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Comments
Yes, it still really holds up very well as a James Bond film 40 years on. It's much better than its predecessor, DAF.
DAF is a good film but the bit in California bores me a bit.
Wow! A classy fan there. That must have been quite something.
oh happy birthday LALD!!!! ^:)^ My first ever experience of 007 thanks to my dear old mum! I have never been the same since! :-bd
Agreed - mostly why I dislike DAF so very much.
What you mean the 2 minute scene with Felix at the airport and where the hearse drives to the funeral home? Yeah that protracted sequence always really drags for me too.
:-\"
http://hmssweblog.wordpress.com/2013/06/01/live-and-let-dies-40th-the-post-connery-era-truly-begins/
The movie came out as the Blaxplotation era was winding down but the movie still stands out and mixes with many of those films of that day.
The film took a lot of hate from writers who complained of racism and the fact that all the villains were black but I never saw that as a problem. I found the black villains just as cool, cunning and dangerous as any previous Bond villains. And they were enjoyable rogues. Kananga, Tee Hee, Adam and others are memorable. The New Orleans funeral march is an enduring memory from this movie.
Jane Seymour was great. Beautiful with an innocence and that killer body. She is one of my favorite Bond girls.
Mankiewicz wrote the screenplay and the villains plot is kinda flimsy but the movie is not short on action, stunts (yes real stunts, not the cheesy CGI we see nowadays) My only problem is with Kananga's death. It was just silly and that is not physically possible. Why not just let the sharks kill him?
Paul McCartney's song was played by most radio stations that summer. I understand that Harry Salzman liked the song but wanted a female black entertainer to perform it. He finally gave in.
I always loved this movie and was glad Harry Salzman was back at the helm rather than Cubby on this production.
40th anniversary?! Ah well ...
LALD rocks with a fantastic score and theme song. A solid Bond movie and a very good debut for Roger, who did look many years younger than his actual age then.
Nowadays they would use CGI for the crocodiles but that was one thing about earlier films, the stunts were actually performed by real stuntmen.
It was his name that Mankiwicz used for the main villain, because fans of the book will recall that there was no Kananga/Mr.Big in the book only Mr. BIG
I like the name Kananga better then Mr. Big for the villians name
I think my problem with most of the 70s films is that they seem quite horribly dated in 2013. The 60s films actually seem to stand up far better.
Well all that said it's still much much better than DAF - I find it much harder to watch all of the way through.
"Camp" dates more than "serious" on the whole.
LALD doesn't have long moments of dullness that Diamonds does either (IMO)