The end of an era, and a spectacularly damp one at that. After Lazenby left the role, there were several names thrown about to replace him as James Bond. Some of the more notable actors considered were Adam West (who turned down the role because he felt James Bond should not be American), Clint...
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Ah harsh. This one grew to become one of my favorites if not my favorite. It has the flaws of a probably too aged Bond actor, a clumsy attempt at OHMSS closure (oooh James Bond is sooo angry at Blofeld in the pre-title, such an epic quest for revenge, he was clearly strongly affected by the murder of his spouse in that parallel universe), and indeed a wasted Jill StJohn character (she starts great and then becomes one of these abominable mary-goodnight-like bumbling child-women that plague the history of cinema). The hidden tape scene was some stupid Benny Hill shit, and really gave the impression that she was written by different characters in each scene. Women, even more than men, are only allowed to be competent as enemies of the hero, his allies most let him shine alone. But then there's also the horribly sexist end to the bambi/thumper encounter. At least when Bond killed female enemies, they were dangerous to the end.
But anyway. It is still one of the wittiest (the wittiest?) Bond movie, and I like the fact that Witt and Kidd have most of the one-liners (they are baddies but still a cool fun couple, which depiction is less creepy than in the novel). Still, the best Bond line for me remains "alimentary my dear Leiter". I actually like the plot very much, it's much more investigative than the later Bond movies, and has some cool "film noir" aspects. And it features this marvelous space laser menace as a twist, again something that will become a staple of the genre.
But above all, it's a collection of my favorite sequences. I love the silly moon buggy chase (I even love the moon landing scene). I love the "good idea - wrong cat" idea. I absolutely adore Bond hugging and kissing himself in the street (again, lovely film noir trick), and the fight in the elevator is really a high point of the series - such limited space, yet eventful, thrilling, well filmed, and clever, a great example of the "witty tactical fistfights" of these films, like Thunderball's widow's furniture mayhem. Simple idea (elevator fight), great use of all the weaponizing possibilities it offers.
As a kid I didn't like it much. It felt too grounded despite the diamond satellite, it felt too starsky and hutch, not globe-trotting enough. Now I love it because of that. It has the best dialogues, it makes more sense than most Bond plots, it had a cool use of not too outlandish gadgets (great balance in those). For me it's the most solid Bond despite its lack of some trademark elements (such as the forced exoticism of other movies that seek pretexts to start each new scene with a new ooooh location card).
I see it as a very respectable, mature swansong for Connery's Bond. And I wish (a bit like Goldeneye) that it had defined the series style and quality, like finding its footing at last. But Connery's run was ending and the series would go in a very different direction afterwards. So I see it as a lonely peak.
Amusing how the last two reviews are really at the opposite of my own impressions. Bond movies are fun to light through different angles.