Information about Never Say Never Again

Never Say Never Again

Never Say Never Again movie poster
James BondSean Connery
Also starringKlaus Maria Brandauer
Kim Basinger
Barbara Carrera
Max von Sydow
Bernie Casey
Alec McCowen
Edward Fox
Directed byIrvin Kershner
Produced byJack Schwartzman
Novel/Story byKevin McClory
Jack Whittingham
Ian Fleming
ScreenplayLorenzo Semple Jr.
Cinematography byDouglas Slocombe
Music byMichel Legrand
Main themeNever Say Never Again
ComposerAlan Bergman
Marilyn Bergman
PerformerLani Hall
Distributed byWarner Bros.
ReleasedOctober 7, 1983
Running time134 min.
Budget$36,000,000
Worldwide gross$160,000,000
Admissions (world)50.8 million
IMDb profile


Never Say Never Again, released in 1983, is the unofficial remake of the 1965 James Bond film Thunderball. It starred Sean Connery as the famous British Secret Service agent (as did Thunderball), and was released theatrically by Warner Bros.

The film is considered an "unofficial" James Bond film because it is not part of the Bond film franchise produced by EON Productions and United Artists, even though it is currently owned by United Artists parent MGM.[1] MGM acquired the distribution rights in 1997 after their acquisition of Orion Pictures. The film also marks the culmination of a long legal battle between United Artists and Kevin McClory.

Originally, the film was scheduled for release in direct competition against the official, EON Productions Bond film, Octopussy starring Roger Moore, which led to the media dubbing the situation 'The Battle of the Bonds'. Ultimately, the two films were released at different times in 1983, and both were box office successes — although Octopussy ended up making more money than Never Say Never Again.

Plot

Never Say Never Again follows a similar plotline to the film and novel Thunderball, but with some differences.

The film opens with a middle-aged, yet still athletic James Bond making his way through an armed camp in order to rescue a girl who has been kidnapped. After killing the kidnappers, Bond lets his guard down, forgetting that the girl might have been subject to the Stockholm syndrome (in which a kidnapped person comes to identify with his/her kidnappers) and is stabbed to death by her. Or so it seems.

In fact, the attack on the camp is nothing more than a field training exercise using blank ammunition and fake knives, and one Bond fails because he ends up "dead" (a previous 'fake' mission saw his legs get blown off by a land mine). A new M is now in office, one who sees little use for the 00-section. In fact, Bond has spent most of his recent time teaching, rather than doing, a fact he points out with some resentment.

Feeling that Bond is slipping, M orders him to enroll in a health clinic in order to "eliminate all those free radicals" and get back into shape. While there, Bond discovers a mysterious nurse (Fatima Blush) and her patient, who is wrapped in bandages. His suspicions are aroused even further when a thug (Lippe) tries to kill him.



She and Blush's charge, an American Air Force pilot named Jack Petachi, are in fact operatives of SPECTRE, a criminal organisation run by Ernst Stavro Blofeld. Petachi has undergone an operation to alter one of his retinas to match the retinal pattern of the American President. Using his position as a pilot and the president's eye pattern to circumvent security, Petachi infiltrates an American military base in England and orders the dummy warheads in two cruise missiles replaced with two live nuclear warheads, which SPECTRE captures and uses to extort billions of dollars from the governments of the world.

M reluctantly reactivates the 00 section, and Bond is assigned the task of tracking down the missing weapons, beginning with a rendezvous with Domino Petachi, the pilot's sister, who is kept a virtual prisoner by her lover, Maximillian Largo. Bond pursues Largo and his yacht to the Bahamas, where he engages Domino, Fatima Blush, and Largo in a game of wits and resources as he attempts to derail SPECTRE's scheme.

Cast

Filming

The Flying Saucer, Largo's ship, is a translation of "the Disco Volante", the name of Largo's ship in Thunderball. In this film, the Flying Saucer dramatically dwarfs the vessel present in the official film continuity and, as Largo observes, has the offices and computer power to "run a small country from here." The Disco is still the base of underwater operations by Largo. In real life, the 282' yacht used in long shots was known as the "Nabila" and was built for Saudi billionaire, Adnan Khashoggi. The yacht was later sold to Donald Trump who renamed it "Trump Princess." Later Trump sold it to Prince Alwaleed bin Talal bin Abdul Aziz al Saud who christened it the "Kingdom 5KR." The casino where Bond and Largo go head to head in a video game was called Casino Royale.

This scene also prevented author John Gardner from having a somewhat similar scene involving Bond playing a computer game over a LAN in Gardner's novel Role of Honour. Bond was supposed to be playing a simulation of "The Battle of Waterloo", this was later changed to a different type of game involving "The Battle of Bunker Hill".

McClory originally planned for the film to open with some version of the famous "gunbarrel" opening as seen in the official Bond series, but ultimately the film opens with a screenful of "007" symbols instead. When the soundtrack for the film was released on CD, it included a piece of music composed for the proposed opening.

The film re-used submarine special-effect footage from Ice Station Zebra.

Klaus Maria Brandauer, who played Largo, was originally cast as Marko Ramius in The Hunt for Red October; the role eventually went to Connery.

Casting

Rowan Atkinson, who later became world-famous for the Mr. Bean comedy series, played a British agent in this movie, the bumbling Nigel Small-Fawcett. Later he would play a James Bond parody in Johnny English.

According to the Lee Pfeiffer/Philip Lisa book "The Films of Sean Connery," Richard Donner was given the chance to direct but declined.

Barbara Carrera was nominated for a Golden Globe for her portrayal of Fatima Blush.

Changes to the Bond universe

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The film makes changes to the James Bond universe, and to the noticeably older character of 007 – having him drive his beloved new Bentley from the novels, for example. There is a gritty realism to the entire environment and a recognition of the geopolitics of the early 1980s and the rising powers of the Middle East, driven by oil money.

MI6 is shown to be underfunded and understaffed, the new M (this is acknowledged) played by Edward Fox having little time for 007's methods and exploits, and taking an accountant's attitude (which would eventually be picked up in the official EON series with Judi Dench becoming another new M in GoldenEye). With regards to Q Branch, the character Q is referred to by the name "Algernon" and may also be a different individual from the 'Q' in the official Bond series (where Q's first name is never revealed). His personality is also very different, as is his impoverished background environment; Algernon makes no bones about expecting "gratuitous sex and violence" from Bond, which the 'Q' of the official series is very much against. James Bond does not have a wonder-car, either — rather a sprightly and mildly armed motorcycle that Algernon promises to send him if he can "get it to work".

Maximilian Largo's Disco Volante (known here by its English language name, The Flying Saucer) has experienced changes. Still launching a wet-sub from a secret chamber, the Disco is now a civilian frigate, and equipped with the amenities expected within a villain's lair, and particularly of a villain with superb taste and a definite European character.

Perhaps the most notable change is in the depiction of Felix Leiter, Bond's CIA friend and colleague, who is portrayed by a black actor for the first time (the 2006 version of Casino Royale, MGM/Columbia's official reboot of the Bond film franchise, also features a black Leiter). This film also appears to take place in an "alternative universe" in which none of the events of SPECTRE-involving films such as You Only Live Twice, On Her Majesty's Secret Service, and Diamonds Are Forever (which followed the original Thunderball) have taken place, since Blofeld is active and apparently previously unknown to Bond and MI6 at this point. The film also makes a major departure from "official" continuity by ending with Bond indicating his intention to retire from MI6 (and settle down with his leading lady). Actor Connery also breaks the fourth wall during this scene by winking at the camera (something George Lazenby previously did in On Her Majesty's Secret Service).

A change that the movie makes to the Bond films as a whole resides mainly in the introduction. In the EON productions, Bond is shown through a gunbarrel, then turns swiftly and shoots the screen. In Never Say Never Again, the camera zooms in on a long sequence of '007s', through which the set for the beginning of the movie appears. Also, the credits are shown after the sequence after the gunbarrel in the official films. In "Never Say Never Again", the credits are shown during the sequence.

Another notable difference is Bond's gun. The official films had Bond using a Walther PPK colored as dark brown with light brown sides of the handgrip. Bond's gun in "Never Say Never Again" is a Walther P5 that is completely black.

Release and reception

Domination within the film

In the film at a casino Bond and Largo play a holographic table-top video game called “Domination” designed by Largo himself. The losing player is subject to electric shock. Bond wins, but instead of taking cash for his victory he takes a dance with Domino.

Other cultural works have been inspired by this scene. The aspect of two men playing a three dimensional table top video game at a high end cultural venue drawing the rapt attention of beautiful women and sophisticates was used during a Super Bowl XLI commercial featuring Jay-Z and Don Shula. This portrayal of a game in the film is also often mentioned in discussions of the German art project/video game called PainStation that applies electric shocks to players as they lose at a table top 2-D variant of Pong.[2]

References

1. ^ [1]
2. ^ PainStation (EN). Retrieved on Feb. 6, 2007

External links

Gender Male
Affiliation British Secret Service
Current status Active
Portrayed by Barry Nelson (1954 unofficial television)
Bob Holness (1954 unofficial radio)
Sean Connery (1962-1967; 1971; 1983 unofficial film)
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Sir Sean Connery

Connery at the premiere of Seems Like Old Times in 1980.
Birth name Thomas Sean Connery
Born July 25 1930 (1930--) (age 77)
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Klaus Maria Brandauer

Klaus Maria Brandauer, spring 2003 in Biberach/Riß
Birth name Klaus Georg Steng
Born May 22 1944 (1944--) (age 63)
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Kim Basinger

Kim Basinger in 1990
Birth name Kimila Ann Basinger
Born November 8 1953 (1953--) (age 55)
Athens, Georgia, U.S.
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Bárbara Carrera

Born November 30 1951 (1951--) (age 57)
Bluefields, Nicaragua
Died

Years active 1970–2004

Awards

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Max von Sydow

Max von Sydow at the 2006 San Sebastian International Film Festival
Birth name Max Carl Adolf von Sydow
Born March 10 1929 (1929--) (age 78)
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Bernie Casey

May 8 1939 (1939--) (age 68)
Wyco, West Virginia

Position(s)| Wide Receiver
College| Bowling Green State
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Alec McCowen (born May 26, 1925) is an English actor, best known for classical roles including Shakespeare.

Early life

He was born in Tunbridge Wells, Kent, the son of Mary and Duncan McCowen.
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Edward Fox

Birth name Edward Charles Morrice Fox
Born March 13 1937 (1937--) (age 70)
Chelsea, London, UK
Died

Years active
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Irvin Kershner (born April 29, 1923 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), is an American film director and occasional actor.

Background

Irvin Kershner's background is a mixture of music and art.
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Jack Schwartzman (July 22, 1932, New York City, New York - June 15, 1994, Los Angeles, California) was a producer and husband of actress Talia Shire. Schwartzman, born Jacob Schwartzman
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Ian Fleming
Casino Royale (1953) • Live and Let Die (1954) • Moonraker (1955) • Diamonds Are Forever (1956) • From Russia with Love (1957) • Dr.
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Kevin O'Donovan McClory (8 June 1926 - 20 November 2006) was an Irish screenwriter, producer, and director. McClory was best known for the 1983 James Bond film Never Say Never Again
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Jack Whittingham (1910 - July 3, 1972) was a British playwright, film critic, and screenwriter.

He is particularly famous for having collaborated with Ian Fleming and Kevin McClory on a James Bond screenplay for a film.
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Ian Lancaster Fleming

Born: May 28 1908(1908--)
Mayfair, London
Died: July 12 1964 (aged 56)

Occupation: Author and journalist
Nationality: British
Writing period: 1953 to 1964
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Lorenzo Semple Jr. (born 1923) is an American screenwriter and sometime playwright, best known for his work on the campy television series Batman and the political/paranoia movie thrillers The Parallax View (1974) and Three Days of the Condor (1975).
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Douglas Slocombe (b. February 10, 1913) is a British cinematographer who has enjoyed a long career in the British film industry. His many films as director of photography include Robbery (1967), The Italian Job (1969), Nijinsky
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007" (sometimes referred to as the "007 Theme"), is an adventure theme composed by John Barry in 1963 for the Bond film, From Russia with Love.

It became a secondary Bond theme, being used in quite a few Bond movies, primarily during action scenes.
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Michel Legrand (born February 24, 1932 in Paris) is a French musical composer, arranger, conductor, and pianist.

Legrand has composed more than two hundred film and television scores, several musicals, and made well over a hundred albums.
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007" (sometimes referred to as the "007 Theme"), is an adventure theme composed by John Barry in 1963 for the Bond film, From Russia with Love.

It became a secondary Bond theme, being used in quite a few Bond movies, primarily during action scenes.
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For the American Ballet Dancer see Alan Bergman (Dancer).


Alan Bergman (born September 11, 1925) is a prolific American prolific lyricist and songwriter.
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Marilyn Bergman (born November 10, 1929) is a composer, songwriter and author.

She was born Marilyn Katz in Brooklyn, New York and studied psychology and English at New York University.
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Lani Hall (born November 6, 1945 in Chicago, Illinois) is an American singer.

Music career

Hall first came to be known to the public at large when she joined the second Brasil project of Bossa Nova master Sergio Mendes, Brasil '66.
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Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc., or Warner Bros. (pronounced Warner Brothers), is one of the world's largest producers of film and television entertainment.

It is currently a subsidiary of the Time Warner conglomerate, with its headquarters in Burbank, California.
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October 7 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.

Events

  • 3761 BC - The epoch (origin) of the modern Hebrew calendar (Proleptic Julian calendar).

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-1983- 1984 1985 1986  1987 .  1988 .  1989 .  1990  . 1991  . 1992  . 1993 
In home video: 1980 1981 1982 -1983- 1984 1985 1986     
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-1983- 1984 1985 1986  1987 .  1988 .  1989 .  1990  . 1991  . 1992  . 1993 
In home video: 1980 1981 1982 -1983- 1984 1985 1986     
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In film, a remake is a newer version of a previously released film or a newer version of the source (play, novel, story, etc.) of a previously made film. The term "remake" is generally used in reference to a movie which uses an earlier movie as the main source material, rather than
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-1965- 1966 1967 1968  1969 .  1970 .  1971 .  1972  . 1973  . 1974  . 1975 

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James Bond 007 is a fictional British agent[1] created in 1952 by writer Ian Fleming, featured in twelve novels, two anthologies, and a film series.[2]
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