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Albert R. Broccoli (1909–1996)

Author of The Man with the Golden Gun [1974 film]

10+ Works 702 Members 6 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Albert Broccoli

Image credit: Wikimedia.org

Works by Albert R. Broccoli

Associated Works

Chitty Chitty Bang Bang [1968 film] (1968) — Producer — 686 copies
Dr. No [1962 film] (1962) — Producer — 383 copies
Goldfinger [1964 film] (1964) — Producer — 382 copies
GoldenEye [1995 film] (1995) 329 copies
From Russia with Love [1963 film] (1963) — Producer — 312 copies
You Only Live Twice [1967 film] (1967) — Producer — 270 copies
Live and Let Die [1973 film] (1973) — Producer — 270 copies
The Spy Who Loved Me [1977 film] (1977) — Producer — 264 copies
On Her Majesty's Secret Service [1969 film] (1969) — Producer — 253 copies
For Your Eyes Only [1981 film] (1981) — Producer — 248 copies
Diamonds Are Forever [1971 film] (1971) — Producer — 245 copies
Moonraker [1979 film] (1979) — Producer — 228 copies
The Living Daylights [1987 film] (1987) — Producer — 208 copies
Octopussy [1983 film] (1983) — Producer — 191 copies
The Incredible World of 007 (1992) — Foreword, some editions — 38 copies
DRESSED TO KILL: James Bond - The Suited Hero (1600) — Foreword — 19 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1909-04-05
Date of death
1996-06-27
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Occupations
film producer
Relationships
Broccoli, Barbara (daughter)

Members

Reviews

The Man With The Golden Gun (1965) (Bond #13) by Ian Fleming. This book is set one year after the events of You Only Live Twice. That story ended with Bond going missing, presumed dead. In fact he was in the hands of the Russians who managed to brainwash him and direct his talents against M himself as depicted in this book. Captured by the secret service and treated by their best brain doctor, it is decided to set him on a no win course.
Either Bond can be set aside for dismal office duties, never to be trusted again until he ultimately resigns, or he can be given a mission he can not succeed at. The latter is deemed the better option for it offers the Service just the dullest glimmer of hope that Bond can be rescued.
The mission is simple: Find and kill an assassin called Scaramanga, the owner of the “Golden Gun”, the world’s best shot and it’s deadliest killer.
Simple.
Unlike the movie version, which was in my opinion very bad, the novel is set in Jamaica, sight of some of Bond’s most thrilling adventures. Mary Goodnight is along for the ride, and where the film had be as a bubble-headed blond, the novel provides a more attractive version of her.
There is a resort being built, but it is failing. Scaramanga heads up a consortium of international evil-doers and he is trying to milk them for more money. There is a meeting held at the uncompleted resort and Bond manages to get himself invited, as you knew he would.
This novel has all the action and adventure you might desire in a Bond novel, the villain is almost too cock-sure, the group around him able to break through Bond’s guise and lay a plan for his death, but Bond has a few helpers come out of hiding to assist. Mr. Fleming’s love of the island is on full display in this outing. And with the release of the latest Bond novel, With A Mind To Kill by Anthony Horowitz, set two weeks after this book, it is imperative that you delve through You Only Live Twice and The man With The Golden Gun to insure you have the events set firmly in your mind.
And if you don’t want to read the new book, you can fully enjoy this shining example of the Bondman view of this little slice of paradise.
… (more)
 
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TomDonaghey | 1 other review | Jun 2, 2022 |
Timothy Dalton; Albert R Broccoli; Michael G Wilson; John Glen; Carey Lowell; Robert Davi; Talisa Soto; Anthony Zerbe; Ian Fleming; United Artists Corporation.; MGM Home Entertainment Inc.; Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment, Inc.
 
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BahayPag-Asa | 3 other reviews | Jan 27, 2018 |
Rating: 3* of five

I felt generous. The 1974 film, which is what I'm rating, is more or less a 2-star experience. Oh me oh my...an AMC Hornet, an AMC Matador, Simon Templar....I mean Roger Moore!...wearing loser suits...I mean leisure suits!...and the most horrendously offensive Southern stereotype sheriff in the history of moviemaking adds up to some seriously noxious stuff. Then there's the damnfool idiot chop-socky pandering, and the concomitant "Oriental" stereotypes...ugh.

Maud Adams is GORGEOUS. She's just luminous in or out of her clothes. Tattoo from Fantasy Island is the houseboy to the baddie, resulting in a regrettable lack of hunky blond henchrats for me to ogle. Britt Ekland, Peter Sellers' ex, plays the stupidest secret agent imaginable, who manages to get herself locked in the trunk of the baddies' FLYING AMC MATADOR *oh dear goddesses please keep my dinner down* with the macguffin in her handbag which she hasn't had the common sense to drop...well, it's ridiculous even for a Bond movie.

The ending is...it's...epic. Titanic. So awful, so ridiculous, so completely...I...words do not exist yet for the sensation of revolted, horrified, amused, aesthetically affronted...well.

The title tune is sung by Lulu. I do not know why they chose this singer or this tune. It's just awful. Hideous.

I didn't lke 1974 the first time around, and I don't like it any better this time. Oh wait...Bond's Bangkok hotel room was way cool, turquoise shantung walls and marvelous decorative accessories and wonderful closets...you see where my mind was. The "story" (which doesn't resemble the novel too terrible much) sure as hell wasn't doin' it.
… (more)
½
 
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richardderus | 1 other review | Dec 11, 2013 |
"A documentary broadcast on March 15, 1999 by the Australian Broadcasting Corporations Four Corners program. Summary: Jakarta's astonishing announcement that they would consider independence for East Timor sent hopes soaring. But in the past few months dozens of pro-independence civilians have been gunned down or have mysteriously vanished, replacing hope with a chilling fear that the change of heart means little more than a change of tactics by the Indonesian military. transcript at href="http://www.abc.net.au/4corners/stories/s20270.htm" rel="nofollow" target="_top">http://www.abc.net.au/4corners/stories/s20270.htm"… (more)
 
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opirg-carleton | 3 other reviews | Jul 19, 2006 |

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