James Bond must investigate a mysterious murder case of a British agent in New Orleans. Soon he finds himself up against a gangster boss named Mr. Big.
Roger Moore
James Bond
Yaphet Kotto
Kananga/Mr. Big
Jane Seymour
Solitaire
Clifton James
Sheriff J.W. Pepper
Julius Harris
Tee Hee
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
Lon Satton
Strutter
Madeline Smith
Miss Caruso
Roy Stewart
Quarrel
Arnold Williams
Cab Driver 1
Robert Dix
Hamilton
James Drake
Dawes (uncredited)
Dennis Edwards
Baines
Brenda Arnau
Singer
Kubi Chaza
Sales Girl
Michael Ebbin
Dambala
Joie Chitwood
Charlie
Ruth Kempf
Mrs. Bell
Stephen Hendrickson
M. Bleeker
Louis Saint-Juste
Chef des voudous
Don Topping
Animateur
Lance Gordon
Eddie
Alvin Alcorn
Assassin
Roy Hollis
Shérif
James Langston Drake
Dawes
Tony Amelchi
Danseur
Della McCrae
Danseuse
Keith Forte
Garde
Sylvia Kuumba Williams
Femme qui pleure
Irvin Allen
Garçon
Dan Jackson
Garçon
Gabor Vernon
Délégué hongrois
Vic Armstrong
Policier
Jack Cooper
Policier
Peter Brayham
Homme de main
Paul Weston
Homme à l'aéroport
Nikki Van der Zyl
Solitaire (voice) (uncredited)
Director
Guy Hamilton
Novel
Ian Fleming
Screenplay
Tom Mankiewicz
August 27, 2018
7
Roger Moore’s fun and colorful debut as 007
Agent 007 (Roger Moore) travels from Harlem to the Caribbean to Louisiana to stop a black heroin mogul (Yaphet Kotto) fortified with a multifarious organization and a lovely tarot card reader (Jane Seymour).
This was Moore’s dynamic debut as Bond. He did 7 films for the franchise in 13 years from 1973-1985. The tone of “Live and Let Die” is similar to Sean Connery’s final canon Bond flick, “Diamonds Are Forever” (1971). Moore’s stint is my favorite run in the series with all seven films being kinetic, amusing, scenic and just all-around entertaining. There’s not one stinker in the bunch and they were all profitable at the box office.
Aside from the picturesque globetrotting, “Live and Let Die” features several colorful characters beyond those already noted: The metal-armed Tee Hee (Julius Harris), the chortling voodoo minion Baron Samedi (Geoffrey Holder) and redneck Sheriff JW Pepper (Clifton James). On the female front, Seymour is young & cute while Gloria Hendry is impressively fit as Rosie. The head-turning Madeline Smith has a small role. In addition, there are several memorable thrilling parts, like the amusing airport sequence, Bond using crocogators as stepping stones, the great bayou boat chase and the closing train cab brouhaha.
As far as the movie being “racist,” as SJW’s whine, the character Agent Quarrel Jr. (Roy Stewart) blows that whole eye-rolling idiot-theory.
The film runs 2 hours, 1 minute and was shot in Manhattan, Jamaica and Louisiana (New Orleans & the bayous) with additional work done in England.
GRADE: B+
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$7,000,000.00
Revenue:
$126,400,000.00