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Casino Royale
Casino Royale
Sir James Bond is called back out of retirement to stop SMERSH. In order to trick SMERSH, James thinks up the ultimate plan - that every agent will be named 'James Bond'. One of the Bonds, whose real name is Evelyn Tremble is sent to take on Le Chiffre in a game of baccarat, but all the Bonds get more than they can handle.
rating
5.259
runtime
131 min

Release

1967-04-18

Cast

David Niven
David Niven
as James Bond
Peter Sellers
Peter Sellers
as Evelyn Tremble
Ursula Andress
Ursula Andress
as Vesper Lynd
Orson Welles
Orson Welles
as Le Chiffre
Joanna Pettet
Joanna Pettet
as Mata Bond
Daliah Lavi
Daliah Lavi
as The Detainer
Woody Allen
Woody Allen
as Jimmy Bond (Dr. Noah)
Deborah Kerr
Deborah Kerr
as Agent Mimi / Lady Fiona McTarry
William Holden
William Holden
as Ransome
Charles Boyer
Charles Boyer
as Legrand
John Huston
John Huston
as M / General MacTarry
Jean-Paul Belmondo
Jean-Paul Belmondo
as Un légionnaire
George Raft
George Raft
as Himself
Terence Cooper
Terence Cooper
as Cooper
Barbara Bouchet
Barbara Bouchet
as Moneypenny
Gabriella Licudi
Gabriella Licudi
as Eliza
Tracy Reed
Tracy Reed
as Fang Leader
Tracey Crisp
Tracey Crisp
as Heather
Kurt Kasznar
Kurt Kasznar
as Smernov
Elaine Taylor
Elaine Taylor
as Peg
Angela Scoular
Angela Scoular
as Buttercup
Jacqueline Bisset
Jacqueline Bisset
as Giovanna Goodthighs
Alexandra Bastedo
Alexandra Bastedo
as Meg
Ronnie Corbett
Ronnie Corbett
as Polo
Bernard Cribbins
Bernard Cribbins
as Taxi Driver
Derek Nimmo
Derek Nimmo
as Hadley
Anna Quayle
Anna Quayle
as Frau Hoffner
Graham Stark
Graham Stark
as Cashier
Colin Gordon
Colin Gordon
as Casino Director
John Bluthal
John Bluthal
as Casino Doorman & MI5. Man
Geoffrey Bayldon
Geoffrey Bayldon
as Q
John Wells
John Wells
as 'Q's' Assistant
Duncan Macrae
Duncan Macrae
as Inspector Mathis
Chic Murray
Chic Murray
as Chic
Jonathan Routh
Jonathan Routh
as John
Percy Herbert
Percy Herbert
as 1st Piper
Jeanne Roland
Jeanne Roland
as Captain of the Guards
Vladek Sheybal
Vladek Sheybal
as Le Chiffre's Representative
Richard Wattis
Richard Wattis
as British Army Officer
Penny Riley
Penny Riley
as Control Girl
Jack Gwillim
Jack Gwillim
as British Officer at Auction
Geraldine Chaplin
Geraldine Chaplin
as Keystone Kop (uncredited)
Caroline Munro
Caroline Munro
as Guard Girl (uncredited)
Anjelica Huston
Anjelica Huston
as Agent Mimi's Hands (uncredited)
Peter O'Toole
Peter O'Toole
as Scottish Piper (uncredited)
Mireille Darc
Mireille Darc
as Jag (uncredited)
Valentine Dyall
Valentine Dyall
as Vesper Lynd's Assistant / Dr. Noah's Voice (uncredited)
Ian Hendry
Ian Hendry
as (uncredited)
Stirling Moss
Stirling Moss
as Driver (uncredited)
Nikki Van der Zyl
Nikki Van der Zyl
as Vesper Lynd (voice) (uncredited)
Eddie Powell
Eddie Powell
as Man in Casino (uncredited)
David Prowse
David Prowse
as Frankenstein's Creature (uncredited)
John Le Mesurier
John Le Mesurier
as M's Driver (uncredited)
Veronica Carlson
Veronica Carlson
as Tall Blonde (uncredited)
Erik Chitty
Erik Chitty
as Sir James Bond's Butler (uncredited)
John Hollis
John Hollis
as Fred (uncredited)
Burt Kwouk
Burt Kwouk
as Chinese General (uncredited)
Mona Washbourne
Mona Washbourne
as Tea Lady (uncredited)
Jennifer White
Jennifer White
as Bond Girl (uncredited)
Richard Reeves
Richard Reeves
as Hit Man (uncredited)
Hal Galili
Hal Galili
as USA Officer at Auction (uncredited)
Robin Tolhurst
Robin Tolhurst
as Casino Girl (uncredited)
REVIEWS
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Wuchak

_**Psychedelic secret agent satire with a superlative cast**_ A mysterious organization named SMERSH is killing off notable spies from top countries compelling James Bond to come out of retirement (David Niven). Peter Sellers plays a younger “James Bond” agent while Woody Allen is on hand as a diminutive “James Bond.” Orson Welles plays the lead heavy while William Holden and John Huston have small roles. “Casino Royale” (1967) is notorious in cinema and generally loathed by critics & cinephiles, but it’s actually superior to contemporaneous spy satires like “In Like Flint” (1967) and “Fathom” (1967). It was intentionally made with four different directors in mind for four separate segments, but ended up with six directors. There were originally 4 writers (if you include Ian Fleming’s book), but ended up with a total of 11. Welles and Sellers didn’t get along and refused to work together. It was one of the most expensive films of its day and cost more than any of the James Bond flicks up to that time. Surprisingly, it all sort of comes together for a madly amusing 60’s secret agent farce despite the problematic Sellers being fired before all of his scenes were shot. I suggest using the subtitles so you can make out all the witty verbiage and follow what’s happening. The female cast is outstanding with Barbara Bouchet (Moneypenny) and Joanna Pettet (Mata Bond) leading the way, but also featuring Ursula Andress (Vesper Lynd), Jacqueline Bisset (Miss Goodthighs), Deborah Kerr (Lady Fiona) and several others, including Caroline Munro and Veronica Carlson in cameos. The movie is overlong at 2 hours, 11 minutes. It was shot in Ireland, Scotland and England. GRADE: B-

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drystyx

Very boring comedy. Mostly just forgettable. Niven plays Bond, and the story tries to be funny, but the humor is too dry for me, or too lame. I'm not sure which it is. I couldn't follow the story line, so let us just say it is confusing. A big climax at the end is something you probably won't expect. Still, at 3/10, it is three times better than the serious 007 version of Casino Royale.

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Geronimo1967

I've given up counting the number of times I've tried to make it all the way through this film, and now that I finally have I didn't hate it. There's a nefarious plot gripping the world and "M" (John Huston) has convinced his opposite numbers in France, Russia and the United States that there's only one way to thwart this dastardly plotting. Enter the original, newly knighted, "Sir James Bond" (David Niven) who undertakes the task of heading up the new "007" division and tracking down the criminal mastermind behind "SMERSH"! What now ensues is split into segments and each involves a separate strand in their search. It's not that these aren't entertaining enough, up to a point, it's that they are all just bit contrived to maximise the faux-menace whilst providing us with as many cameos as the five directors behind this over-long project can squeeze in - even Peter O'Toole must have had a bar bill to pay. Peter Sellers and original "Bond" girl Ursula Andress help to keep Niven and the ship afloat and for me, the "Le Chifre" (Orson Welles) scene at the gambling tables steals what there is to show. I think it does quite successfully parody the worst excess of the kitsch, the jingoistic and the kaleidoscopically coloured 1960s, rife with sexism and chauvinism and Niven seems to be very much in on the joke. No, it's not good and it's portmanteau style misses more than it hits but it's of it's time and still just about worth a watch.