Russian and British submarines with nuclear missiles on board both vanish from sight without a trace. England and Russia both blame each other as James Bond tries to solve the riddle of the disappearing ships. But the KGB also has an agent on the case.
Roger Moore
James Bond
Barbara Bach
Major Anya Amasova
Curd Jürgens
Karl Stromberg
Richard Kiel
Jaws
Caroline Munro
Naomi
Walter Gotell
General Anatol Gogol
Geoffrey Keen
Sir Frederick Gray
Bernard Lee
M
George Baker
Captain Benson
Michael Billington
Sergei Barsov
Olga Bisera
Felicca
Desmond Llewelyn
Q
Edward de Souza
Sheik Hosein
Vernon Dobtcheff
Max Kalba
Valerie Leon
Hotel Recepcionist
Lois Maxwell
Miss Moneypenny
Sydney Tafler
Liparus Captain
Nadim Sawalha
Aziz Fekkesh
Sue Vanner
Log Cabin Girl
Eva Rueber-Staier
Rublevich
Robert Brown
Admiral Hargreaves
Marilyn Galsworthy
Stromberg's Assistant
Milton Reid
Sandor
Cyril Shaps
Dr. Bechmann
Milo Sperber
Prof. Markovitz
Albert Moses
Barman
Rafiq Anwar
Cairo Club Waiter
Felicity York
Arab Beauty
Dawn Rodrigues
Arab Beauty
Anika Pavel
Arab Beauty
Jill Goodall
Arab Beauty
Shane Rimmer
Cmdr. Carter
Bob Sherman
USS Wayne Crewman
Doyle Richmond
USS Wayne Crewman
Peter Whitman
USS Wayne Crewman
Ray Hassett
USS Wayne Crewman
Vincent Marzello
USS Wayne Crewman
Nicholas Campbell
USS Wayne Crewman
Ray Evans
USS Wayne Crewman
Anthony Forrest
USS Wayne Crewman
Garrick Hagon
USS Wayne Crewman
Ray Jewers
USS Wayne Crewman
George Mallaby
USS Wayne Crewman
Christopher Muncke
USS Wayne Crewman
Anthony Pullen Shaw
USS Wayne Crewman
Don Staton
USS Wayne Crewman
Stephen Temperley
USS Wayne Crewman
Bryan Marshall
Cmdr. Talbot
Michael Howarth
HMS Ranger Crewman
Kim Fortune
HMS Ranger Crewman
Barry Andrews
HMS Ranger Crewman
Kevin McNally
HMS Ranger Crewman
Jeremy Bulloch
HMS Ranger Crewman
Sean Bury
HMS Ranger Crewman
John Sarbutt
HMS Rangers Crewman
David Auker
HMS Ranger Crewman
Dennis Blanch
HMS Ranger Crewman
Keith Buckley
HMS Ranger Crewman
Nick Ellsworth
HMS Ranger Crewman
Keith Morris
HMS Ranger Crewman
John Salthouse
HMS Ranger Crewman
George Roubicek
Stromberg One Captain
Lenny Rabin
Liparus Crewman
Irvin Allen
Stromberg Crew
Yashaw Adem
Stromberg Crew
John Truscott
USS Wayne Crewman
Robert Sheedy
USS Wayne Crewman
Eric Stine
USS Wayne Crewman
Murray Salem
USS Wayne Crewman
Harry Fielder
USS Wayne Crewmember (uncredited)
Barbara Jefford
Naomi (voice) (uncredited)
Bob Simmons
KGB Thug #2 (uncredited)
Michael G. Wilson
Man in the Audience at the Pyramid Theatre (uncredited)
Director
Lewis Gilbert
Novel
Ian Fleming
Screenplay
Richard Maibaum
Screenplay
Christopher Wood
Script Editor
Vernon Harris
August 30, 2018
8
Great Globe-Trotting, Spectacular Locations, thrilling action and fun vibe
Roger Moore did more official James Bond films as secret agent 007 than any other actor. He started the role when he was almost 45 years-old and ended his 7-film stint at 57. His third Bond film was “The Spy Who Loved Me” released in 1977 and it’s one of the most entertaining movies in the series.
The plot revolves around 007 teaming up with female Russian agent XXX (yeah right) to prevent world-hating Karl Stromberg (Curd Jürgens) from starting World War III by stealing nuclear subs. Stromberg doesn't care if the world kills itself because he lives as a mad recluse on a crab-like submersible dream home called "Atlantis." The giant steel-toothed Jaws assists Stromberg along with the beautiful raven-haired Naomi.
The top item I demand in any Bond flick is exciting globe-trotting and, consequently, great locations. “The Spy Who Loved Me” delivers on this front in spades. Right out of the gate there’s a rousing ski chase that culminates in a spectacular jump from Baffin Island's Mt. Asgard (Canada), substituting for the Austrian Alps. It’s an incredible stunt and easily one of the best openings in the franchise. From there we get the Sahara desert, Cairo, the Nile River and the great pyramids of Giza, as well as the Italian Mediterranean island of Sardinia, Scotland (Royal Naval base) and the waters of the Bahamas. These are all fabulous locations to say the least.
Richard Kiel as the 7’2” Jaws is both intimidating and amusing. The on-going joke is that NOTHING can stop or kill him.
Barbara Bach is good as Agent XXX and certainly possesses an exotic beauty, similar to Britt Ekland from the previous movie, but watch her get blown out of the water by the stunning Caroline Munro when she’s introduced as Naomi. Many cite Ursula Andress' coming out of the water in a white bikini in “Dr. No” (1962) as the ultimate ‘Bond girl’ moment but Caroline's introduction here is a serious rival; it's, at least, the second best one. The only problem is that Caroline's role is too brief. Check her out in “The Golden Voyage of Sinbad” (1974) to see her in a more prominent part. Some editions of the DVD include an over 40-minute documentary that includes an interview with Ms. Munro. She was still beautiful over 25 years after the movie was released.
Another great aspect of “The Spy Who Loved Me” is that the fun, adventurous vibe and globe-trotting sequences give it an undeniable Indiana Jones feel, even though it was made four years before the first Indiana Jones flick. WATCH OUT for the great sequence where Bond's car morphs into a submarine as he attempts to flee Naomi in a helicopter.
Many compositions in Bond films are relatively timeless, like “For Your Eyes Only” from 1981, but the disco elements in the score for “The Spy Who Loved Me” are horribly dated. This doesn't bug me that much. I can live with it; others can't.
As for Roger Moore's take on Bond, I guess you either like him or you don't. I do. Regardless of his age Moore always looked great and was perfectly convincing as 007 throughout his run.
IMHO Moore's seven films are the most consistently entertaining. Yes, Sean Connery is great and his stint is generally more serious (albeit with the typical Bond cheese), but who can deny the color and vibrancy of the Moore films? All of his pictures are very entertaining and were hugely successful at the box office. Even the heavily maligned “Moonraker” (1979) and “A View to a Kill” (1985) are great. They may have more goofy or amusing elements, which are actually funny by the way, but they remain essentially serious stories; they rarely go overboard into the rut of parody or camp. Seriously, I weary of hearing all the complaints about Moore's stint in the series. All of his films are quality Bond adventures. There's not a dud in the bunch.
The movie runs 2 hours, 5 minutes.
GRADE: A-
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$13,500,000.00
Revenue:
$185,438,673.00