Garbo: The Spy (2009) Poster

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6/10
A stunning documentary about Juan Pujol , ¨Garbo¨, an important spy who helped change the course of history
ma-cortes20 August 2020
A compelling account of Juan Pujol, an extraordinary Spanish double agent during WWII and the only spy to be decorated by both sides . ¨Garbo: The Spy¨ , also known as Garbo, the Man Who Saved the World and Garbo: El Espia , is a Spanish documentary about Juan Pujol Garcia's role in the Second World War, well directed by Edmon Roch. It contains interviews , stock footage and fragments of films as ¨The longest day¨ with Curd Jürgens , ¨Patto¨n with George C. Scott , ¨Our Man in Havana¨ with Alec Guinnes, ¨Mata Hari¨ with Greta Garbo , ¨Appointment in Berlin¨ with George Sanders and ¨cartoon movies¨.The documentary reconstructs the career of "Garbo," who formed the centerpiece of Allied deception and counter-information to have the Nazis believe that D-Day landing would occur in Pas-de-Calais and not in Normandy , called Operation Fortitude . This documentary Garbo premiered at the Rome Film Festival on October 20, 2009, opened in Spain on December 4, 2009 and opened at the Village East Cinema in New York 2010.

It deals with his moving life , as in 1939, during the early days of World War ll, Pujol decided that he must make a contribution "for the good of humanity" (and to oppose the Franco regime) by helping Poland, Britain - which, with some of its Commonwealth realms and France, were Germany's only adversaries at the time.He initially approached the British three different times including through his wife , but they showed no interest in employing him as a spy. Therefore, he resolved to establish himself as a German agent before approaching the British again to offer his services as a double-agent.Pujol created an identity as a fanatically pro-Nazi Spanish government official who could travel to London on official business; he also obtained a fake Spanish diplomatic passport by fooling a printer into thinking Pujol worked for the Spanish embassy in Lisbon.He contacted an Abwehr agent in Madrid. The Abwehr accepted Pujol and gave him a crash course in espionage (including secret writing), a bottle of invisible ink, a codebook, and £600 for expenses. His instructions were to move to Britain and recruit a network of British agents.He moved instead to Lisbon, and - using a tourist's guide to Britain, reference books, and magazines from the Lisbon Public Library, and newsreel reports he saw in cinemas - created seemingly credible reports that appeared to come from London .During his time in Portugal, he stayed in Estoril .He claimed to be travelling around Britain and submitted his travel expenses based on fares listed in a British railway guide. Pujol's unfamiliarity with the non-decimal system of currency used in Britain at the time was a slight difficulty. At this time Great Britain's unit of currency, the pound sterling, was subdivided into 20 shillings, each having twelve pence. Garbo was unable to total his expenses in this complex system, so simply itemised them, and said that he would send the total later.During this time he created an extensive network of fictitious sub-agents living in different parts of Britain. Because he had never actually visited the UK, he made several mistakes, such as claiming that his alleged contact in Glasgow "would do anything for a litre of wine", unaware of Scottish drinking habits or that the UK did not use the metric system.His reports were intercepted by the British Ultra communications interceptions programme, and seemed so credible that the British counter-intelligence service MI5 launched a full-scale spy hunt. In February 1942, either he or his wife approached the United States after it had entered the war, contacting U.S. Navy Lieutenant Patrick Demorest in the naval attache's office in Lisbon, who recognised Pujol's potential. After he passed the security check conducted by MI6 Officer Desmond Bristow, Bristow suggested that he be accompanied by MI5 officer Tomás Harris to brief Pujol on how he and Harris should work together. Pujol's wife and child were later moved to Britain. Pujol operated as a double agent under the XX Committee's aegis; Cyril Mills was initially Bovril's case officer; but he spoke no Spanish and quickly dropped out of the picture. His main contribution was to suggest, after the truly extraordinary dimensions of Pujol's imagination and accomplishments had become apparent, that his code name should be changed as befitted 'the best actor in the world'; and Bovril became "Garbo", after Greta Garbo. During planning for the Normandy beach invasion, the Allies decided that it was vitally important that the German leaders be misled into believing that the landing would happen at the Strait of Dover by means of Operation Furtitude . In order to maintain his credibility, it was decided that Garbo should forewarn the Germans of the timing and some details of the actual invasion of Normandy, although sending it too late for them to take effective action. Special arrangements were made with the German radio operators to be listening to Garbo through the night of 5/6 June 1944, using the story that a sub-agent was about to arrive with important information. However, when the call was made at 3 AM, no reply was received from the German operators until 8 AM. This enabled Garbo to add more, genuine but now out-of-date, operational details to the message when finally received, and thus increase his standing with the Germans. Garbo told his German contacts that he was disgusted that his first message was missed, saying "I cannot accept excuses or negligence. Were it not for my ideals I would abandon the work. Part of the "Fortitude" plan was to convince the Germans that a fictitious formation-First U.S. Army Group, comprising 11 divisions , commanded by General George Patton-was stationed in southeast Britain.
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6/10
Garbo Docs Offers Insights, but in a Different Presentation
verbusen3 February 2021
This was a disappointing film for me to watch. I had viewed other films about Garbo that I enjoyed more. It started out as a 1940s newsreel so that fooled me and my wife if this was a film or newsreel history or what. Then they rattle off a bunch of partial clips of 2 or 3 interviews with people only saying much later who they are. Nigel West appears and sheds light on how he found Garbo after the war. The WW2 cartoons of Private Snafu with the German spy woman are pretty cheap to get off the public domain and repetitive to watch. Why American cartoons? No German cartoons of English spy woman footage around? I liked how they talked about how stupid the German's were from a rational sense, believing many superstitious things, feuling Garbo's imagination to make agents. They do joke about an English sense of humor (and lack of German humor) that may offer deep insight on why Garbo was so successful so I will credit it for that, 6 of 10 stars. I would recommend watching this as a supplementary film to the other productions about Garbo, they are more coherent and entertaining.
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8/10
A fine documentary
JT334 April 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Having learned about Juan Pujol Garcia quite some time ago, I was fascinated to find out that somebody had made a movie about him. Granted, this was not what I would expect (somebody else can surely make a true dramatic version of his incredible story), but I found this to be very entertaining. I admit I like quirky styles, so the offbeat interviewers identities hidden until halfway through the film, the odd music selections (which grew more likable as the movie progressed) and the numerous film clips interspersed with the rest of the story made for just my flavor. The humor is palpable and the movie is memorable on many levels. It would be great if more people knew of the incredible heroics of the secretive man from Catalan and his brave deeds.
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6/10
There is a great story here under this muddled mesd
carosan-7968629 April 2020
This documentary deserves to be remade by professionals. Characters speak in different languages with no translation. People come and go with no segways. it has potential. I see my friend Nigel West in the credits. perhaps he can shed some light.
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9/10
The Ghost Spy Who Saved the World
Thistle-325 March 2010
Garbo: The Spy hit me like Fire in the Heartland. Again, here's a topic that I feel I am familiar with. i have seen movies about World War II, read books about the Invasion of Normandy. So, why have I never heard about this guy? Why don't I know how critical he apparently was to the whole Allied effort? If you've seen Alias or the Bournes, you know that a good spy has handlers. Garbo is the codename he received from his British handlers, because he took on various roles so well. In reality, he grew up in the Catalan region of Spain, the child of well-to-do parents, in the days before Franco. He wants to get involved. And, I will tell you we don't get to know much about his actual motivations or personality. The guy's a ghost, really. But, we get to find out what he did, offering his services to the Third Reich and to the Allies. Garbo set up an elaborate ruse that may have turned the tide of the war. He must have had iron clad insides to pull off some of these capers. I don't want to give too much away, but it's just an incredible story. And, to get it on the screen, since we don't have anything but talking heads and documents to illustrate the story, Director Edmon Roach intersperses scenes from spy films and movies about World War II that mirror real life events. It's a beautiful device and a remarkable piece of storytelling. I give Garbo: The Spy an 9 out of 10.
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10/10
A mystery wrapped in an Enigma
patrick-taylor121 March 2011
As a WW2 buff I am reasonably au fait with the deceptions around the Normandy landings. However that was not really relevant as the film provides enough information for any viewer.

In a quirky film that teases you along it is a little gem and a great story - but true story. The director manges to in a sense bamboozle the viewer so what is true and what is mirage is not really explicit until one is gripped by the tale. The inter-cutting of news reels and fictional spy movies provides atmosphere and refreshes the memory on what a confused arena Europe was in the thirties and forties.

I defy anyone not to be better informed and amused by this excellent film.
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10/10
Great documentary about a great man.
rudimart16 January 2014
I absolutely loved the movie. It was entertaining and mixing Hollywood spy movies with the real narrative was brilliant. Prior to viewing this movie, I had no idea this man existed and the role he played in making the D-day landings a success. He acted solely out of the motivation to save civilization from the horrors that a Nazi victory would have brought. Had it not been for him the D Day landings would likely have been a disaster and the war would have dragged on for perhaps two more years and maybe Hitler would have had time to make more rockets or even atomic bombs. This man single handedly fooled the Germans so many times and even had them believe that the D-day landings were only a diversion but were so successful that the allies cancelled the real invasion at Calais. After the war he still received money from the grateful Germans for his invaluable service. He never speaks in the movie but befittingly does visit the graves at Normandy. An informative and well presented documentary about a man who sought little glory for himself and yet was responsible for saving so many lives and turning the course of the war.
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10/10
I found it fascinating
blanche-217 May 2019
"Garbo, The Spy" is the story of Juan Pujol Garcia, probably the most successful double agent in World War II. Garcia's job with British intelligence was to earn Germany's trust and feed their military all kinds of incorrect information. This included his insistence that D-Day would take place in the Pas des Calais rather than Normandy.

Garbo had a network of subagents, all fake people. Before going to London, he told the Germans that he was there - he was really in Lisbon, getting information from the library to send them.

The deception of Pas des Calais/Normandy was remarkable and is beautifully covered in a documentary called Ghost Army, which tells the story of fake units with fake tanks and fake radio calls that were set up to throw off the Germans.

"Garbo, The Spy," as you perhaps discern from the other posts, is somewhat unusual in its format. Personally I liked it. They used movies, real footage, cartoons, and interviews to tell Pujol's story. Possibly the closest to Garcia's story was the Alec Guinness film, "Our Man in Havana," from which several scenes were shown. Classic film buffs will also recognized Leslie Howard, Margaret Lindsay, and others.

Interestingly, Germany bought everything this guy was peddling and gave him the Iron Cross, and he was also brought to Buckingham Palace and given the Medal of Honor.

I say don't miss this, and the documentary footage of the Allies coming into Paris, the look on peoples' faces, and the liberated concentration camp survivors smiling and eating.

One person interviewed was Aline Griffith, the Countess de Romanones, who was an American model who became a spy in the OSS in Spain, eventually marrying Count Romanones. Her books - The Spy Wore Red, etc., make for fun reading.
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4/10
Great story, less than great documentary
poikkeus7 March 2013
This story is one of the more memorable footnotes to World War II - the tale of Joan Pujol Garcia, a man who ends up being a double-agent during a pivotal moment in history. And his appearance on the world stage couldn't be more important: his counterintelligence was designed to undermine the D-Day invasion.

It's obviously not a big-budget documentary, but uses a variety of talkies and newsreel footage to round out the story. The cast of interviewees is relatively small; and the inclusion of inappropriate (or confusing) sound effects and garbled film editing makes for a less than compelling story. The story itself was the most memorable segment in Ben Macintre's Operation Zigzag, and the film's running length of 88 minutes suggests that the filmmaker had run out of material. If only he'd read Macintire's book first.
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8/10
Pujol: Conman as Hero
Miles-106 May 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Paul Schrader said that every movie, from its first moment, teaches you how to watch it. "Garbo, the Spy", which begins with a series of outtakes from films ranging from World War II military documentaries to dramas made by both Hollywood and Pinewood, will immediately have you wondering what kind of movie you are being taught to watch. Mixed in are interviews with several talking heads who are presumably talking about the same person, but who is he and what does he have to do with all those film clips? The confused viewer might want to know whether any of this will ever become clear and prove worthy of the investment in time. The answer to both questions seems to be "yes".

This peculiar movie is the story of a peculiar man named Juan Pujol Garcia, whose many guises might as well be explored by looking at odd movie clips - even if, at first, they strain patience and credulity. The story itself is strange. Pujol was essentially a conman who lulled people into believing he was whatever they wanted him to be; but his most specific ambition was to be a spy and a double agent at that.

Born in Barcelona in 1912, Pujol participated in two wars, but he did not initially get what he wanted. His efforts to play both sides of the Spanish Civil War were so disastrous that, I cannot tell which side of the Civil War he was really on.

When World War II came, Pujol again tried to become a double agent. The British rejected him four times, but the Germans proved to be more trusting. Pujol made his intelligence reports to the Abwehr, or German military intelligence, at their Madrid outpost. He told them that he was in London but, at first, he was right there in Madrid, though he later moved to Lisbon. His reports "from London" were faked by doing research in public records and then doctoring them by adding speculation.

If the Germans had been more careful in analyzing Pujol's reports, they might have realized the truth which was that he had never been to London. For example, Pujol told the Germans that British dockworkers would give up classified information for the price of a few glasses of wine. That dockworkers might know something strategically important was not incredible, but, as one of the interviewees (possibly British historian Nigel West) observes, the typical British dockworker of the period had probably never tasted wine in his life.

Pujol told the Germans that his intelligence came from a network of agents that he actually had made up. Still, the British rejected Pujol when he applied to work for them, but the Spaniard was already helping them. On one occasion, for example, he misled the Germans so badly about British strategy in the Mediterranean, that Germany diverted their forces to protect against a phantom attack. The British knew that someone must be fooling the Germans on their behalf, but they did not know who or why.

At this point, Pujol applied for a job with the Americans, telling them specifically about his deceptions. Although they did not hire him, the Americans passed on his information to the British, who realized that Pujol must be the mysterious agent who had been misleading the Germans. They hired him, brought him to London, and gave him the codename "Garbo", after the film star Greta Garbo. (The Germans already called him "Alaric" and called his (phony) network "Arabel".)

In London, Pujol was teamed with a British spy named Thomas Harris. Together, Pujol and Harris continued the work that Pujol had already begun, feeding the Germans a combination of truths, half-truths and outright lies, supposedly based on intelligence reports from an international cast of what were actually fictitious spies. It was Harris and Pujol who repeatedly told the Germans that the Allies were going to invade Europe at Pas de Calais. Even after the Allies invaded at Normandy on 6 June 1944, Pujol continued to assure them that this was just a diversion and that the real invasion would be at Pas de Calais. How did the Germans continue to believe in Pujol when no Calais invasion materialized? Pujol told them that after a couple of months, the Allies had decided that the Normandy landing had worked so well that they cancelled the Calais landing. The Germans must have believed this because they continued to value Pujol's intelligence reports.

Pujol also helped the British codebreakers who were busily cracking the complicated Enigma Code that the Germans used. The key to the code was changed every day. Pujol's reports helped the codebreakers because, after his reports were sent to Madrid, they were always transmitted by Enigma to Berlin. By comparing the Enigma version to Pujol's original text, the codebreakers had a key to the daily code.

Pujol and Harris further humiliated the Abwehr by having them pay Pujol and his network, sending money to London through a businessman in Madrid. Since the fictitious spy network did not really need the money, it went to the British intelligence service to pay for their operations. The Germans were thus tricked into financing their own defeat. (The make-believe spymasters killed off one of their imaginary spies and made the Germans give a pension to his equally notional widow.)

I am reminded that there were plenty of times during World War II when the Germans fooled the British, but this is about a true case of the shoe being on the other foot in a way that proved consequential. At the end of the war, Pujol went back to Madrid and met the Abwehr agent who had been transmitting his reports to Berlin. The German abjectly apologized to Pujol on behalf of Germany for losing the war. He had no idea that he was talking to the man who, as much as any individual, had ensured that Germany never had a chance of winning.

After the war, Pujol continued behaving like the great imposter that he was. Leaving a wife and children in Europe, he traveled in Africa where he was reported to have died in 1949, but nearly four decades later he resurfaced in Venezuela where he had a new family. His two families might have been miffed, but Pujol was brought to the U.K. where he was given a medal by the Queen and a ticket to the 1984 celebration of the anniversary of D-Day.

"Garbo, the Spy" tells us as much as it can about what Pujol did, and winks at us noting that Pujol's mischief accomplished much good, but the man remains as much of mystery at the end as he was at the beginning.
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1/10
A Disappointment
liscarkat-210 May 2012
Garbo was a Spanish secret agent during World War II who sold his independent services to the Nazis, while really working for the allies. His brilliantly imaginative approach to espionage was to invent dozens of fictional subordinate spies, then make up false information to feed to the Germans.

This potentially interesting subject was spoiled by an odd attempt at a documentary that appears to have been intended to be artistic and funny, rather than informational. The film bounces back and forth between talking heads who remain unidentified until halfway through, and clips from old B movies. All this is accompanied by irrelevant, anachronistic music and silly science fiction sound effects. The overall result is unfocused, annoying, and almost unwatchable.
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2/10
Odd style makes an interesting story not believable.
torbi-224 March 2014
I'm on a roll this week watching bad docs with subjects that should have made them much more interesting. I'm still trying to figure this one out. Obviously the interviewees think this is an amazing story, but the viewer is left wondering why—the doc takes this amazing story and tries to tell it using old movie clips whose only connection is that they were about WWII. I didn't like the fact that we are not introduced to these interviewees until midway through the film, that there are long pauses of silence (where it seems narration should have been placed but wasn't) and the music was disconcerting (to be diplomatic... to be rude, it was awful). I could see how this story would make a great Hollywood movie, but the way it was presented here, I had a hard time believing any of it was true.
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1/10
Fascinating true true story of a WWII double agent
socly26 July 2016
Juan Pujol garcia, s Spaniard, aka Garbo, was a double agent, feeding information to Nazi handlers, who thought he was their agent based in England. He gave the Nazis, who thought he was their spy, information the British gave him to relay and thus was instrumental in misleading the Nazis so they thought the D-Day invasion was to take place in Pas de Calais rather than on the Normandy coast. The true story was interesting, told through interviews, snippets of movies and what appeared to be newsreel footage but the film jumped all over the place, back-and-forth in time and place, and too-loud music drowned out some parts. Fortunately subtitles were available and readable
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1/10
Absolutely Appalling Documentary, "Garbo" Deserves Better Treatment
robertguttman2 May 2019
Known to British Intelligence under the code-name of "Garbo", the career of Juan Pujol Garcia is one of the most incredible "now-it-can-be-told" stories to come out of World War II. Although a neutral from Spain, Garcia voluntarily transformed himself the most successful double-agent of the war, and ultimately had a major role in the success of the D-Day Invasion. The story of "Garbo" makes any of the exploits you will see in any James Bond movie seem like piffle. "Garbo" was the real deal, and he maintained the deception for over four years. Funded by the German Abwehr and ultimately awarded the Iron Cross by them for his services to the Reich, for years Garbo fed the Germans misleading and false information, which he acquired from a string of entirely fictitious agents whom he had invented.

Unfortunately, this dreadful documentary does not do justice to the story of this absolutely incredible individual. The music is terrible, often inappropriate and, for reasons that pass understanding, the director frequently chooses to increase its' volume while the commentators are in the middle of speaking. Sometimes he has two commentators speaking at the same time, so that the viewer cannot understand what either one is saying.

Worst of all, however, is that some of the commentators speak Spanish but, again for reasons that defy comprehension, the director has seen fit not to provide any subtitles. At least one of those commentators speaks for a considerable amount of time. I have no doubt that what he this individual, who is not identified, has to say is of great interest. It's too bad that, unless the viewer happens to speak Spanish, he will have absolutely no idea who this individual is or what he has to say.

It just so happens that, a few years ago, I actually read the biography of "Garbo" by Stephan Talty. Consequently, I already knew who "Garbo" was and what he had done. However, anyone trying to learn about him merely by seeing this awful documentary will, at best, find the story extremely confusing and, at worst, incomprehensible. "Garbo" deserves better.
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2/10
awful
metropical20 May 2019
Has some good info but just so poorly presented. lots of pointless footage and music. For a doc on someone who seems to be pivotal in WWII.
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