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 Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - good
I got the dvd faster than I expexted which is good, it just the box of dvd was broken, but thanks anyway



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - "Welcome to Japan, Mr. Bond"
XXXXX

It's difficult to believe that this movie is more than 40 years old (counting from the date of this review)!!

(Sir) Sean Connery made six EON (or "official") movies with him starring as James Bond. They were: (1) Dr. No (1962) (2) From Russia with Love (1963) (3) Goldfinger (1964) (4) Thunderball (1965) (5) You Only Live Twice (1967) and (6) Diamonds are Forever (1971).

As you can see from the above list, this movie is the fifth spy film of the British Bond series. As well, it is the fifth to star Connery as the fictional MI6 agent Commander James Bond (code number 007).

This movie is based on the 1964 novel of the same name as the movie by Ian Fleming (1908 to 1964).

Briefly, Bond is told to go to Japan after American and Russian spacecraft mysteriously disappear in orbit. With each nation blaming the other amidst the Cold War, Bond travels secretly (he's thought to be dead) to a remote Japanese island is find out who is behind these spacecraft disappearances and comes face to face with Ernst Blofeld (Donald Pleasence), known as "number one" since he is head of SPECTRE (SPecial Executive for Counter-intelligence, Terrorism, Revenge, and Extortion).

This movie reveals the appearance of Blofeld who was previously a partially unseen character.

The title song is sung by Nancy Sinatra.

Connery brings his characteristic savoir fare to the role. As well, there are beautiful Japanese Bond girls in this movie.

There are gadgets in this movie courtesy of Q. The main gadget is a Wallis WA-116 Series 1 gyroplane (similar to a helicopter but smaller) code named "Little Nellie." Bond tell us that, "She's a wonderful girl." You'll have to watch this movie to see why.

M and Miss Moneypenny also make an appearance.

This movie was filmed mainly in Japan and London, England.

Total box office for this movie was about one-hundred eleven million, six hundred thousand dollars. In today's dollars, that's about seven-hundred and twenty million, four hundred thousand.

For Bond enthusiasts, they will notice Charles Gray in a small part as a British contact living in Japan. He went on to play Blofeld in the next and last Bond movie starring Connery. Also Burt Kwouk has a bit part in this movie. He's the one that played "Kato" in the Pink Panther series starring Peter Sellers.

Personally, I don't understand why this movie gets such a bad rap. In my opinion, it showed considerable imagination, especially in the last half.

I only had two minor problems with this movie. First, Bond presumably unexpectedly encounters a locked safe. He just happens to have a safe cracking device on him to open it! (It's amazing it wasn't broken since he has a gruelling fight just before he encountered the safe.) Second, again unexpectedly, Bond has to climb down a very tall structure. Again, he just happens to have suction cups on him to aid him in this task!!

The DVD (the one released in May, 2007) is flawless in picture and sound quality. The picture has been digitally restored and I'm sure the picture is just as good (if not better!!) than when it was released over 40 years ago. As well, there is one extra in the form of an audio commentary.

Finally, here is some information to consider. This DVD is actually the first disc of the two-disc "Ultimate Edition." Bond fanatics might want to purchase this two-disc Ultimate Edition since the second disc has "the best collection of special features ever assembled for Bond." (Unfortunately, the Ultimate Edition is no longer available but it can be purchased second-hand).

In conclusion, this is the last serious James Bond movie starring Sean Connery. Because of this, this movie is a must-see!!

(1967; 2 hr; wide screen; 32 scenes)

<>

XXXXX




Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - One of the best Bonds
Naturally a person would think that the longer a series runs the greater the decline in quality. But in this case the series seemed to get better in the last couple of books. Bond is falling apart mentally and on the verge of losing his job, allowing Fleming to show the human side of a secret agent. One of my favorite Bond books.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Sizzling bond thriller from 1967, set in Japan
After James Bond (Sean Connery) has participated in faking his own murder in Hong Kong, to give him "more elbow room" in the words of his superior, M (Bernard Lee), he is dispatched to Japan to investigate the mysterious disappearance of both American and Soviet space crafts which threatens to spark World War III.

Working together with Japanese secret service leader Tiger Tanaka (Tetsuro Tamba), he meets beautiful Japanese agent Aki (Akiko Wakabayashi), who helps Bond through several close shaves.
Working with a Japanese Secret Service Ninja force, he locates the sabotage to the shadowy organization SPECTRE, led by the sinister Ernst Stavro Blofeld (Donald Pleasence).
After Aki is murdered by SPECTRE agents (She dies after ingesting poison dropped into the bed she shares with Bond), Bond teams up, in a faked marriage with the attractive Kissy Suzuki Mie Hama).
Together with the Ninja force they penetrate Blofeld's massive headquarters, hidden in a volcano, where the final battle ensues.
Before Blofeld tries to kill Bond, he reminds him "You Only Live Twice", referring to his earlier faked death.
The chemistry between Bond and the exquisite Aki is perfect, and in the scene where a marriage is proposed and Bond thinks it is Aki, Aki's face lights up.
No less stunning is Mie Hama as Kissy Suzuki, an expert swimmer and fighter, and one of the sexiest Bond girl ever.




Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Bond in the Orient...
1967's "You Only Live Twice" was Sean Connery's fifth outing as James Bond and his growing disenchantment with the role unfortunately shows through. This movie also marks a decided movement towards increasing implausible story premises and spectacular special effects at the expense of ties to Ian Fleming's original novels.

The movie opens up with a pre-credit sequence in which Bond is apparently assassinated, a nice set-up for the outstanding theme song "You Only Live Twice." The actual plot concerns an attempt by the evil SPECTRE organization to start a war between Russia and the US by hijacking their spacecraft in orbit. British Intelligence sends Bond to Japan in search of arch-nemisis Blofeld, where he works closely with his Japanese counterparts, including at least one attractive female agent. Bond and his Japanese allies will ultimately find and assault the SPECTRE headquarters, located in an extinct volcano, in a splashy finale featuring dozens of ninja warriors.

This movie never quite hits the stride of its predecessors. Bond seems out of place in Japan. Donald Pleasence's urbane, cat-petting Blofeld is a less than menacing villain, while the special effects seem to be covering for a less convincing storyline. It all still makes for a good show, highly recommended for fans of the 007 franchise.


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