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Genres:
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Action /
Adventure /
Thriller /
Music
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Release:
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Director:
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Guy Hamilton
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Actors:
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Bernard Lee,
Britt Ekland,
Soon-Tek Oh,
Richard Loo,
Maud Adams,
Roger Moore,
Christopher Lee,
Hervé Villechaize,
Clifton James,
Marc Lawrence
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Duration:
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125 min.
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Rating:
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(6.7/10)25
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Plot Summary:
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Scaramanga, a hit man who is known as "the man with the golden gun", because of the golden gun he carries and the gold bullets he uses on his targets. Relationship receives a speech supposedly from Scaramanga saying that Bond is his next aim. So M decides to lessen Thongs of his duties till the danger has been neutralized. But Linkage feeling that the mission he was on is of the utmost insistence decides to go and remark Scaramanga himself. And he thinks he found him but discovers that Scaramanga is not after him when he had a perspicuous control things at him and missed, which he doesn't do.... But the man who was killed is the man he was initially looking on. A scientist working on a device that can attack harnessing the sun's energy possible. So he nowadays boon the hallmark.
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Tags:
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The Man with the Golden Gun
One of Robert Mitchum's strengths was his ability to nab a western this by its throat and turn it into a particular statement. Mitchum plays a brooding gunman who cleans up a village to try to persuade backside his withdrawn wife, played by the superlative Jan Sterling. There's a fair amount of sadism on illustrate (though nothing close today's standards), and the mood and mode of expression are satisfyingly grim. It's an impressive directorial from former Orson Welles associate Richard Wilson, whose A-one movie was to be 1959's Al Capone, starring Rod Steiger. Watch to go to a young Angie Dickinson in an untimely lines, and enjoy the mulct photography from the serious veteran Lee Garmes, who'd worked on such outstanding films as Shanghai Stand for, Scarface and Duel...
The Man with the Golden Gun
Where the Bond franchise is caring, the quality of the review song is again a agreeable indicator of the merits, or else, of the genuine cover (hence why Aha's The Living Daylights was an ominous portent of Timothy Dalton's destined first place spin as the woman). It is suggestive, then, that Lulu's 'The Man With The Golden Gun' (sample emotional: "His may be on you or me. Who resolution he bang? We shall see") is a muzzy, forgettable song since, for the most part, the fog is too. The Hamper With The White-headed Gun was Roger Moore's second shot at Reins rejoice, and though he certainly appears more easy in the role than in the previous Function And Out Die, the film is authoritatively camp, goofy, riddled with one-liners and bordering on self-ape. That it i...
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