the one which summoned Harry to Helsinki. After determining that he cannot trust either Leo or Anya, Harry is abducted by his former [[MI5]] superior, Colonel Ross ([[Guy Doleman]]), who coerces him into working once more for the British government in pursuing the conspiracy. Harry is ordered to [[Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic|Latvia]] where he embeds with some rebels to obtain intelligence for Leo's operation. After being captured and left for dead, Harry is extracted from Russia by Colonel Stok ([[Oskar Homolka]]), an old acquaintance from the [[KGB]]. Back in Helsinki, Anya tries to kill Harry while seducing him, then confesses that the computer told her to kill him. Harry locks her in a room and waits for Leo at the computer's location. Leo offers to pay off Harry for his trouble, but Harry insists on half of the money Leo is getting from whatever the conspiracy is all about. '
New page size (new_size)
11327
Old page size (old_size)
11332
Size change in edit (edit_delta)
-5
Lines added in edit (added_lines)
[ 0 => 'Harry Palmer ([[Michael Caine]]), who has left [[MI5]] to work as a private investigator, is told by a mechanical voice on the phone to take a package to [[Helsinki]]. The package contains six virus-laden eggs that have been stolen from the [[British government]]'s research facility at [[Porton Down]]. In [[Helsinki]], he is met by Anya ([[Françoise Dorléac]]) who takes him to meet her handler, Harry's old friend Leo Newbigen ([[Karl Malden]]). Leo is in love with Anya, but Harry knows that she is only pretending to reciprocate. Leo takes Harry to a secret room where a computer issues daily instructions to Leo and Anya. The computer speaks in the same voice as the one which summoned Harry to Helsinki.' ]
Lines removed in edit (removed_lines)
[ 0 => 'Harry Palmer ([[Michael Caine]]), who has left [[MI5|MI-5]] to work as a private investigator, is told by a mechanical voice on the phone to take a package to [[Helsinki]]. The package contains six virus-laden eggs that have been stolen from the [[British government]]'s research facility at [[Porton Down]]. In [[Helsinki]], he is met by Anya ([[Françoise Dorléac]]) who takes him to meet her handler, Harry's old friend Leo Newbigen ([[Karl Malden]]). Leo is in love with Anya, but Harry knows that she is only pretending to reciprocate. Leo takes Harry to a secret room where a computer issues daily instructions to Leo and Anya. The computer speaks in the same voice as the one which summoned Harry to Helsinki.' ]
Whether or not the change was made through a Tor exit node (tor_exit_node)
0
Unix timestamp of change (timestamp)
1420584930