Skip to content

Special Mission Lady Chaplin Traditional Cache

This cache has been archived.

ProfessorBenson: I'm taking this one down since repeated efforts to find the last cache have come up empty. The site is an active short dump location which is filled with trash and used tires. Until someone wants to aim a security camera at it and take plate numbers of the dumpers, I see no reason to try and continue placing geocaches here.

More
Hidden : 4/26/2014
Difficulty:
2 out of 5
Terrain:
2 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

Join now to view geocache location details. It's free!

Watch

How Geocaching Works

Related Web Page

Please note Use of geocaching.com services is subject to the terms and conditions in our disclaimer.

Geocache Description:

Cache contains a log only. You will need to bring your own pen.


Back to the great spy films of the 60's with this one. From the Dorado Films website:

Ken Clark returns in the third and final chapter of the Dick Malloy euro-spy trilogy. But just who is Lady Chaplin? A high-fashion designer? A peace-loving nun? An eminent scientist? Nope. She’s the most dynamic femme fatale in the espionage game. Played by Daniela Bianchi (just three years after co-starring in From Russia With Love), Lady Chaplin is a freelance adventuress who carries out assassinations with a dart-shooting wheelchair, plays Malloy and super-villain Kobre Zoltan against each other, and takes part in the frenzied finale as a sky-diving, machine-gunning angel of death. Zoltan is no slouch either. Played by Jacques Bergerac, he's the most compelling bad guy in the Malloy series—color him urbane, rapacious and cruel. Zoltan has discriminating taste in wine and women, wears sunglasses indoors, and unwinds by matching his scorpion against other scorpions in high-stakes death matches. Forget Blofeld's cat. No diabolical mastermind ever had a cooler pet. Oh, and he's stolen 16 Polaris missiles and is threatening to start World War III. The third and arguably best of the Dick Malloy films, Special Mission Lady Chaplin outdoes its predecessors in style, action and attitude to deliver one of the most mindlessly enjoyable spy romps of the sixties.

Additional Hints (No hints available.)