Thunderball
:There is also a game in the UK National Lottery called Thunderball
The film
Prior to the agreement in which Thunderball would become the fourth official James Bond film, producers Albert R. Broccoli and Harry Saltzman had planned to follow Goldfinger with On Her Majesty's Secret Service, which some prints of the film claim in the closing "James Bond will return" line. For the film, Richard Maibaum revised his 1961 screen adaptation he initially wrote to be the first James Bond film. John Hopkins was later brought in to add the finishing touches.
Related Topics:
Goldfinger - On Her Majesty's Secret Service - Richard Maibaum - John Hopkins
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Since teaming up with Ian Fleming, Kevin McClory had always wanted to direct the film himself; however, the agreement with EON did not allow this. Instead McClory took on the role of executive producer. Consequently, with the exception of GoldenEye (1995), Thunderball is the only official James Bond film for which Broccoli, during his lifetime, did not receive credit as producer. Initially, Broccoli turned to director Guy Hamilton, who directed Goldfinger. Hamilton turned the job down claiming that he had done all he could with the Bond character, although he would later return in 1971 for Diamonds Are Forever as well as Live and Let Die (1973), The Man with the Golden Gun (1974), and was at one point attached to direct The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), but backed out to pursue other films. Terence Young, who directed the first two Bond films, Dr. No and From Russia With Love, was subsequently chosen.
Related Topics:
Kevin McClory - Executive producer - GoldenEye - 1995 - Producer - Guy Hamilton - 1971 - Diamonds Are Forever - Live and Let Die - 1973 - The Man with the Golden Gun - 1974 - The Spy Who Loved Me - 1977 - Terence Young - Dr. No - From Russia With Love
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Sean Connery, who already had a contract to do a certain number of Bond films, returned to the role of James Bond; however, he had started to have reservations about the role and the future of the James Bond film franchise. In February 1965 Connery was quoted in The Daily Mail saying,
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:"I think it could be better than the last one, but I can't see the cycle going on past that. Though I am signed to do two more - OHMSS and one other. But who knows? America seems to lap them up... My only grumble about the Bond films is that they don't tax one as an actor... I'd like to see someone else tackle Bond, I must say - though I think they'd be crazy to do it."
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Although this is the fourth official James Bond film, it is the first time Sean Connery performed the gun barrel intro sequence, traditionally present at the beginning of all Bond films. Previously, stuntman Bob Simmons performed the scene. The sequence was reshot primarily because this is the first James Bond film to be shot in the widescreen process Panavision. The sequence is also, for the first time, in color rather than in black and white (although a black-and-white version of the sequence would be used in Diamonds Are Forever).
Related Topics:
Bob Simmons - Panavision
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Thunderballs release in 1965 marks the height of what is generally referred to as "spymania" that was essentially created after the cinema success of Dr. No, From Russia With Love, and Goldfinger. Fueled by James Bond, 20 new spy films had been announced to be either in preproduction or production in 1965 and numerous successful television shows featuring similar spy elements and secret agents were just beginning, such as The Man from U.N.C.L.E., I Spy, The Wild Wild West, and Get Smart. When Thunderball was released, it became the most financially successful Bond film to date and the most successful of Sean Connery's official Bond films, taking in $141.2 million worldwide. John Cork's James Bond: The Legacy {{ref|Success}}, a book about the cultural impact of James Bond states, "Thunderball would go on to sell over 58.1 million tickets in the U.S., which at the end of 1965 had 194.5 million inhabitants. In raw terms, this meant that statistically more than one in every four Americans paid to go and see the movie. The film became the highest-grossing hit of 1966 all over the world." Additionally, to date, Thunderball is the only James Bond film to rank #1 on the American box office chart. With inflation taken into account, Thunderball is also the most financially successful Bond film ever. In 1966, it became the second James Bond film to be nominated and win an Academy Award. John Stears won for Best Visual Effects.
Related Topics:
Television shows - The Man from U.N.C.L.E. - I Spy - The Wild Wild West - Get Smart - Academy Award - John Stears - Best Visual Effects
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On November 20th 2005, a special 40th Anniversary screening is being held in London (UK) with surviving members of the cast and crew in attendance.
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Plot summary
Like most of the earlier James Bond films, Thunderball is a close adaptation of the Ian Fleming novel with changes mostly for the pre-title credits, the inclusion of gadgets, and an update of technology.
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The film begins with James Bond attending the funeral of Jacques Boitier, a S.P.E.C.T.R.E. agent who had murdered two British agents. As it would turn out, a woman who Bond notices open a car door for herself at the funeral is Boitier in disguise. Bond comes to this realization and ambushes Boitier at his château where he kills him. Afterwards, Bond escapes using a jetpack to fly to his car parked outside the château where he has a brief battle with his pursuers, during which Bond uses water cannons on the Aston Martin DB5.
Related Topics:
British - Aston Martin - DB5
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A major difference between the novel and film versions of Thunderball is that, in the film continuity, Bond was first introduced to S.P.E.C.T.R.E. in Dr. No and the events of From Russia With Love are also masterminded by the organization. The plot of Thunderball deals with S.P.E.C.T.R.E. attempting to hold the world hostage by hijacking two nuclear bombs. In the film, the Avro Vulcan that is transporting the bombs is hijacked by a S.P.E.C.T.R.E. henchman who has undergone plastic surgery to appear as a NATO observer that would accompany the pilots on the trip. Once in control of the plane, the henchman lands it in the middle of the ocean near the Bahamas where Emilio Largo (number two in S.P.E.C.T.R.E.) and his men retrieve the warheads and conceal the plane from any sort of overhead reconnaissance looking for it. The bomb retrieval begins after Largo kills the man posing as the NATO observer because he demanded more money prior to the hijacking.
Related Topics:
Dr. No - From Russia With Love - Avro Vulcan - Plastic surgery - NATO - Emilio Largo
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Prior to this event, Bond is ordered by M to attend a health farm in order to improve his physical condition. While enjoying a massage from a sexy attendant, Bond meets Count Lippe, a shifty individual who becomes distrustful of Bond when 007 notices a gangland tattoo on the Count's arm. Lippe subsequently attempts to murder Bond on a traction machine, but Bond is rescued by the attendant (whom he promptly beds); Bond subsequently has his revenge by trapping Lippe in a steam bath, although the count survives. Things become stranger when Bond finds a dead man wrapped in bandages, and survives yet another attempt on his life.
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Due to the S.P.E.C.T.R.E. crisis, MI6 calls an emergency conference where a number of 00-agents are briefed and given assignments (although no faces are clearly seen, this is the first time 00-agents other than Bond have been seen on-screen). Initially M assigns Bond to Canada, but Bond recognizes a photo of the NATO observer as the dead man he saw at the health club. Since the NATO observer's sister is in Nassau, M allows Bond to journey there to investigate. The sister, Domino, played by Claudine Auger, is Largo's mistress. Bond exploits this connection to get close to Largo after meeting Domino while scuba diving.
Related Topics:
M - Canada - Nassau - Claudine Auger
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An additional character in the film is Fiona Volpe (played by Luciana Paluzzi), who is not in the novel. A member of S.P.E.C.T.R.E., she was responsible for the substitution of the NATO observer, and attempts to kill Bond after rendezvousing with Largo in Nassau. She is later shot in the back by a bullet intended for Bond while dancing at a nightclub with him during local Junkanoo celebrations. Bond leaves her body at a table, saying: "Look after my friend. She's just dead."
Related Topics:
Luciana Paluzzi - Junkanoo
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Amongst Bond fans it is controversial as to whether or not Bond intentionally moves her into the path of the bullet, Fleming's Bond being against killing anyone in cold blood.
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In Nassau, Bond teams up with Felix Leiter and the two set out to find the hijacked plane, which they eventually find along with the corpse of the phony NATO observer. Afterwards Bond informs Domino that her brother was killed by Largo and pleads for her to aid him in finding the nuclear warheads. She gives Bond information that allows for him to take the place of a S.P.E.C.T.R.E. agent on a mission with Largo, who is retreiving the nuclear warheads from their underwater hiding place, in order to plant one at its target just off the coast of Florida. After an underwater battle that Bond barely escapes from, he is rescued by Leiter from the underwater cave where the bombs were concealed. Bond informs Felix of the location of the bomb, and the Bond as well as a platoon of U.S. Navy Frogmen parachute to the location of the bomb where a massive underwater battle takes place. Bond eliminates numerous S.P.E.C.T.R.E. frogmen, utlizing various high tech devices, as well as his bare hands. As the battle ends, Largo escapes to the Disco Volante which still has one of the two warheads aboard, and Bond follows, sneaking onto the vessel. Bond encounters Largo, who is attempting to escape by using the Disco Volante's hydrofoil to speed away. The two have a fierce hand-to-hand fight; however, Largo is shot in the back with a speargun by Domino. Bond and Domino jump overboard as the out of control hydrofoil runs aground and explodes.
Related Topics:
Felix Leiter - Florida - U.S. Navy - Frogmen
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Cast & characters
- James Bond - Sean Connery
- Dominique 'Domino' Derval - Claudine Auger
- M - Bernard Lee
- Miss Moneypenny - Lois Maxwell
- Q - Desmond Llewelyn
- Felix Leiter - Rik Van Nutter
- Emilio Largo, aka 'Number 2' - Adolfo Celi — dubbed by Robert Rietty
- Fiona Volpe - Luciana Paluzzi
- Count Lippe - Guy Doleman
- Francois Derval/Angelo Palazzi - Paul Stassino
- Vargas - Philip Locke
- Wladislav Kutze - George Pravda
Crew
- Directed by: Terence Young
- Produced by: Kevin McClory
- Written by: Kevin McClory, Ian Fleming, Jack Whittingham
- Screenplay by: Richard Maibaum, John Hopkins
- Music composed by: John Barry
- Cinematography by: Ted Moore
- Supervising editor: Peter R. Hunt
- Production design by Ken Adam
Due to the agreement with Kevin McClory, Albert R. Broccoli and Harry Saltzman are not credited as producers of the film, and are instead credited as the movie being "presented by" them.
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Soundtrack
The original title credit theme to Thunderball was entitled "Mr. Kiss-Kiss, Bang-Bang", which was written by John Barry and Leslie Bricusse. The title was taken from an Italian journalist who in 1962 dubbed agent 007 as Mr. Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang. The song was originally recorded by Shirley Bassey, but was later rerecorded by Dionne Warwick, whose version was not released until the 1990s. The song was removed from the title credits after producers Albert R. Broccoli and Harry Saltzman were worried that a theme song to a James Bond movie would not work well if the song did not have the title of the film in its lyrics. John Barry teamed up with lyricist Don Black and wrote "Thunderball". "Thunderball" was sung by Tom Jones who, according to Bond production legend, fainted in the recording booth when singing the song's final, high note. Jones said of the final note, "I closed my eyes and I held the note for so long when I opened my eyes the room was spinning." {{ref|FreshAir}}
Related Topics:
John Barry - Leslie Bricusse - Italian - Shirley Bassey - Dionne Warwick - Don Black - Tom Jones
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The rest of the soundtrack for the film was also composed by John Barry; this was his third soundtrack for the series. The soundtrack was actually still unfinished days before the release of the film and even when the soundtrack album was released to stores. The original soundtrack only featured twelve tracks, roughly only the first half of the film; the last seven tracks listed below were released for the first time when the soundtrack was issued on CD in the early 2000s.
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Track listing
- "Thunderball" — Tom Jones
- "Chateau Flight"
- "The Spa"
- "Switching the Body"
- "The Bomb"
- "Cafe Martinique"
- "Thunderball"
- "Death of Fiona"
- "Bond Below Disco Volante"
- "Search for the Vulcan"
- "007"
- "Mr. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang"
- "Gunbarrel / Traction Table / Gassing the Plane / Car Chase"
- "Bond Meets Domino /Shark Tank / Lights out for Paula / For King and Country"
- "Street Chase"
- "Finding the Plane / Underwater Ballet / Bond with SPECTRE Frogmen / Leiter to the Rescue / Bond Joins"
- "Underwater Battle"
- "Underwater Mayhem / Death of Largo / End Titles"
- "Mr. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (Mono)" — Dionne Warwick
Vehicles & gadgets
In Thunderball, the famous Aston Martin DB5 makes its second appearance, previously in Goldfinger. For this film a surprise modification of rear water cannons were used in the opening pre-title sequence, although the vehicle itself has a noticeably weathered appearance that goes unexplained (perhaps suggesting other, unseen adventures). Also used in the pre-title sequence was the "Bell Textron jet pack", also referred to as the "rocket belt" by the Bell Aircraft Corporation. The rocket belt, which was used by Bond to escape from a building, actually works and was used numerous times afterwards for entertainment and amusement purposes; most notably Super Bowl I and at a regularly scheduled show at the 1964-1965 New York World's Fair {{ref|Rocketbelt}}. The very popular rocket belt made a cameo appearance in 2002's Die Another Day and is a feature borrowed for the video game adaptation of From Russia With Love.
Related Topics:
Aston Martin DB5 - Goldfinger - Water cannon - Jet pack - Bell Aircraft Corporation - Super Bowl I - 2002's - Die Another Day - Video game - From Russia With Love
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Q branch provides Bond with a number of other gadgets throughout the film, which were given to Bond while in the field, a first in the Bond films. Included was a homer pill that when swallowed emits a signal that helps headquarters trace his whereabouts, a waterproof watch that doubles as a Geiger counter and a camera that doubles as a Geiger counter. Bond was also outfitted with an underwater jet pack that was armed with a spear gun. It was used by Bond to maneuver through the water faster than anyone else. Lastly, Bond was given a "rebreather", which was a small scuba device that can be carried unnoticed and, when used, provides a few minutes of air in underwater emergencies. After the film's release there was some confusion as to whether a "rebreather" of this size actually existed and worked, since most of Bond's gadgets (at the time), while possibly implausible, were somewhat based on real gadgets. The rebreather did not exist, but would appear again in a couple future Bond films, most notably Die Another Day and would also possibly be the inspiration for other similar devices found in other movies such as '.
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Locations
Film locations
Shooting locations
Filmed in Caribbean locales, Thunderball is remarkable for its underwater scenes, which contributed greatly to the popularization of scuba diving as recreation. While in Nassau during one of the final days of shooting, John Stears, the special effects supervisor, was supplied experimental rocket fuel to use to blow up Largo's ship, the Disco Volante. Not knowing how volatile the fuel was, Stears doused the entire ship with the fuel and took cover from a safe distance of the ship. When the ship was detonated, the resulting explosion was massive; so massive in fact that it shattered windows along Bay Street in Nassau roughly thirty miles away.
Related Topics:
Scuba diving - Volatile
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- Pinewood Studios — London
- Silverstone racing circuit was used for the chase involving Count Lippe, Fiona Volpe, and James Bond's Aston Martin DB5.
- Paris, France
- Nassau, The Bahamas
Trivia
- At the last minute, a reference to the then-recent Great British Train Robbery was inserted into the S.P.E.C.T.R.E. briefing near the beginning of the film.
- In the conference room, Agent 007 sits in the 7th chair.
- Throughout the entire film, James Bond never introduces himself as "Bond, James Bond".
- The name of Emilio Largo's yacht, the Disco Volante, means "Flying Saucer" in Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish. In the 1983 remake Never Say Never Again, Largo's ship is named the Flying Saucer.
- Some prints of this film are lacking the trademark "James Bond will return" message at the end, while others include it.
- Thunderball was delayed from an October 1965 release to December 1965. Peter Hunt stated this was due to the film running long; Variety reported the runtime to be four and half hours.
~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | The novel |
| ► | The controversy over the novel |
| ► | The film |
| ► | References |
| ► | Further reading |
| ► | External links |
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