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Post by RiP, IMDb on Apr 15, 2020 21:59:45 GMT
You ONLY Live Twice (1967)!!
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Post by movielover on Apr 15, 2020 22:00:11 GMT
Yay!
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Post by RiP, IMDb on Apr 15, 2020 22:00:54 GMT
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Post by Popeye Doyle on Apr 15, 2020 22:01:36 GMT
Meh. One of those OO7 films I rarely revisit. Ken Adams’ production design still killer, though.
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Post by darksidebeadle on Apr 15, 2020 22:05:06 GMT
Meh
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Post by FridayOnElmStreet on Apr 15, 2020 22:31:26 GMT
Yay. A very good 007 film. 8/10
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Post by politicidal on Apr 15, 2020 22:32:07 GMT
Meh.
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Post by msdemos on Apr 15, 2020 22:37:04 GMT
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Post by marth on Apr 15, 2020 22:41:28 GMT
Yay
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Post by alpha128 on Apr 15, 2020 22:41:48 GMT
Yay!
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Post by Catman on Apr 15, 2020 23:01:54 GMT
Akiko Wakabayashi!
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Post by Ass_E9 on Apr 15, 2020 23:13:55 GMT
"After this, I'm heading over to breakfast at Tiffany Case's."
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Post by ck100 on Apr 15, 2020 23:14:29 GMT
My least favorite of Connery's films, but it's watchable though.
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Post by Archelaus on Apr 15, 2020 23:14:38 GMT
I re-watched the film on Monday and it's still pretty good.
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Post by moviemouth on Apr 15, 2020 23:39:44 GMT
yay
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Post by jcush on Apr 15, 2020 23:46:15 GMT
Yay
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Post by hitchcockthelegend on Apr 16, 2020 18:15:23 GMT
Yay
Thunderball had broke box office records for Bond, gadgetry, outlandish stunts and a quip on the tongue had proved most profitable. It was planned originally that On Her Majesty's Secret Service would be number 5 in the series, but a change of tack to go for You Only Live Twice as the story gave producers Broccoli & Saltzman the scope for a giganticus enormous production. However, it may be set in Japan and feature a Bond/Blofeld conflict, but Roald Dahl's script bares little resemblance to Ian Fleming's source novel. Although a massive financial success with a Worldwide gross of over $111 million, Bond 5 took $30 million less than Thunderball. Strange since this is a better film. Can we attribute the drop to it being a space age saga? Maybe, the rebirth of sci-fi was a few years away, and of course Bond had lost some fans who had grown tired, like Connery, of 007 relying on gadgets instead of brains and brawn to complete his missions. There was also the rival Casino Royale production, as bad as it was, to contend with, while the spy boom created by Bond had been overkilled elsewhere and was on the wane.
True enough that You Only Live Twice has flaws, though they are far from being film killers if you like the gadgets and hi-techery side of the franchise? Connery announced once production was over that he was leaving the role of Bond behind. He had been close to breaking point after Thunderball, but finally the media circus, typecasting, the fanaticism and the character merely being a cypher for outrageous sequences, led Connery to finally call it a day. His displeasure shows in performance, oh it's professional, very much so, but the swagger and machismo from the earlier films has gone. Although Dahl's script tones down the "cheese" dialogue and unfolds as a plot of considerable World peril worth, characterisations are thinly drawn, making this reliant on production value and action sequences. Thankfully both are top dollar. And the ace up its sleeve is the long awaited face to face meeting of Bond and Blofeld.
Ken Adam's set design is fit to grace any epic in film history, as is Freddie Young's photography around the Japanese locales, Barry lays a beautiful Bond/Oriental score all over proceedings and Nancy Sinatra's title song is appealingly catchy. The action is excellently constructed by Gilbert (helming the first of three Bond movies on his CV), with the final battle at Blofeld's volcano crater base full of explosions, flying stunt men, expert choreography and meaty fights. Along the way we have been treated to Ninjas, Piranhas, poison, aeroplane peril and the awesome Little Nellie versus the big boy copter smack down! Then there's that Bond/Blofeld confrontation. Well worth the wait, with Pleasence visually scary with bald head (setting the marker for bald villainy to follow in TV and cinema it seems) and scar across his eye. Pleasence is also very low key with his menace, which is perfect, we don't want pantomime and the scenes with Bond work wonderfully well.
It made less than the film before it and it has fierce critics in Bond and Fleming circles. But it's a Bond film that pays rich rewards on revisits, where the artistry on show really shines through in this HD/Upscale age. 8/10
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Post by Sulla on Apr 16, 2020 18:30:09 GMT
Yay! The first Bond flick I ever saw, and the first at a theater. I fell in love with Little Nellie.
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Post by sdrew13163 on Apr 17, 2020 0:11:07 GMT
Yay
Almost as gorgeously shot as Goldfinger, just with a dumb story instead. Still good though.
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