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AdventureActionThriller

The Spy Who Loved Me

- It's the BIGGEST. It's the BEST. It's BOND. And B-E-Y-O-N-D.

Russian and British submarines with nuclear missiles on board both vanish from sight without a trace. England and Russia both blame each other as James Bond tries to solve the riddle of the disappearing ships. But the KGB also has an agent on the case.

Release Date : 1977-07-07

Language :EnglishItalianArabic

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : EON ProductionsUnited Artists

Production Country : United Kingdom

Alternative Titles : James Bond - The Spy Who Loved Me

Cast

Roger Moore

Character Name : James Bond

Original Name : Roger Moore

Gender : Male

Barbara Bach

Character Name : Major Anya Amasova

Original Name : Barbara Bach

Gender : Female

Curd Jürgens

Character Name : Karl Stromberg

Original Name : Curd Jürgens

Gender : Male

Richard Kiel

Character Name : Jaws

Original Name : Richard Kiel

Gender : Male

Caroline Munro

Character Name : Naomi

Original Name : Caroline Munro

Gender : Female

Walter Gotell

Character Name : General Anatol Gogol

Original Name : Walter Gotell

Gender : Male

Geoffrey Keen

Character Name : Sir Frederick Gray

Original Name : Geoffrey Keen

Gender : Male

Bernard Lee

Character Name : M

Original Name : Bernard Lee

Gender : Male

George Baker

Character Name : Captain Benson

Original Name : George Baker

Gender : Male

Michael Billington

Character Name : Sergei Barsov

Original Name : Michael Billington

Gender : Male

Olga Bisera

Character Name : Felicca

Original Name : Olga Bisera

Gender : Female

Desmond Llewelyn

Character Name : Q

Original Name : Desmond Llewelyn

Gender : Male

Edward de Souza

Character Name : Sheik Hosein

Original Name : Edward de Souza

Gender : Male

Vernon Dobtcheff

Character Name : Max Kalba

Original Name : Vernon Dobtcheff

Gender : Male

Valerie Leon

Character Name : Hotel Recepcionist

Original Name : Valerie Leon

Gender : Female

Lois Maxwell

Character Name : Miss Moneypenny

Original Name : Lois Maxwell

Gender : Female

Sydney Tafler

Character Name : Liparus Captain

Original Name : Sydney Tafler

Gender : Male

Nadim Sawalha

Character Name : Aziz Fekkesh

Original Name : Nadim Sawalha

Gender : Male

Sue Vanner

Character Name : Log Cabin Girl

Original Name : Sue Vanner

Gender : Female

Eva Rueber-Staier

Character Name : Rublevich

Original Name : Eva Rueber-Staier

Gender : Female

Robert Brown

Character Name : Admiral Hargreaves

Original Name : Robert Brown

Gender : Male

Marilyn Galsworthy

Character Name : Stromberg's Assistant

Original Name : Marilyn Galsworthy

Gender : Female

Milton Reid

Character Name : Sandor

Original Name : Milton Reid

Gender : Male

Cyril Shaps

Character Name : Dr. Bechmann

Original Name : Cyril Shaps

Gender : Male

Milo Sperber

Character Name : Prof. Markovitz

Original Name : Milo Sperber

Gender : Male

Albert Moses

Character Name : Barman

Original Name : Albert Moses

Gender : Male

Rafiq Anwar

Character Name : Cairo Club Waiter

Original Name : Rafiq Anwar

Gender : Female

Felicity York

Character Name : Arab Beauty

Original Name : Felicity York

Gender : Male

Dawn Rodrigues

Character Name : Arab Beauty

Original Name : Dawn Rodrigues

Gender : Female

Anika Pavel

Character Name : Arab Beauty

Original Name : Anika Pavel

Gender : Female

Jill Goodall

Character Name : Arab Beauty

Original Name : Jill Goodall

Gender : Male

Shane Rimmer

Character Name : Cmdr. Carter

Original Name : Shane Rimmer

Gender : Male

Bob Sherman

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Bob Sherman

Gender : Male

Doyle Richmond

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Doyle Richmond

Gender : Male

Peter Whitman

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Peter Whitman

Gender : Male

Ray Hassett

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Ray Hassett

Gender : Male

Vincent Marzello

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Vincent Marzello

Gender : Male

Nicholas Campbell

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Nicholas Campbell

Gender : Male

Ray Evans

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Ray Evans

Gender : Male

Anthony Forrest

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Anthony Forrest

Gender : Male

Garrick Hagon

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Garrick Hagon

Gender : Male

Ray Jewers

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Ray Jewers

Gender : Male

George Mallaby

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : George Mallaby

Gender : Male

Christopher Muncke

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Christopher Muncke

Gender : Male

Anthony Pullen Shaw

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Anthony Pullen Shaw

Gender : Male

Don Staton

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Don Staton

Gender : Male

Stephen Temperley

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Stephen Temperley

Gender : Male

Bryan Marshall

Character Name : Cmdr. Talbot

Original Name : Bryan Marshall

Gender : Male

Michael Howarth

Character Name : HMS Ranger Crewman

Original Name : Michael Howarth

Gender : Male

Kim Fortune

Character Name : HMS Ranger Crewman

Original Name : Kim Fortune

Gender : Male

Barry Andrews

Character Name : HMS Ranger Crewman

Original Name : Barry Andrews

Gender : Male

Kevin McNally

Character Name : HMS Ranger Crewman

Original Name : Kevin McNally

Gender : Male

Jeremy Bulloch

Character Name : HMS Ranger Crewman

Original Name : Jeremy Bulloch

Gender : Male

Sean Bury

Character Name : HMS Ranger Crewman

Original Name : Sean Bury

Gender : Male

John Sarbutt

Character Name : HMS Rangers Crewman

Original Name : John Sarbutt

Gender : Male

David Auker

Character Name : HMS Ranger Crewman

Original Name : David Auker

Gender : Male

Dennis Blanch

Character Name : HMS Ranger Crewman

Original Name : Dennis Blanch

Gender : Male

Keith Buckley

Character Name : HMS Ranger Crewman

Original Name : Keith Buckley

Gender : Male

Nick Ellsworth

Character Name : HMS Ranger Crewman

Original Name : Nick Ellsworth

Gender : Male

Keith Morris

Character Name : HMS Ranger Crewman

Original Name : Keith Morris

Gender : Male

John Salthouse

Character Name : HMS Ranger Crewman

Original Name : John Salthouse

Gender : Male

George Roubicek

Character Name : Stromberg One Captain

Original Name : George Roubicek

Gender : Male

Lenny Rabin

Character Name : Liparus Crewman

Original Name : Lenny Rabin

Gender : Male

Irvin Allen

Character Name : Stromberg Crew

Original Name : Irvin Allen

Gender : Male

Yashaw Adem

Character Name : Stromberg Crew

Original Name : Yashaw Adem

Gender : Male

John Truscott

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : John Truscott

Gender : Male

Robert Sheedy

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Robert Sheedy

Gender : Male

Eric Stine

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Eric Stine

Gender : Male

Murray Salem

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewman

Original Name : Murray Salem

Gender : Male

Harry Fielder

Character Name : USS Wayne Crewmember (uncredited)

Original Name : Harry Fielder

Gender : Male

Barbara Jefford

Character Name : Naomi (voice) (uncredited)

Original Name : Barbara Jefford

Gender : Female

Bob Simmons

Character Name : KGB Thug #2 (uncredited)

Original Name : Bob Simmons

Gender : Male

Michael G. Wilson

Character Name : Man in the Audience at the Pyramid Theatre (uncredited)

Original Name : Michael G. Wilson

Gender : Male

Reviews

W

Wuchak

@Wuchak

2021-06-23

Great Globe-Trotting, Spectacular Locations, thrilling action and fun vibe Roger Moore did more official James Bond films as secret agent 007 than any other actor. He started the role when he was almost 45 years-old and ended his 7-film stint at 57. His third Bond film was “The Spy Who Loved Me” released in 1977 and it’s one of the most entertaining movies in the series. The plot revolves around 007 teaming up with female Russian agent XXX (yeah right) to prevent world-hating Karl Stromberg (Curd Jürgens) from starting World War III by stealing nuclear subs. Stromberg doesn't care if the world kills itself because he lives as a mad recluse on a crab-like submersible dream home called "Atlantis." The giant steel-toothed Jaws assists Stromberg along with the beautiful raven-haired Naomi. The top item I demand in any Bond flick is exciting globe-trotting and, consequently, great locations. “The Spy Who Loved Me” delivers on this front in spades. Right out of the gate there’s a rousing ski chase that culminates in a spectacular jump from Baffin Island's Mt. Asgard (Canada), substituting for the Austrian Alps. It’s an incredible stunt and easily one of the best openings in the franchise. From there we get the Sahara desert, Cairo, the Nile River and the great pyramids of Giza, as well as the Italian Mediterranean island of Sardinia, Scotland (Royal Naval base) and the waters of the Bahamas. These are all fabulous locations to say the least. Richard Kiel as the 7’2” Jaws is both intimidating and amusing. The on-going joke is that NOTHING can stop or kill him. Barbara Bach is good as Agent XXX and certainly possesses an exotic beauty, similar to Britt Ekland from the previous movie, but watch her get blown out of the water by the stunning Caroline Munro when she’s introduced as Naomi. Many cite Ursula Andress' coming out of the water in a white bikini in “Dr. No” (1962) as the ultimate ‘Bond girl’ moment but Caroline's introduction here is a serious rival; it's, at least, the second best one. The only problem is that Caroline's role is too brief. Check her out in “The Golden Voyage of Sinbad” (1974) to see her in a more prominent part. Some editions of the DVD include an over 40-minute documentary that includes an interview with Ms. Munro. She was still beautiful over 25 years after the movie was released. Another great aspect of “The Spy Who Loved Me” is that the fun, adventurous vibe and globe-trotting sequences give it an undeniable Indiana Jones feel, even though it was made four years before the first Indiana Jones flick. WATCH OUT for the great sequence where Bond's car morphs into a submarine as he attempts to flee Naomi in a helicopter. Many compositions in Bond films are relatively timeless, like “For Your Eyes Only” from 1981, but the disco elements in the score for “The Spy Who Loved Me” are horribly dated. This doesn't bug me that much. I can live with it; others can't. As for Roger Moore's take on Bond, I guess you either like him or you don't. I do. Regardless of his age Moore always looked great and was perfectly convincing as 007 throughout his run. IMHO Moore's seven films are the most consistently entertaining. Yes, Sean Connery is great and his stint is generally more serious (albeit with the typical Bond cheese), but who can deny the color and vibrancy of the Moore films? All of his pictures are very entertaining and were hugely successful at the box office. Even the heavily maligned “Moonraker” (1979) and “A View to a Kill” (1985) are great. They may have more goofy or amusing elements, which are actually funny by the way, but they remain essentially serious stories; they rarely go overboard into the rut of parody or camp. Seriously, I weary of hearing all the complaints about Moore's stint in the series. All of his films are quality Bond adventures. There's not a dud in the bunch. The movie runs 2 hours, 5 minutes. GRADE: A-

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

Commander James Bond, recruited to the British Secret Service from the Royal Navy. License to kill and has done so on numerous occasions. The Spy Who Loved Me is directed by Lewis Gilbert and adapted to screenplay by Christopher Wood and Richard Maibaum from the novel written by Ian Fleming. It stars Roger Moore, Barbara Bach, Curt Jurgens, Richard Kiel and Walter Gotell. Music is scored by Marvin Hamlisch and cinematography by Claude Renoir. Bond 10. Allied and Soviet nuclear submarines are mysteriously disappearing from the waters and causing friction between the nations. MI6 and the KGB have a notion that a third party is responsible and stirring up trouble for their own nefarious means. 007 is partnered with Soviet spy Major Anya Amasova (Agent XXX) and the pair are tasked with getting to the bottom of the plot before the crisis escalates. During the whole run of the James Bond franchise there have been a few occasions when it was felt it had run out of steam. 1977 and on the back of the mediocre reception and by Bond standards the poor box office return of The Man with the Golden Gun, now was one such time. With producer Albert Broccoli striking out on his own, the stakes were high, but with a determined vision forming in his head and a near $14 million budget to work from courtesy of United Artists, Broccoli went big, and it worked magnificently. The Spy Who Loved Me is Moore's best Bond film, not necessarily his best Bond performance, but as a movie it's near faultless, it gets all the main ingredients right. Gadgets and humour were previously uneasy accompaniments to James Bond as a man, but here they serve to enhance his persona, never taking away his tough bastard edge. The suspense and high drama is back, for the first time in a Roger Moore Bond film things are played right, we don't think we are watching an action comedy, but an action adventure movie, what little lines of humour are here are subtle, not overt and taking away from the dramatic thrust. For production value it's one of the best. Brocoli instructed the great Ken Adam to go build the 007 Stage at Pinewood so as to achieve their vision for The Spy Who Loved Me. At the time it became the biggest sound stage in the world. With such space to work from, Adam excels himself to produce the interior of the Liparus Supertanker, the home for a brilliant battle in the final quarter. Vehicles feature prominently, the amphibious Lotus Esprit moved quickly into Bond folklore, rocket firing bikes and mini-subs, helicopter, speedboat, escape pod, wet-bike and on it goes. Then there's Stromberg's Atlantis home, a wonderfully War of the Worlds type design for the outer, an underwater aquarium for the inner. Glorious locations are key, also, Egypt, Sardinia, Scotland and the Bahamas are colourful treats courtesy of Renoir's photography. Underwater scenes also grabbing the attention with some conviction. The film also features a great cast that are led by a handsome, and in great shape, Moore. Barbara Bach (Triple X) is not only one of the most beautiful Bond girls ever, she's expertly portraying a femme of substance, intelligent, brave and committed to the cause, she is very much an equal to Bond, and we like that. The accent may be a shaky, but it's forgivable when judging Bach's impact on the picture. Jurgens as Stromberg is a witty villain, but he oozes despotic badness, sitting there in his underwater lair deliciously planning to start a new underwater world. Kiel as Jaws, the man with metal teeth, he too moved into Bond folklore, a scary creation clinically realised by the hulking Kiel. Gotell as Gogol is a presence and Caroline Munro as Naomi is memorable, while Bernard Lee's M and Desmond Llewelyn's Q get wonderful scenes of worth. They forgot to give poor Moneypenney something to chew on, but in the main it comes over that the makers were reawakened to what made Bond films great in the first place. There's even a candidate for best title song as well, Nobody Does it Better, delivered so magically by Carly Simon. The grand vision paid off, handsomely. It raked in just over $185 million at the world box office, some $87 million more than The Man with the Golden Gun. Not bad considering it was up against a record breaking Star Wars. Critics and fans, too, were pleased. It's not perfect. It's ironic that director Lewis Gilbert returned for his second Bond assignment, because this does feel like a rehash of his first, You Only Live Twice, only bigger and better. Hamlisch underscores it at times and John Barry's absence is felt there. While if we are being particularly harsh? Then Stromberg could perhaps have been a more pro-active villain? He makes a telling mark, we know he's a mad dastard, but he only really sits around giving orders and pushing death dealing buttons. But small complaints that fail to stop this Bond from being one of the best. Hey, we even get an acknowledgement that Bond was once married, and the response from Bond is respectful to that dramatic part of his past. 9/10

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2022-06-22

Not my favourite outing for "James Bond" this one, perhaps because the opening snow-scape scenes rely too heavily on green screen - maybe Roger Moore didn't like skiing, or just couldn't get insured - but in any case he certainly never left Pinewood for the first ten minutes here. It then leads into one of the more preposterous stories in which he must team up with the glamorous Soviet agent "Amasova" (Barbara Bach) to track down what has happened to two nuclear submarines that have vanished. It's got the usual travelogue elements - we go via Austria, to Egypt before the high seas where we encounter a sort of ecological megalomaniac in "Stromberg" (Curt Jürgens) who is trying to initiate global armageddon so he can live in his city under the sea. To help him achieve his goals, he has engaged the services of toothy strongman "Jaws" (Richard Kiel) who soon presents the couple with some perilous scenarios as they, of course, start to fall for each other. There is a distinct paucity of gadgets in this film, save for the submersible Lotus; the humour is a bit on the tacky side and I felt that the whole thing dragged a bit towards the end. Jürgens does just enough to get by but is hardly menacing; quite how Bach remains contained in her frock towards the end is astonishing and the denouement, though offering plenty of pyrotechnics, was rather rushed and a bit flat. It's OK, this film - but, sadly, nothing more than that.

G

GenerationofSwine

@GenerationofSwine

2023-01-11

Now, I am 100% in the "Sean Connery was the greatest Bond and had the greatest 007 movies ever made" camp... ... so take it to heart when I say that this is Roger Moore's greatest outing as 007 and one of the best 007 movies (with one of the best 007 introductory songs) ever made. This is Roger Moore at his absolute finest in a games bond movie with Barbra Bach being a great female spy with one of the best, most suggestive, Bond Girl names since Honor Blackman's (this review probably won't make it past the censors if I wrote her character's name)... and that, of course, would be Agent Triple X... AKA Anya Amasova. Anya Amasova.... yeah, we all like calling her Agent Triple X so much more don't we? Honey Ryder is still the quintessential Bond Girl, Honor Blackman still plays the Bond Girl with the best name, but Bach comes in third and we can actually write her joke name. Anyway, the locations are amazing, and Moore has moments in this where we see the Connery Era cold blooded assassin come out of him, meanwhile the plot is still amazing and over-the-top, we have Jaws, and one of my all time favorite 007 cars ever featured. The Spy Who Loved Me is one of the epic Bond movies, it is the Best Roger Moore Era 007, and one of the films that should be on everyone's Top 10 007 film lists.

T

The Movie Mob

@mooney240

2023-01-21

**The Spy Who Loved Me gives Roger Moore the perfect formula to show off his goofy Bond charm with exotic locations, extravagant gadgets, big battle scenes, and a great supporting cast.** The Spy Who Loved Me is my favorite Roger Moore and one of the best classic Bond films. Live and Let Die was his first and a less conventional Bond movie. Man with the Gold Gun was ok, but The Spy Who Loved Me finally fired on all cylinders for Moore. Beautiful locations, exciting villains, a catastrophic nuclear threat, a strong, capable Bond girl, and a dangerous romance give Moore’s third outing as Bond the edge over his other films. The final battle with various submarine crews fighting an army of villains made for an exciting backdrop as Bond battled to save the world once again. Add to it all some of the coolest gadgets and vehicles of the franchise, one of the most iconic henchmen in Richard Keil’s Jaws, and Barbara Bach’s gorgeous Russian agent Major Amasova and you have one of the best classic spy films ever made.

T

The Movie Mob

@mooney240

2023-02-11

**The Spy Who Loved Me gives Roger Moore the perfect formula to show off his goofy Bond charm with exotic locations, extravagant gadgets, big battle scenes, and a great supporting cast.** The Spy Who Loved Me is my favorite Roger Moore and one of the best classic Bond films. Live and Let Die was his first and a less conventional Bond movie. Man with the Gold Gun was ok, but The Spy Who Loved Me finally fired on all cylinders for Moore. Beautiful locations, exciting villains, a catastrophic nuclear threat, a strong, capable Bond girl, and a dangerous romance give Moore’s third outing as Bond the edge over his other films. The final battle with various submarine crews fighting an army of villains made for an exciting backdrop as Bond battled to save the world once again. Add to it all some of the coolest gadgets and vehicles of the franchise, one of the most iconic henchmen in Richard Keil’s Jaws, and Barbara Bach’s gorgeous Russian agent Major Amasova and you have one of the best classic spy films ever made.

D

drystyx

@drystyx

2023-04-04

We have here the ultimate 007 film. This one not only has the aspects that make 007 films great: beautiful scenery, exotic settings, beautiful women, wit, non stop action, adventure, gadgets, etc., but it also has an epic story, the best of all the Bond films. The story is a woman, who is quite capable, finds out her lover has been killed, and she vows to kill the man who killed her lover, but as the story progresses, she finds out that this man was not the devil she believed. There is, of course, the other story, of a maniac who murders his employees, and this time it's not the head of Specter. A lot of the spy work makes little sense, as does the motivation of "Jaws" (Richard Kiel), who became a fan favorite henchman. But the main story is still the first one, and that holds this together, along with all the non stop action. There is also a memorable scene where Bond thinks he is going to meet his boss, only to find someone else at the chair. This is the ultimate Bond film, and I don't believe I am alone in claiming this is the best Bond film ever made, at least up to 2023.

2

2_Fast-22

@2_Fast-22

2024-11-23

I love The Spy Who Loved Me. This film is one I can never get enough of, overtime I think of it or hear of it I want to watch it, it's just that damn good. This is my brothers favourite Bond film and a number 4 spot on my ranking, The Spy Who Loved Me is nothing but a cinematic masterpiece.