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Hitchcock was one of the leading filmmakers to really show women in bras, so that may have helped pave the way for Bond to show the skin of its actresses, and has been a franchise that has always embraced the female form ever since its debut in theaters.
Indeed looking at the dates it seems that the global threat from a Carribbean island on film is perfectly overlapped by similar real world events and it seems inconceivable that at least some of the people who went to see the film had no interest or knowledge of Bond but were attracted by what seemed a prescient thriller that uncannily aped the current geopolitical news story du jour.
Similarly the space race was really heating up so a film about a shadowy character destroying Americas rockets certainly pandered to fears of the communist threat (despite the fact Dr No worked for SPECTRE) nicely and must have helped getting bums on seats.
The difference between the two is that whilst the missile crisis was just a stroke of luck for EON, the space race was something they must've been aware of during production and you wonder just how much it influenced their thinking. Although the film is a fairly accurate reproduction of the novel the film does seem to dwell a lot more on the whole toppling angle than the book. In the book it seems rather incidental compared to the overall goal of just stopping Dr No's reign of terror.
Not just the same week, the same day! The two most popular British things ever had their debut on the exact same day!
Glad to see this can be resurrected. I'll get cracking on FRWL later today.
Yes, I'm pretty sure there was a major world event in the year FRWL was released...
:))
Who needs the Profumo Scandal, the Magic Circle of the Tory Party and Sir Alec Douglas-Home and Kennedy assassination when you've got that, eh?!
I was actually recently thinking about the Cuban Missile Crisis-Dr. No and Kennedy Assassination-From Russia With Love connections as I was in the Kennedy Presidential Library up in Boston. Dr. No was actually released just before the Cuban Missile Crisis in Britain, and didn't see release in the US until May of '63. From Russia With Love, likewise, wasn't released in the US until April of '64. Goldfinger didn't premiere until a few months after the UK premiere, in December of '64. That's 3 Bond films in about 18 months! Curiously enough, Thunderball premiered in Tokyo and apparently debuted in the US before the UK. Interesting stuff all around.
Anyway, Bond was way more sexualized than almost everything else out there. In the time of Dr. No, the pop songs of the day were "Be My Baby" and "Then He Kissed Me" and "She Loves You" (these came out in '63, but cut me some slack). In the first five minutes of the movie, we see Bond playing (and winning) a high-stakes game of cards in a casino at 3 A.M. against an impossibly beautiful woman, not to mention setting a date with her, and we find out that's just what he does for fun! A few minutes later we see him hit on the secretary, and then he discovers the woman from earlier wearing only his shirt, and of course coitus ensues. Then we get what is repeatedly stated to be hours and hours of Bond and Miss Taro together, and I doubt I even need to discuss Honey Ryder's introductory scene. Bond himself was an unstoppable vortex of sexuality in the early films, and the films on the whole were like nothing out there, except for Playboy, which I would imagine had far less mainstream appeal & acceptance.
Film: From Russia With Love
Release date: 1963
Villains scheme: SPECTRE plans an intricate scheme to lure James Bond into stealing a valuable Soviet decoding machine, and unknowingly deliver it into their hands. In the process, Agent 007 is to suffer a humiliating and disgraceful death.
World events the year before release: Cuban missile crisis; Algerian war ends with the independence of Algeria; The Beatles' first record. Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation begins. Sino-Indian War. Second Vatican Council is opened by Pope John XXIII.
World events the year of release: Independence of Kenya and creation of Malaysia Birmingham campaign. Martin Luther King, Jr. delivers "I Have a Dream" at the March on Washington. Assassination of John F. Kennedy. Launch of the first geostationary satellite. Paul VI becomes Pope.
Box Office: $24,796,765 (US Domestic)
As this has been left static for a while, I'm hoping we can discuss the possible outcome for each of the Bond films, and how events at the time may have helped or hindered the performance and or the story.
John F Kennedy had listed his favourite books in '62 I believe, with FRWL being one of them. This led Saltzman and Broccoli to move ahead and film FRWL as the follow up to DN.