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Rico 2021-11-14 08:01:22
The best and worst Bond: Love from Russia
007's feelings about love watching movies from Russia:
1. As an action movie in the 1960s, it is of course unfair to use a modern perspective to evaluate the action movies of the year. In the storyline, perhaps this is the 007 movie closest to the spy movie. The British Intelligence Agency, the...
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Liam 2021-11-14 08:01:22
It's more than just a razor
It is more than just a what. This sentence pattern is currently most commonly used in "998" shopping programs on various local channels. The reason, I think, is because it is concise enough, connotative enough, has a gimmick, and can attract attention.
Internet communism is now, and old...

George Pastell
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Jan 2021-11-14 08:01:22
7.5. Not bad. Dr. Noir is stronger. In this game, the presence of the Ghost Party is much stronger. The big boss with the cat in his arms also makes his debut for the first time. It seems that the layout of the opposition between the British and the Soviet Union looks a lot like that. There are also many good points. The opening courtyard play is a tribute to the huge poster killing last year in Marienbad, which was later learned by Suzuki Kiyoshi. The action scene on the train was also very good (later paid tribute by Jin Min ), I also neta the Orient Express, haha. But a few scenes after the train were more hip, the plane chasing the drama to the north-northwest was too obvious, and the pistol was unable to complain. The erotic meaning of early 007 is really heavy. To put it bluntly, it really sells colors. Spies and actions are all auxiliary.
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Blake 2022-03-25 09:01:06
This film is the second episode of the "007" series, and it is also Sean Connery's favorite Bond movie. The film truly established the tone of the series (brave agents, sexy Bond girls, Cold War, new agent gear, and all kinds of hot scenes), but it was still unremarkable, and the lack of suspense led to the film's dramatic tension. Next, the saving grace is that Sean Connery is far more calm than the performance of the previous "Dr. No", creating an elegant and witty James Bond and the image of an Italian Bond girl (unfortunately still a vase).
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James Bond: Now, listen, just do as I say, will you?
Tatiana: Yes, James.
[James slaps Tatiana on the fanny]
Tatiana: But, there are some English customs - zat are going to be changed.
James Bond: But, of course, darling.
[hands Tatiana his tie, she puts it in her mouth, stretches it out, smiles, and playfully laughs]
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Donald "Red" Grant: We were keeping you alive until you could get us the Lektor.
James Bond: So, you had me deliver it on a silver plate? That's brilliant. Go on, I'm fascinated.
Donald "Red" Grant: Now that we've got it, you and the girl are expendable... from here onto Trieste.
James Bond: The girl? Isn't she working for SPECTRE too?
Donald "Red" Grant: No. She thinks she's doing it all for Mother Russia. She takes her orders from Colonel Klebb. And so do I.
James Bond: Rosa Klebb? But Colonel Rosa Klebb is a Russian, head of operations for SMERSH.
Donald "Red" Grant: Correction: was. Klebb works for SPECTRE now. The girl doesn't know that.
James Bond: But why kill her?
Donald "Red" Grant: Orders. That's only half of it, old man.
[Grant pulls out a roll of 8mm film and an envelope from his suit pocket]
Donald "Red" Grant: Here's a roll of film. She'll have this in her handbag. And on you they'll find this letter. It's from her, threatening to give the film to the press unless you marry her for helping you steal the Lektor.
James Bond: [confused] What film?
Donald "Red" Grant: [sneers] Taken in the bridal suite at your hotel. Something else the girl didn't know about... or you.