Rent or buy movies on YouTube or Google TV
Purchasing movies is no longer available on Google Play

Top Secret!

1984 • 90 minutes
4.4
25 reviews
15
Rating
Eligible

About this movie

The second of Zucker-Abraham-Zucker's theatrical-feature spoofs (Airplane was the first, discounting the patchwork Kentucky Fried Movie), Top Secret! lampoons practically every film genre. Specifically, however, this is a hybrid of an "Elvis" movie and a World War II "underground resistance" thriller. In his film debut, Val Kilmer plays Nick Rivers, a Presley-like American rock idol sent behind the Iron Curtain on a goodwill tour. Before long, he is involved in a complex espionage scheme thanks to beautiful Lucy Gutteridge, the daughter of a scientist (Michael Gough) held captive by the Communists. Also essential to the action is flamboyant resistance leader Christopher Villiers, who behaves like Victor Mature in Betrayed (1954) and talks like James Mason. Adhering to Z-A-Z's cheerful disregard for people, places and events, the East Germans are depicted as Nazis, while the Underground is comprised of Frenchmen. The plot is mainly an excuse for the Z-A-Z team's fondness for joke-a-minute lampoonery, skewering cinematic targets ranging from The Blue Lagoon (1980) to The Wizard of Oz (1939). As in Z-A-Z's other efforts, Top Secret! scores its biggest yocks when invoking cliches that we never realized were cliches-and falls on its face whenever attempting a too-obvious gag (the biggest clinker: that pigeon statue in the park). Everyone has his or her favorite bits in this film: our faves include the resistance fighter named Deja Vu ("Haven't we met somewhere before?"), Kilmer's horrible nightmare while being tortured (he arrives too late to take final exams), the army-booted cow, the sensitive Pinto, and the East German National Anthem, sung to the tune of the Shorewood (Wisconsin) High School marching song. But let's say no more: comedy of this nature is designed to be seen, not written or read about.
Rating
15

Ratings and reviews

4.4
25 reviews
Jon Blyth
February 11, 2020
Some of the best visual gags around, and some of the most brilliantly pointless high-effort gags to boot. But they're spread out a lot more thinly than Airplane!, and the hit:miss ratio leaves you checking your watch. The second half of the film picks up, once Val Kilmer isn't carrying the action. He's no Leslie Neilsen.
Did you find this helpful?
JJ RR
March 2, 2018
A dud. Rewatching this, Val Kilmer is just a comedy black hole.
Did you find this helpful?
Samantha Wallace
August 17, 2020
When you are bored or fed up these sort of films lift you up
Did you find this helpful?

Rate this movie

Tell us what you think.