UK action
1963
color 118 min.
Director: Terence Young
CLV: out-of-print collectible
           1 disc, catalog # CC1290L
Tanya: Oh, James, James,
will you make love to me all the time in England?
James Bond: Day and
night!Sean Connery returns in From Russia with Love in the best of all
of Ian Fleming's stories. Filled with sex, violence and incredible suspense, it
was this film that elevated the adventures of James Bond to a new entertainment
high, virtually guaranteeing the huge success that was to follow.
Working from
a novel that was one of President John F. Kennedy's favorites, director Terence
Young and screenwriter Richard Maibaum introduce a blackmail and assassination
plot so formidable that it could spell the end for James Bond.
S.P.E.C.T.R.E.
-- The Special Executor for Counter-Intelligence, Terrorism, Revenge and
Extortion -- returns to seek revenge for the death of its Dr. No operative in the
Caribbean. Fiendish Ernst Stavro (Anthony Dawson, uncredited; voice: Eric
Pohlmann) assigns the task of humiliating Bond to three of his best agents --
Kronsteen (Vladek Sheybal), the master planner who treats life like a chess game;
Colonel Rosa Klebb (Lotte Lenya), a Russian defector who specializes in torture
and murder; and, finally, the ruthless and seemingly unstoppable Red Grant
(Robert Shaw), a platinum blonde-pated killer who strangles his helpless victims
with a retractable wire in his wrist watch. Their bait: a Lektor decoding machine
that can decipher top secret Russian signals and a voluptuous Soviet cypher clerk
named Tatiana Romanova (Daniela Bianchi). Thus begins one of James Bond's
greatest adventures. Arriving in exotic Istanbul, spy capital of the Balkans, he
immediately joins forces with British Intelligence's local spymaster, the
resourceful Ali Kerim Bey (Pedro Armendariz) who has been approached by the
defecting Romanova. Little do Bond and Kerim know that she is an innocent dupe in
the ingenious S.P.E.C.T.R.E. plot that will eventually trap Bond on the Orient
Express. Bond's only trump card -- a gadget-rigged briefcase supplied to him by Q
Branch.
From the fiery gypsy camp where two hot-blooded females fight to the
death over a common lover, to the rat-infested sewers where Kerim spies on the
Russian Embassy, to the moody interior of St. Sofia mosque, Bond is kept alive by
S.P.E.C.T.R.E. until he meets Romanova and successfully steals the Lektor. In the
bridal suite of 007's hotel, their passionate lovemaking is even filmed by an
enemy film crew -- another knot in the rapidly tightening S.P.E.C.T.R.E. noose
around James Bond's neck.
Escaping from Istanbul with his prizes, 007 boards
the Orient Express where a final showdown with Grant becomes one of the most
suspenseful sequences ever filmed in the Bond series. Combine that with a
cat-and-mouse battle with an enemy helicopter and a high-speed motorboat chase
and From Russia with Love proves itself as one of the greatest spy
adventures ever filmed.
Released with little fanfare in early 1964, From
Russia with Love was nonetheless a major hit in the United States, even more
so when, after the success of Goldfinger, it was later re-released on a
double bill with Dr. No. Connery was confident in the role that would soon
guarantee him international stardom. Sadly, Pedro Armendariz was dying of cancer
during the filmmaking and would soon return to the United States where he
committed suicide. Daniela Bianchi, so beautiful in the film, would appear in
only a few more films, including Operation Kid Brother (starring Neil
Connery), before retiring to private life. Lotte Lenya, wife of Three Penny
Opera's Kurt Weill, shines as the frightening Rosa Klebb, an abrupt departure
from her career as a top European musical star. Eunice Gayson makes her last
appearance as fetching Sylvia Trench, while those Bondian stalwarts, Bernard Lee
(M), Desmond Llewelyn (Q) and Lois Maxwell (Miss Moneypenny) appear together for
the first time.
-- STEVEN JAY RUBIN
Credits
Producers: Harry
Saltzman, Albert R. Broccoli
Director: Terence Young
Screenplay: Richard
Maibaum
Adapted by: Johanna Harwood
Cinematography: Ted Moore
Production
Designer: Syd Cain
Special Effects: John Stears
Editor: Peter Hunt
Main
Title Designer: Robert Brownjohn
Music: John
Barry
Transfer
The Criterion Collection is proud to present
From Russia with Love in its original wide-screen format. (Since this
film's British 1.75:1 aspect ratio is similar to traditional 1.85:1 format, it
may appear only slightly letterboxed on some screens.)
Visit Voyager's Dr. No site.
Visit Voyager's Goldfinger site.