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The metal-mouthed bruiser in “The Spy Who Loved Me” and “Moonraker,” was comically dumb and terrifyingly monstrous — you could literally drop a building on him without killing him.
“The Spy Who Loved Me,” the 1977 James Bond movie starring Roger Moore, perhaps sought to capitalize on the shark craze created in the wake of “Jaws” when it introduced a new villain — a ...
It was originally intended that, like Oddjob (Harold Sakata) before him, Richard Kiel’s Jaws would perish in the film's finale. When Double-0 Seven grabbed the silent, towering killer with an ...
Released in 1977 (the year I was born), “The Spy Who Loved Me” would become another of my most beloved Bond adventures. Of course, the first time I saw it (at the tender age of 10), I had none ...
The result is The Spy Who Loved Me, which eschews nearly every decision that would require lowering the budget, introduces one of the most famous Bond bad guys (the metal-mouthed giant named Jaws ...
Women's liberation has even infiltrated the realm of James Bond.The British super agent 007 (Roger Moore) gets a partner in the shape of a lovely Russian agent (Barbara Bach) 'in the latest Ian ...
At the start of The Spy Who Loved Me, James Bond is on a mission in Austria, where he's staying in a cabin with a woman.M requires his service, and sends a message to James Bond's watch. Bond ...