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Casino Royale. (1967 film) Casino Royale is a 1967 spy parody film originally distributed by Columbia Pictures. It is loosely based on the 1953 novel of the same name by Ian Fleming; the first novel to feature the character James Bond. The film stars David Niven as the "original" Bond, Sir James Bond 007. Forced out of retirement to investigate ...
Casino Royale: Directed by Val Guest, Ken Hughes, John Huston, Joseph McGrath, Robert Parrish, Richard Talmadge. With Peter Sellers, Ursula Andress, David Niven ...
- (33K)
- Comedy
- Val Guest, Ken Hughes, John Huston
- 1967-04-28
Directed by. Val Guest. ... (scenes with Woody Allen and additional scenes with David Niven) Ken Hughes. ... (as Kenneth Hughes) (Berlin scenes) John Huston. ...
- Plot
- Cast & Characters
- Production
- Release and Reception
- Trivia
- External Links
Overview
The story of Casino Royale is told in an episodic format and is best outlined in "chapters". Val Guest oversaw the assembly of the sections, although he turned down the credit of "co-ordinating director".The fact the film had several directors means that many of the sections have very different flavours to one another.
Opening sequence
Evelyn Tremble/James Bond 007 (Peter Sellers) and Inspector Mathis meet in a pissoir or vespasienne(a French public urinal), where Mathis presents his "credentials". This sets the tone of the film by satirizing the dramatic opening sequences in the EON Bond films, and other Cold War spy films. The setting is France, probably Paris. A group of school children pass by singing Frère Jacques, and there is graffiti on the pissoir saying "les Beatles" (sic). Unlike most Eon films, the opening is no...
Other cast: 1. John Wells as Fordyce: Q's assistant. 2. A quintet of SMERSH agents undercover as M/Lord McTarry's daughters 2.1. Gabriella Licudi as Eliza 2.2. Angela Scoular as Buttercup 2.3. Tracey Crisp as Heather 2.4. Elaine Taylor as Peg 2.5. Alexandra Bastedo as Meg 3. Colin Gordonas Casino director 4. John Bluthalas MI5 Man/Casino doorman 5....
Directors
The production proved to be rather troubled, with five different directors helming different segments of the film, with stunt co-ordinator Richard Talmadge co-directing the final sequence. In addition to the credited writers, Woody Allen, Peter Sellers, Val Guest, Ben Hecht, Joseph Heller, Terry Southern, and Billy Wilderare all believed to have contributed to the screenplay to varying degrees. Val Guest was given the responsibility of splicing the various "chapters" together, and was offered...
Early screenplays
Ben Hecht's contribution to the project, if not the final result, was in fact substantial. The Oscar-winning writer was the first person whom Feldman recruited to produce a screenplay for the film. He created a number of complete drafts with various evolutions of the story incorporating different scenes and characters. All of his treatments were “straight” adaptations, far closer to the original source novel than the spoof which the final production became. The first, from as early as 1957, i...
Budget
The studio approved the film's production budget of $6 million, already quite a large budget in 1966. However, during filming the project ran into several problems and the shoot ran months over schedule, with the costs also running well over. When the film was finally completed it had run twice over its original budget. The final production budget of $12 million made it one of the most expensive films that had been made to that point. The previous Eon Bond film, Thunderball, had a budget of $...
The "chaotic" nature of the production was featured heavily in contemporary reviews, while later reviewers have sometimes been kinder towards this. Roger Ebert said "This is possibly the most indulgent film ever made," and Varietysaid "it lacked discipline and cohesion." Some later reviewers have been more impressed by the film. Andrea LeVasseur, i...
The film plays fast and loose with historic dates and character ages, primarily with regards to Sir James Bond and his daughter, Mata. Although Sir James is depicted as elderly, Mata is depicted as...Casino Royale shares some overlap with What's New Pussycat? released a couple of years earlier, these include the producer Charles K. Feldman, and a soundtrack partly by Burt Bacharach. Apart from...The only James Bond film to be filmed anywhere in Ireland, with several locations doubling up as Scotland. (John Huston would also do for his film Sinful Daveywhich was entirely filmed in Ireland,...The idea of James Bond having a nephew was used around the same time for a one-off children's book featuring James Bond Jr. (1967 character) and again in 1991 as the premise of an unrelated America...Casino Royaleon Metro-Goldwyn-MayerWatchlist. NEW. This wacky send-up of James Bond films stars David Niven as the iconic debonair spy, now retired and living a peaceful existence. Bond is called back into duty when the mysterious ...
- (42)
- Peter Sellers
- Val Guest
- Comedy
Roger Ebert. Roger Ebert was the film critic of the Chicago Sun-Times from 1967 until his death in 2013. In 1975, he won the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished criticism. Action. At one time or another, "Casino Royale" undoubtedly had a shooting schedule, a script and a plot. If any one of the three ever turns up, it might be the.
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A spy spoof film featuring multiple James Bonds who try to stop SMERSH, a criminal organization. The film involves a baccarat game, a love interest, and a retired spy who is forced out of retirement.