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Diamonds are Forever By Sean Axmaker
Sean Connery retired from the 007 franchise after You Only Live
Twice (replaced by George Lazenby in the underrated and
underperforming On Her Majesty's Secret Service) but was lured back
for one last official appearance as James Bond in Diamonds Are Forever.
He's in fine form--cool but ruthless--in a sharp precredits sequence
hunting the unkillable Blofeld (a suavely menacing Charles Gray in this
incarnation), but the MacGuffin of a story (involving diamond smuggling, a
superlaser on a satellite, and Blofeld's latest plot to rule the world )
is full of the groaning tongue-in-cheek gags that Roger Moore would make
his signature. Goldfinger director Guy Hamilton keeps the film
zipping along gamely from one entertaining set piece to another, including
a terrific car chase in a parking lot, a battle with a pair of bikini-clad
killer gymnasts named Bambi and Thumper, and a deadly game with a bizarre
pair of fey, sardonic killers who dispatch their victims with elaborate
invention. Jill St. John is the brassy but not too bright American
smuggler Tiffany Case, and country singer and pork sausage king Jimmy Dean
costars as a reclusive billionaire with not-so-subtle parallels to Howard
Hughes. Shirley Bassey belts out the memorable theme song, one of the
series' best. Connery retired again after this one but he returned once
more, for Never Say Never Again 15 years later for a rival
production company.
Academy Awards
Diamonds are Forever received an Academy
Awards nomination for Sound (Gordon K. McCallum, John Mitchell, Alfred
J. Overton). |
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FILM
FACTS |
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|  | Director: Guy Hamilton
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|  | Stars: Sean Connery, Jill St. John, Jimmy Dean
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|  | Released: December 17, 1971
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|  | Availability: DVD VHS CD | | |
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