"On Her Majesty's Secret Service"
by John Barry
From On Her Majesty's Secret Service
The 1969 contribution to the Bond series was based on Fleming's 1963 novel. After Connery decided to retire after You Only Live Twice, George Lazenby landed the role. Diana Rigg starred as Countess Tracy di Veicenzo, Bond's love interest with Telly Savalas playing Ernst Stavro Blofeld, the leader of SPECTRE. Lois Maxwell and Bernard Lee reprised the role of Miss Moneypenny and M, respectively, joined by Gabriele Ferzetti, Ilse Steppat and George Baker.
Barry was at his best in this soundtrack featuring the driving title theme. It was part of Barry's fifth score for the franchise and one of only two instrumentals to be featured in the opening credits. "On Her Majesty's Secret Service" was one of the first in cinema to feature the Moog synthesizer.
Ernst Stavro Blofeld, played by Christoph Waltz, is the mastermind behind Spectre and the arch-nemesis of Bond. Judi Dench appeared in her eighth Bond movie as M, marking 20 years since her debut as the character in GoldenEye. Spectre also includes Léa Seydoux, Ben Whishaw, Naomie Harris as Moneypenny, Dave Bautista as assassin Mr. Hinx, Andrew Scott, Rory Kinnear, Jesper Christensen and Monica Bellucci.
Licence To Kill, from 1989, is the second and final film to star Timothy Dalton and the 16th overall. It also is the fifth and final Bond movie directed by John Glen, the last with Robert Brown as M and Caroline Bliss as Miss Moneypenny.
Bond gets suspended from MI6 as he chases drug lord Franz Sanchez (Robert Davi), who ordered an attack against Bond's CIA friend Felix Leiter. Rather than stop his aim for revenge, Bond resigns, although Moneypenny retypes the letter as a request for leave.
Licence To Kill also stars as DEA informant Pam Bouvier, Talisa Soto, Anthony Zerbe and Everett McGill and includes American decathlete Rafer Johnson and Anthony Starke, best known for speaking in the third person as Jimmy in the Seinfeld episode "The Jimmy".
The theme song, sung by Gladys Knight, was written by Narada Michael Walden, Jeffrey Cohen and Walter Afanasieff, the latter who had written several of Mariah Carey's biggest hits. "Licence To Kill" shot up to #1 in Sweden, #2 in the Netherlands, Switzerland, Norway and Denmark, #3 in West Germany, #4 in Ireland and #6 in the U.K.
Tomorrow Never Dies from 1997 is the 18th Bond film and the second to star Pierce Brosnan. It is the only Brosnan movie in the series that did not open at #1 at the box office, finishing #2 to Titanic. It is the first Bond movie after original producer Albert Broccoli died. His daughter Barbara and half-brother Michael G. Wilson produced the movie.
In this thriller, Bond tries to keep power-hungry Elliot Carver, played by Jonathan Pryce, from initiating world events that would trigger World War III.
Colin Salmon is Charles Robinson, one of three times Salmon performed in the role. The cast also includes Teri Hatcher, Michelle Yeoh, Götz Otto, Ricky Jay, Samantha Bond playing Miss Moneypenny, Joe Don Baker as Jack Wade, Bond's ally in the CIA, along with other Bond mainstays Judi Dench as M and Desmond Llewelyn, who appeared in 17 Bond films as Q.
Moneypenny, the one constant woman in Bonds' life who has seen him through hundreds of women and missions, phoned him to request that he return to headquarters ASAP. Bond replied that he'll be in soon, that he was just "brushing up on his Danish". Moneypenny of course knew Bond, prompting her to say the great line, "You always were a cunning linguist, James."
Barry was in talks to return for the first time in a decade but when negotiations fell through, Barbara Broccoli chose David Arnold to score the movie.
Arnold originally set out to write the theme with lyricist Don Black, to be recorded by David McAlmont. When MGM demanded a popular artist sing the theme, however, various singers were invited to write songs and Crow was selected from amongst the competition.
"Tomorrow Never Dies" was nominated for Best Original Song from a Motion Picture at both the Grammys and the Golden Globes. It reached #3 in Greece, #5 in Finland and #12 in the U.K.
Casino Royale (2006), the 21st edition in the Bonds canon, is generally regarded as the best film since the early years. Daniel Craig made his debut as Bond, out to arrest a bomb maker in Madagascar before he learns of terrorist financier Le Chiffre and must bankrupt Le Chiffre in a high-stakes poker game at the Casino Royale in Montenegro.
Craig delivered one of the top quotes in the Bond series after knocking off an enemy but recovering himself--"That last hand nearly killed me."
Jeffrey Wright plays CIA ally Felix Leiter. The cast also includes Giancarlo Giannini, Jesper Christensen, Judi Dench as M, Tobias Menzies, Isaach de Bankolé, Simon Abkarian, Ivana Miličević, Caterina Murino, Claudio Santamaria and Sébastien Foucan.
David Arnold composed his fourth soundtrack while Nicholas Dodd orchestrated and conducted the score. Chris Cornell of Soundgarden recorded the theme song for the opening credits, with the main notes reoccurring throughout the film. Cornell wrote lyrics that conveyed the emotional turn Craig brought to the franchise, and it hit #3 in Finland, #4 in Italy, #5 in Norway and #7 in the U.K.
Pierce Brosnan starred as Bond in 1999 for the third time in The World Is Not Enough. The KGB terrorist Renard kills billionaire Sir Robert King and Bond is subsequently assigned to protect King's daughter Elektra, played by Sophie Marceau.
The movie also stars Robert Carlyle, Denise Richards as Bond girl Dr. Christmas Jones, Maria Grazia Cucinotta as the veteran assassin working for Renard known as "Cigar Girl", Robbie Coltrane and Desmond Llewelyn as Q. John Cleese appears as Q's assistant. Bond says to him, "If he's Q, does that make you R?"
David Arnold composed the soundtrack, his second for the franchise and co-wrote the title song with Don Black, his fifth theme, preceded by "Thunderball", "Diamonds Are Forever", "The Man With The Golden Gun" and "Tomorrow Never Dies". Garbage performed "The World Is Not Enough" in the movie's opening credits.
The song peaked at #2 in the Netherlands and #7 in Norway and Finland and #11 in the U.K.
The second James Bond movie From Russia With Love is one of the top movies in the franchise's history, and generally regarded as the movie which firmly established Sean Connery in the iconic role. Terence Young directed it, with production once again by Albert Broccoli and Harry Saltzman. The movie is based on Ian Fleming's 1957 novel of the same name.
Bond is sent to help Soviet clerk Tatiana Romanova defect in Turkey, but SPECTRE plans to avenge Bond's killing of Dr. No in Jamaica the first movie there as well.
But SPECTRE assassin "Red" Grant is always present, looking for his moment to dispose of Bond. Robert Shaw delivered an outstanding performance to match that of Connery, earning accolades from Esquire as The #1 Villain of the Bond Franchise. Pedro Armendáriz stars as Ali Kerim Bey, head of MI6 Station T in Istanbul and Lotte Lenya as Rosa Klebb, another of the top villains in the Bond series, as well as Bernard Lee as M, Daniela Bianchi and Eunice Gayson.
Klebb, despite being Number Three, really calls all the shots, placing both friend and foe exactly where she wants them to be.
From Russia with Love is the movie which brought in John Barry as the primary composer. Lionel Bart wrote the theme song, recorded by crooner Matt Monro and featured at the end of the movie.
The ten best themes are coming up in Part Three!
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