Product Details
The Man With The Golden Gun [DVD] [1974]

The Man With The Golden Gun [DVD] [1974]
Directed by Guy Hamilton

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #36100 in DVD
  • Released on: 2008-10-20
  • Rating: Parental Guidance
  • Formats: Box set, PAL
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Running time: 119 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Synopsis
James Bond is assigned the task of recovering a valuable piece of technical equipment capable of harnessing the sun's energy. Standing in his way are a number of arch-villains. Roger Moore is the ever-debonair 007 in this ninth film in the James Bond series.


Customer Reviews

Perhaps the most undervalued Bond of them all4
The Man With the Golden Gun was producer Harry Saltzman's last hurrah before selling out his share in the Bond series to United Artists to ensure the maximum inconvenience to his detested partner Cubby Broccoli. It's certainly not premium Bond: at times it threatens to turn into an episode of The Avengers, what with Scaramanga's funhouse, his midget servant Nick Nack, its human statues or the off-kilter angles of MI6's Hong Kong HQ located in the rusting wreck of the Queen Elizabeth, not to mention Roger Moore's more Steed-like Bond. Although there are hints of the lows to come in Moore's tenure - Bond being saved by a pair of schoolgirls or defeating a villain by pretending to be a tailor's dummy - this is still recognisable an old-school Bond film, with thankfully few gadgets, although it's disappointing that the producers provide Scaramanga with an island lair and super-weapon to give Bond something to blow up at the end (a rather half-hearted effort to be sure: instead of a private army, Scaramanga simply has Herve Villachaize and a maintenance man). Britt Ekland's irritating `typical silly woman' comic relief was a bit hard to take in 1974 and gets worse with each passing year, but Christopher Lee's Scaramanga is one of the more interesting Bond villains, not least because of his imagined empathy with his prey - he regards himself as Bond's moral and professional equal, the kind of pathological snobbery Fleming's books were full of but the films increasingly abandoned.

Unlike many of the repackaged 2-disc `Ultimate Editions,' this is a fairly substantial upgrade from the original single-disc issue, carrying over all of the original features and adding plenty more - a new commentary by Roger Moore, behind the scenes footage, interview with director Guy Hamilton and an amusingly cheesy extract from a British TV interview with Moore and Villachaize. The only disappointment is that the deleted Molotov Cocktail sequence from Bond and Scaramanga's duel that featured heavily in the teaser trailers has not been located and included.

Triple-nippled assassin goes gunning for Bond5
Roger Moore's second outing as the suave super-spy sees him up against Christopher Lee's equally smooth hit man, Scaramanga. Ian Fleming's final 007 novel has been radically altered for the big screen, but still has plenty going on and is classic 1970s Bond - with grotesque murders, a homicidal midget, the obligatory gadgets and plenty of beautiful females to distract James from the job in hand.

Roger Moore is still the right side of nauseating in this 1975 adventure, while franchise stalwarts Bernard Lee (M), Desmond Llewellyn (Q), and Lois Maxwell (Monypenny) are all present and correct. Although this is the point where the gadgets really start to take over, there are still plenty of things to like about this high-octane movie, although the semi-comic redneck Sherriff who appears in the middle of the film after making his debut in the previous film is not one of them.

Good fun and great entertainment - this is one of the best if you're playing the `have a drink every time an innuendo appears' game - there are tonnes!

Moore's classy bond continues 5
With the best bond movie (in my opinion) over I was nervous that the next one would be dissapointing but was I wrong yes. What a follow up Moore is very impressive in this as bond giving a great performance as does the rest of the cast. Christopher Lee is a memorable baddie as Scaramanger two brilliant bond girls B.Ekland and M.Adams and the action is excellent with possibly the most memorable car jump ever. Overall I loved this and Moore continued his great bond.