Tags
007, 1960's, Akiko Wakabayashi, Bernard Lee, Desmond Llewelyn, Donald Pleasence, James Bond, Karin Dor, Lewis Gilbert, Lois Maxwell, Mie Hama, Sean Connery, Spy, Teru Shimada, Tetsurō Tamba, You Only Live Twice
Film Title
You Only Live Twice
Director
Lewis Gilbert
Starring
- Sean Connery as James Bond
- Tetsurō Tamba as Tiger Tanaka
- Akiko Wakabayashi as Aki
- Mie Hama as Kissy Suzuki
- Donald Pleasence as Blofeld
- Teru Shimada as Mr Osato
- Karin Dor as Helga Brandt
- Bernard Lee as M
- Lois Maxwell as Miss Moneypenny
- Desmond Llewelyn as Q
The fifth film in the James Bond canon, You Only Live Twice is also one of the most well-known. With the iconic villain of Blofeld, stunning locations and action, it is a great addition to the franchise. Some of it may become a little ridiculous but overall You Only Live Twice is a strong, entertaining and memorable spy movie.
In the opening scenes, James Bond fakes his death while in Hong Kong so that his enemies are less suspecting. After a mock funeral at sea, Bond is informed of his next mission. The mission in question centres around American and Soviet spacecrafts that have disappeared in orbit under mysterious circumstances. With each nation blaming the other and tensions mounting, M dispatches Bond to Tokyo to find the cause of this potentially fatal situation. 007 soon uncovers that SPECTRE is behind this, with the nefarious head Blofeld at the heart of it. He plans to instigate a war between the countries and wreak havoc in the process, all from the security of his lair which is situated under a dormant volcano. Helped by the charming head of Japanese Secret Service Tiger Tanaka, female agent Aki and eventually a student of Tanaka’s Kissy, Bond dives into the sinister plan and hopes to stop nations coming to the brink of war.
You Only Live Twice features some of the best set design in the Bond movies. Under the skilful eye of Ken Adam, the volcano lair that houses Blofeld is amazing to look at and ingenious in its execution, with it still holding up even in today’s age of blockbusters. The same can be said about the beautiful Japanese locations, that paint a thrilling and adventurous picture of the Orient as Bond comes up against his many enemies amongst the blazing sun, mountains and rivers. Lewis Gilbert directs with finesse and makes the film memorable all round with its cocktail of action, scenery and intrigue. The final attack on the volcano lair is exciting and generates thrills and explosions a plenty. It’s also great to finally see Blofeld in person. In other films, he was just a voice, a pair of hands and a purring Persian cat. But in You Only Live Twice, we get a look at the evil mastermind for the very first time and it immediately becomes an iconic scene. Where You Only Live Twice stumbles is in the moments when it falls into the realms of ridiculousness. The main example is Bond being made to look Japanese as part of his cover. The whole idea is needless and doesn’t do anything for the plot as well as being supremely unconvincing. John Barry contributes one of his best scores to the series with a lush and romantic sound featuring prominently as well some suspenseful pieces of composition. Nancy Sinatra’s haunting title song perfectly compliments the beautiful title sequence of Maurice Binder, which incorporates spinning parasols, melancholy geishas and lava flowing.
Despite being disillusioned with the role at the time of filming, Sean Connery is still charming, virile and convincing as James Bond on yet another mission to stop worldwide war. Tetsurō Tamba is charismatic as Tiger Tanaka, Bond’s valuable ally in Japan. The scenes between Connery and Tamba are great as we see that both men are very similar in that they are there to do a dangerous job, but are not above refusing the advances of beautiful women. As the two Bond girls, Akiko Wakabayashi and Mie Hama are beautiful and charming, even though neither is given much in the way of character development. Despite this, both girls are good as willing agents aiding Bond on his mission. Donald Pleasence is creepy and effective as the mastermind Blofeld, his scarred face and Persian cat becoming staples of evil and leading to many imitators. Teru Shimada and Karin Dor are used well enough as enemy agents, scared to fail their menacing boss for fear of a painful death. The MI6 regulars( Bernard Lee, Lois Maxwell and Desmond Llewelyn) are all fine, with Llewelyn especially humorous as Q.
Despite the odd trip into ridiculous and needless strands that don’t make sense, You Only Live Twice is another exciting yarn in the James Bond universe.
Great write up man! I watched this for the first time just the other day. Agree with your points on the ridiculousness haha. The whole turning Bond Japanese was stupid, but the climax in the volcano was awesome.
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Thanks for the comment man, I love the volcano climax.
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Would like to see this.
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I highly recommend it Alex.
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Something tells me you got at least 16 in my Bond quizzes 🙂 What do you think of Idris Elba as Bond?
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I probably scored quite highly. I think Elba would be great as Bond.
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If you type in Bond you can find parts 1 and 2. You may well set the record 🙂 What are your favourite Bond songs btw?
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I’ll definitely pop over to those quizzes when I have the chance. As for my favourite Bond songs, they would be Goldfinger, You Only Live Twice and Live and Let Die.
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Solid choices 🙂 I do like Skyfall and my love of 80s music means I have to include A-ha and Duran Duran’s efforts. Madonna gets a big fat 0 for her effort.
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Nice choices Alex, I usually like Madonna’s music but Die Another Day is definitely not a great Bond track.
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Can i weigh in? ‘Nobody Does it Better’ by Carly Simon is my fave – although the hardcore Beatle fan in me says it should be ‘Live & Let Die’.
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Thanks for commenting, I love Nobody Does it Better, it just describes the character of Bond so well.
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Is this the one with ‘Little Nellie’? I love ‘Little Nellie’!
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Yes this is the one with Little Nellie, it’s such a great addition to the series.
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this is another great connery bond movie.
liked it despite the absurdity of turning him into an oriental
nice review Vinnie!
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Thanks Rob, it is an absurd idea, but the rest of the film really works.
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🙂
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Great take my friend. You really are an original voice and I’m enjoying your reviews, especially now you’re working through the Bond’s. Many very salient points made here.
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Thanks for the comment, it means a lot. Glad you liked the review.
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Oddly enough this is probably one of my least favorite Bond films. I think there are parts where it is uncharacteristically slow. That being said, it’s still a great film.
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Glad to hear your thoughts man, this is a Bond movie that always seems to divide opinion a lot.
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There seems to have been a bit of a backlash towards YOLT in recent years (possibly thanks to Austin Powers?), and you’re right that some of it is ridiculous… but then, as you say, there’s the sets, the music, the cast, and my personal favourite bit, the wonderful single-shot chase across the rooftops. One of my absolute favourite Bonds.
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It ranks highly on my list as well.
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I do like this one just because it’s like total Bond. This one really sets the tone for the Connery years and a lot of fun. Just like your review! ha.
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This is definitely up there with some of the best in the Bond series.
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Vin, I think your review here is spot on in every respect. Twice was real treat. I find now that I miss those big action sequences, or just that epic Bond film in general. Like the Volcano scenes and all its many minions wearing colourful uniforms —similar to those you find in the underwater fight in Thunderball, or the submarine scenes in The Spy Who Loved Me. Even Bond like spies like, Our Man Flint, and its climatic finish saw the thrill in that kind of epic big screen entertainment. We all knew it could never really happen. But hey, its a movie and isn’t suppose to have a grand final, and 007 delivered! I even miss the older Bond movie posters. Those wonderfully colorful artist renderings. A collage of spectacular events to be seen in the film, with Bond posing with his gunin that ridiculous Bond pose. It all offered the promise of another amazing 007 escape to adventure, and a fun night out. Sadly, that seems to be lacking of late. They even replaced the openings—the opening gun barrel sequence—there for a while. I MEAN, COME ON NOW, THAT IS BOND! Finally corrected in the last 007 film. Just saying, can’t they still make a Bond movie with a 007 that moves like Daniel Craig, looks like Brosnan, but has Connery’s sense of fun and a wink, that say’s hey, it’s all just for fun? Casino Royale was close if not quite the return, but not a bad one. Maybe they’ll get the whole thing sorted out by the next Bond film. Just stay away from surfing an ice flow or dressing like a clown.
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I think this is the Bond movie that began the epicness of the series, specially in terms of design and action.
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