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Live And Let Die

Barcode 5050070002270
DVD

Original price £4.29 - Original price £4.29
Original price
£4.29
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Release Date: 27/10/2000

Region Code: DVD 2
Certificate: MPAA PG
Label: MGM
Actors: Roger Moore, Jane Seymour, Bernard Lee, Roger Moore, Jane Seymour, Yaphet Kotto, Clifton James, Guy Hamilton
Director: Guy Hamilton
Number of Discs: 1
Duration: 116 minutes
Audio Languages: English
Subtitle Languages: English

DVD Special Features : Audio Commentary featuring Guy Hamilton
Second Audio Commentary by Tom Mankiewicz
"Inside Live and Let Die" Documentary
Original TV Spots
Radio Spots
Milk Commercial
On Set with Roger Moore: Hang Gliding Lessons and Funeral Parade
Collectable "Making Of" Booklet
Original Theatrical Trailers
Stills Gallery
English Subtitles
1.77:1 widescreen 16:9 version
Dolby Digital AMAZON.CO.UK REVIEW
Roger Moore was introduced as James Bond in this 1973 action movie featuring secret agent 007. More self-consciously suave and formal than predecessor Sean Connery, he immediately re-established Bond as an uncomplicated and wooden fellow for the '70s. This film also marks a deviation from the more character-driven stories of the Connery years, a deliberate shift to plastic action (multiple chases, bravura stunts) that made the franchise more of a comic book or machine. If that's not depressing enough, there's even a good British director on board, Guy Hamilton (Force 10 from Navarone). The story finds Bond taking on an international drug dealer (Yaphet Kotto), and while that may be superficially relevant, it isn't exactly the same as fighting super-villains on the order of Goldfinger. --Tom Keogh, On the DVD: Anyone old enough to remember the old milk marketing board commercials will relish the sight of James Bond exhorting everyone to "drink a pinta milka day" in one of the TV spots included here. Elsewhere in the special features, the characteristically in-depth "making of" featurette has a mixture of both contemporary and new interviews plus behind-the-scenes footage (the alligator-jumping sequence is positively hair-raising). The first of two audio commentaries is hosted by John Quark of the Ian Fleming Foundation and features a variety of cast and crew members, notably director Guy Hamilton; the second has writer Tom Mankiewicz on his own, who in between pauses has the occasional interesting thing to say. Overall another good package of features to accompany another excellent anamorphic print. --Mark Walker