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Eagerly anticipating this week ... (14-24)
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8/23/2015

Diamonds Are Forever (1971) - Connery's last Bond adventure is a colorful romp



Explosive entertainment under something resembling a disco ball on this poster for Guy Hamilton's Diamonds Are Forever

QUICK REVIEW:

James Bond kills his arch enemy Blofeld in the beginning of this, Bond movie # 7. But when he subsequently follows a mysterious diamond hoax from Holland to Las Vegas, it is revealed that Blofeld is still more alive than ever!

Sean Connery (The Hunt for Red October (1990)) was brought back to the 007 well for his last film as Bond after George Lazenby's underwhelming single stint as the gentleman spy in On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969). And Diamonds is just what every fan of the early Bond films could have ever wished for: An incredibly extravagant film, which contains the franchise's wildest car chase up to this point, through Las Vegas, along with another fun chase in a Moon Buggy in the Nevada desert!
The film also has Jill St. John (The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone (1961)) as the excellent Bond babe Tiffany Case and a bizarre gay villain couple, (called Mr. Kidd and Mr. Wint.)
How exactly the diamonds fit in remains unclear to me, but Diamonds Are Forever still stands as a Bond classic in my book. It was written by Richard Maibaum (Thunderball (1965)) and Tom Mankiewicz (Live and Let Die (1973)), based on Ian Fleming's 1956 novel of the same name, and directed by Guy Hamilton (Goldfinger (1964)) as the second of the four Bond films that he directed.

Related reviews:

Bond franchise: Skyfall (2012) - The overly celebrated third pout from Daniel Craig as Bond in slick production
A View to a Kill (1985) or, Once a Gentleman, Always a Gentleman! 
Casino Royale (1967) - The packed spy spoof frontrunner, a film very much of its time (spoof comedy - not part of the franchise)
Dr. No (1962) - Bond # 1 is one attractive package



Watch the original trailer here

Cost: 7.2 mil. $
Box office: 116 mil. $
= Blockbuster
[Lazenby had signed on for 7 Bond films (!), but wanted out after the first one after the advice of his agent, (strange agent, hu?). United Artists wanted Connery back for just about any prize, and he finally landed 1.25 mil. $, - a record sum at the time, - for the job. - He proved to be worth it. The film grossed 43.8 mil. $ (38 % of the total gross) in North America. Many critics have criticized its 'campy' humor, preferring, ostensibly, the mock-gloom of the latter, 'serious' Bond entries.]

What do you think of Diamonds Are Forever?

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