AJB live commentary on Casino Royale 1967
Higgins
GermanyPosts: 16,619MI6 Agent
Time for the Off-Topic Encore of our groupwatching!
This time, it‘s
CASINO ROYALE 1967
London Summertime: 20:00
Paris Summertime: 21:00
New York local time 15:00
LA local time 12:00
PLEASE KEEP IN MIND THAT WE ARE ALL STARTING 10 MINUTES LATER !
The 19:00 deadline is set so that everybody has enough time to find their DVDs/Blu Rays, boot their players and get ready for playing the movie
WE ARE STARTING PRECISELY AT 19:10
- Please make sure that everybody has their BluRay/DVD/VCR ready and start the player latest 19:00 GMT to get done with all the dodgy menus.
- PAUSE YOUR PLAYER
- HIT PLAY PRECISELY AT 19:10.
I‘ll post some timecodes during the thread just in case that somebody has messed it up
This time, it‘s
CASINO ROYALE 1967
London Summertime: 20:00
Paris Summertime: 21:00
New York local time 15:00
LA local time 12:00
PLEASE KEEP IN MIND THAT WE ARE ALL STARTING 10 MINUTES LATER !
The 19:00 deadline is set so that everybody has enough time to find their DVDs/Blu Rays, boot their players and get ready for playing the movie
WE ARE STARTING PRECISELY AT 19:10
- Please make sure that everybody has their BluRay/DVD/VCR ready and start the player latest 19:00 GMT to get done with all the dodgy menus.
- PAUSE YOUR PLAYER
- HIT PLAY PRECISELY AT 19:10.
I‘ll post some timecodes during the thread just in case that somebody has messed it up
President of the 'Misty Eyes Club'.
Dalton - the weak and weepy Bond!
Dalton - the weak and weepy Bond!
Comments
There are a few scenes which work, though they're outnumbered by the many that don't. Niven was a pleasure to watch, as always. Orson Welles could have been a classic villain in a better movie. Peter Sellers was... strange. Not his usual self.
The Bacharach music is very enjoyable, while not in the least Bondian.
The movie as a whole is incoherent, as many have noted, no doubt due to the chaotic production and the many directors.
My favourites are Peter O'Toole's very brief cameo, and Stirling Moss.
Deborah Kerr, Charles Boyer, Jean-Paul Belmondo, Jacqueline Bisset, Bernard Cribbins, Jealous Husbands, Humiliated Chefs, Outraged Tailors- the list is endless!
Also the Look of Love is maybe the most beautiful Bond song ever, and there have been a lot of jazz covers. The scene in the film where it appears is nicely done too, and actually falls into the part of the film adapted from Fleming.
Barbel: is Alpert's instrumental main theme musically related to the Look of Love? they both are built around a four note hook, one slow and sultry, the other fast and zany. When I try to hum, I can make one toon turn into the other, but we know i'm tonedeaf so that's no evidence.
The music is definitely one remarkable feature. For me, another interesting focus would be the film's possible influence on later OO7 movies in the Eon stable - in terms of specific details, but also in some broader aspects. And amidst all the mayhem, there are a number of sequences which sort of work well as Bond material in their own right...
A Monday?! But I am working the next day. This film demands a double scotch, neat, twice!
I mean, CR-67, Sober?!
Oh Crikey...... There are SO MANY Machines that ping Go! Goping, go Ping even.
You keep an eye on Me, I'll keep you topped up with Coke Zero.
Not that I wouldn't.
I'll be selective by only highlighting the best of the Machines that Go Ping.....
Along with a few Machines that Go BOOM!!
There was always some thing about the score being recorded in such ridiculously high quality that the LP was used by proper vinyl nerds to prove the quality of their stereo systems, wasn't there? Apparently the album was really famous in soundaphile circles for being the one to get hold of and use to test your equipment.
But sadly the original tapes no longer survive in the highest of quality so any new releases can't quite match that original sound.
Burt Bacharach’s non-Bondian score is terrific, though. The Look Of Love would have transferred to the montage scene in OHMSS, seamlessly. As far as I remember, a snippet of John Barry’s Born Free theme is played which foretells the use of other film themes in Bond films a decade later.
You remember correctly. Specifically when the M4 (McTarry, Ransom, Smernoff and LeGrande
arrive at Bond Towers.
@CHB- yes, a brief excerpt from "Born Free" is heard shortly after the opening titles, as M & co approach Sir James' place and encounter lions.
Plus there’s another bit of fortelling with the Q scene having ‘Bond’ use the ‘poison pen letters’ gag, which Octopussy actually recycled a few years later! What’s surprising is it’s actually supposed to be a bad joke in CR and Q rolls his eyes because he’s heard it a thousand times before!
Yes I recently bought the 50th anniversary expanded edition CD (about 35 tracks) which is a lot of fun and even has the end title music. It sounds absolutely fine to me of course but I’m sure the audiophile gang were sad about it!
Between the releases, some cue titles change names and have been presented in different edits. To avoid getting even more confused, I’ll be sticking (mainly) to the titles as released on the original OST.
One of the OP dvd commentaries attributes the poison pen letter gag to Roger Moore - an addition he introduced to the OP screenplay. Whether or not Moore was consciously recalling CR67, this is indeed one example of where post-'67 Eon movies echo details in the spoof film.
Angela Scoular appeared as Buttercup in Casino Royale 67, two years before playing an official Bond girl in the role of Ruby in OHMSS...
Casino Royale '67 prominently features the plot device of an ageing Bond coming out of retirement- 53 years before NTTD did the same...
"The spectre of defeat..."
Here are some others...
In the scene following bathtub time with Angela Scoular, Sir James Bond is formally dressed at dinner, flanked by two girls. There's a brief shot underneath the table of each girl draping a bare thigh over Niven's legs - one apiece. The girls are being surreptitious about that, and an embarrassed Sir James makes efforts to continue polite conversation with oblivious matriarch Deborah Kerr. It's hard not to imagine that Peter Hunt had that in mind when devising the OHMSS moment when Scoular's Ruby reaches under the dinner table to write her room number in lipstick on 'Sir Hilary's' thigh, unbeknownst to Irma Bunt.
I don't think any Bond villain before Donald Pleasance (even Dr No) had worn quite the same style of Blofeld costume as Doctor Noah. (Similar to Blofeld's 'surprise' introduction in the WW penthouse suite in DAF, Doctor Noah's entrance surprises because his voice trickery has meant we've not been expecting him to turn out to be Jimmy Bond!) Like Bond in YOLT, Jimmy makes use of an exploding cigarette to get out of a jam. And while CR67 affords us no capsule in space, it does reward us with a space craft landing in Trafalgar Square. Sections of CR67 feature screened televisual images which are absurd because no camera could plausibly have captured them: not previously an Eon trope but definitely a noticeble ingredient of the screen-rich YOLT, with its impossible in-world scanner images of an aerial 'drop in the ocean' and an exploding space capsule.
CR67 opened in cinemas two months before YOLT. Feldman and Broccoli were always on good terms with each other, apparently. But given these odd parallels, it's intriguing to wonder whether, during the making of CR67, Feldman had a mole at Eon feeding him inside knowledge about aspects of YOLT's production. A job, perhaps, for Mister Fisher, the industrial spy used as cover by Connery's Bond! At least one of the CR67 girls was a YOLT Japanese bath girl (seemingly not Asian herself), and Burt Kwouk was in both films, but I don't know how far these rival movies had other personnel in common...
One other for now... Magda's dress for the raid on Kamal's palace in OP is very similar to Mata's pink sequin dress for knockabout scenes in CR67.
https://ok.ru/video/535897901720
https://greenwichmeantime.com/
35 minutes till loading up
45 minutes till watching
Dalton - the weak and weepy Bond!
Voice of Dr Noah- Valentine Dyall (Radio’s “The Man In Black”, had been on “The Goon Show” with Sellers)
Robert Reitty of course
and...
wait for it...
Nikki van der Zyl!! (Claims to have done at least part of Ursula Andress' dialogue, a role with which she had experience)