Ein gefälschtes Fabergé-Ei und der Tod eines Kollegen führen den Agenten James Bond auf die Spur eines internationalen Rings von Juwelenschmugglern, dessen Anführerin die mysteriöse Octopuss... Alles lesenEin gefälschtes Fabergé-Ei und der Tod eines Kollegen führen den Agenten James Bond auf die Spur eines internationalen Rings von Juwelenschmugglern, dessen Anführerin die mysteriöse Octopussy ist und der als Tarnung für einen Nuklearangriff auf die NATO-Streitkräfte dient.Ein gefälschtes Fabergé-Ei und der Tod eines Kollegen führen den Agenten James Bond auf die Spur eines internationalen Rings von Juwelenschmugglern, dessen Anführerin die mysteriöse Octopussy ist und der als Tarnung für einen Nuklearangriff auf die NATO-Streitkräfte dient.
- Auszeichnungen
- 2 Gewinne & 4 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Twin Two
- (as Anthony Meyer)
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With a little more parody than in the previous film "For your eyes only", "Octopussy" continues in the line of more down to earth Bond adventures.
Roger Moore's performance is good as usual, the cast is also remarkable -Louis Jourdan is one of the French actors who built a good Hollywood career, starring in films like Hitchcock's "The Paradine case" and Vincente Minnelli's "Gigi". He's Kamal Khan, a very charming and sophisticated villain -he's the criminal equivalent of Bond. Jourdan brings a special touch of glamour -you see he's an actor of the golden years of Hollywood!
Maud Adams is the only actress who played twice a Bond girl -she was Andrea in "The man with the golden gun".
Steven Berkoff is an established English actor, mainly for theater, but he played also in Stanley Kubrick's "Barry Lyndon".
Kabir Bedi is an Indian actor very popular in the second half of the Seventies -he was "Sandokan" in a famous TV film made by RAI, Italian public TV.
John Glen directs the film with a lot of fun and assures a great show. The film doesn't disappoint.
"Octopussy" is the last great Roger Moore movie as Bond, and maybe the last BIG Bond of the series as well -because it's original, lavish, acrobatic, romantic and pompous.
8,5/10
This is what Diamonds are Forever wanted to be, except that this film actually gives us a good excuse for Bond to investigate diamond smuggling while also providing an interesting series of clues that add up to an actual adventure. We start with two main actions, the killing of a clown outside of a circus in Germany where he delivers a Faberge Egg to a British official in his final moments, and a crazed Soviet general outlining his plan to send a couple dozen tank divisions into the West, confident that there would be no counterattack. The general gets dismissed angrily by General Gogol, but it's obvious that General Orlov isn't going to stop there.
The death of 009, the clown, is the exact kind of hook that would send 007 into the field to investigate, and the investigation quickly takes him to India. The movie uses the colors and visual flavors of the country really well as Bond navigates backgammon games, chases with auto rickshaws, and even a hunt that includes elephants where Bond himself is the quarry. It's well filmed and exciting stuff that gets Bond one step closer each time to what he thinks is the center of the mystery, an island populated by young women and the eponymous Octopussy, a slightly older woman who runs a jewelry smuggling ring whom Bond immediately beds because he's James Bond.
The mystery continues, though, because there has to be more than just jewelry smuggling and, as Octopussy points out, jewelry smuggling isn't the concern of the British secret service (a subtle dig at Diamonds are Forever, perhaps?). Bond keeps following the trail and finds that there is more, and it involves that Russian General Orlov. He's used the jewelry smuggling operation by stealing precious Russian jewels and selling them in order to buy a nuclear weapon that he will detonate at an American military base in Germany. His hope is that the explosion will look like an accident and drive the West towards denuclearization, which he'll be able to use back home as justification for a more aggressive approach towards dealing with Europe.
For a movie that's talked about as inherently silly, that plot by Orlov is surprisingly grounded. It's not about neutering the human race like in Moonraker or making life unlivable on land so people will move to the sea like in The Spy Who Loved Me. It's about triggering an explosion that will create a political environment for the Soviet Union can take advantage of. It's still about bombs, spies, and chases, but the basic evil plot feels surprisingly grounded and real. I've never minded the sillier aspects of Moore's run as Bond, mostly objecting to the fact that they're poorly constructed, but this plot feels like something Connery's Bond would have dealt with.
The silliness is there, though. The famous Tarzan yell is a headscratcher at best. The alligator disguise isn't really that out there, but it's definitely weird. However, in particular with the Tarzan yell, that happens at the end of a compelling chase where Bond has to escape captivity in an Indian mansion where his host is readying a hunt on his elephant and ends up chasing Bond instead. It's taught and exciting, and then there's the embarrassing visual and sound, but it's a very small part of the sequence. I don't excuse the yell, but I do note that it's a small part of a sequence that works really well in a movie that actually knows how to unfold a mystery. Oh, and it ends with one of the best stunt sequences in the franchise as Bond fights his way into a plane as its flying.
Maud Adams as the titular character has an easy rapport with Bond and fits in nicely with the overall plot, running a circus that Orlov uses to get the bomb into West Germany. When she strikes back out against Khan, the man who got her unwittingly involved with Orlov, she does it from a position of strength, using what skills she has to exact her revenge. Yes, the sight of a series of circus performers descending on an Indian villa and using their skills to infiltrate and fight is a bit silly, but it still works overall.
So, yeah, if the movie had held back some of its sillier elements (I guess it could have done with one less bit of Bond dressed up like a clown), I think it would have improved. There's a tonal problem when some of these things pop up, but the rest of the movie around them is really, really good. The only Bond movie under Moore that understands how to unfold a mystery and gives us a compelling antagonist. This movie is really underappreciated and is Moore's best outing.
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- WissenswertesAccording to Sir Roger Moore's commentary in the DVD during the dinner scene, the eyeball in the stuffed sheep's head that Louis Jourdan eats is made out of marzipan.
- PatzerThe train of the "Octopussy Circus" has a steam engine which was a quaint, obsolete technology in 1983. However, due to the rising oil prices in the 1970s the railroad company of the German Democratic Republic started re-using steam engine trains in their regular traffic. The last steam engine got out of order in 1988.
- Zitate
[after Bond has escaped]
Kamal Khan: Mr. Bond is indeed of a very rare breed... soon to be made extinct.
- Crazy CreditsJAMES BOND WILL RETURN IN "FROM A VIEW TO A KILL" - this is the second time in the series that the title of the next Bond film is not given as it will eventually appear (the FROM being dropped from Fleming's original title). See also The Spy Who Loved Me.
- Alternative VersionenABC cut 30 seconds from this film for its 1986 network television premiere.
- VerbindungenEdited into Toyota Corona Roger Moore 'Octopussy' Television Commercial (1983)
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- James Bond 007 - Octopussy
- Drehorte
- Monsoon Palace, Udaipur, Rajasthan, Indien(Kamal Khan's palace)
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Budget
- 27.500.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 67.893.619 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 8.902.564 $
- 12. Juni 1983
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 67.917.359 $
- Laufzeit2 Stunden 11 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.39 : 1