James Bond - Diamonds Are Forever (Ultimate Edition 2 Disc Set) [1971]
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Binding : DVDEAN : 5035822516991Label : MGM EntertainmentManufacturer : MGM EntertainmentPublisher : MGM EntertainmentRelease date : 2006-07-17Title : James Bond - Diamonds Are Forever (Ultimate Edition 2 Disc Set) [1971]Actor : ArrayAudience rating : Parental GuidanceFormat : ArrayLanguages : ArrayNumber of items : 2Original release date : 1971-01-01Region code : 2Running time : 120Studio : MGM EntertainmentTheatrical releaseDate : 1971
Editorial reviews
Special FeaturesTHE ULTIMATE EDITION CONTAINS: NEVER BEFORE RELEASED ON DVD:
NEVER BEFORE RELEASED ON DVD: DECLASSIFIED: MI6 VAULT Deleted Scenes • Sean Connery 1971: The BBC Interview Lesson # 007: Close Quarter Combat Deleted Footage - Oil Rig Attack • Satellite & Explosions Test Reel Alternate & Expanded Angles 007 MISSION CONTROL Interactive Guide Into the World of Diamonds Are Forever THE COMPLETE SPECIAL FEATURES LIBRARY: MISSION DOSSIER Audio Commentary Featuring Director Guy Hamilton and Members of the Cast and Crew • Inside Diamonds Are Forever Cubby Broccoli - The Man Behind Bond MINISTRY OF PROPAGANDA Original Trailers, TV Spots, Photo Gallery & Radio Communications
SynopsisSuperspy James Bond (Sean Connery) gets tangled up in the wild world of international diamond smuggling. However, the mission is not quite as simple as it seems. In DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER, Bond's chase of the jewel thieves leads him to conspirators with plans for unleashing a nuclear armageddon on an unsuspecting planet. The majority of the action takes place on the gaudy, glittering streets of Las Vegas, as Bond negotiates the grotesque terrain with his customary aplomb and fancy mechanical gadgets. As always, he manages to dally with several sexy bombshells along the way, including the wonderful Lana Wood as Plenty O'Toole. Connery is as suave and entertaining as ever, taking on the menacing Charles Gray, who is trying his hand at playing Bond's archenemy, Blofeld. Digitally restored.
Customer reviews
review by: droogzilla date: 2008-03-24 rating:
more S.T.E.N.C.H. than S.P.E.C.T.R.E.THIS film lost out [in the 1971 UK box-office returns] to the big-screen version of LWT's ' ON THE BUSES'.....and if that doesn't tell you all you need to know about the pulling-power of this lamest of BOND entries....well, I don't know what does.
I saw this when it was released on the big screen, and the media 'blitz' that surrounded it's arrival was phenomenal........this is, in all probability, THE biggest let-down [certainly in the BOND franchize]of any mass-marketed film.
The 'plot' is a haphazard, muddled shambles [i.e. a scene of BOND trapped in a coffin about to be incinerated ends abruptly, and without proper explanation of how he is saved]; this, coupled with uneven, mis-matched 'set-pieces',[ a 'movie set' moon base; about as 'real' as anything else within the stilted, lifeless script]-----diluted even further by a fey, listlessly effeminate CHARLES GRAY hopelessly squandered in a laughably non-menacing role,-----all sum up the cretinous, banal non-entertainment that encapsulates this sorry mess.
GOOD POINTS: CONNERY reportedly donated his [then-high] 1 M dollar fee to a Scottish trust, so some good did come out of it.
look out for an aged BRUCE CABOT [FAY WRAY'S love interest--other than the giant ape---in the 1933 'KING KONG'].
If you DO insist on collecting the entire BOND canon on a film-by-film basis, I suggest that you leave this trite, irritating morrass of half-digested non-ideas til last to be collected: it is almost ENTIRELY [at least JILL St JOHN looks nice] a total waste of yours--or anyone else's--time.
only SHIRLEY BASSEY'S evocative, era-defining theme standard is of any true merit.
review by: date: 2008-01-23 rating:
Connery and Hamilton return with one of the better Bond moviesWhen George Lazenby turned down the offer to continue as James Bond, Sean Connery was brought back for one last movie before Roger Moore took over. They also brought back "Goldfinger" director Guy Hamilton. "Diamonds Are Forever" is set mostly in Las Vegas and Bond once again fights Blofeld (this time played by Charles Gray). The running time is back at an even two hours, and it doesn't suffer from an uneven pace as "Thunderball" and "On Her Majesty's Secret Service" did. The story is good and the movie has two of the Bond series' best henchmen, Mr Kidd and Mr Wint. In my opinion, this is one of the best Bond movies after "Goldfinger" and before "The Spy who Loved Me".
review by: date: 2008-01-07 rating:
A disaster from beginning to endThere's not a great deal to be said about this film that hasn't been said on these boards before. With the blood, sweat and tears pour out in OHMSS, we were introduced to a new, grittier kind of Bond. I don't know who decided that it didn't work, but clearly someone did. 'Diamonds Are Forever' was the follow up, and is cemented at the very bottom of most Bond lists.
Sean Connery looks like he couldn't care less what's going on in this film. It seemed to be a case of take the money and... stroll. The plot is all but non-existent but still manages to confuse and bore. The action is timid and dull, the locations are far from inspired and Charles Gray is nothing short of pathetic in the role of Bond's nemesis, Blofeld, who seems to have gone from uber-villain to uber-camp cabaret act. Seriously, he's about as fearsome as my grandmother.
It is important to bear in mind that Blofeld murdered Bond's wife at the end of the last film. In spite of this, Bond seems to consider him a mild annoyance in this movie, rather than the object of his blind rage. The scenes between the two of them look like they were shot on different days, there is that little tension between them.
Thinking about it, there is really nothing at all memorable about this tripe. Even John Barry's score felt mediocre after OHMSS. This film is a disgrace to the franchise and to Connery's career. The only small redemption is that Connery's used the whopping fee he earned for this to make 'The Offence' with Sidney Lumet. Ignore 'Diamonds' and watch that. You'll thank me later.
As terrible as this movie is, the new DVD is fantastic. As with all the new Bond DVDs, the picture and sound have been remasted to stunning effect. Watching these films on an upscaling DVD player, you will be amazed at how clean they look, sound and feel. Extras are superb too, with a nice 30 minute documenatry and a wealth of other tidbits.
review by: date: 2007-12-12 rating:
Connery clocks on at the Bond factory againConnery's last Bond film for Broccoli and Saltzman is very familiar stuff. Diamonds Are Forever is one of those once popular Bond films whose reputation among the faithful seems to drop every year as OHMSS's rises. Certainly it makes for a poor follow-up and the weakest of the `Blofeld Trilogy.' Its biggest sin is the incredibly lazy pre-title sequence of Bond tracking down and disposing of one Ernst Stavro Blofeld. Aside from the lazy TV-movie look, this isn't a man hunting the murderer of his wife but someone having a bit of a laugh at work. The sequence only really makes much sense if you regard it as a sequel to You Only Live Twice that's determinedly pretending OHMSS never happened after Lazenby incurred the producers' wrath by walking out on the series.
Once you can get over the massive shift in tone from the previous film, or the fact that the film rarely makes much of an effort in its determination to part you from your money, it's still moderately entertaining in its very undemanding way. But there's no disguising the fact that after the first half the film becomes increasingly reliant on Connery's starpower, leaving a shoddy patchwork of half-hearted setpieces and weak puns as the filmmakers imaginations dry up. Unfortunately Connery walks through it all with the satisfied laziness of a man who knows he's being paid too much and is on triple-overtime while Guy Hamilton directs like a man determined to finish on the dot of 6:00pm come hell or high water rather than lose those restaurant reservations. It's particularly telling that when Bond trips slightly when walking with M after the title sequence they didn't even reshoot the scene - too much of the film has a "Nah, that'll do" feel to it.
It's also one where the rejected motive for the film's diamond smuggling - to stockpile enough to perpetually blackmail all the diamond companies with the threat of flooding and destabilizing the market - is rather more promising than the giant space laser-weapon that they opt for instead. It's not helped by the distinctly unthreatening villains, who take camp to new lows. Despite having a few good quips, by turning Charles Gray's Blofeld into a virtual standup comedian it's hard to take him seriously long before he turns up in drag, while the film's pair of camp killers, Wint and Kidd, are an even more unmenacing pair, played purely for cheap laughs. The sight of Putter Smith shuffling towards the camera with a pair of burning kebabs in the post-plot murder attempt that became a regular feature of Moore's outings and which here looks seemingly tagged on as if an afterthought, certainly qualifies as one of the series lowpoints. Still, there are a few nice moments like the opening smuggling montage or the fight in the elevator, John Barry delivers a nice score and there are a couple of nice Ken Adams designs - particularly the Slumber Chapel of Rest, designed like a stained-glass diamond. Connery's worst Bond film is still better than Moore's worst, but you really need to dial your expectations down low for this one.
The two-disc Ultimate edition boasts a fairly modest upgrade in extras from the previous release - a 1971 BBC interview with Connery, a featurette on the elevator fight, a few alternate and expanded angle scenes, some test footage and an additional couple of deleted scenes.
review by: date: 2007-11-21 rating:
Diamonds Are Forever - A ReviewBest not to watch straight after 'On Her Majesty's Secret Service' as it isn't a worthy sequel. Sean Connery returns but even though he is only 41 he just doesn't work in it now. Charles Gray is in a underrated performance as Blofeld who is stealing diamonds for a satellite in space(Don't ask). Which is later copied in 'Die Another Day'. It is very 70's and camp, but still a good guilty pleasure.
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