I think the girl in Gold finger, the one who tried to snipe Auric and had her car totalled by Bonds wheel mounted tyre shredder interrupted him as well.
Best sound tracks? Heck, what a travesty the Oscars were that year. The soppy, squishy, ridiculous and wholly forgettable "The Way We Were" beat out a McCartney classic for best theme song. Macca sings his song to this very day, thrilling audiences around the globe...while the Streisand song remains a fan favourite among geriatric drag queens. SMH
Not my favourite Bond film..but one of the best line's. Should have had a Bond face reaction shot. Eye-brow at a slightly acute angle face like a Guppy.. anyway funny. Ta for aharing.
I was in the audience when Jane Seymour was in Dancing With The Stars, I know she's close to 70 but my goodness the lady was scorching hot and definitely had more charisma than everyone else around her.
Th thing that bothers me is that in the original Ian Fleming novel, one of the chapters around the equivalent scene here is called "N***er Heaven" and full of highly questionable bigotry. Though still not as awful as in Goldfinger where Fleming wrote: "Those terms included putting Odd-Job or ANY OTHER KOREAN firmly in place, which in Bond's estimation was lower than apes in the mammalian hierarchy."
The introduction : 'My name is Bond, James Bond', in my opinion was best delivered by Moore. He had just the right tonality and the pause after saying 'Bond' was perfect. They don't make em like this anymore.
For those commenting on the "007" deck of cards. This is 1973 and the production designers put little things like this for the very few sharp eyes, in movie theaters. Not even VHS was out yet, not to mention DVD or other digital media. You think they guessed people would freeze still the movie while on their toilet?
@@vordman Perfect way of describing it. Best of the escapist action packed Bond movies by a mile. It still has solid character development but it's a badass action movie #1 and it nailed it.
I checked her luggage at LAX back in 2001 when the private company was doing the screening before TSA took over. She had a f*****-up attitude but she did look good for her age
@@1990758 yeah. It's a ashame always wanted to meet shatner and Bruce Willis... But I heard the stories guess not worth it nowadays. Is there anyone you met that actually was nice like the person they portrayed?
@@robertonline6543 Believe It or Not Jan-Michael Vincent I was working at the movie theater in Century City it was located above the Playboy club. He said hi to me he was real cool I think they was having some kind of private screening. I was working as an usher at the door I also seen Jacqueline Smith from Charlie's Angel LOL believe it or not she winked at me she looks better than Farrah Fawcett also Michelle Lee I think she was in Dallas or Knots Landing now that's a gorgeous person. Do you remember the Playboy club when it was in Century City
0:47 probably one of the most underrated introductions interactions in the series, the slow switch to the theme of 007 from the villain's soundtrack was executed nicely. This is coming from a Craig fan.
0:45 This is in my opinion the second best delivery of the "Bond.... James Bond" - line in any of the movies. Only beaten by Sean Connery's introduction scene in Dr No.
This and for your eyes only are the two best Moore films in my opinion! He is at his best, when he’s written in a less comedic manner. The balance is just right..! (Although I do really enjoy the man with the golden gun as well)
I'm a big fan of all the Moore Bond films, and I think Moonraker gets a bad wrap. (There IS too much humor in that one, though) But there's something special about Moore's first two, and of course For Your Eyes Only, as you mentioned. I think Man with the Golden Gun is actually my favorite overall Bond film! But Live and Let Die is close behind; it's also amazing.
Roger Moore looked SO much better and much more convincing as Bond when he had his hair like this, shorter down the back and sides and without it hanging over his ears. It also helped to keep him looking a bit younger.
Jane Seymour was only 20 when she was cast as Solitaire. Between her and Lynn-Holly Johnson in For Your Eyes Only, we can say that Roger Moore was Bond's middle-age crisis phase.
Roger Moore didn't like acting with Lynn-Holly and said to the producers that it came off as a little weird that long-in-the-tooth Bond would be attracted to the High School aged Lynn-Holly. That's why later on in the film that Bond hooks up with a well-over 30s "Countess".
The one thing that keeps breaking my immersion are the backsides of the cards. Not only do they show a 007 logo on the back which seems rather unreal, but also every card in the movie must have been made by the same company because it doesn't matter if they're from Solitaire's deck or from a random store, they all have the same backside. Also you can never again unsee this trivia now, you're welcome.
If Solitaire is so good with tarot, she ought to know that Fool is not a bad card. It doesn't literally mean fool. Rather a carefree adventurer, a mischievous go-getter.
As a further layer: in the original game set up of Tarot, before it was used for fortune-telling, the Fool was believed to serve the same role as the Joker card in poker: i.e. it acted as an 'excuse' to permit whoever plays it to not follow suit. A very fitting hint that Bond is not a guy who follows the leader and always has a plan to do his own thing.
I think that they really made the most of Roger Moore's Englishness in this film. The way he drops the gun in the bin: I'm not sure that he predecessors could've pulled that off so perfectly.
I absolutely love her with her hair down in the later parts of the movie. She was 22 the time the movie went out, probably 21 during the shoot. She's the prettiest Bond girl for me and one of my favorites. Ironically my favorite Bond girls are both evil.
When I die, I would like my tombstone to have that very inscription, "Names is for tombstones, baby!". In fact, you know what, I will be sure to include that detail in my will, just to be sure. :P Not that I'm planning to die any time soon of course (I'm only 27, but still, never know). :D
OK, physics nit-pick here ... just having a metal pincer with incredible grip doesn't mean your arm muscles would have the strength to bend the steel barrel of a revolver, especially when you are holding the butt of gun in your bare hand. :D
@@mrman8541 good memory! That's right, I remember when James pushed him out of the train window his entire prosthetic arm was left behind. By the way spoiler alert for anyone who hasn't had a chance to see the movie in the past 40 years, lol. However, even if his entire arm is robotic, his flesh arm would still need to have enough strength to push against the gun with equal and opposite force in order to bend it. It would only work if the butt of the gun was clamped in a vise or something like that. I'm sure I'm overthinking this anyway...
One our honeymoon to Jamaica I realized the lobby (later in the film) was from Live and Let Die. And Dr. Kinanga's lair was actually the room the resort had the pool tables. It was San Suici Lido in Ocho Rios.
Regarding Tee Hee bending the Walther's barrel, wouldn't you still require a lot of arm strength even with a prosthetic like that? A lot more than is possible from a human?
0:13 Relax Baby, Mister Big is gonna take care of you in a minute.. That's the exact words you tell a Girl you took home after a Bar night out after it has established she has Daddy Issues..
I was 12 when this came out and my mother managed a movie theater so I saw at least a dozen times. Never once did I notice that the cards say 007 on the back
Mr. Big, the only character in cinema history with the stones to interrupt James Bond. RIP Yaphet Kotto.
I think the girl in Gold finger, the one who tried to snipe Auric and had her car totalled by Bonds wheel mounted tyre shredder interrupted him as well.
@@davfree9732 Tilly Masterson did indeed
Absolutely superb villain. The perfect Bond baddie. So charismatic.
Yaphet was an awesome actor. Equally skilled in comedy as he was in drama.
Also Max Kalba from "TSWLM" was like "Yeah, Bond, James Bond, and...?".
2:58 "Now promise you'll stay right there. I shan't be long" Jeez Bond was such a smooth talking badass.
His delivery there just remind me of "Ta ta, and farewell" from the succulent Chinese meal man 😂
He's super smooth in this scene later on...
th-cam.com/video/jsSY-A2f28A/w-d-xo.html
Bond: thank you
Thugs: keep your hands of things,
Lader drop kick
Felix: Drop it.
Bond. Jeez Bond
@@sasha_ytubeI think Harold Strutter CIA agent is following bond.
One of the best Bond films, with one of the best bad guys and definitely one of the best sound tracks. R.I.P Yaphet Kotto who died 15.03.2021.
Best sound tracks? Heck, what a travesty the Oscars were that year. The soppy, squishy, ridiculous and wholly forgettable "The Way We Were" beat out a McCartney classic for best theme song. Macca sings his song to this very day, thrilling audiences around the globe...while the Streisand song remains a fan favourite among geriatric drag queens. SMH
And JW was icing on the cake 😂
"Names is for tombstones baby"- one of the best villain lines in Bond films.
Bond: "Expect me to talk?".
Goldfinger: "No Mr. Bond, I'm expecting you to die".
My dads favourite bond movie and his favourite line
Not my favourite Bond film..but one of the best line's.
Should have had a Bond face reaction shot. Eye-brow at a slightly acute angle face like a Guppy.. anyway funny. Ta for aharing.
Blofeld: you only live twice, Mr bond
@@troyandrew6154...once when you are born, and once when you look death in the face.
Jane Seymour in this movie was the most beautiful, classiest, most stunning woman… mind blowing 🤪
I was in the audience when Jane Seymour was in Dancing With The Stars, I know she's close to 70 but my goodness the lady was scorching hot and definitely had more charisma than everyone else around her.
She was a great Bond girl, one of my favorites. She's still good-looking today even at age 70!
No wonder Henry VIII married her.
One of prettiest bonds girls ever
@@lloydkline1518 Not one of... She's THE most beautiful Bond girl.. Period...
"Now, promise you'll stay right there. I shan't be long..." Bloody brilliant!
@@arkady714 I like the sound of that to Roger Moore.
The thing that bothers me about this scene is the realization I could order everything on the menu for $3.00 in 1973 😭.
The heroin was probably subsidizing the restaurant chain.
3$ back in 1973 is like 10 dollars now or perhaps a bit more.
Th thing that bothers me is that in the original Ian Fleming novel, one of the chapters around the equivalent scene here is called "N***er Heaven" and full of highly questionable bigotry. Though still not as awful as in Goldfinger where Fleming wrote: "Those terms included putting Odd-Job or ANY OTHER KOREAN firmly in place, which in Bond's estimation was lower than apes in the mammalian hierarchy."
@@criteriumgaming9457 , 18 dollars.
@@JWBabaYaga gas was something like $0.36 per US gallon when the film was made.
The introduction : 'My name is Bond, James Bond', in my opinion was best delivered by Moore. He had just the right tonality and the pause after saying 'Bond' was perfect. They don't make em like this anymore.
Unlike, I dunno, Craig in his last run. Craig sounded utterly wankered.
Pierce Brosnan in Goldeneye was great too.
@@lindildeev5721 Terrific guy...his bond charisma spills over to other non-bond movies he's acted in too.
@@mantabondTrue.. These days bond movies aren't really all that captivating.
@@lindildeev5721 The November man movie check it out. Bronsan is lead role.
Take out the bits with Solitare and that's almost exactly how my last job interview went
.......WHY DID YOU BRING THE GUN?!?!?!
@@judyhopps9380 better question is, what kind of interview starts with a revolving wall?
@@cooltrainervaultboy-39 better question: Where's that waiter?
TheSmithersy - Thought for sure the forbidden "N" word was to follow... you know the word that never goes away. I wonder why!?!...
@@judyhopps9380 You bring a piece to all first time meetings.
The way Bond casually drops his gun in the trash can has got to be one of the funniest moments in the whole entire James Bond franchise.
He dropped it into the ashtray 😂
For those commenting on the "007" deck of cards. This is 1973 and the production designers put little things like this for the very few sharp eyes, in movie theaters. Not even VHS was out yet, not to mention DVD or other digital media. You think they guessed people would freeze still the movie while on their toilet?
Also, because they were manufacturing them as a tie-in product.
Yeah, watched this on Betamax
My favourite Bond movie. Tons of atmosphere and perfect pacing. Not a wasted frame.
Yep, it's a rollercoaster from beginning to end. I have always loved it. Moore's best imho.
@@vordman Perfect way of describing it. Best of the escapist action packed Bond movies by a mile. It still has solid character development but it's a badass action movie #1 and it nailed it.
The first Bond I ever saw in a theatre. It made a huge impact. Love it to this day. It has style and class. Its a film. Not a movie.
"Is he armed?" love the line delivery and expression of Julius Harris there.
And 30s later…”was” armed
I never noticed the cards actually have *007* printed on the back. Fantastic.
rofl, as many times as I've watched this scene and never caught that. Great catch
@@killsalive1 same!
Jane Seymour, what a beauty. Not many prettier faces out there.
even at middle age she was :)
In my list of lovely brunettes of my younger years, perhaps only Jaclyn Smith surpasses her
Monica Bellucci and Sophie Marceau
@@devinmoose that’s kinda like beauty couple of them such as Carey Lowell, Michelle Yeoh, Denise Richards, Halle Berry, and Léa Seydoux.
@@winnienguyen4420 absolutely gorgeous women. Sophie Marceau is one of my favourites of all time.
My god that actress was so beautiful in her 20's.
Jane Seymour was as beautiful as a woman could be in this movie.
I'll have to thank Jane Seymour for my "Awakening" at 8 years old when i saw this in the theatre. Something is going on down there.
possibly the hottest of all the 007 girls
@@MrRobjs83 She got my temperature rising. And I was 7
@@MrRobjs83 prettiest not hottest. hottest was barbara bach from spy who loved me
@@roquefortfiles and your parents let you watch a bond film back then lol
One of the best bond films ever Roger Moore, legends never die.And Jane Seymour still beautiful in 2020.
Michael Lawrence They needed to ditch the cancer mouth sheriff! It not only ruined this movie but the blow-up explosion of Kananga was horrible!
One of the best bond films ever i would agree
Fun fact: One of Henry VII wives was named Jane Seymour
@@Alexagrigorieff Hi thats is right!!
It was a great bond ...you are correct as the music score was well placed and probably the best of Roger Moore
with the scenes and dialogue..
Jane Seymour is drop dead gorgeous. If l had to say and select the No 1. Bond girl of all time it would be her.
People say Moore didn't fully establish himself until his third film.
For me he became Bond in this scene.
He’s my favourite Bond too - although Timothy Dalton runs him close.
For me he was bond the second he said those 3 magic words
Bond James Bond
Loved the waiter in the beginning. Took the money AND drank the drink!
The scene was even better a few seconds before. Bond says “no ice”, waiter goes “that’s extra man...”
😂
That was smooth as FUUUUCK!!👍🤣
this always has me in tears XD
Exactly!
Brother has rent to pay😂
Yaphet Kotto died today and that line immediately came to mind.
It takes a real OG to pull off the suede double-breasted trench coat.
Not going to lie, that's a nice trench coat!
I hardly see people who can pull off double-breasted coats like Roger Moore
Overcoat. It's (I think?) wool.
Mr. Big died on March 16, 2021. Now his name can be put on a tombstone. R.I.P.
Jane Seymour...good God.
I checked her luggage at LAX back in 2001 when the private company was doing the screening before TSA took over. She had a f*****-up attitude but she did look good for her age
@@1990758 maybe she had a bad day?; she was beautiful back in the day, don't know about her attitude.
@@robertonline6543 wrong about 75 percent of celebrities I like that in person when the cameras are not around
@@1990758 yeah. It's a ashame always wanted to meet shatner and Bruce Willis... But I heard the stories guess not worth it nowadays. Is there anyone you met that actually was nice like the person they portrayed?
@@robertonline6543 Believe It or Not Jan-Michael Vincent I was working at the movie theater in Century City it was located above the Playboy club. He said hi to me he was real cool I think they was having some kind of private screening. I was working as an usher at the door I also seen Jacqueline Smith from Charlie's Angel LOL believe it or not she winked at me she looks better than Farrah Fawcett also Michelle Lee I think she was in Dallas or Knots Landing now that's a gorgeous person. Do you remember the Playboy club when it was in Century City
0:47 probably one of the most underrated introductions interactions in the series, the slow switch to the theme of 007 from the villain's soundtrack was executed nicely. This is coming from a Craig fan.
MY GOD... Jane Seymour is bloody gorgeous...!
English rose
In her 20s at the time, makes perfect sense!
@@jonessoda4me1 She was 21yo at the time of filming...! Oh, My Holy God..!!
Solitaire and Domino, the hottest Bond Girls ever
0:45 This is in my opinion the second best delivery of the "Bond.... James Bond" - line in any of the movies. Only beaten by Sean Connery's introduction scene in Dr No.
I agree. That and casino Royale
Completely agree
Jane Seymour = one of the most beautiful Bond Girls in the franchise's history.
But not the best. Wai Lin would easily kick her little ass and Vesper Lindt would destroy her with his eyes only.
Claudine Auger too
2:41 "Waste him" is that a good thing?
haha, Bond is so wonderfully white in this film, love it!
Based.
You honestly believe 007 didn't know what that meant?
@@missyadams Of course not, you sausage!
@@missyadams Of course he did but was using it as a foil in a very white way.
When Bond films were fun.
Alas the time has come for Yaphet Kotto's name to be emblazoned. Rest in peace to a fabulous actor.
This and for your eyes only are the two best Moore films in my opinion! He is at his best, when he’s written in a less comedic manner. The balance is just right..! (Although I do really enjoy the man with the golden gun as well)
Seconded Man with Golden Gun. I can't explain why I love it ... I just do. But Live and Let Die is still my favourite.
I'm a big fan of all the Moore Bond films, and I think Moonraker gets a bad wrap. (There IS too much humor in that one, though) But there's something special about Moore's first two, and of course For Your Eyes Only, as you mentioned.
I think Man with the Golden Gun is actually my favorite overall Bond film! But Live and Let Die is close behind; it's also amazing.
Roger Moore had such a funny sense of humour and whit - just great and I think its what the new bonds currently lack
I totally agree!
In this movie Bond gets called "boy" "baby" "stupid muthah" and "honky" lmao
Yeah it's fine, nobody needs to get offended.
Of course, he’s in Harlem in the 70’s
@@TheSoloTrooper Yes before the gentrification.
@@rileyanoid8444 you ain't lying
@@TheSoloTrooper ya maan
Lord Have Mercy Jane Seymour!! Beautiful women at every stage of life.
Rest in peace to Mr Yaphet Kotto!.
Roger Moore looked SO much better and much more convincing as Bond when he had his hair like this, shorter down the back and sides and without it hanging over his ears. It also helped to keep him looking a bit younger.
Well I mean he was younger
@@SophieJN he was yeah but in his later films the hair and wardrobe just made him look worse than he actually was.
@@Class158 I looked ok, no better or worse.
James is so cool and collected in these scenes.
Jane Seymour was only 20 when she was cast as Solitaire. Between her and Lynn-Holly Johnson in For Your Eyes Only, we can say that Roger Moore was Bond's middle-age crisis phase.
Well Moore didn't look that old here
Roger Moore didn't like acting with Lynn-Holly and said to the producers that it came off as a little weird that long-in-the-tooth Bond would be attracted to the High School aged Lynn-Holly. That's why later on in the film that Bond hooks up with a well-over 30s "Countess".
ahh Lynn-Holly Johnson
Jane Seymour was okay as Solitaire, but I think Ethel Merman would have been better casting for the role. 😉
@@venturatheace1 unlike Sean connery
She's so beautiful
Back when I was a kid, I saw these cards for sale at a department store (yeah, it was a LONG time ago). Note “007” on back of the cards.
Jane Seymour in her prime.... rawr. Nuff said.
nuff snuff - lol
uWu.
_Awww,_ hell no! - she was hot here but when she entered "milf" territory she was positively _SMOKIN!!_ (as Stanley Ibkiss might say).
Man this is still one of my favorite James Bond movies. Not sure why but it’s always stuck with me.
0:06 I like how the waiter takes a sip of the drink that 007 thought was for him
" You Can't Be Too Careful In N.Y.C. These Days?!?!? " #EPIC
❤
Damn str8
Now it's all gentrified.
Still true
Very under-appreciated. After Goldfinger the best of all the bond films.
Jane Seymour is the greatest Bond girl.
I'll have to agree.
Definitely one of them.
Caroline Munroe being the other.
Although the 60s bond girls were all my favourites, I can't deny I have a soft spot for Solitaire.
The one thing that keeps breaking my immersion are the backsides of the cards. Not only do they show a 007 logo on the back which seems rather unreal, but also every card in the movie must have been made by the same company because it doesn't matter if they're from Solitaire's deck or from a random store, they all have the same backside.
Also you can never again unsee this trivia now, you're welcome.
Loonatic Blue You have a quick eye! I had to go back and pause the clip before realizing the 007 design on the cards!
I never noticed that before! Looks like it was put in as a bit of an easter egg. The 007 logo is hidden in the design.
They sold those cards back then to promote the movie. I saw those cards for sale, in a department store, back in the 70’s.
,xchlpie2808e7
Lemme play devil's advocate for no reason but my own amusement just to be silly: The cards all being labeled 007 are why she knows who he is.
Loved Solitaire’s look of outrage when Bond showed her the Lovers card.
Great background score in this scene.
Kotto was GREAT as Mr. Big/Dr. Kananga
Solitaire knew her fate already :D
Cards told her: the OO7 will be her lover ♡♡♡ she couldn't avoid that.
If Solitaire is so good with tarot, she ought to know that Fool is not a bad card. It doesn't literally mean fool. Rather a carefree adventurer, a mischievous go-getter.
That can apply to Bond too
And that is Bond to a tee, especially in the novels.
She literally said He found himself lol.
As a further layer: in the original game set up of Tarot, before it was used for fortune-telling, the Fool was believed to serve the same role as the Joker card in poker: i.e. it acted as an 'excuse' to permit whoever plays it to not follow suit. A very fitting hint that Bond is not a guy who follows the leader and always has a plan to do his own thing.
Depends on if it's upside down or not doesn't it?
I think that they really made the most of Roger Moore's Englishness in this film. The way he drops the gun in the bin: I'm not sure that he predecessors could've pulled that off so perfectly.
Wow, what a memorable scene.
Didn't even give him a chance to say his classic "Bond. James Bond." What a savage.
The moment I saw Solitaire I fell in love with her. So beautiful
and humble too :)
I absolutely love her with her hair down in the later parts of the movie. She was 22 the time the movie went out, probably 21 during the shoot. She's the prettiest Bond girl for me and one of my favorites. Ironically my favorite Bond girls are both evil.
It seems that Solitaire really knows how to read the inevitable future for our sophisticated agent, specially when it comes in meeting Doctor Claw.
Anyone notice that the back of the cards say 007?
I like how the back of the cards say "007". I heard that deck was custom made for the movie.
Looks like it tarot for 007 very cool .. love the shocked look on her face when he pulls the lovers card 😁
I just love that sound track
And now Mr Big is dead too. Names is for tombstones baby. May all rest in peace.
1:48 "funny how the least little thing amuses him"
Looooool
And he toss his PPK in the trash. 🗑️
Roger's Best 007 Movie ...R.I.P....
Love the eyebrow raise at 1:17 my favorite moment for some reason 🤣
Beautiful. Powerful. A little sinister. Miss Solitaire.
When I die, I would like my tombstone to have that very inscription, "Names is for tombstones, baby!". In fact, you know what, I will be sure to include that detail in my will, just to be sure. :P Not that I'm planning to die any time soon of course (I'm only 27, but still, never know). :D
Prop guy to the production: «Don’t worry, nobody will noticed that the bad guy has a fake arm»...
Jane Seymour was the fukin' BOMB!
What a beauty!
The bald head guy with the continuous smile is excellent actor
He's called Tee Hee in the film
@@alexojideagu oh thanks
OK, physics nit-pick here ... just having a metal pincer with incredible grip doesn't mean your arm muscles would have the strength to bend the steel barrel of a revolver, especially when you are holding the butt of gun in your bare hand. :D
That's what I was thinking. I was expecting him to crush it, but when he bent it without the other hand even straining....
Shh! You'll ruin everything!
But remember, he doesn't have arm muscles, the whole arm was robotic.
@@mrman8541 good memory! That's right, I remember when James pushed him out of the train window his entire prosthetic arm was left behind. By the way spoiler alert for anyone who hasn't had a chance to see the movie in the past 40 years, lol. However, even if his entire arm is robotic, his flesh arm would still need to have enough strength to push against the gun with equal and opposite force in order to bend it. It would only work if the butt of the gun was clamped in a vise or something like that. I'm sure I'm overthinking this anyway...
@@mrman8541 yep, but the other hand looked like flesh, and that's providing the necessary equal force (and hardly denting in the process)
Say what you like about Moore's Bond, his entrance and delivery of "Bond, James Bond" was perfect in this scene.
Prophetic movie. The black to white ratio in London today is about the same as this clip.
What?! London and New York have been multicultural cities for centuries!
@@WedgePee LOL. Not after Windrush...that was when it got a LOT more african.
Anybody noticed the 007 marking on the back of the cards?
R.I.P. Yaphet Kotto, 🙏❤️
the wall turning was so sudden and random it was hilarious.
One our honeymoon to Jamaica I realized the lobby (later in the film) was from Live and Let Die. And Dr. Kinanga's lair was actually the room the resort had the pool tables. It was San Suici Lido in Ocho Rios.
jane seymour is soo beautiful
Love how there is „007“ all over the card deck
A black person wearing blackface is the funniest thing I've seen in a Bond film. 🤣
Check out Sir Roger as "The Saint". Total badass - unbelievable fight scenes.
I have never seen such a beautiful woman in my life. 😍
The best bond ever
Imo this is Roger Moore's second best Bond movie, after TSWLM of course
For Your Eyes Only was also a classic
@@MrRobjs83 For Your Eyes Only was #1. Then TSWLM.
“Mr. Bond, I heard you killed a couple of brothers up in Harlem. This disturbed me immensely.”
I just now noticed that it says 007 on the back of the tarot cards.
And now I want to watch this movie.
RIP Mr Big / Yaphet Kotto
At a job interview after the manager introduces himself: “Names is for tombstones baby”
Rog at his best. Great movie.
Regarding Tee Hee bending the Walther's barrel, wouldn't you still require a lot of arm strength even with a prosthetic like that? A lot more than is possible from a human?
He’s a Bond henchman, most of them are pretty physically strong (see Oddjob or Jaws)
You are absolutely right but Bond movies have always used a generous amount of cinematic license in their storytelling.
It's a movie
Yes, but this is Bond. Some suspension of disbelief is required.
yes and the support hand would break. Who comes up with this crap?
Love how Bond just tosses his gun in the waste basket. Good thing MI6 seems to have an endless supply of Walther PPKs.
RIP Yaphet Kotto
0:13 Relax Baby, Mister Big is gonna take care of you in a minute.. That's the exact words you tell a Girl you took home after a Bar night out after it has established she has Daddy Issues..
My Name is Bond The best delivery of the line ever
It's top two, behind Sean Connery's introduction in Dr. No
Now promise you'll stay right there, I shalln't be long 🤣
most impressive 15 seconds a villain ever had in bond history
I was 12 when this came out and my mother managed a movie theater so I saw at least a dozen times. Never once did I notice that the cards say 007 on the back