 Condorman
(1981)

Picture James Bond, slightly geekier and wearing a winged
condor suit. Got it? Then you're ready for Condorman, a
goofy action/comedy from Disney, starring the world's most
unlikely superheroic secret agent.
Comic book writer/artist Woody Wilkins refuses to put anything
into his Condorman comic that he can't actually do himself
(the movie opens with Woody swooping clumsily from the Eiffel
Tower in his Condorman outfit), making him a hero to 'boys
everywhere.

Taking a needed break from the grind, Woody visits CIA buddy
Harry Oslo in Paris, but a mix-up gets the hapless comics man
caught in a web of international intrigue.
Defecting KGB vixen Natalia, whom Woody accidentally saves from
the hands of villainous agents, insists that only Woody be allowed
to help her defect. Woody agrees, but only if the CIA equips him
with all the fancy gadgetry and vehicles he's dreamed up for
Condorman.
Woody gets his wish, scoring not only a flashy Condorman flying
suit, but also a speedy sports car, a machine gun walking stick,
and more.
Now working as the real Condorman, Woody fights off
Natalia's ex-boyfriend and KGB baddie Krokov on an action-packed
chase across the continent.
The movie starred Michael Crawford, who had attained fame as
the hapless Frank Spencer in Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em, and
would go on to play the title role in Broadway's Phantom of the
Opera.
Condorman disappointed at the box office and left
circulation for years, but a collector's edition video and DVD
were released in early 1999, bringing a nostalgic smile to fans of
nutty superhero flicks.
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