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Alec Leamas, in the 1965 film The Spy Who Came in from the Cold; Alexander Scott, from the TV series I Spy; Allen Gamble and Terry Hoitz, from the movie The Other Guys; Amos Burke, from TV series Burke's Law; Annie Walker from the USA original series Covert Affairs; Arun Khanna, from the 2003 Indian film The Hero: Love Story of a Spy
W.O.O.H.P. (World Organization of Human Protection), the fictional organization from Totally Spies!, an animated series on Cartoon Network. Various fiction invent British spy agencies with "MI numbers" other than the well-known MI5 or MI6. Examples include MI7 in Johnny English, M.I.9 in M.I. High, and MI-13 in Marvel Comics.
Fictional comic book counter-terrorism and intelligence agency that often deals with superhuman threats: Marvel Universe Marvel Cinematic Universe: Comics S.W.O.R.D. Sentient World Observation and Response Department A fictional counterterrorism and intelligence agency to deal with extraterrestrial threats to world security.
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This is a list of fictional spymasters, deputy directors, directors general, and executive directors of Intelligence agencies This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.
Fictional secret police organizations and historical secret police organizations are listed on their own respective pages. In this list, reputable sources, with relevant quotes, assert that the organizations in this list are secret police.
Three writers of recent espionage fiction, Terry Hayes, Lea Carpenter and David Downing, turn their keen powers of observation on 1950s Los Angeles, current-day Europe and beyond to shed light on ...
They are often popularized as individual characters rather than parts of the fictional work in which they appear. Stories involving individual detectives are well-suited to dramatic presentation, resulting in many popular theatre, television, and film characters. The first famous detective in fiction was Edgar Allan Poe's C. Auguste Dupin. [1]