Inside 'the Spy Who Loved Me' (Video 2000) Poster

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8/10
More love for the spy
Chip_douglas19 March 2008
Patrick Macnee, sounding even older than he looked in A View to a Kill, narrates this honest and insightful look at the production of The Spy Who Loved Me, the Bond film most commonly known as Roger Moore's best (and his personal favorite). From the fact that Ian Fleming put it in writing that apart from the title, none of the specifics from his 1962 novel were to be adapted, to the premiere on 7-7-1977 (the summer of Star Wars) fate seemed to be working against this Eon production at every turn. Yet Bond still managed to keep up the British end and deliver a 007 outing that cemented both Moore as Bond and Cubby Broccoli as a solo producer.

During pre-production Cubby's partner on all the previous Bonds, Harry Saltzman, lost his part of the shares due to some unfortunate business ventures, leaving the future of the Bond films solely on the shoulders of Broccoli. The previous entry in the series, The Man with the Golden Gun had been the least successful outing so far (though this fact is never mentioned). This meant the box office performance of 'The Spy' would be a make or break situation for it's production team. Early story treatments featured the return of Ernst Stavro Bloveld, but Thunderball writer Kevin McClory objected and threatened to sue in case they used 'his' character.

Goldfinger's Guy Hamilton was first choice to direct, and worked on a script with a young John Landis, but Guy decided to do Superman instead (before Richard Donner replaced him). Lewis Gilbert, who's earlier 007 outing was You Only Live Twice, stepped in, and in this documentary he claims it was he who decided that Roger Moore should stop trying to be tough as Connery (and smack women around as he had been doing in the previous Bonds) and make 007 suit himself more by playing it humorous, smooth and upper class English. Despite this, Gilbert does admit to the similarities between Spy and Twice where the plot is concerned.

All this is recounted by Gilbert and many other principal cast and crew members, including some of those who have passed away via archival footage. Special attention is made of the impressive opening ski-jump and Ken Adam's incredible sets (even if some of this material is also used in the 'Designing Bond' feature on the same disc). Here Ken reveals he asked Stanley Kubrick to give him a second opinion on the giant submarine hangar set and that the reclusive Stanley only agreed to visit if no one knew he was ever there. The building of the giant 007 stage is recounted, as is the occasion when Cubby himself cooked spaghetti for the entire crew when the food in Egypt turned out to be 'diabolical and depressing'.

One of the most interesting items of trivia mentioned in 'Inside The Spy Who Loved Me' (never mind the Double Entrende) must be the fact that in one shot when Bond is following Jaws amongst the pyramids, 007 is nothing more than a cardboard cut out. They never managed to get the required shot of Roger Moore, and had to make do with a still. One last reason why the 10th Bond film is considered one of the series highlights must surely be because it features three of the most gorgeous Bond girls ever. Two of them, Valerie Leon and Caroline Munroe are briefly seen in new interviews (about the same amount of time as their on screen roles) but sadly, the spy who loved him herself, Barbara Bach, was too busy being Mrs. Ringo Starr to make an appearance. Luckily she is still featured in behind the scenes footage and a bit of her screen test. To make up for the lack of Barbara, two of the other stars of the picture, Richard 'Jaws' Kiel and the Lotus Esprit do get their turn in the spotlight.

8 out of 10

PS: Roger Moore and John Glen appear before the opening credits. As the credits role, narrator Patrick Macnee is the first person listed by name on screen. After that all participants have their names neatly identified on screen, even the ones only seen in decades old footage like Cubby and Bob Simmons. However, when Moore and Glen appear again their names are not shown at all. The person in charge of the titles must have thought they were already credited at the start, even though they weren't.
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8/10
Middle Eastern Billionaires Tried to Buy Bond . . .
cricket3021 June 2014
Warning: Spoilers
. . . during America's Bicentennial Year, INSIDE THE SPY WHO LOVED ME reveals. Many commentators have noted how much the villains of WWII have been white-washed on the Big Screen since wealthy Japanese "investors" bought up huge chunks of the English-speaking world's film production and distribution capacity. Though the South Koreans are hopping mad, Hirohito's descendants simply chortle back, "Losers CAN be choosers!" So PEARL HARBOR becomes a lame romance, instead of The Day That Once Lived in Infamy. Similarly, if the sheiks HAD latched on to James, no doubt "Q" would have sent him back to 1776 in a Time Machine to snatch a Revolutionary War victory from the Jaws of Redcoat Defeat. Every subsequent Bond would have involved James helping Sunnis prevail over Shiites. The standard for "Bond Girls" would have dropped dramatically, since who could tell the difference when a female is covered head-to-toe in a Burqa? Since INSIDE THE SPY WHO LOVED ME is nearly 41 minutes long, I would have enjoyed learning more about this plot to further subvert the Values of Western Civilization.
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10/10
Inside The Spy Who Loved Me was a worthy making of-doc on that movie's Blu-ray disc
tavm12 September 2022
This was a fascinating latter-making of doc of the 10th James Bond film entry, The Spy Who Loved Me, on the Blu-ray disc extras. It chronicles the behind-the-scenes troubles of getting it on screen from former producer Harry Saltzman's financial troubles to some "intellectual proprety" issues involving Kevin McClory to getting a new giant stage at Pinewood Studios dubbed the "007 Stage" in order to get a giant water tank set for a ship/submarine sequence to several attempts to get the now-iconic ski/parachute jump at the end of the pre-beginning credit scene to producer Albert R. "Cubby" Broccoli's cooking spaghetti for his crew because of bad Egyptian food and troubles of getting British food in to casting Barbara Bach as the leading lady just four days before shooting was to begin. Bach appears from archive footage from the earlier "The Making of The Spy Who Loved Me" featurette while most of the other interviews are from the latter-day ones like those of other ladies that appered in the film like Valerie Leon and Caroline Munro. I was most fascinated at finally getting a look at Cubby's widow, Dana, mother of Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson, current Bond producers. In summary, Inside The Spy Who Loved Me was a worthy doc on that movie's Blu-ray disc.
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