ned, 2. listopada '05 u 14:41
Malo infoa o filmu...
Roger Moore....James Bond
Yaphet Kotto....Kananga/Mr. Big
Jane Seymour....Solitaire
Clifton James....Sheriff J.W. Pepper
Julius Harris....Tee Hee (as Julius W. Harris)
Geoffrey Holder....Baron Samedi
David Hedison....Felix Leiter
Gloria Hendry....Rosie Carver
Bernard Lee....M
Lois Maxwell.... Miss Moneypenny
Tommy Lane.... Adam
Earl Jolly Brown.... Whisper
Roy Stewart....Quarrel Jr.
Lon Satton....Harold Strutter
Arnold Williams....Cab Driver
Par citata.
[as Bond unzips Miss Caruso's dress with the magnet in his watch]
Miss Caruso: Such a delicate touch.
James Bond: Sheer magnetism, darling.
Tee-Hee: There are two ways to disable an croc, you know.
James Bond: I don't suppose you'd care to tell me what they are.
Tee-Hee: One way is to take a pencil and stick it in the pressure area above its eye.
James Bond: And the other way?
Tee-Hee: Oh, the other way is twice as simple. You just stick your hand in its mouth and pull its teeth out. Heh, heh.
Kananga: Tee-Hee, on the first wrong answer from Miss Solitaire, you will snip the little finger of Mr. Bond's right hand. Starting with the second wrong answer, you will proceed to the more... VITAL... areas.
Sheriff J.W. Pepper: What are you? Some kinda doomsday machine boy? Well WE got a cage strong enough to hold an animal like you here!
Felix Leiter: Captain, would you enlighten the Sheriff please?
State Trooper: Yessir. J.W., let me have a word with ya. J.W., now this fellow's from London England. He's a Englishman workin' in cooperation with our boys, a sorta... secret agent.
Sheriff J.W. Pepper: Secret AGENT? On WHOSE side?
*Sean Connery turned down the then astronomical sum of $5.5 million to play James Bond.
* Roger Moore's first appearance as James Bond.
* Ross Kananga (credited as "stunt coordinator") was the owner of the crocodile farm in which Bond escapes some hungry reptiles. Kananga did this stunt by himself wearing Roger Moore's clothes and shoes made of crocodile skin. It took five attempts to complete the stunt. During the fourth attempt, one of the crocodiles snapped at one of the shoes as it went by. The producers liked Ross Kananga so much that the movie's villain was named after him.
* The character of Quarrel, Jr. is a direct reference to the first Bond film, Dr. No (1962) which also featured a character named Quarrel. The original novel takes place before Dr. No (in which, as in the movie version, Quarrel is killed) and features the first appearance of the character.
* United Artists wanted an American to play Bond: Burt Reynolds, Paul Newman and Robert Redford were all considered. Producer Albert R. Broccoli, however, insisted that the part should be played by a Briton and put forward Roger Moore.
* The Tarot card deck used by Solitaire features contemporary paintings by Fergus Hall, "Courtesy of the Portal Gallery Limited, London, England". A duplicate set was published in Switzerland by Agmueller and Cie, distributed worldwide by U.S. Games Systems, Inc. New York. The cards in the film had a red, patterned background featuring the "007" emblem, but the commercial set is blue instead (same pattern).
* The tarot cards say 007 on the back.
* Roger Moore should not have been available for the part since at the time he was committed to "The Persuaders!" (1971), but when the show flopped in the U.S. he was prematurely released from his contract. Moore was author Ian Fleming's original choice for Bond, but he was committed to "The Saint" (1962) when the earlier films were in production.
* All of Moore's contracts include an unlimited supply of hand-rolled Monte Cristo cigars (in one 007 movie the final bill comes to 3176.50 pounds).
* This is the first 007 score not to involve John Barry; former Beatles producer George Martin did the job instead.
* The power-boat jump over the causeway set the world record for distance: 110 feet. The second boat was not scripted to collide with the police car, but after this happened while shooting the stunt, the script was changed to accommodate it.
* The only Bond film since his first appearance in From Russia with Love (1963) not to feature Q (Desmond Llewelyn). Fans demanded his return in the next film, The Man with the Golden Gun (1974).
* In an attempt to shift the focus away from Bond's gadgetry, Q does not appear.
* Roger Moore becomes the first actor to perform the gun-barrel sequence without a hat.
* Roger Moore had been in the running to play Bond as early as 1962, but was considered too young looking, even though he was older than Sean Connery.
* We see Bond's apartment for the second and (to date) final time in the series. Among the fixtures is a machine for making coffee that is treated as a gadget. Today's audiences will easily recognize it as either an espresso or cappuccino machine, which were uncommon in 1973.
* Among other actors considered for the role of Bond: John Gavin, Simon Oates, John Ronane, Michael McStay and Michael Billington.
* Gayle Hunnicutt was signed to play Solitaire, but had to pull out when she became pregnant.
* Moore and Seymour caught dysentery while shooting in Jamaica.
* The character of Baron Samedi was rumored to make a return in a future Bond film, which explains his appearance on the front of the train at the end of the film.
* The first Bond film to be filmed 'flat' (i.e. with spherical lenses rather than using the Panavision anamorphic widescreen process) since Goldfinger (1964).
* The white "pimpmobile" is actually a Chevrolet Corvette fitted with the fiberglass molding of a Cadillac Eldorado - the vehicle was marketed as the "Corvorado" by Dunham Coach of Boonton, New Jersey. Other Dunham conversions featured in the film included a Cadillac Fleetwood and Eldorado (seen parked in front of the Fillet of Soul restaurant). Les Dunham stated that he kept possession of the Corvorado after the film was completed; it has been modified several times for appearances in other films and/or car shows. He claimed that the car was used in the film Superfly (1972).
* Diana Ross was considered for the role of Solitaire.
* According to Paul McCartney, after the director heard the title song, complete with orchestra and all, he said "Yeah, that's good for a demo but when are you going to do the real record!"
* Madeline Smith, who played Miss Caruso said that additional awkwardness of a bedroom scene was created by Roger Moore's overprotective wife who was on the set during the filming
* In order to establish the effect of Bond unzipping Miss Caruso's blue dress with his magnetic watch, a thin wire was attached to the zipper from the watch to create the effect.
* The first 007 movie not to deal with the theme of world-domination (the subject is drugs). The drug theme would later surface in Licence to Kill (1989).
* Roger Moore was 46 when he made his debut as 007, making him the oldest actor to do so. The youngest was George Lazenby who made his debut at age 30.
* All cars were GM except for the van a car slams into which was a early '60s Ford Econoline Van.
* The license plate of the car that picks up Bond in New York and his luggage ticket were the same, 545-BBB.
* The license plate of the white "pimpmobile" was 347-NDG.
* The address on the registration of the white "pimpmobile" was 33 E. 65th St., New York, NY 10021.
* Bond's bungalow in San Monique was # 12.
* The name of the main villain, Kananga, was borrowed from Ross Kananga, the real-life owner of the alligator farm which served as a location for several scenes. Ross Kananga doubled for Roger Moore leaping across the backs of the crocs. The producers (while scouting locations) first took notice of Ross Kanangas' farm from the sign out front which read: "WARNING; TRESSPASSERS WILL BE EATEN"
The End of Live and Let Die
James Bond will return in
The Man with the Golden Gun
FYI, naš Count Dooku je u slijedećem filmu kao Čovjek sa zlatnim pištoljem.
"Leaves from the vine, falling so slow.
Like fragile, tiny shells,
Drifting in the foam.
Little soldier boy, come marching home.
Brave soldier boy, comes marching home."