The James Bond franchise’ association with Asian Cinema doesn’t stop within the 007 films themselves. The late Richard Kiel (“Jaws” from 1977’sSpy Who Loved Meand 1979’sMoonraker) played a similar character in Tsui Hark’s 1984 action caperAces Go Places 3(akaMad Mission 3: Our Man...
Few movies debut as "franchise-ready" asDr. Nodid, even though the Hollywood of the '60s wasn't as obsessed with universe-building as it is now. The first James Bond 007 film was made by Eon Productions, a union between rivals Albert Broccoli and Harry Saltzman that merged to secure th...
Holly Goodhead; Bond fighting Jaws atop aerial cable car in Rio; Bond trapped in fast-spinning G-force centrifuge space flight simulator; spoof music of “Magnificent Seven” when Bond is in Western garb and tones of “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” for door lock; Jaws falling in lov...
With the release of No Time to Die, we wanted to look back at the Bond films that came before. Whether you're a Connery or Moore fan, a Craig or Brosnan devotee, or you have a soft spot for Dalton and Lazenby, here's our ranking of all 25 James Bond movies. Timothy Dalton as ...
Our list of the Top 10 Bond villains and henchmen from the iconic Oddjob to the larger than life Jaws, to the menacing Le Chiffre. Sorry, no Dr. Evil. James Bond Movies The complete list of official James Bond films, Beginning with Sean Connery, and going through George Lazenby, Roger...
Jaws makes a comeback, and is weirdly turned into a good guy by the end. John Barry, however, is firing on all thrusters, turning in a great score. This movie fell between The Spy Who Loved Me and For Your Eyes Only, which are the two movies during the disco era that had ...
travels to Egypt to wrestle with metal-toothed Jaws (Richard Kiel) and battles with a nuke-crazy nut who hopes to survive the fallout underwater. Most impressively, there’s money, tons of it spent on cavernous sets (an entire new soundstage was built for this movie) and an amazing spider...
The 6-year, 4-month gap between this film and "Licence to Kill" (1989) is the longest between any of the Bond movies. The song "The Experience of Love", which appears during the end credits is actually a sped-up version with lyrics of a select sequence from Eric Serra's score from...
Also ranks #1 onThe Best Spy Movies Of The 1960s Also ranks #2 on14 Villains Who Fail To Kill The Hero, Ranked By How Much It Comes Back To Bite Them Also ranks #4 onThe Best Movies About Arms Dealers 2 From Russia with Love ...
Jaws's heart ultimately softens when he falls in love with the equally super-strong Dolly (Blanche Ralavec) and decides to help both her and Bond escape. The rare Bond villain to get a happy ending,Jaws almost returned for "For Your Eyes Only"before the film was rewritten with a more ...