Sharp says he was approached to make the film by producer
George Willoughby, who had been recommended to use the director by John Terry of the
National Film Finance Corporation. Sharp says it was "rather a nice thriller" with the original title of
The Girl in the Red Mini. The film was being made for television and theatrical release; Westinghouse – through its company, Group W – was providing American finance. It was shot in France in 1968. Sharp said it had "quite a nice cast without any big names" but four days before shooting was to begin Westinghouse announced it had done a survey of what had been successful of television that revealed comedy-thrillers rated better than straight thrillers. Accordingly, the company sent over a writer,
Alec Coppel, to turn the film into a comedy-thriller. Sharp knew Coppel from Australia before the war and felt "he'd done some good work" like
I Killed the Count (1939) and
The Gazebo (1959) but that was "some time back". Sharp says Coppel would rewrite "out of context... reams of stuff" which the director had to rewrite and cut the night before filming "getting it into the right shape... You wouldn't believe the chaos and confusion", said Sharp. The director says the roles played by Peter Bowles, David Buck and Francis Matthews in particular were greatly reduced. Peter Bowles wrote in his memoirs that he had clashed with Don Sharp while making an episode of
The Avengers but three weeks later Sharp offered the actor a role in
Taste of Excitement. Bowles loved making the film because of its location. ==Reception==