Tremendous acting from both Messrs Connery and Shaw. Robert Shaw brought realism and intensity to every role he played. Hugely talented man. Sean owns the role here.
Shaw's body language as Nash is fun to watch. There are little glimpses of Grant's own natural body language every so often, but it's an entirely different physical personality when he is pretending to be Nash.
@@williamshaw9047 Especially watch _"Runaway Train"_ with Jon Voight and Rebecca De Mornay. And if you enjoy foreign films then watch _"The Bullet Train"_ with the legendary Sonny Chiba who very sadly passed away a couple of weeks ago at 82 years old.
@@mckinleymac3452 I don't think there's a restaurant car on that first train. Still an excellent film, as is The Taking of Pelham 123 with Walter Matthau, Robert Shaw again , and a train with no restaurant or cabins that spends much of the film going nowhere .
5:35 A lot of people don't realize this, but Grant taking Bond's metal cigarette case was intended to shake things up with the audience. In the book, Grant succeeds in shooting Bond - but the blow the bullet delivers is significantly reduced as it passes through the cigarette case. The idea was viewers who had read the book would be left on the edge of their seats wondering how he'd get out of this mess now.
@@Hawthorne-Studios They did that a lot in the early Bond films. In the Doctor No novel, Bond pockets a table knife from dinner with the intent of using it as part of his escape. The the film they have Dr. No noticing Bond do it: "I'm not a fool, please do not treat me as one - and that table knife please put it back." In the Goldfinger novel, Bond writes a message warning of Operation Grand Slam and leaves it in the toilet of Goldfinger's private jet in the slim hopes it will be discovered by the cleaners who will in turn warn the authorities. In the film, he slips this message into Mr. Solo's pocket unknowing that he is to be killed and disposed of in a car compactor.
@@WhiteJarrah That is some absolutely genius adapting work. You know Bond will succeed in the end because he's Bond, but the mystery around "oh NOW how's he gonna do it?" is awesome.
0:37 I love Grant's response when Bond says he looks very fit. Instead of saying 'Thank you', he says 'Yes' as if to say 'You better fucking believe it, mate.'
Omaid Shokouri this movie is also Sean Connery’s favorite Bond film that he did, It was Daniel Craig’s favorite Bond film. Both Brosnan and Craig were influenced by Connery’s films, as Brosnan’s first film he saw as a kid was Goldfinger.
Omaid Shokouri I think it’s pretty much everyone’s favourite James Bond movie, isn’t it? It’s certainly the most credible and dramatic. Apparently, someone involved in the franchise once said “We keep trying to make FRWL but often end up making Thunderball” and much of Thunderball was tedious, repetitive action that added little to the plot.
@@Htheorphanarian As a rule of thumb: it is red wine with red meats and desserts; white wine with white meats, fish and pasta; and sparkling wine with shell fish, cheese and fruits. Alternatively, rosé wine with all manner of seafood. This is debatable, but to some mixing the wrong wine with the wrong food is seen as a sign of unsophistication (especially back in the 60s when this was made), while others see grilled fish as an exception to the rule of thumb. Personally, I'm more of a spirits drinker and prefer either a gin or scotch with my food.
She was SO Beautiful! I Love train scenes in movies and this is great.Robert Shaw was so good...apparently he became a very good novelist too before he died young from cancer.
borderlord Robert Shaw died in 1978 at age 51 of a massive heart attack while was driving to his vacation cottage in Ireland with his wife. He was suffering chest pains and stopped the car thinking he would get out to walk it off and collapsed a few feet away from the car. His wife ran to a nearby cottage to use a land line phone for emergency services but Robert Shaw was already gone by time they arrived.
nzzgon yes it was a heart attack while he was on vacation with his third wife going on vacation and was driving when was having severe chest pains and died after pulling the car over and got out of car to walk off the pains and fell down and was dead within minutes.
Robert Shaw is mesmerising here - although this video clip ends just as his expression and demeanour completely change as the polite charade is over and he takes charge of the situation. The fight on the train is rightly praised as one of the best screen fights ever and the scene just before that, a perfect head to head with Connery and Shaw - is the finest of any the Bond films
Shaw is so spotless as Grant, every small book details like insecure hiding his true identity through using the phrase of 'an old man' and the moments of his eyes getting all of the sudden aggressive like in 1:28
I thought that was him not fully knowing certain phrases in English the upper and middle-class use. They use Old Boy and even Young Man but never Old Man, that's seen as derogatory.
One of the things that I have always noticed about this classic fight scene was that when Grant knocks Bond out, the blow to the back of his head looks like he really made some good contact. Appears that Shaw really gave Connery a good whack.
3:17 Bond looks angry as he saw what Grant did..... but he has to continue the charade, and when Grant says 'exhaustion I'd say' Bond just moodily grunts... lol.. That fight between them both remains the most violent I've ever seen because it takes place in very dim lighting, near dark, very small space and the fact they are on a public train with many onboard... but yet no one knows they are fighting till death.
The fight scene in the Bond film ''FRWL'' is a classic fight scene, but two notable things need to be pointed out about that famous scene. First, how does Bond after suffering a major concussion after the blow to his head from Red Grant manage to fight Grant evenly until the moment when Grant gets the upper hand in the fight using his wristwatch with the hidden wire ? Second, if you examine the end of the fight very carefully you will notice that it is physically impossible for Grant to get the wire around Bond's neck the way he does because Grant held Bond's head in a half-nelson with Grant's right arm so that Grant would have had to release the half-nelson in order to get the wire tightly around Bond's neck--otherwise the wire would be wrapped around Bond's right arm below Bond's armpit making it impossible for Grant to get the wire around Bond's neck! If Grant does not release the half-nelson, then Grant would not have sufficient leverage to tighten the wire around Bond's neck because Grant's forearm and right hand would be behind Bond's neck requiring Grant to wrap the wire several times around Bond's neck using his (Grant's) left hand and then pull hard on the end of the wire with his left hand. In other words, to wrap the wire tightly around Bond's neck, Grant would have had to first, release the half-nelson completely, then pull his (Grant's) right arm out from under Bond's right arm and armpit, and then pull out the wire from his watch and then wrap the wire around Bond's neck. By the time Grant would do all that, Bond would have plenty of time to whirl around and sock Grant in the jaw.
What I love is, when Bond isn't in the same scene as Grant (and when he is but is facing away), Grant has such a look and feeling of contempt in him lol. It's like his disguise is barely contained
Grant has an ego the size of England taking on this job, it's incredible he really DID have Bond fooled even when held at gunpoint with his deception being tested. Not to mention, I wonder how ironic it is that the villain here asks if he cares more about the girl or the mission while on a train, just like his former friend does in GoldenEye decades later.
It was a huge surprise learning that this actor also played the grizzled captain in "Jaws." Robert Shaw is JACKED in this movie, but middle age hit him like a bus over the next 12 years.
Well, I never really understood that. Later on Bond says something like “Red wine with fish. That should have told me something.” But the faux pas here was ordering a red Chianti with a fish dish. Chianti is just too bold a wine to go with fish. If they’re stocked with Italian wines and you want a light red to go with a fish dish then a Valpolicella Classico does the job. A lighter French red such as a Gamay will work too…
@@JMBluecoat8289 I can only imagine if Bond had his actual train contact, what would have happened if he also ordered a red wine and just didn't know any better about overpowering the fish. I sure as hell wouldn't know since I'm not a wine guy, haha.
Unless he wants to distinguish his wine glass from the others so he knows which one is drugged. But yes, there is also a snobbish element to the scene too.
Probably the only Bond film where everything in the story is totally plausible and one of the best (if not *THE* best) in the series. I don't think that's a coincidence.
"You look very fit Nash" See there Bond is considering the credibility of Nash' claimed role and whether he could take him if need be. But in todays movie climate Romanava could throw Nash around like a twig!
Possibly my favourite Sean Connery Bond movie and certainly the nearest any Bond movie actually got to being a real spy movie.Sean was without any doubt the best Bond. He had presence, charisma, class, was cultured, passionate and could be gentle and considerate but you always knew that underneath all that he could be deadly and ruthless when necessary. The other Bond's pale into shadows by comparison. Again in my own opinion the best Bond movies were the first three. From Thunderball onwards the movies, while at times entertaining or even thrilling were all going downhill (including Sean's later Bond movies). Plot lines disappeared and well thought out characters became cameos or shams. As for Blofeld? Well the biggest mistake has been to show him and as movies moved on make him more and more a mere bit part character rather than the formidable villain originally portrayed. The voice of Blofeld in From Russia With Love was terrific, no need to see him or have him jumping through hoops.
To be honest I hated the 'don't show the villain' trope that was a thing in the 1950s and 60s. These were good Bond movies, but so were the later ones.
Gene Ryan Robert Shaw was only 3 years older then Connery in real life and was 35 when filmed From Russia with Love and Connery was 32. Connery and Shaw were adversary’s again in the 1975 movie Robin and Marion with Sean Connery as an aging Robin Hood and Shaw as an older Sheriff of Nottingham
No he wouldn't. This movie is FAR from the best. Dr. No was even boring as hell, this is only marginally better. The title for best Bond movie is already occupied by Die Another Day. Connery's first two are only better than that POS that is Casino Royale.
+Firemarioflower Are you serious? "Dr. No", "From Russia with Love" and "Casino Royale" are probably the three best Bond movies. "Die Another Day" is among the worst, if not the worst.
+Friedrich Schmidt You're insane.... Die Another Day is exaclty how a 007 movie should be. It couldn't get crazier and more entertaining. IT had everything you could wish for. Dr. No was pathetic, slow and boring. Casino Royal was AWFUL, with a stupid plot and the James Bond vibe is totally not there. It was a movie that didn't make any sense whatsoever. Russia With Love is good but overrated, just like Goldfinger. They didn't age well when you look objectively at it. Brosnan's movies however are instant classics.
I don't think I've ever seen someone so dumb but here you are, calling Brosnan's movies the best, LOL. Goldeneye was the only decent movie, the rest were predictable and mediocre.
I love how the movie doesn't cheat and actually shows us that Bond saw him spike the drink, but you don't even notice until repeat viewings. It's this four second shot at 3:14.
@@williamshaw9047 To a trained field operative, that shows you're working-class -- and if you're a working-class person trying to pass yourself off as upper-class (or vice versa), that makes you a likely enemy agent!
From Russia With Love Robert Shaw was only 35 years old when filmed in 1962 for release in 1963 and released Jaws in 1975. By the time he played Quint Robert Shaw was older as he was life long alcoholic and heavy smoker aged him to.
ive seen this movie 100 times and I never recognized the henchman Grant as Robert Shaw.... He was one of the more convincing, imposing and capable of Bond film henchmen. His acting is very convincing. I need to research Robert Shaw's body of work a little bit harder i believe.
I agree with you about Robert Shaw A wide variety of work If you like oddball films/plays etc from the 60’s I recommend you watch The Birthday Party from 1968 Based upon a Harold Pinter Story Robert died too young
Because at that point, Bond was convinced he wasn't an enemy anymore. As much as he WAS right with the red wine and the pill, Grant put up an effective charade.
How did you not know that was Robert Shaw he is in the film credits and in his autobiography but a lot of people don’t realize that knew him as Quint in the 1975 classic Jaws that he played Assassin Red Grant in 1963’s From Russia with Love
Since Red Grant was supposed to have broken out of Dartmoor Jail - he should have been on Dartmoor Jail Ale, or Otter Ale, lol ! Possibly a Plymouth Gin !
He's testing his contact's credentials if he is who he says he is, which is kind of important if you're sneaking government secrets across borders with some help. And Grant plays him like an absolute fiddle.
A James Bond movie that looks like an actual spy movie rather than a comic book fantasy. Incredible.
leafyutube
The novel also is a great spy book
oczywiście
Well, this is the bit without the helicopters and the sequence where they're chased by SPECTRE's own navy.
@@mohammadmostafa9215 agreed, the novel is incredible
Bond is a Cold War character period. All this new stuff makes zero sense.
Tremendous acting from both Messrs Connery and Shaw. Robert Shaw brought realism and intensity to every role he played. Hugely talented man. Sean owns the role here.
Shaw's body language as Nash is fun to watch. There are little glimpses of Grant's own natural body language every so often, but it's an entirely different physical personality when he is pretending to be Nash.
I love train journey scenes in movies with dining car and cabin!
See "Silver Streak" and "Murder on the Orient Express"
@@williamshaw9047
Especially watch _"Runaway Train"_ with Jon Voight and Rebecca De Mornay. And if you enjoy foreign films then watch _"The Bullet Train"_ with the legendary Sonny Chiba who very sadly passed away a couple of weeks ago at 82 years old.
"The Out of Towners"(original) and "Strangers on a Train"
Classy
@@mckinleymac3452 I don't think there's a restaurant car on that first train. Still an excellent film, as is The Taking of Pelham 123 with Walter Matthau, Robert Shaw again , and a train with no restaurant or cabins that spends much of the film going nowhere .
5:35 A lot of people don't realize this, but Grant taking Bond's metal cigarette case was intended to shake things up with the audience. In the book, Grant succeeds in shooting Bond - but the blow the bullet delivers is significantly reduced as it passes through the cigarette case. The idea was viewers who had read the book would be left on the edge of their seats wondering how he'd get out of this mess now.
I wondered that, figured Nash was worried if a weapon was stashed in the case.
@@Hawthorne-Studios They did that a lot in the early Bond films. In the Doctor No novel, Bond pockets a table knife from dinner with the intent of using it as part of his escape. The the film they have Dr. No noticing Bond do it: "I'm not a fool, please do not treat me as one - and that table knife please put it back." In the Goldfinger novel, Bond writes a message warning of Operation Grand Slam and leaves it in the toilet of Goldfinger's private jet in the slim hopes it will be discovered by the cleaners who will in turn warn the authorities. In the film, he slips this message into Mr. Solo's pocket unknowing that he is to be killed and disposed of in a car compactor.
@@WhiteJarrah That is some absolutely genius adapting work. You know Bond will succeed in the end because he's Bond, but the mystery around "oh NOW how's he gonna do it?" is awesome.
Robert Shaw, what a actor, was so good.
0:37 I love Grant's response when Bond says he looks very fit.
Instead of saying 'Thank you', he says 'Yes' as if to say 'You better fucking believe it, mate.'
For some reason, Shaw here with his physique, masculinity, hair, cut of his suit... Christ, even his face reminds me very much of Daniel Craigs Bond.
@Omaid Shokouri interesting
Omaid Shokouri this movie is also Sean Connery’s favorite Bond film that he did, It was Daniel Craig’s favorite Bond film. Both Brosnan and Craig were influenced by Connery’s films, as Brosnan’s first film he saw as a kid was Goldfinger.
@@scottknode898 no that was Goldfinger that Pierce First saw as a kid
I hadn't realised that until your comment. Very interesting observation.
Omaid Shokouri I think it’s pretty much everyone’s favourite James Bond movie, isn’t it? It’s certainly the most credible and dramatic. Apparently, someone involved in the franchise once said “We keep trying to make FRWL but often end up making Thunderball” and much of Thunderball was tedious, repetitive action that added little to the plot.
This era Sean Connery in his first 4 movie were his best he was super trim and looked fantastic
Sean cemented himself as Bond with this movie. Everything from the way he handles women to the cool, slick way he handles Shaw.
2:40 Gotta love the look on Connery's face. As if to say "Seriously?!" lol
'Something's fishy here, and it ain't the grilled sole!'
zufgh 🤣
I ain't a wine connor-saur, what is the deal with red wine with fish? is it a no no? was that why JB gave the look?
@@Htheorphanarian As a rule of thumb: it is red wine with red meats and desserts; white wine with white meats, fish and pasta; and sparkling wine with shell fish, cheese and fruits. Alternatively, rosé wine with all manner of seafood. This is debatable, but to some mixing the wrong wine with the wrong food is seen as a sign of unsophistication (especially back in the 60s when this was made), while others see grilled fish as an exception to the rule of thumb. Personally, I'm more of a spirits drinker and prefer either a gin or scotch with my food.
With real actors you don’t need special effects. Love me some Robert Shaw❣️
She was SO Beautiful! I Love train scenes in movies and this is great.Robert Shaw was so good...apparently he became a very good novelist too before he died young from cancer.
nzzgon maybe you're right,I thought cancer.
@ borderlord. Robert Shaw died from a massive heart attack not cancer.
borderlord Robert Shaw died in 1978 at age 51 of a massive heart attack while was driving to his vacation cottage in Ireland with his wife. He was suffering chest pains and stopped the car thinking he would get out to walk it off and collapsed a few feet away from the car. His wife ran to a nearby cottage to use a land line phone for emergency services but Robert Shaw was already gone by time they arrived.
nzzgon yes it was a heart attack while he was on vacation with his third wife going on vacation and was driving when was having severe chest pains and died after pulling the car over and got out of car to walk off the pains and fell down and was dead within minutes.
@@scottknode898 sounds like you were there
Robert Shaw is mesmerising here - although this video clip ends just as his expression and demeanour completely change as the polite charade is over and he takes charge of the situation. The fight on the train is rightly praised as one of the best screen fights ever and the scene just before that, a perfect head to head with Connery and Shaw - is the finest of any the Bond films
Shaw is so spotless as Grant, every small book details like insecure hiding his true identity through using the phrase of 'an old man' and the moments of his eyes getting all of the sudden aggressive like in 1:28
I thought that was him not fully knowing certain phrases in English the upper and middle-class use. They use Old Boy and even Young Man but never Old Man, that's seen as derogatory.
One of the things that I have always noticed about this classic fight scene was that when Grant knocks Bond out, the blow to the back of his head looks like he really made some good contact. Appears that Shaw really gave Connery a good whack.
So many beautiful Bond Girls but she is my all time favorite.
This is the first time I've seen him as anything but Quint. Blew me away but also totally not surprised. Awesome, epic actor.
He’s fucking fantastic one of our true great actors 🇬🇧
I felt from Russia with love was one best james bond movies it was sean Connery favorite.
3:17 Bond looks angry as he saw what Grant did..... but he has to continue the charade, and when Grant says 'exhaustion I'd say' Bond just moodily grunts... lol.. That fight between them both remains the most violent I've ever seen because it takes place in very dim lighting, near dark, very small space and the fact they are on a public train with many onboard... but yet no one knows they are fighting till death.
I loved that fight because Bond won it by the skin of his teeth. If I didn't get that knife, he would have been dead.
The fight scene in the Bond film ''FRWL'' is a classic fight scene, but two notable things need to be pointed out about that famous scene. First, how does Bond after suffering a major concussion after the blow to his head from Red Grant manage to fight Grant evenly until the moment when Grant gets the upper hand in the fight using his wristwatch with the hidden wire ? Second, if you examine the end of the fight very carefully you will notice that it is physically impossible for Grant to get the wire around Bond's neck the way he does because Grant held Bond's head in a half-nelson with Grant's right arm so that Grant would have had to release the half-nelson in order to get the wire tightly around Bond's neck--otherwise the wire would be wrapped around Bond's right arm below Bond's armpit making it impossible for Grant to get the wire around Bond's neck! If Grant does not release the half-nelson, then Grant would not have sufficient leverage to tighten the wire around Bond's neck because Grant's forearm and right hand would be behind Bond's neck requiring Grant to wrap the wire several times around Bond's neck using his (Grant's) left hand and then pull hard on the end of the wire with his left hand. In other words, to wrap the wire tightly around Bond's neck, Grant would have had to first, release the half-nelson completely, then pull his (Grant's) right arm out from under Bond's right arm and armpit, and then pull out the wire from his watch and then wrap the wire around Bond's neck. By the time Grant would do all that, Bond would have plenty of time to whirl around and sock Grant in the jaw.
7Lukibi99Tore7 You think too much !
@ Richardo Cantoral. Perhaps, but you have to admit that the two points I made in my posted comment are valid ones.
Stanislas Houston even Q has told James Bond “if it hadn’t been for Q Branch you would have been dead a long time ago.”
My favorite Bond movie. Love this scene. Bond/Connery genuinely looks like he believes he's going to die.
Robert Shaw is one of the few actors I can think of who was a convincing physical opponent for a young Connery. Shame he died too soon.
And he was an alcoholic too
He was the best Bond imo.
From Russia with Love was the best.
What I love is, when Bond isn't in the same scene as Grant (and when he is but is facing away), Grant has such a look and feeling of contempt in him lol. It's like his disguise is barely contained
Grant has an ego the size of England taking on this job, it's incredible he really DID have Bond fooled even when held at gunpoint with his deception being tested.
Not to mention, I wonder how ironic it is that the villain here asks if he cares more about the girl or the mission while on a train, just like his former friend does in GoldenEye decades later.
The book is fantastic and so is the film. The golden age of 007.
Rest in Style, James.
Just heard the news, and I had to be here.
RIP Sean Connery.
It was a huge surprise learning that this actor also played the grizzled captain in "Jaws." Robert Shaw is JACKED in this movie, but middle age hit him like a bus over the next 12 years.
Should've kept in shape like he did in "Yugoslavia."
The old gun on the back of the neck trick ..... never fails 😂
One hell of an impeccable scene.
When you can hold your own in acting chops with Robert Shaw, you know you're pretty damn good!
To be fair Shaw does look a beast in this film
2:40 - Red Chianti with Grilled Sole. 007 disapproves.
Apparently Robert Shaw became a very good novelist in his later years ,Anthony Burgess rated him.
My all time favourite James bond movie.
The fact that Ash is also Captain Quint from Jaws blows my freakin' mind!
His name is Nash
Red wine with fish... now that should've told me something
I always didn't quite really get that...can you please help me what was that all about? Why did Bond glare at him when he asked for the red wine
@@supernatural-d3c typically you’re supposed to drink white wine with fish, and red wine with red meats like beef.
@@kjek1 ohh...thanks man 👍👍👍
"You may know the right wines, but you're the one on your knees. How does it feel old man?"
I like to think its a sign that he would play in jaws. Red wine being blood and fish being jaws. Rip the legend shaw
Bond looks up in disgust when he orders a red wine with fish LOL
Well, I never really understood that. Later on Bond says something like “Red wine with fish. That should have told me something.” But the faux pas here was ordering a red Chianti with a fish dish. Chianti is just too bold a wine to go with fish. If they’re stocked with Italian wines and you want a light red to go with a fish dish then a Valpolicella Classico does the job. A lighter French red such as a Gamay will work too…
@@JMBluecoat8289 I can only imagine if Bond had his actual train contact, what would have happened if he also ordered a red wine and just didn't know any better about overpowering the fish. I sure as hell wouldn't know since I'm not a wine guy, haha.
"Uh, no, the red kind." Key mistake, Grant.
So that makes him an enemy agent?
K SS Precisely
Unless he wants to distinguish his wine glass from the others so he knows which one is drugged. But yes, there is also a snobbish element to the scene too.
Big deal! I had 4 cans of special brew with my haddock and chips..
Red wine with fish, what a giveaway.
Probably the only Bond film where everything in the story is totally plausible and one of the best (if not *THE* best) in the series.
I don't think that's a coincidence.
Lotte Lenya, Pedro Armendariz, Vladek Sheybal, poison shoe, attache case, asweel as Robert Shaw. what a stew!
This movie definitely took it up a notch after Dr No. in terms of story action and acting.
The Best Bond film. period!
"You look very fit Nash" See there Bond is considering the credibility of Nash' claimed role and whether he could take him if need be. But in todays movie climate Romanava could throw Nash around like a twig!
Possibly my favourite Sean Connery Bond movie and certainly the nearest any Bond movie actually got to being a real spy movie.Sean was without any doubt the best Bond. He had presence, charisma, class, was cultured, passionate and could be gentle and considerate but you always knew that underneath all that he could be deadly and ruthless when necessary. The other Bond's pale into shadows by comparison. Again in my own opinion the best Bond movies were the first three. From Thunderball onwards the movies, while at times entertaining or even thrilling were all going downhill (including Sean's later Bond movies). Plot lines disappeared and well thought out characters became cameos or shams. As for Blofeld? Well the biggest mistake has been to show him and as movies moved on make him more and more a mere bit part character rather than the formidable villain originally portrayed. The voice of Blofeld in From Russia With Love was terrific, no need to see him or have him jumping through hoops.
To be honest I hated the 'don't show the villain' trope that was a thing in the 1950s and 60s. These were good Bond movies, but so were the later ones.
Fav. Bond film. RIP Robert Shaw.
Great acting and story line with Connery and Shaw without any ridiculous special effects.
“A Japanese submarine slammed two torpedoes into our side, Bond..”
Best of all Bond movies and the best of all Bond girls
shashi dhar she gorgeous blond lady
The best of all Bond girls: Maybe ;-)
Always loved what was in Nash's purloined brief case. Everything for a day or so, including the PPK.
Now that's a proper train cabin
Robert Shaw looks like a better looking Mike Pence.
Mike Pence is the dollar store Robert Shaw
darkheart1721 he does!
darkheart1721 more like Daniel Craig with the build and blonde hair
Or like a taller Vladimir Putin!
That IS Mike Pence.
3:14 it is safe to assume at this point, Bond grows suspicious to Red Grant, especially to the drug mixed with the drink
He doesn't actually notice the pill, but the seasoned agent doesn't need to see it to know what's going on.
I only knew Robert Shaw from Jaws. Never knew he was kind of handsome at some point.
Gene Ryan yeah when he was young he really was!
People back then eat bad ,smoked too much and drank and it shown later on in life .
He was great in "The Deep" and "The battle of the bulge" he died at 51 in 1978.
Gene Ryan Robert Shaw was only 3 years older then Connery in real life and was 35 when filmed From Russia with Love and Connery was 32. Connery and Shaw were adversary’s again in the 1975 movie Robin and Marion with Sean Connery as an aging Robin Hood and Shaw as an older Sheriff of Nottingham
And don't forget Shaw in "The Sting".
05:07 OMG
Red wine with fish? That got Bond suspicious.
Robert Shaw RIP
Video cuts the big fight...great.
2:57 Add Quint yelling "SOB!" from Jaws.
I never knew Vice President Pence was in from Russia With Love, awesome!
Robert Shaw is pretty famous you know.
Max Payne
Robert Shaw is the cold determined German panzer commander Colonel Heisler in the movie "Battle of the Bulge".
Quite impressive!
Yup, and President Trump would play Goldfinger just two years later!
walterlv01
Who's gonna play the spy who loves me?
hola necesito la pelicula completa
Rip sean
Whos here after his death
He was the BEST BOND PERIOD! Rest In Peace, Sir Sean Connery
Robert Shaw + Train = Great Movie
Robert Shaw + Shark = Great Movie
Rip sir😥
Bond should've thrown Red Grant towards a shark...
I noticed a couple of train sharks in the dining car. I don't know how Bond missed that
Jaws waiting
my favorite movie fight
Robert Shaw was cooler than the other side of the pillow.
Robert Shaw was gorgeous.
Simply the best Bond movie of all. Ian Fleming would be appalled at most of the later movies.
No he wouldn't. This movie is FAR from the best. Dr. No was even boring as hell, this is only marginally better.
The title for best Bond movie is already occupied by Die Another Day.
Connery's first two are only better than that POS that is Casino Royale.
+Firemarioflower
Are you serious? "Dr. No", "From Russia with Love" and "Casino Royale" are probably the three best Bond movies.
"Die Another Day" is among the worst, if not the worst.
+Friedrich Schmidt You're insane.... Die Another Day is exaclty how a 007 movie should be. It couldn't get crazier and more entertaining. IT had everything you could wish for.
Dr. No was pathetic, slow and boring. Casino Royal was AWFUL, with a stupid plot and the James Bond vibe is totally not there. It was a movie that didn't make any sense whatsoever.
Russia With Love is good but overrated, just like Goldfinger. They didn't age well when you look objectively at it.
Brosnan's movies however are instant classics.
I don't think I've ever seen someone so dumb but here you are, calling Brosnan's movies the best, LOL. Goldeneye was the only decent movie, the rest were predictable and mediocre.
Do you think Ian Fleming ever visited Russia?
I love how the movie doesn't cheat and actually shows us that Bond saw him spike the drink, but you don't even notice until repeat viewings. It's this four second shot at 3:14.
red wine with fish, that's shocking!
does that automatically make you a enemy?
@@leroykevin I guess to Bond, anyone who doesn't know you eat white with fish and red with meat is an enemy.
@@williamshaw9047 To a trained field operative, that shows you're working-class -- and if you're a working-class person trying to pass yourself off as upper-class (or vice versa), that makes you a likely enemy agent!
He’d hate me. I had 4 cans of special brew with my haddock and chips:
. . .and that is how one draws a service pistol: a sleigh of hand with both hands.
Sean Connery is the most terrific bond from all other James Bonds by Rajeev Mishra
super pretty blond lady,wow,
4:45 - the expression we saw Quint make so many times 12 years later
And when he’s leaving on the boat in the deep!!
Romanova looks like a doll 😁.
Looks like Daniel Craig and Sean Connery having a conversation.
I never realized he played this role and Quint in Jaws.
From Russia With Love Robert Shaw was only 35 years old when filmed in 1962 for release in 1963 and released Jaws in 1975. By the time he played Quint Robert Shaw was older as he was life long alcoholic and heavy smoker aged him to.
The best bond movies in the franchise: FRWL & OHMSS.
El mejor de todos, the best, Sean Connery.
Best Bond film. Followed by For Your Eyes Only and Living Daylights.
4 people who disliked this work for Spectre
lmao at first I thought it was a smartphone at 5:35
It was 1963.
Inigualable escena
Not a guy you could bully like Dreyfuss. He wouldn't dare
A beautiful lady that doesn't have to show everything. Notice how slim she was. I feel shorted.
Constantly using the term "old man"
red wine with fish
possibly the hokey British accent
I can tell he was already sus
Captain Nash aka Red Grant was a brilliant opponent for Bond.
*AND?*
For me, You Only Live Twice, or Man with the Golden Gun - look left, LOL ! xx
I wonder what grant would've done if that case was really his. 007 asked him to leave it and go ahead with Tanya.
2:48 it looks like they could have just stopped at Clapham Junction and avoided the kerfuffle.
ive seen this movie 100 times and I never recognized the henchman Grant as Robert Shaw.... He was one of the more convincing, imposing and capable of Bond film henchmen. His acting is very convincing. I need to research Robert Shaw's body of work a little bit harder i believe.
I agree with you about Robert Shaw
A wide variety of work
If you like oddball films/plays etc from the 60’s I recommend you watch
The Birthday Party from 1968
Based upon a Harold Pinter Story
Robert died too young
@@joanne26 thx!
4:38 Why would you STOP pointing your gun at a confirmed enemy agent??? Bond is criminally stupid, and is saved by sheer luck.
Yes
Because at that point, Bond was convinced he wasn't an enemy anymore. As much as he WAS right with the red wine and the pill, Grant put up an effective charade.
Mrs Somerset...
I've seen this movie at least 10 times and I had no idea that was Robert Shaw.
How did you not know that was Robert Shaw he is in the film credits and in his autobiography but a lot of people don’t realize that knew him as Quint in the 1975 classic Jaws that he played Assassin Red Grant in 1963’s From Russia with Love
Since Red Grant was supposed to have broken out of Dartmoor Jail - he should have been on Dartmoor Jail Ale, or Otter Ale, lol ! Possibly a Plymouth Gin !
My 3rd fave Connery Bond film after Dr No and Goldfinger
I love how Bond is a little surprised that "Nash" is so fit. He'd have to be, wouldn't he?
There's fit, and there's Bond fit. :)
Fair enough. :)
Oh. You need to see this scene where a female spectre member with red hair punches Red Grant in the stomach and he doesn't flinch or move!
@@abigaildoll1760 With a pair of Brass knuckles none the less!
He's testing his contact's credentials if he is who he says he is, which is kind of important if you're sneaking government secrets across borders with some help. And Grant plays him like an absolute fiddle.
For a moment there, I thought he pulled out 007's I-phone at 5:35 !
Cigarette case.