"The plane, the plane"...


...Did Nick Nack say that when Bond's plane arrived at Scaramanga's island? Maybe I imagined it.

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Trolling or are you serious? Btw this movie was way before β€œFantasy Island” was on TV so yeah, you probably imagined it.

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Okay, that explains it; thanks! :)

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that's one of kelly bundy's funniest lines, i always knew that comment repeated in "married with children" as kelly taunts her short little brother, but i always thought it was from this movie as it involves nick nack around a flying machine, i didn't find out until later it was from a series the actor played in, by the way, if mary goodnight's name was invented for moore's line "goodnight, sir" at the end that would be like the longest way to go to reach a joke punch line. there are some comments on this board how moore fits the part and after comparing to connery, but did you know moore was considered for the part of bond already from the start in the late 1950's early 60's. i think moore bringing humour and a lightness to the role suits just fine, these flicks often has a ridiculous plot and the most awful dialogue you've ever come across, and yet they were greatly entertaining with amazing moviemakers and music with stars like connery and moore, but after moore they went to a more serious bond, darker really in 89, which seems to be widely considered even by critics as just too boring, then it followed on with that same pattern and from what i've seen of the modern current bond flicks they have pretty much dropped all trademarks as well and it looks like any other regular action movie. "the plane, boss, the plane." πŸ‘‰



πŸ•΄β›±πŸ–πŸŒ…β›°πŸš£β€πŸ˜πŸ›ΆπŸ₯‹πŸ•΅οΈβ€




home tears me down,
run your border get build up,
so afraid youll go away,
stuck at this freaky weird place,
lost residents like earths nightmare cant escape,
soul withering world dark and cold,
without your sweet home.

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"The Man with the Golden Gun" was Moore's second outing as Bond. He did 7 films for the franchise in 13 years from 1973-1985. Moore's stint is my favorite run in the series with all seven films being kinetic, amusing, scenic and -- as you point out -- just all-around entertaining. There's not one clunker in the bunch and they were all profitable at the box office, but this one kinda got lost between the cracks of "Live and Let Die" (1973) and "The Spy who Loved Me" (1977).

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