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Casino Royale (1967)

 Casino Royale (1967)
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TVTItem
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Casino Royale (1967)
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CasinoRoyale1967
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The one that's a complete parody.The second adaptation (after the 1954 Climax! episode) of Ian Fleming's Casino Royale, released in 1967. It was originally planned to be a straight adaptation of the one novel that Eon Productions (at the time) didn't have the rights to, but producer Charles Feldman instead decided to mount it as spoof of James Bond and spy films in general. Unfortunately, a Troubled Production ensued.Sir James Bond (David Niven) is forced out of retirement to investigate the deaths and disappearances of various British Secret Service agents, which turn out to be the work of the spy organization SMERSH. Organizing the recruitment of a new team of agents, he also plans to confuse SMERSH by naming all of them "James Bond" — even the women. The film proceeds to jump back and forth between the misadventures of the faux-007s before most of them are brought together for the climax. They are: Evelyn Tremble (Peter Sellers): A baccarat expert sent to challenge SMERSH operative Le Chiffre (Orson Welles) at the titular casino, in the one plot thread that is derived from the original book. He is recruited and assisted by... Vesper Lynd (Ursula Andress): A former colleague of Sir James Bond who's gone into high finance. Mata Bond (Joanna Pettet): Sir James's swinging daughter, the product of his tragic affair with Mata Hari. She's sent behind the Iron Curtain to investigate a SMERSH fundraising auction. Cooper, aka "Coop" (Terrence Cooper): His specialty is resisting the advances of women, a vital skill given that the dead agents were all seduced to their dooms by SMERSH's roster of female spies. The Detainer (Daliah Lavi): "The new secret weapon" of the group. Jimmy Bond (Woody Allen): Sir James's "disappointing" American nephew.The music was done by Burt Bacharach.Eon Productions (owners of the main James Bond franchise) acquired the rights to the novel in 1999, and eventually produced a serious, Truer to the Text (and expanded) adaptation in 2006, which should not be confused with the 1967 spoof.
 Casino Royale (1967)
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2023-05-28T13:15:27Z
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Dropped link to InNameOnly: Not a Feature - ITEM
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_107edaa4
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Comforting the Widow
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_107edaa4
comment
Comforting the Widow: Lady Fiona McTarry is a SMERSH agent impersonating M's widow - at M's ancestral home she enters Bond's bedroom, demanding to be comforted (and ruin his Celibate Hero image). When he politely declines, she takes it as an insult to her honor.
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Anyone Can Die
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_1237828f
comment
Anyone Can Die: It's the only movie (before No Time to Die) where James Bond dies. All seven of them. Many at the same time.
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One Last Smoke
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_13d6db18
comment
One Last Smoke: Jimmy Bond has a last cigarette in front of a Latin American firing squad ("I'm gonna give it up any day now") - it's an impact bomb he throws at the squad. He climbs the wall laughing in triumph - and lands on the other side...in front of another firing squad.
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So Long, Suckers!
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_152b22ff
comment
So Long, Suckers!: Jimmy Bond is at a Latin American firing squad - his last cigarette is a concussion bomb he throws at the shooters. He climbs the wall chuckling "So long, suckers!" - and lands on the other side in another country, in front of a firing squad for another guy.
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Man in a Kilt
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_15929a2d
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Man in a Kilt: James Bond goes up against a bunch of Scotsmen, while Evelyn is hallucinated into a hostile Highlander marching band.
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Genre Savvy
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comment
Genre Savvy: Although its Played for Laughs at first, The Detainer deciding to go down the drainpipe rather than pass through Casino Royale turns out to be this given the wild fight that breaks out and makes it hard to escape out the door.
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Daddy's Girl
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_19fe3478
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Daddy's Girl: Mata Bond is touchingly close with her father, despite their limited contact, and Jumped at the Call to come help him during MI6's hour of need.
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The Cameo
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The Cameo: Even in a movie chock full of them Peter O'Toole as a bagpiper during Tremble's Mind Screw at Le Chiffre's hands stands out.
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_202ce3e0
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Eat the Bomb
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_202ce3e0
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Eat the Bomb: The film ends with Jimmy Bond tricked into swallowing his pill-size bomb, and blowing everyone up.
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_23473ae7
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Adaptation Expansion
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_23473ae7
comment
Adaptation Expansion: The film actually plays out the original novel's story, after a fashion, but that only took up about a tenth of the running time, the rest of it going off in several bizarre tangents.
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Anachronism Stew
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_259d5879
comment
Anachronism Stew: It's mentioned Sir James Bond had been awarded the Victoria Cross at Mafeking, a siege that took place in 1899-1900. David Niven is in his late 50s here, but this would date Bond as around 85 at least. Bond had an illegitimate daughter by Mata Hari, who was executed in 1917. The daughter is played by a 25-year old Joanna Pettet, but she would have to be 50 at least. But then, this movie is not at all logical or linear.
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Generation Xerox
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Generation Xerox: Miss Moneypenny's daughter, who looks just like her and has the same job as her mother.
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_26ac510e
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Mythology Gag
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_26ac510e
comment
Mythology Gag: The sequence focusing on Evelyn Tremble and Le Chiffre has a recognizable reference to the torture scene from the novel — not only in that something like that happens, but there's a chair in the middle of the room Tremble wakes up in and Le Chiffre tells him not to worry about it. Woody Allen plays Jimmy Bond, James' American nephew. The very first adaptation of Casino Royale in 1954, for the CBS series Climax!, made James an American and called him Jimmy.
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_294ed981
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Bilingual Bonus
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_294ed981
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Bilingual Bonus: The French Legionnaire translates "merde" when he hits his hand as "ouch." It actually means "shit".
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Cast as a Mask
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_2c3a7a97
comment
Cast as a Mask: Dr. Noah is pretty much a spoof of this trope. He's voiced by Valentine Dyall, radio's "Man in Black", until The Reveal that he's actually Jimmy Bond — Woody Allen's character.
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Significant Birth Date
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_2edf787f
comment
Significant Birth Date: Jimmy Bond plots to replace all the world's leaders with his robotic doubles on April Fools Day, his birthday.
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I Want You to Meet an Old Friend of Mine
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_2f5790f5
comment
I Want You to Meet an Old Friend of Mine: Burt Kwouk, Peter Sellers' costar in The Pink Panther series, makes a cameo as a Chinese General. Alas, they don't share any scenes.
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Kinda Busy Here
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Kinda Busy Here: Done in a makeshift foxhole with military telephones.
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_3495b94d
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Gendercide
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_3495b94d
comment
Gendercide: Jimmy Bond has developed a strain of bacteria that, when released, would turn every woman beautiful and destroy every man over four foot-six (or taller than him).
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Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_35b241c0
comment
Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping: Inverted: Agent Mimi, played by the Scottish Deborah Kerr, impersonates M's widow, but upon witnessing the prowess of Bond, doesn't lapse back into a native French accent, but starts singing his praises in orgiastic French.
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Never Heard That One Before
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_3684532f
comment
Never Heard That One Before: Evelyn is at a training center preparing to take the role of James Bond. He's shown gadgets for the field, including a pen that sprays poison gas. He tells the obligatory 'poison pen letter' joke, and his instructor wearily finishes the sentence with him, pointing out that all new recruits say that. Some years later, Roger Moore as 007 says it, but gets a free pass (apart from Q's usual peevish reaction.)
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_379dcdf2
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Cowboys and Indians
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Cowboys and Indians: The American reinforcements in the climax are these.
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_3820a9ea
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Tomboyish Name
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_3820a9ea
comment
Tomboyish Name: Inverted Evelyn Tremble. Evelyn as a male name wasn't completely unknown in the mid-20th century (most obviously, Evelyn Waugh), but it was pretty uncommon.
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_392372f9
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Actor Allusion
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_392372f9
comment
Actor Allusion: Bernard Cribbins was previously in another 007 spoof - Carry On Spying. Ursula Andress was the first Bond girl in Dr. No. Now she becomes James Bond 007 proper.
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_3a8ac552
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All in the Eyes
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_3a8ac552
comment
All in the Eyes: Done with Le Chiffre.
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_3cb68bd3
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Cut His Heart Out with a Spoon
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_3cb68bd3
comment
Cut His Heart Out with a Spoon: Jimmy Bond sputters not-very-intimidating woodyallenisms at a Banana Republic firing squad:
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_3dc1e273
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Not Enough to Bury
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_3dc1e273
comment
Not Enough to Bury: Played for laughs - Sir James Bond survives a mortar bombardment of his home but M doesn't. He visits M's widow carrying a small box containing all that's left of him.
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Haggis Is Horrible
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_3fc3406b
comment
Haggis Is Horrible: At M's wake, Fiona, the enemy agent posing as his widow, details the preparation of the haggis traditionally made for the occasion; Sir James incredulously gulps "and...eat it?"note Ironically, the original novels gave Bond Scottish ancestry, as Skyfall explicitly acknowledged.
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Why Am I Ticking?
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comment
Why Am I Ticking?: Jimmy Bond turns into a bomb after being tricked into swallowing his own explosive pill.
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Ambiguous Ending
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Ambiguous Ending: Possibly, depending on how much of the Gainax Ending you take seriously, especially given that many characters had apparently escaped from the casino before the explosion yet still appear to be dead.
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Not Even Bothering with the Accent
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Not Even Bothering with the Accent: Vesper Lynd speaks with Ursula Andress' native Swiss-German accent.
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_450c5a85
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Alternate Continuity
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_450c5a85
comment
Alternate Continuity: The film has no connection to the standard Bond continuity... or does it?? It is made specifically clear in this film that after the retirement of the original Bond, his name became nothing more than a codename for new spies - and a subtle reference is made to Sean Connery's Bond as one of his namesakes. Also keep in mind that the last Bond movie with Connery, You Only Live Twice, came out the same year, and it was clear that another actor would have to take over as Bond.
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_4540f0b9
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Mistaken for Dying
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_4540f0b9
comment
Mistaken for Dying: Agent Mimi, after her Heel–Face Turn, helps Sir James Bond and gets injured. She goes on in a melodramatic dying scene fashion and requests a last kiss.
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Saying Too Much
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_4733b5a5
comment
Saying Too Much: Parodied when Mata Bond is looking for information on Le Chiffre:
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You Have Failed Me
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_474e3977
comment
You Have Failed Me: Le Chiffre detonates a minion in a phone booth, remotely.
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Death by Adaptation
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_48c99e19
comment
Death by Adaptation: Turns out to be James Bond himself!
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Planet of Steves
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_48d87e94
comment
Planet of Steves: Sir James Bond, now heading the secret service, assigns all his agents the name and number of James Bond 007 to confuse the enemy. Previously, when he had resigned, his superiors had assigned his name and number to the 007 we all know for agency morale purposes.
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Evil All Along
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_4aa98555
comment
Evil All Along: Certainly Jimmy Bond, who turns out to be the Big Bad, and possibly Vesper Lynd.
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Downer Ending
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_4e3d253b
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Downer Ending: A rare Played for Laughs version. Most of the cast gets blown up with Casino Royale at the end.
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Animated Credits Opening
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_4eddbc06
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Animated Credits Opening: By Richard Williams, no less.
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_505ff63
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Bag of Kidnapping
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_505ff63
comment
Bag of Kidnapping: Vesper steps out of the casino and two waiting thugs throw a bag over her and carry her off. Evelyn steps out a moment later, looking for her.
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_505ff63
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_51566669
type
Auction of Evil
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_51566669
comment
Auction of Evil: La Chiffre sets up an "art auction" between the US, USSR, and Great Britain to sell a set of compromising photographs, culminating in a hilarious scene where each country believes that they are under attack.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_51566669
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_51566669
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5311aa2d
type
Love Father, Love Son
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5311aa2d
comment
Love Father, Love Son: James Bond comes out of retirement, walks into his office, and bumps into Moneypenny. Exclaiming that she hasn't aged a day, he kisses her full on the mouth... only for her to reveal that she's actually Moneypenny's daughter. Bond looks appropriately abashed and keeps his hands off her for the rest of the film.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5311aa2d
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5311aa2d
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_5311aa2d
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_537dd8fe
type
Affably Evil
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_537dd8fe
comment
Affably Evil: Dr. Noah. His grand plan does certainly spring from pettiness and is threatening genuinely destruction — he intends to kill off all men taller than him — but it's also him standing up for the little guy, after a fashion (since goofy guys like him will now get their choice of women, who will all be turned beautiful by the same device). He seems to treat his many, many underlings well; the only one he kills is Le Chiffre, who's Faux Affably Evil anyway. He does hold the Detainer as a captive in his quarters, but tries to convince her to get in on his scheme and the new world order rather than forcing her into it. In fact, his affability is key to his downfall, as she is able to trick him into swallowing his own bomb pill.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_537dd8fe
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_537dd8fe
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_55cd4012
type
"Everybody Dies" Ending
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_55cd4012
comment
"Everybody Dies" Ending: Jimmy Bond is tricked into eating an explosive pill, which blows up the casino at the end with every main character in it. However, all the good guys are seen in heaven, strumming harps. Even the villain, until "Six of them went to a Heavenly spot, the seventh one is going to a place where it's terribly hot."
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_55cd4012
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_55cd4012
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_55cd4012
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5b979c61
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With My Hands Tied
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5b979c61
comment
With My Hands Tied & Feigning Intelligence: Jimmy Bond tries to show to the Detainer that he's just as manly as his uncle Sir James Bond - he sits down at a piano and masterfully plays some Debussy (a passionate pursuit of Sir James), then goes all "Look, one hand!" - then hastily hammers the piano off when it keeps playing without him.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5b979c61
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_5b979c61
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5bc36262
type
Backwards-Firing Gun
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5bc36262
comment
Backwards-Firing Gun: It kills George Raft.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5bc36262
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1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5bc36262
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_5bc36262
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5cdd2b27
type
Running into the Window
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5cdd2b27
comment
Running into the Window: Dr. Noah, in his underground lair, meets up with his uncle James Bond, and lowers a big sheet of invisible glass between them. When James sums up his plans for world domination as compensation for his feelings of sexual inferiority, Noah angrily steps forward — forgetting about the glass and smashing it to bits.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5cdd2b27
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_5cdd2b27
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5d9b8c3a
type
Femme Fatale Spy
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5d9b8c3a
comment
Femme Fatale Spy: Marta Bond, the illegitimate daughter of Mata Hari and James Bond, is this trope played for maximum silliness.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5d9b8c3a
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_5d9b8c3a
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_5d9b8c3a
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6185e4bf
type
Levitating a Lady
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6185e4bf
comment
Levitating a Lady: Le Chiffre levitates and vanishes an assistant, played by Penny Riley.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6185e4bf
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6185e4bf
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_6185e4bf
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_655d406a
type
Instrument of Murder
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_655d406a
comment
Instrument of Murder: Vesper uses the old machine-gun-in-the-bagpipes trick.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_655d406a
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1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_655d406a
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_655d406a
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_66959aaf
type
Everyone Join the Party
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_66959aaf
comment
Everyone Join the Party: In the finale, all Hell breaks loose when the Big Bad's casino is invaded by Ransome and an army of secret agents (apparently) sent to assist James Bond, consisting of a French Foreign Legionnaire, George Raft playing himself, stereotypical Cowboys and Indians, chimpanzees, and even seals. And then everyone else in the casino joins in on the action. No one is safe, especially when the whole casino explodes at the end, killing everyone inside.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_66959aaf
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_66959aaf
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_66959aaf
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_67fedd35
type
Bizarrchitecture
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_67fedd35
comment
Bizarrchitecture: The West Berlin spy school is depicted this way, in the spirit of German expressionism.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_67fedd35
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_67fedd35
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6b2b3b59
type
The Reveal
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6b2b3b59
comment
The Reveal: Dr. Noah is actually Jimmy Bond.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6b2b3b59
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6b2b3b59
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_6b2b3b59
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6ec4232f
type
Casting Gag
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6ec4232f
comment
Casting Gag: Among the many pinside jokes in the movie is Stirling Moss' cameo as a man who is instructed to "follow that car" and runs after it on foot. Moss is one of the greatest racing drivers of all time. A more conspicuous example is casting Ursula Andress - the inaugural "Bond girl" - as one of the James Bond proxies.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6ec4232f
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6ec4232f
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_6ec4232f
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6fdd991c
type
Overt Operative
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6fdd991c
comment
Overt Operative: MI-6 formally gives the codename "James Bond 007" to every single one of their agents— including the women—in order to confuse people.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6fdd991c
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_6fdd991c
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_6fdd991c
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_709bf03
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Television Portal
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_709bf03
comment
Television Portal: Le Chiffre is anxiously watching two of Doctor Noah's enforcers (who have come to kill him) over a security monitor. One of the men walks right up to the camera, reaches his gun hand up and then smashes through the screen and shoots Le Chiffre dead.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_709bf03
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_709bf03
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_722b3319
type
Camp Gay
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_722b3319
comment
Camp Gay: Fordyce, Q's assistant at outfitting Evelyn Tremble.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_722b3319
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1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_722b3319
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_722b3319
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_7230cfe
type
Shoe Phone
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_7230cfe
comment
Shoe Phone: James Bond is an old-school gentleman spy who, meeting with the secret service heads of the superpowers, contemptuously ridicules the gadgetry concealed on their persons.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_7230cfe
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1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_7230cfe
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_7230cfe
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_786bf97f
type
Real Life Writes the Plot
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_786bf97f
comment
Real Life Writes the Plot: It's unclear how the increasingly zany plot was conceived. The best guess is that even though Charles Feldman had the right to make a straight James Bond entry, he feared that he would not be able to compete with the official Bond movies, and he directed each writer who came along to make the film more and more of a parody. As mentioned above, however, Peter Sellers had been hired while the film was still intended to be a serious Bond movie, and he saw it as a way to broaden his acting portfolio. He was not amused when the film veered towards a wacky parody during the filming process, and after many fights with the producers, the director and his co-stars, including/especially Orson Welles, Sellers either was fired or quit. After that, Feldman, scrambling for a replacement story, decided to go all-out and pack the film with seven Bonds, and also hired a different director for each act of the film, resulting in its extremely disjointed feel. The above account is not supported by the "making-of" documentary on the DVD release, which, while it does support that Feldman originally intended to do a serious Bond, goes on to claim that the multi-Bond/multi-director approach had always been planned. What is known is that Sellers left the production prematurely, forcing the filmmakers to incorporate an outtake of Sellers and use creative editing in order to finish his part of the film.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_786bf97f
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_786bf97f
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_7aa8e46b
type
Cunning People Play Poker
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_7aa8e46b
comment
Cunning People Play Poker: Bond, who could be the Trope Codifier, has him at one point playing poker against either the Big Bad and/or their Number Two. His cunning nature and other skills always guarantees that he wins.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_7aa8e46b
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_7aa8e46b
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_7b8b3def
type
Celebrity Paradox
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_7b8b3def
comment
Celebrity Paradox: The original novels describe Bond as looking like a cross between Hoagy Carmichael and David Niven.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_7b8b3def
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_7b8b3def
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_7b8b3def
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_7e499910
type
Obligatory Joke
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_7e499910
comment
Obligatory Joke: Q is outfitting Evelyn with spy gadgets, including a fountain pen that shoots a stream of poison.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_7e499910
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_7e499910
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_7e499910
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_823c6e3e
type
Large Ham
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_823c6e3e
comment
Large Ham: Deborah Kerr devours the scenery as a Scottish lady.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_823c6e3e
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_823c6e3e
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_823c6e3e
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_82accf22
type
Gainax Ending
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_82accf22
comment
Gainax Ending: The last few minutes of the film have to be seen to be believed. Cowboys ride their horses across the plains before barging into Casino Royale, a pair of seals fight each other, bubbles swarm the area as chaos ensues, then Indians parachute from a warplane into the casino. Someone calls the police, then we see policemen driving a vintage car in greyscale…except that there are so many of them that they can't fit into the car! Later on a seal with a "007" tag claps its flippers at Indians dancing around a burning teepee-shaped structure. That's not even the entire list of weird moments that occur during the ending, and suffice to say they don't really make sense.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_82accf22
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_82accf22
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_82accf22
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_86101877
type
What Song Was This Again?
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_86101877
comment
What Song Was This Again?: When the film was translated into French and German, it was considered a good idea to also record dubbed versions of Dusty Springfield's "The Look Of Love". Mireille Mathieu not only sang the French version "Les jeux d'amour", but also the German version "Ein Blick von dir". In 1970, she and Dusty re-recorded the English original, by the way.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_86101877
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_86101877
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_86101877
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_863fa679
type
What Happened to the Mouse?
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_863fa679
comment
What Happened to the Mouse?: The end title theme says that there are 'seven James Bonds.' Actually, there are eight in the film — David Niven (Bond himself), Peter Sellers (Tremble, codenamed James Bond), Terence Cooper (Cooper, codenamed James Bond), Woody Allen (Jimmy Bond), Daliah Lavi (Lady James Bond), Joanna Pettet (Mata Bond, codenamed James Bond), Barbara Bouchet (Moneypenny, codenamed James Bond), and Ursula Andress (Vesper, codenamed James Bond). However, the scene that accompanies this song, with the 'seven James Bonds' in Heaven, is lacking Terence Cooper, who apparently somehow DIDN'T die in the casino explosion...? Or they may mean Lady James Bond, aka The Detainer; she was last seen before her attempted escape from a second-story bathroom window. Given the extended period of time between her entering the bathroom and the explosion, it can be assumed that she either fell to her death (the first floor IS rather tall), or that she was still trying to descend the drain-pipe during the explosion. Actually they're all there. All eight of them. The one that the 'seven James Bonds' song doesn't acknowledge is Sellers, since he died in an earlier scene and so he's not among the seven James Bonds that died at the Casino, he was already in the afterlife. Notice how all seven of the just deceased ones are dressed like angels but Sellers stays in the same Scottish garments he died in.note This, however, was likely due to Sellers quitting the film before completing his work on it. The presence of Vesper is an example of the trope being taken in another direction as she leaves the story well before the explosion, and thus her presence in the afterlife is left unexplained.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_863fa679
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_863fa679
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_88a97dd4
type
Stiff Upper Lip
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_88a97dd4
comment
Stiff Upper Lip: The Cosmopolitan Council believes that bombs are being dropped. The American representative rushes to the phone yelling "Get me the President!" while the British representative merely calls his wife and calmly explains that he won't be home for dinner because "it seems a war has broken out."
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_88a97dd4
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_88a97dd4
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_89102272
type
Artistic Title
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_89102272
comment
Artistic Title: The film has animated titles that can be best called psychedelic medieval illuminations.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_89102272
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1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_89102272
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_89102272
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_8a295a46
type
Cool Car
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_8a295a46
comment
Cool Car: Bond drives a suitably old-school Bentley roadster.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_8a295a46
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_8a295a46
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_8a295a46
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_927b2f11
type
The Bus Came Back
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_927b2f11
comment
The Bus Came Back: Ransome in the final scene.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_927b2f11
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_927b2f11
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_927b2f11
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_95b7c400
type
Faux Affably Evil
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_95b7c400
comment
Faux Affably Evil: Le Chiffre's a jolly gambler, but at the same time he has no qualms with blowing up the auctioneer via telephone when the auction is ruined by Mata Bond or torturing Evelyn Tremble after Evelyn wins the game.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_95b7c400
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_95b7c400
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_95b7c400
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_961518ca
type
Mid-Battle Tea Break
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_961518ca
comment
Mid-Battle Tea Break: There's a bit of background business at Q Branch where a prisoner is being brutally beaten in an interrogation...the tea cart comes around moments later and he's amicably drinking with his interrogators.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_961518ca
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_961518ca
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_961518ca
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_970c790a
type
Big Bad
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_970c790a
comment
Big Bad: Dr. Noah.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_970c790a
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_970c790a
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_970c790a
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_97f253c1
type
Egocentric Team Naming
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_97f253c1
comment
Egocentric Team Naming: Once Sir James Bond becomes head of MI6 after the previous M gets offed, the very first thing he does is rename ALL his agents, male AND female, James Bond 007 as a ploy to confuse the enemy.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_97f253c1
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_97f253c1
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_97f253c1
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_98591d23
type
Speech Impediment
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_98591d23
comment
Speech Impediment: The original James Bond has a tendency to stutter — until he returns from Scotland. Back at MI-5 he asks an underling if he's stuttering; when he's told he's not, he says that's good because he "doesn't have time for that now."
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_98591d23
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_98591d23
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_98591d23
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_9d184483
type
Changing Clothes Is a Free Action
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_9d184483
comment
Changing Clothes Is a Free Action: Early on, Bond is visited by a host of intelligence heads, and while talking with them goes through no less than three costume changes. Later on, Evelyn leaves the casino in a tuxedo and is suddenly in full formula racing gear to give chase to the bad guys.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_9d184483
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_9d184483
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_9d184483
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a0d9c2f3
type
Final Speech
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a0d9c2f3
comment
Final Speech: Parodied - SMERSH agent Mimi, after her Heel–Face Turn, gets a little bit of shrapnel in the chest and coughs out a big impassioned goodbye to Sir James, followed by a big kiss.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a0d9c2f3
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a0d9c2f3
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_a0d9c2f3
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a4c37cbe
type
Mood Whiplash
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a4c37cbe
comment
Mood Whiplash: When Vesper Lynd recruits Evelyn Tremble, the film suddenly becomes considerably less wacky, though still heavy on comic Double Entendre; it's where "The Look of Love" comes in after 40+ minutes of slapstick. Most of Peter Sellers' scenes come as this compared to the rest of the film, in part because he plays his role mostly straight — reacting to the strange world he's in rather than being just another wacky resident of it. This is because Sellers was cast when the movie was intended to be a straight adaptation, and he apparently considered the final script a bait-and-switch. He either refused to deliver the comedic lines as scripted and ad-libbed, or may have even out-and-out rewrote his scenes with the collaboration of an outside screenwriter to make them hew closer to the original conception he had been promised. Accounts vary.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a4c37cbe
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 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a4c37cbe
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 Casino Royale (1967)
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Casino Royale (1967) / int_a4c37cbe
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a536f3a3
type
Gender-Blender Name
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a536f3a3
comment
Gender-Blender Name: Evelyn Tremble. Vesper Lynd asks him straight off if that isn't a woman's name. ("...No, it's mine, actually.") Of course, there was also the writer Evelyn Waugh.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a536f3a3
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 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_a536f3a3
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a5d92fce
type
Celibate Hero
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a5d92fce
comment
Celibate Hero: Niven's Bond, following having to double-cross the love of his life, Mata Hari (yes, that Mata Hari), and have her executed. And then he kisses Moneypenny's daughter. Yeah.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a5d92fce
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a5d92fce
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_a5d92fce
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a60e3252
type
Rule of Funny
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a60e3252
comment
Rule of Funny: Much of the movie runs on this, with the climactic fight the most elaborate example.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a60e3252
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a60e3252
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_a60e3252
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a70223
type
Karma Houdini
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a70223
comment
Karma Houdini: Oddly, Vesper Lynd actually makes it to Heaven with the other James Bonds and stays there, unlike Jimmy Bond.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a70223
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a70223
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_a70223
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a7aef9ff
type
Obfuscating Stupidity
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a7aef9ff
comment
Obfuscating Stupidity: Jimmy Bond's introductory scene has him nervously trying to talk a firing squad out of shooting him ("You do realize this means an angry letter to the Times?"), but he successfully pulls off a distraction when they're about to fire and scales the wall behind him to escape...although it turns out that there's another firing squad about to shoot someone else on the other side and he barely escapes that. This foreshadows Jimmy turning out to be Dr. Noah, the Big Bad in the late going.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a7aef9ff
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_a7aef9ff
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_a7aef9ff
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_af3ea0e3
type
Face–Heel Turn
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_af3ea0e3
comment
Face–Heel Turn: While Le Chiffre is torturing Evelyn, Vesper Lynd arrives to save him — only to kill him for the money, apparently. (That said, it's possible that this is a case of Evil All Along rather than this trope.)
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_af3ea0e3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_af3ea0e3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_af3ea0e3
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_afc8486b
type
Awesome Anachronistic Apparel
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_afc8486b
comment
Awesome Anachronistic Apparel: Sir James Bond is a holdover from an earlier, more genteel age of espionage, and underscores it by wearing a series of smart Edwardian suits.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_afc8486b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_afc8486b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_afc8486b
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_b3deb1c6
type
Sexbot
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_b3deb1c6
comment
Sexbot: Jimmy Bond has made robot doubles of all the world leaders, and several opposition agents, including The Detainer. He sheepishly explains "I copied her down to the last...the two of us have had some...profoundly moving religious experiences."
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_b3deb1c6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_b3deb1c6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_b3deb1c6
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_b434558
type
Video Phone
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_b434558
comment
Video Phone: Sir James Bond calls Vesper on the video Shoe Phone while she's getting dressed. She indignantly covers the camera until she hears Bond signing off, only to remove her hand to see Bond looking downwards expectantly.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_b434558
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_b434558
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_b434558
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_b53077b3
type
Take That!
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_b53077b3
comment
Take That!: Niven's Bond calls Sean Connery's Bond a sex maniac who dragged the James Bond name through the dirt, and takes his fellow spies to task for relying on gadgets. Peter Sellers was fired/quit midway through the shoot due to chronic absences and miscellaneous poor behavior, so the filmmakers making up for this by having his character shot to death by the suddenly turncoat Vesper can be seen as this as well.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_b53077b3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_b53077b3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_b53077b3
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_bc452029
type
Strapped to an Operating Table
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_bc452029
comment
Strapped to an Operating Table: Jimmy Bond has the Detainer strapped naked to a cot (with wide, strategically placed metal straps). His intentions are strictly lustful.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_bc452029
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_bc452029
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_bc452029
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c0d32460
type
Sexy Secretary
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c0d32460
comment
Sexy Secretary: Played with - an out-of-retirement Bond enters his office and tells Moneypenny "You haven't changed a bit!". After a long smooch, she informs him that she's Moneypenny's daughter.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c0d32460
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c0d32460
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_c0d32460
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c0e891c1
type
Winged Soul Flies Off at Death
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c0e891c1
comment
Winged Soul Flies Off at Death: "Seven James Bonds at Casino Royale. They came to save the world and win a gal at Casino Royale. Six of them went to a heavenly spot. The seventh one is going to a place where it's terribly hot."
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c0e891c1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c0e891c1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_c0e891c1
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c1f378e3
type
Brick Break
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c1f378e3
comment
Brick Break: Evelyn is introduced to an agent who breaks a cinderblock with a karate chop... and accidentally knocks himself out saluting Bond. Earlier in the film, Bond cracks a boulder in half with a karate chop while showing off following a successful caber toss.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c1f378e3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c1f378e3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_c1f378e3
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c5f0119c
type
Insane Troll Logic
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c5f0119c
comment
Insane Troll Logic: Bond describes Mata Hari with the words "great little dancer, terrible spy" and their daughter Mata Bond as a "terrible dancer". From that he deduces that she "might be a great little spy" and thus the right person to infiltrate SMERSH.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c5f0119c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c5f0119c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_c5f0119c
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c6074d96
type
I Am Spartacus
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c6074d96
comment
I Am Spartacus: The original Bond gives orders that all the newly recruited agents are to be called James Bond 007.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c6074d96
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c6074d96
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_c6074d96
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c74fba76
type
Cast Full of Writers
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c74fba76
comment
Cast Full of Writers: The film falls into this category - largely because the actual script was such a mess that producers had to get the cast (who included experience writers such as John Huston, Orson Welles and Woody Allen) to try and make some sense of it. Peter Sellers, the nominal star, also wrote a lot of his own material.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c74fba76
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_c74fba76
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_c74fba76
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_cb87452d
type
Reverse Polarity
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_cb87452d
comment
Reverse Polarity: Self-inflicted when a henchman with a crude battery-powered pacemaker is unplugged by Mata Bond. He frantically reconnects himself and gets the leads wrong, running backward at high speed.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_cb87452d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_cb87452d
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1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_cb87452d
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_cd83fa5b
type
Spoiler Opening
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_cd83fa5b
comment
Spoiler Opening: The title sequence contains shots from the ending sequence.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_cd83fa5b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_cd83fa5b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_cd83fa5b
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d332bf54
type
Lampshaded
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d332bf54
comment
The Scots theme continues, including Tremble suddenly encountering bagpipers, and his French police contact Inspector Mathis (one of the few characters from the source novel) being played by a Scots actor with accent (which is even Lampshaded.)
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d332bf54
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d332bf54
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_d332bf54
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d439c910
type
Too Many Cooks Spoil the Soup
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d439c910
comment
Too Many Cooks Spoil the Soup: Five directors working on it wouldn't lead to good results.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d439c910
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d439c910
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_d439c910
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d51263b9
type
Fake Shemp
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d51263b9
comment
Fake Shemp: Peter Sellers dropped out of the picture midway through filming. Because of this, Evelyn Tremble, in the final scenes of the movie, is played by a cardboard cutout of Peter Sellers. In later versions, this cardboard cutout is replaced by previously shot footage of Sellers, dressed in Highland garb.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d51263b9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d51263b9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_d51263b9
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d5a060a8
type
Interchangeable Asian Cultures
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d5a060a8
comment
Interchangeable Asian Cultures: During the AFSD training scene, Cooper says "sayonara" to a Chinese woman.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d5a060a8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d5a060a8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_d5a060a8
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d6618014
type
Last Request
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d6618014
comment
Last Request: Jimmy Bond is in front of a firing squad, and requests a last cigarette, which is a bomb he throws at the firing squad. This distracts them which allows him to climb over the wall behind him. Of course, behind that wall is another firing squad performing another execution at that very moment.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d6618014
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d6618014
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_d6618014
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d7ecbd57
type
You're Insane!
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d7ecbd57
comment
You're Insane!:
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d7ecbd57
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d7ecbd57
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_d7ecbd57
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d8d22bb0
type
Dutch Angle
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d8d22bb0
comment
Dutch Angle: This type of shot is used extensively in a sequence with Mata Bond in Berlin, appropriately in a German Expressionist-style set.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d8d22bb0
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d8d22bb0
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_d8d22bb0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d9d864e2
type
Stage Magician
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d9d864e2
comment
Stage Magician: Le Chiffre does a few magic tricks during the poker scene. This is because magic-loving Orson Welles was allowed to do them to keep him happy as the shoot dragged on. They're reportedly all genuine illusions, with no camera tricks.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d9d864e2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d9d864e2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_d9d864e2
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d9e9ad7e
type
The Cavalry
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d9e9ad7e
comment
The Cavalry: played for laughs in the climax, with the arrival of cowboys, Indians and the French foreign legion.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d9e9ad7e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_d9e9ad7e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_d9e9ad7e
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_da1c8191
type
Writers Cannot Do Math
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_da1c8191
comment
Writers Cannot Do Math: As pointed out in the recap by The Agony Booth, if Mata Bond really is the daughter of Mata Hari, she should be at least fifty years old.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_da1c8191
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_da1c8191
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_da1c8191
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ddb8ba26
type
Shot at Dawn
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ddb8ba26
comment
Shot at Dawn: Jimmy Bond is in front of a Banana Republic firing squad. He gets away using a concussion grenade hidden in his last cigarette, jumps the wall - and lands in front of a firing squad in the neighboring country.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ddb8ba26
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ddb8ba26
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_ddb8ba26
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e08f95fd
type
Everything's Louder with Bagpipes
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e08f95fd
comment
Everything's Louder with Bagpipes: Vesper uses a bagpipe/machine gun on a corps of pipers attacking Evelyn, and then on him. Early in the movie, agents playing M's widow and daughters try to corrupt Bond at a funeral fling with piping, drinking, and dancing, but he ends up the last person standing.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e08f95fd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e08f95fd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_e08f95fd
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e132a621
type
Fluffy Cloud Heaven
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e132a621
comment
Fluffy Cloud Heaven and Fire and Brimstone Hell: Spoofed in the final scene. "Six of them went to a heavenly spot, the seventh one is going to a place where it's terribly hot."
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e132a621
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e132a621
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_e132a621
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e1ec301
type
Cover Drop
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e1ec301
comment
Cover Drop: During the opening credits, notice the images of explosions and several characters as angels. These will make sense at the very end.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e1ec301
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e1ec301
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_e1ec301
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e5421161
type
Expy
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e5421161
comment
Expy: Terence Cooper's character, "Coop" (a.k.a. James Bond), is the only Bond in the entire film to resemble the Bond of the EON film series (even though he is closer in appearance and personality to the later Roger Moore Bond).
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e5421161
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e5421161
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_e5421161
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e743ffa9
type
Good Old Ways
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e743ffa9
comment
Good Old Ways: Bond considers spying to be a noble calling and expresses contempt for the current breed exemplified by his namesake.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e743ffa9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e743ffa9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_e743ffa9
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e933b1f7
type
Follow That Car
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e933b1f7
comment
Follow That Car: Spoofed, with race car driver Stirling Moss in a cameo as the running chauffeur.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e933b1f7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e933b1f7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_e933b1f7
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e9fcaa
type
The Taxi
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e9fcaa
comment
The Taxi: Mata Bond has to leave London for Berlin, so naturally they flag a taxi. When it's specified to be West Berlin, the driver's okay with it.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e9fcaa
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_e9fcaa
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_e9fcaa
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ee6edfec
type
Arsenal Attire
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ee6edfec
comment
Arsenal Attire: Taken to the point of absurdity — Q has just developed a vest with one hundred different (and painfully obvious) functions.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ee6edfec
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ee6edfec
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_ee6edfec
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ee7a60e9
type
One-Steve Limit
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ee7a60e9
comment
One-Steve Limit: Sir James Bond spearheads a campaign against SMERSH - he gives all his agents (men and women alike) the name James Bond, to keep the enemy confused.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ee7a60e9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ee7a60e9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_ee7a60e9
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ef478375
type
Hiccup Hijinks
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ef478375
comment
Hiccup Hijinks: Jimmy Bond is tricked into swallowing an aspirin that makes him hiccup 1,000 times and then explode. The explosion destroys the Casino Royale and kills pretty much the entire cast.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ef478375
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ef478375
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_ef478375
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ef54d219
type
Footsie Under the Table
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ef54d219
comment
Footsie Under the Table: SMERSH attempts to destroy Sir James Bond's Celibate Hero image through almost certain temptation - at M's castle at a funeral dinner, two female agents flanking him drape their legs over his.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ef54d219
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_ef54d219
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_ef54d219
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_f018c5cf
type
Offhand Backhand
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_f018c5cf
comment
Offhand Backhand: A nice dual example with Sir James and Ransome during the climactic fight scene, with no break in their conversation.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_f018c5cf
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_f018c5cf
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_f018c5cf
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_f2d8e3c2
type
Evil Plan
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_f2d8e3c2
comment
Evil Plan: Pretty much the same as the book, except Le Chiffre is working for SMERSH and his double-dealings are a side-plot to SMERSH's master plan, which involves murdering spies all over the world (like the Real Life SMERSH, a Soviet counter-intelligence agency) and to fill the world with a biological agent at the behest of Doctor Noah aka Jimmy Bond. The agent will kill all men over 4'6" (his height) and make all women beautiful; in other words leaving him as the "big man" who gets all the girls.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_f2d8e3c2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_f2d8e3c2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_f2d8e3c2
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_f438b11b
type
Who's Laughing Now?
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_f438b11b
comment
Who's Laughing Now?: Jimmy Bond is the Big Bad, intending to conquer the world as revenge against his famous, and infinitely more stylish and sophisticated, uncle.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_f438b11b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_f438b11b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Casino Royale (1967)
hasFeature
Casino Royale (1967) / int_f438b11b
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_f47bdd2a
type
Violent Glaswegian
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_f47bdd2a
comment
Violent Glaswegian: A bunch of tough Scotsmen who challenge Bond to a game of catch with stone cannonballs, a Highland marching band that roughs up Peter Sellers in a programmed hallucination, and Scots henchmen in Jimmy Bond's underground lair. Also, French police officer Mathis speaks with a Scots accent, which worries him.
 Casino Royale (1967) / int_f47bdd2a
featureApplicability
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Americans Are Cowboys: The American army is apparently composed of Cowboys and Indians.
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The Baroness
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The Baroness: Parodied with Frau Hoffner—she runs a finger over a facial scar as she purrs to Mata Bond "You are even more fascinating zan your mother!"
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Strongly Worded Letter: Jimmy Bond threatens to write an angry letter to The Times, as he's stood before a firing squad.
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Insult Backfire: The Detainer is held captive by Jimmy Bond:
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Dartboard of Hate
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comment
Dartboard of Hate: Dr. Noah, pathologically jealous of his uncle Sir James Bond, has his face printed on a punching bag. He takes a punch at it, and gets punched back as it recoils.
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Door Roulette
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Door Roulette: Sir James and Moneypenny end up in a hall with many doors which all look alike.
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Phlebotinum Bomb
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Phlebotinum Bomb: Jimmy Bond is devising a weapon that will make all women beautiful and kill all men who are taller than he is.
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