I saw this movie when I was twelve. It's kinda that particular age where you don't have the cynicism of adulthood so you just take it on board & have fun with it.I know Moonraker has its naysayers.But I'll always have a soft spot for it regardless.
You guys are from the 70s generation . One of best generation there was . I was older but the 70s were sex , drugs and rock and roll nowadays kids are tagged and fingerprinted with cameras all over the place .
I actually really do like Moonraker, and I agree that Moore is the best in it. Yes the ending when it’s in space does get a little bit goofy, but the beginning is great when you have Moore investigating Drax. Speaking of Drax is very underrated in my opinion, one thing I love about Drax is he is onto Bond from the very beginning- “look after Mr Bond see that some harm comes to him”.
The thing I don't get is; why would Drax want to kill Bond? If Bond didn't stop the training simulator he would've died resulting in a massive investigation by The British and American government. Wouldn't that be too much of a detractor during the final stages of his doomsday plan?
the beginning is great when you have Moore investigating Drax." no way that was boring and the space battle in the end was the best scene. plus drax was uninteresting.
@@mikesteelheartexactly. What a way to show you're guilty of something. And the movie is filled with multiple times where they try to kill Bond in ridiculous ways, and when they fail they just take him prisoner.
You're absolutely right - Moonnraker's score is classed as one of Barry's strongest and came from the same period as the Raise the Titanic score which is utterly astounding and one that even Barry considered his best but was lost fo a number of years. They're both quite strangely familiar in places too certainly in style.
I'm a huge John Barry fan and this is one of favourites. It's got some traditional Bond cues but also some very cool moments.The music during the "Space Lazer Battle" is one of my very favourite Barry tracks. And despite the teasing, I loved this film.
I love the theme song. Everybody says that Shirley Bassey’s Goldfinger is the best here, but Moonraker shows that Shirley isn’t just a belter. She can sing equally well in a gentle and melodic style.
Moonraker is a great Bond, and my personal favorite. I think Bond movies have always tended to be about 30 minutes too long, and Moonraker is the only one that manages to justify the running time. About the time I'd normally be getting tired or bored, Bond goes into orbit, basically beginning the film anew, for all intents and purposes. They were wise to limit the time spent in outer space....It was the ideal way to cap the movie...but it would not have worked as the primary attraction. People refer to Moonraker as if it's two hours of Bond in space waving a light saber and frolicking with Ewoks...but the whole outer space angle is actually kept to a minimum.
Moonraker came out 2 years ahead of the first flight of the shuttle Columbia, the same month I entered college for electrical engineering. Fifteen years later I worked on an experiment that flew on Endevour. So this Bond film remains one of my favorites.
My head says "it's absolute rubbish", but my heart is doing backflips and screaming "yes, this is amazing!" On paper Moonraker should be kind of naff, and yet every time I put it on I have tonnes of fun with it. Roger Moore is endlessly charming and likeable, the rest of the cast are committed to giving fantastic performances, John Barry's score is excellent, Ken Adam's production design is spectacular, the stunt work is exceptional, the plot (as patently ridiculous as it is) is perfectly paced, and it's all wrapped up in Lewis Gilbert's excellent direction and eye for spectacle. I think the fact that everyone involved in this film was absolutely committed to making this the best damn thing they could possibly make is what makes this so delightful. Often I find the worst Bond films (namely Diamonds Are Forever and Die Another Day) are the ones where it feels like there's no heart or soul behind the making of the film, that the people are just doing this for an easy paycheck and aren't really trying. There's no sense of that here, Moonraker was clearly a passion project, and that's why regardless of how silly and nonsensical it gets, I'll always keep going back to it
Well put! The passion and seriousness of the artists trickles down into the treatment of the story and characters as well. It's okay to have silly things in your movie, but the second you don't take it seriously, it begins to fall into itself. How can you expect an audience to? That's why Moonraker works, because it doesn't do that and that's why we all love it all these years later!
@@FilmSpeak of course the women that's in the Bond films fall for him because it's a male fantasy and in a Bond movie she always gets the woman except in these new ones when you bring feminazis on there to rewrite that's why the last Bond movie was terrible and how could a guy ever be mad that the women are waiting for Bond it's a male fantasy movie that's what Bob has always been 😞😞😞💯💯👎
Most Bond movies are silly. They are fantasy...they were never mean to be realistic. If you want plausible movies, the Bond movies are not for you. You have to go in just looking for a good time and not trying to punch holes in it. A five year old could do that. lol
@@dr.juerdotitsgo5119 And women. Don't let anyone tell you a movie is only for men or women as you will find plenty of both who love it if the quality is good.
@@dr.juerdotitsgo5119 dumb comment. My nan loved Connery's Bond films and always said he was the best. Sounds like you've never actually talked to a woman before.
@@alwaysOPEN4business You know what's REALLY dumb? People that can't perceive that accidents don't invalidate the essence. This ridiculous PC fear of generalizations and patterns must be the greatest assault on intelligence in human history.
Glad moonraker is finally getting the appreciation it deserves! I watched it with a group of friends recently and we had so much fun watching it. I’m also glad you mentioned it’s influence on Black Widow (which we coincidentally saw a week after moonraker).
When my father and I were binging the bond series we finished The Spy Who Loved Me and realized that Moonraker was next. We both knew that this would be the first horrible bond film. Then after watching it we both thought that it wasn't that bad. We both laughed our asses off at the "I think he's attempting re-entry" line. It's damn fun.
Agreed! it's got the humor, fun, everything Moore's Bond was, but it's actually not a bad spy flick and a good chunk if it before the space stuff is a really good movie.
The first horrible bond movie was Diamonds are forever. You only live twice was pretty close to beeing the first horrible Bond movie but the ending volccano scene safes it
Moonraker's score is classed as one of Barry's strongest and came from the same period as the Raise the Titanic score which is utterly astounding and one that even Barry considered his best but was lost fo a number of years. They're both quite strangely familiar in places too certainly in style.
Have to agree, both films feature a great deal of special effects, many times times the score is both the guide and the glue for the entire piece; particularly in Moonraker the score that accompanies the entry to Drax's space-age lair, takes the entire ensemble, and every viewer, into a seemingly real space that can only be described as being truly out of this world!
I used to lull my son to sleep listening to ShirleyBassey sing MOONRAKER! Great John Barry work!!! Love all of it! I often think it is the best part of the film!!
Totally agree. Scene where dogs are chasing in the woods, the score is haunting. Also all The space scenes John Barry's score might be the most beautiful in the whole francise.
@@mark-andrews yeah it's strange how sad and mournful the score for the final space flight is, rather than a Williams score that would have been more uplifting in style.
This was by far my favourite film in the mid 1980s when I was less than ten years old. Make of that what you will. I’ve been distrustful of hexagonal drinking glasses my whole life.
Has to be said also, that the visual effects really hold up. As ludicrous as the third act is, they really held it down with long, slow quiet shuttle sequences and took their time with the spacewalks, which really helped differentiate it from Star Wars (in my opinion) - and to this day a lot of the matte/model work of the shuttles really really holds up, both in the space sequences & as a spectacular behemoths dwarfing the action at the South American base before take-off. Got so much love for Moonraker & The Spy Who Loved Me - both absolute gems.
Moonraker (1979) is such an entertaining fun watch with Roger Moore at his charming best in the role of 'James Bond' and 'Hugo Drax' is a brilliant villain !
Really great overview. Moonraker is my favorite Roger Moore Bond movie, edging out both The Spy Who Loved Me and For Your Eyes Only which were both really good as well. Moonraker is more grounded than it was given credit for and Drax is a shockingly prescient villain. The death by dogs has to still be the worst fate a Bond girl has ever met in any of his movies and I absolutely LOVE Lois Chiles as Dr. Holly Goodhead. Even now over 40 years later, I find her to be far more beautiful than many of the Bond girls that came before and after her.
I recently read the Moonraker book because I was curious how the movie could be developed from a book with a 1955 copyright. The similarities that I saw in the two was (1) the villain was a rich man named Drax, and (2) there is a rocket named Moonraker. And, in my opinion, For Your Eyes Only was Roger Moore's best Bond performance.
If anything, Goldeneye is the closest 007 movie adaptation of Moonraker the novel. Both antagonists are former war heros to Great Britain who want revenge and destroy Great Britain using a space weapon. Now Trevelyn differs in that he has a personal relationship to 007, but still the plots are similar.
Moonraker contains the best and most accurate rendition of a space shuttle launch in the movies, and the EVA battle between the astronauts is both brutal and utterly unique.
Yeah that line annoyed me. Bond uses _everyone._ The mission always comes first. There is an axiom in intelligence work: Never have anything in your life you can't walk away from in a second. The one time Bond ignored that axiom (in OHMSS), it did not end well.
I guess my post is not needed. You hit the nail on the head. It aged well for me. I never saw Bond as a misogynist. So the guy lived women. He did not pretend to be this White Knight while being a secret creep and hoping to be liked by kissing ass. He was a straight forward man with no fuss.Nothing more, nothing less. All this pandering now a days is beyond lame and ends up killing a movie by straying away from the plot and making the movie a political statement. Cheers mate.
I saw Moonraker last night (for the second or third time), and I was surprised at how much I liked it - it was stupid in places, yes, but very entertaining!
While Moonraker has many moments that are more fiction than science it also has of of the most realistic quips in the entire series when Bond and Goodhead are dangling from the gondola. She tells Bond to hang on to which he replies "The thought had occurred to me."
@@FilmSpeak Yes, the late Sir Roger Moore's first appearance as James Bond in Live and Let Die did put the franchise on solid footing. And like his predecessor, the late Sir Sean Connery, it was the following films which elevated his portrayal of Ian Flemings' eponymous character; The Spy Who Loved Me, and For Your Eyes Only. Candidly I had put Moonraker in the lower tier of Roger Moore's 007 outings along with Octopussy and View To A Kill. But, I will take another look.
Moonraker was the very first Bond movie that I ever saw when it came out in 1979. I was 16, and enjoyed it tremendously. I've never understood the hate some people have for it. While not in the top 8 of my favourite Bond films, it isn't in my bottom 8 either (I put it at #11 of the 24 'official' Bond films). Thank you for this inciteful commentary!
There's an awesome scene on the ship when where Michael Lonsdale (Drax) is threatening Bond and Holly and he laughs during his line. I don't know how it made the final cut, but it always makes me laugh. I've always loved Moonraker. I can recite each line by heart.
@@chrisf1600 lYou arrive at a propitious moment, coincident with your country’s one indelible contribution to Western civilization: afternoon tea. May I press you to a cucumber sandwich?”
I've always been a huge fan of Moonraker. Released almost 2 years before the first space shuttle launched, it had decent special effects considering no one had actually seen a shuttle flight. Some may think the end is over the top but having space marines battle on James Bond's side only seems appropriate.
I watched Moonraker for the first time in years a couple of months ago, it just has so much entertainment value. If you can't enjoy a movie like that then check your heartbeat, because you might not be alive.
So happy to see it’s not just me that enjoyed this movie. I still remember going to see this at our local movie theatre when it opened, with my Dad and brother. We waited a long time in line, and right after they sold us our tickets, the manager came out and apologized that they’d oversold the show. Thinking we’d missed out, my dad had a quick chat with the manager, and next thing we know, we are the only 3 people in the biggest theatre they had, with our choice of any seat, for a show that started half an hour later. Best seats in the house, a fun bond movie, and a day out I won’t forget. 😃
Gotta say, I’ve been re-evaluating Moonraker. Loved it until I hit age 14- then my space nerdity kicked in by it’s whole lack of orbital realism and other comedy effects. But as I approach the downslope toward 50 there’s something here to really enjoy. Bond films? Realism? That’s not what we’re here for. And Moonraker delivers escapism in spades.
Yes. It is a very underrated Bond film and also a lot of fun. Was very fortunate to find two 007 16mm MINT prints on low fade stock. The Kodak LPP film stock did not exist in 1979. Both from Australia. The second title was '"Octopussy" which I also like very much. Like Louis Jourdan and Maud Adams as the title actress named after her. These mean a lot to me too since my late Father and I went to them when he was well. His ten year battle with cancer was horrible. Thinking about these film's with my Father present and being well makes me feel happy. I was very glad to be able to share them with him. Entirely a completely different world now unfortunately.
I never got the argument that it's too far-fetched, have people watched the rest of the franchise? That's the whole point! Moonraker is solidly in the top third of bond movies imo
Moonraker was the first Bond film I saw in the theater. I'd seen a few other Bond films starting with From Russia With Love when I was a kid but I wasn't really a fan. I was however a fan of Star Wars so the movie posters for Moonraker caught my eye and since it was a rainy day in Honolulu where I was vacationing with my parents it seemed like a good diversion. Since then I have seen every Bond film but Spectre (I'm not a Daniel Craig fan and couldn't get excited about it) in the theater including seeing License to Kill on opening day in Gothenburg Sweden while on vacation. So Moonraker accomplished what it set out to do, bring in new younger fans and get them hooked on James Bond, or at least it did in my case.
@@Zack_410 Thats the thing about bond, even when the flaws are big its formulaic enough that its usually enjoyable. Its pretty much a cartoon meant for adults. Casino Royale sort of deviated a bit to 'shake things up'. I'm going to give Moonraker another shot just for fun, I did quite like The Man with the Golden Gun until that cheesy ending, and Live and Let DIe. Even Sean Connery kind of had an 'edge' to him that made you kind of wary, but Roger just always seemed like such a nice guy that he pulled off those plots, the cheezier the better. The worst thing about Bond was those womens names, that was just brutal, it was like they were DARING you to break that suspension of disbelief. Timothy Dalton is still my favourite Bond, and wish they didn't have the legal problems and he would have done more.
Roger Moore was definitely my favorite James Bond. The guy was just SOOO smooth and suave even though he is constantly in goofy over the top situations. Moonraker is the movie that really put his comedic talents to work.
One of my favorite bond films, first time bond in space, the special effects are fantastic and look so real and the film has a continuous fast action pace to it. Also the action scenes are pretty amazing and unique
_Moonraker_ always gets a lot of hate, but I've always loved it. It's no more batty than the rest of the franchise, and being the clearest "emergency studio response" to the brand new/revived _Star Wars_ and _Star Trek_ franchises just makes it better. Sure -- the space battle is pure Velveeta...but no more so than _lightsabers,_ and _Moonraker_ actually tried to portray a space environment with at least a nod to realism -- Stackpole had to shoehorn the whole _"aether rudder"_ thing as a way to make SW space fighters banking in combat be somewhat realistic. That, and the movie version of Hugo Drax was infinitely scarier than Fleming's original......This, _The Spy Who Loved Me,_ and _For Your Eyes Only_ are three of the best Bond films, and yes - mostly because Roger Moore was _exactly_ the right blend for a movie-Bond.
Drax was a cool Bond villain, definitely ranks up there with Zorin and Silva, yes it gets hokey when they’re on the space station but Michael Lonsdale owned that role right until the moment he got blown out the airlock.
@@leonardmccoy9178 nice stunt . I heard they had parachutes to look like clothes as they fell . I'm one who didn't like jaws. Liked him better in the Wild wild West.
Pretty sure all billionaires are megalomaniacs by default and should all be put to the guillotine. You all fighting between your favorite billionaires is like looking at either side of bootlicker coin.
After this film, I think the film makers must have had a little rethink about where the franchise was going and decided they had gone a bit far with this one.
This movie also inspired one of the hardest levels in GoldenEye. Good ol' Aztec. It's a bastard to unlock but it's fun as hell when you're able to master it.
Over the years, I have unfortunately forgotten the relentless joy I experienced from watching 'Moonraker' at the Drive-in as a young kid! Being newly exposed to James Bond by my Dad, and catching a triple-bill that night of 'The spy who loved me', 'Moonraker' and 'For your eyes only' (Moonraker being my fav of the night!) I now look at the film with fresh eyes again following this accurate dissection of its' more intrinsic aspects. Just watched it again as you advised, and had a load of fun, and developed a new respect for it in the James Bond cannon. Thanks for that!!
Moonraker was awesome.. it has everything you want from a Bond movie. The mid air fight with Jaws, the scenes in Venice / Rio / Amazon / the Space station. The cool villian who feeds his foes to an anaconda. Some brilliant scenes too. The cable car fight, the venice fight inside the clock, the cool jungle base. might be a bit cheesy, but one of the most enjoyable ones out there
Well, I mean, no. Bond doesn't go into space, he goes into sci-fi. The tragedy of Moonraker is that it only needed a bit of tweaking and it'd be good. He doesn't even have his PPK.
Spot on! So rare that you can agree with almost every word. Some of the best movies have always been punching bags for the literal minded. Moonraker got back to the experiential, travelogue feel of the novels, Connery’s Thunderball and You Only Live Twice, and perfected in Octopussy. Bond is a formula rather than formulaic. Change it too much, and you lose cohesion.
The one thing I really liked about Drax as well is that while yes a lot of bond villains also get close, Drax was one of the villains who got closest to his final plan.
Moonraker is simply the quintessential Roger Moore Bond film and you have to take it for what it is. I still don't think I'll ever be able to watch the sword fight scene with out laughing hysterically because the guy attacking Bond is in Kendo equipment; it's the same as if someone attacked you in fencing gear, stabbing at you with an épée or a foil. I can't help but laugh.
I watched Moonraker a few weeks ago for the first time in quite a while and noticed it clearly had quite a lot of money spent on it. The meeting room / launch pad / crematoriam was obviously intended for something bigger as that set was pretty impressive. The space scenes were really as good as anything else at the time and the laser battle was quite brutal. Barry's score is fantastic and it's a shame that the full double album score has been lost.
I just went on a Bond binge on Amazon Prime, never seen Moonraker before and watched all of the films from Dr No up until the end of Licence to Kill......Moonraker is the most memorable for me personally. Great film and fun to watch. The Living Daylights was also a memorable one for me, as was Octopussy, Man with the Golden Gun, Goldfinger and You Only Live Twice. Moore was the best Bond imo, but Connery my favourite.
In 79 I was a 7 year old Sci-Fi kid(SW,Galactica,Superman) and my aunt took me to see Moonraker at The Kings Plaza theater in Brooklyn. My first Bond movie and it blew me away.
Moonraker was the first Bond film I saw as a kid. Was it a bit silly and tongue-in-cheek in places? Yes. But I love Drax's quiet and understated villainy, the women and their outfits, and the action set pieces. The Space Marines invading Drax's Space Station is perfect blend of 2001 and Star Wars.
What if Moore retired after Moonraker and Brosnan became Bond 15 years earlier? His first wife introduced him to Cubby Broccoli during the filming of For Your Eyes Only and Cubby saw his potential. This means that he would never have played Remington Steele or Ian Dunross in Noble House. He was young enough that he could have played Bond for the eight films that followed ending with the World is Not Enough. An almost twenty year run. What do you think? Share your thoughts!
Moonraker is pure goofy fun. There are elements in this movie to which I feel are an improvement over The Spy Who Loved Me. I prefer Moonraker's score by John Barry, Hugo Drax is a much more interesting and witty bad guy than Stomberg ever was, and I felt the actress who portrayed Dr. Goodhead was stronger than Agent Triple X. Also, Roger Moore in a jungle / safari suit just pure camp fun. It may not have a good a theme song, but some of the actions sequences, including the excellent skydiving opening for the pre-title sequence are awesome.
The movie is two hours long...the 'goofiness' is confined to a couple of specific scenes...meanwhile, we see a lovely girl torn to pieces by Dobermans...Bond nearly having a brain hemorrhage in a flight simulator(and actually looking scared)...Bond being tossed out of a plane without a parachute...a villain who speaks openly about spawning a superior race...Bond nearly swallowed by a python....Bond nearly incinerated underneath a rocket....And look at those closeups of Roger Moore when he has the fate of the planet in his hands, and he must use his skill as a marksman to destroy the Earth-bound pods...has Eastwood ever looked any steelier? When he chose, Moore could play the serious moments quite well. The reputation that Moonraker has for silliness has always been way overblown.
I do think that Moonraker is the best *Roger Moore* Bond movie--it takes the arch and silly formula of Roger Moore-era Bond and pushes it as far as it'll go without breaking. I'd have liked it more if its portrayal of space owed more to real physics, but in a Moore Bond, nobody's going to pay much attention to that--it's just not happening.
Jaws biting through a cable car cable is one of the greatest moments in action cinema history in my opinion. Absolutely unforgettable. I’ve never been able to look at cable car cables the same way since
Moonraker is over the top, silly, makes no sense most of the time and is just utterly absurd. In other words, absolutely everything a good Bond movie should be, and it'll always be a favourite of mine.
Even though the special effects are dated, I find the space battle at the end of the movie to be horrifying. Aside from laser fire, the slow, ponderous movement of the combatants looks pretty accurate as to how astronauts movie in space today. How terrible would it feel to be part of a space marine unit slowly advancing on your enemy - with absolutely no cover - in the cold, emptiness of space. What an awful way to die.
I always find it horrifying with men spinning off into space screaming and more so after my husband and son both said they would of been screaming the same if it was them spinning off with all their oxygen hissing out of their suits, the guy heading towards the sun always sends a shiver through me.
I’m so glad I watched this video! I’ve loved Moonraker since it came out in the late 70s and thought it was fantastic fun! Everyone I knew back then loved this James Bond outing. Young and old, and especially both of my parents, who were serious Bond fans! It made more money than any other previous Bond movie by far at the time. It was a big hit, and caused a lot of excitement when it came out. People take it out of its historical context and that’s always a mistake to do. Moonraker was and is great entertainment! Thank you for your work!
My parents were very keen Bond fans and good memories of seeing it at the cinema with them around 1980 moonraker is now one of our favourites. I remember my mum being happy that Jaws fell in love and her with her hands over her ears during the space battle.
My favorite Moore Bond. Yeah, it's silly, but it's very entertaining :) Technically the Best Moore Bond movie is "The Spy Who Loved Me", but Moonraker is still my personal fav
Moonraker has everything: artfulness, silliness, stoicism, ms. Goodhead, incredible stunts, sci-if, awesome villain, etc, etc. It is absolute awesome Bond Entertainment!!!
Great review! I think the best James Bond films are: 1965, 1967, 1977, 1979, 1981, 1983, 1985, 1987, 1989, 1995. *** And yes, "Moonraker"(1979) is a great Bond film with the greatest James Bond ever: Roger Moore!!! By the way, Moonraker had a bigger budget than Star Wars... Well, that's something! *** Sadly, the first 2 Roger's films were weak, mainly because of Guy Hamilton! I think that scene with Bond and Andrea Anders in Peninsula hotel room was disgustinly bad/wrong! But later films, since TSWLM, were all great! Lewis Gilbert and Roger Moore: 2 greatest gentlemen in movie history!!! R.I.P. both in heaven!!!
Another great video. Moonraker has always been towards the bottom for me mostly due to the absurd moments. However, your brother in arms, Calvin Dyson, in your shared opinion of Moonraker has given me enough new perspective to give it another try.
Hell yeah! It's definitely worth a rewatch. I get why people tend to write it off, but idk I think if you ignore the ridiculousness and go with the ride it's pretty compelling.
@@FilmSpeak here’s how you enjoy the movie: watch the face of Jaws when he sees James Bond escape the boat in a hang glider before going over the water fall... He has the absolute ultimate “WTF” face! - TWICE! Once you laugh at that, you will forever enjoy the entire movie! Mark my words, you’ll get why it all works! 👍🏽
here’s how you enjoy the movie: watch the face of Jaws when he sees James Bond escape the boat in a hang glider before going over the water fall... He has the absolute ultimate “WTF” face! - TWICE! Once you laugh at that, you will forever enjoy the entire movie! Mark my words, you’ll get why it all works! 👍🏽
@@sleepycharlie673Just about had to do the old 'volume off/captions on' routine. To be fair to narrator/producer: good speaking voice and voice audio saved it.
The scene with Moore driving the gondola out of the water in Venice was so campy. I cringed when that scene comes around. For a spy, he does attract a lot of attraction
When Bond shoots 🔫 the guy out of the tree 🌳 is frigging PRICELESS and Moore played it off BEAUTIFULLY and the opening scene stunt Bond and Jaws skydiving was amazing 👏
Somehow I saw this in theatrical release (my very first Bond film on the big screen, every other before was just the pan & scan of TV) - they let me & a friend in at the age of 10!
I saw this movie in Honolulu, Hawaii, in 1979, on the last day of a Hawaiian vacation & loved it! From the opening 'action' scene to the wonderful locations, to the unexpected finale in space, it was one of the best "Bond" films, of all times! Fast forward to 1999, I was taking a yoga class in Santa Monica, Ca.,with some actors & at the end, realized that Lois Chiles, "Holly Goodhead" was right behind me & had hardly changed! Wow!
I remember, being in the living room, writing an essay or something. Something I wasn’t really enjoying, but the thing that made it bearable, was that my dad was watching this movie while I was working on it. I’m not gonna say it helped me go any faster, it definitely slowed me down a bit, but it did ease my boredom quite a bit. I’d love to see it again one day.
I remember seeing Moonraker in the theater, it is my favorite Bond film. One thing I can say about it at the time it was a face in the crowd. It is Bond, it will be near the front of the crowd. But sci-fi was everywhere. Star Wars was the point where so many things changed in pop culture. Unless you lived through it, and knew what sci-fi was like before it. After the Star Wars craze kicked in(it took a while), everybody and everything was space happy. That's why I said you had to live through it, I've never seen anything like it since. It was coming at you from all sides, people, products, even just everyday life. You cited how bad things were, I'm afraid that just wasn't the case back then. In hindsight of history all of the things you stated were history by that point. Nor could they be compared to today, at the time there was an optimism in everything. Politics was there, but wasn't in your face. Entertainment then was escapism from everything else. In the face of (now old) media driving the point home, we are all going to get vaporized at any moment. Facing something that grim, the reaction was to live for today, have fun. That's why Disco was a thing. Things were on an upswing from the late seventies to the eighties, even into the 1990's. It was the reason we had the greatest period of pop culture we will ever see.
I saw this movie when I was twelve. It's kinda that particular age where you don't have the cynicism of adulthood so you just take it on board & have fun with it.I know Moonraker has its naysayers.But I'll always have a soft spot for it regardless.
I think I saw it twice in the theater. I was 9.
You guys are from the 70s generation . One of best generation there was . I was older but the 70s were sex , drugs and rock and roll nowadays kids are tagged and fingerprinted with cameras all over the place .
@@speedracer1945 yes anything we did that was stupid didn't end up on the internet😉
LOL, me too. This movie defined sexuality for me in every way.
Same. I was 15.
I actually really do like Moonraker, and I agree that Moore is the best in it. Yes the ending when it’s in space does get a little bit goofy, but the beginning is great when you have Moore investigating Drax. Speaking of Drax is very underrated in my opinion, one thing I love about Drax is he is onto Bond from the very beginning- “look after Mr Bond see that some harm comes to him”.
There was simply no way someone as devious as Drax would not be fully aware of who Bond was. It would be insulting to his character otherwise.
The thing I don't get is; why would Drax want to kill Bond? If Bond didn't stop the training simulator he would've died resulting in a massive investigation by The British and American government. Wouldn't that be too much of a detractor during the final stages of his doomsday plan?
the beginning is great when you have Moore investigating Drax." no way that was boring and the space battle in the end was the best scene. plus drax was uninteresting.
@@mikesteelheartexactly. What a way to show you're guilty of something.
And the movie is filled with multiple times where they try to kill Bond in ridiculous ways, and when they fail they just take him prisoner.
Let's not forget John Barry's operatic score, it adds so much to the film !
You're absolutely right - Moonnraker's score is classed as one of Barry's strongest and came from the same period as the Raise the Titanic score which is utterly astounding and one that even Barry considered his best but was lost fo a number of years. They're both quite strangely familiar in places too certainly in style.
I'm a huge John Barry fan and this is one of favourites. It's got some traditional Bond cues but also some very cool moments.The music during the "Space Lazer Battle" is one of my very favourite Barry tracks. And despite the teasing, I loved this film.
I do like the Bond 77 music. It gets the pulse racing.
I love the theme song. Everybody says that Shirley Bassey’s Goldfinger is the best here, but Moonraker shows that Shirley isn’t just a belter. She can sing equally well in a gentle and melodic style.
@@Dragonblaster1 Isn't that particular track from "The Spy Who Loved Me"? Marvin Hamlisch did that one.
Moonraker is a great Bond, and my personal favorite. I think Bond movies have always tended to be about 30 minutes too long, and Moonraker is the only one that manages to justify the running time. About the time I'd normally be getting tired or bored, Bond goes into orbit, basically beginning the film anew, for all intents and purposes. They were wise to limit the time spent in outer space....It was the ideal way to cap the movie...but it would not have worked as the primary attraction. People refer to Moonraker as if it's two hours of Bond in space waving a light saber and frolicking with Ewoks...but the whole outer space angle is actually kept to a minimum.
Moonraker came out 2 years ahead of the first flight of the shuttle Columbia, the same month I entered college for electrical engineering. Fifteen years later I worked on an experiment that flew on Endevour. So this Bond film remains one of my favorites.
My head says "it's absolute rubbish", but my heart is doing backflips and screaming "yes, this is amazing!"
On paper Moonraker should be kind of naff, and yet every time I put it on I have tonnes of fun with it. Roger Moore is endlessly charming and likeable, the rest of the cast are committed to giving fantastic performances, John Barry's score is excellent, Ken Adam's production design is spectacular, the stunt work is exceptional, the plot (as patently ridiculous as it is) is perfectly paced, and it's all wrapped up in Lewis Gilbert's excellent direction and eye for spectacle.
I think the fact that everyone involved in this film was absolutely committed to making this the best damn thing they could possibly make is what makes this so delightful. Often I find the worst Bond films (namely Diamonds Are Forever and Die Another Day) are the ones where it feels like there's no heart or soul behind the making of the film, that the people are just doing this for an easy paycheck and aren't really trying. There's no sense of that here, Moonraker was clearly a passion project, and that's why regardless of how silly and nonsensical it gets, I'll always keep going back to it
Well put! The passion and seriousness of the artists trickles down into the treatment of the story and characters as well. It's okay to have silly things in your movie, but the second you don't take it seriously, it begins to fall into itself. How can you expect an audience to? That's why Moonraker works, because it doesn't do that and that's why we all love it all these years later!
Well put Christain. I remember seeing it at the Cinema when I was 18, and the first thing I did was buy the soundtrack on ouch - Cassette!
@@FilmSpeak of course the women that's in the Bond films fall for him because it's a male fantasy and in a Bond movie she always gets the woman except in these new ones when you bring feminazis on there to rewrite that's why the last Bond movie was terrible and how could a guy ever be mad that the women are waiting for Bond it's a male fantasy movie that's what Bob has always been 😞😞😞💯💯👎
Most Bond movies are silly. They are fantasy...they were never mean to be realistic. If you want plausible movies, the Bond movies are not for you. You have to go in just looking for a good time and not trying to punch holes in it. A five year old could do that. lol
Drax: "Look after Mr Bond, see that some harm comes to him."
May I interest you in some cucumber sandwiches?
This line sounds even better in the Hungarian dub: "gondoskodjon róla, hogy legyen Mr Bond-nak némi gondja"
The quintessential Bond villain.
Drax has the best one liners of all Bond villains.
Yes… Moonraker is awesome. In spite of its tongue in cheek, hokey humor, it is a SPECTACULAR movie.
Okay...I'll say it - "I think he's attempting re-entry Sir..."
Lol forgot about that line!
But I think the 'James, take me around the world one more time' line is even better.
Moonraker got an Oscar nomination for Best Visual Effects.
‘See that some harm comes to him’ - Best line.
All Bond movies are guilty pleasures, that's the point.
Guilty pleasure for MEN. Or at least they used to be.
@@dr.juerdotitsgo5119 And women. Don't let anyone tell you a movie is only for men or women as you will find plenty of both who love it if the quality is good.
@@dr.juerdotitsgo5119 dumb comment. My nan loved Connery's Bond films and always said he was the best. Sounds like you've never actually talked to a woman before.
@@alwaysOPEN4business You know what's REALLY dumb? People that can't perceive that accidents don't invalidate the essence.
This ridiculous PC fear of generalizations and patterns must be the greatest assault on intelligence in human history.
The first 5 Bond movies are the gold standard. It all descends into silly parody after that for me.
Glad moonraker is finally getting the appreciation it deserves! I watched it with a group of friends recently and we had so much fun watching it. I’m also glad you mentioned it’s influence on Black Widow (which we coincidentally saw a week after moonraker).
When my father and I were binging the bond series we finished The Spy Who Loved Me and realized that Moonraker was next. We both knew that this would be the first horrible bond film. Then after watching it we both thought that it wasn't that bad. We both laughed our asses off at the "I think he's attempting re-entry" line. It's damn fun.
Agreed! it's got the humor, fun, everything Moore's Bond was, but it's actually not a bad spy flick and a good chunk if it before the space stuff is a really good movie.
The first horrible Bond film? Did you skip Diamonds are Forever?!
@@adamp2029Oops! I forgot about that one. I don't hate it, but it's definitely trashy
The first horrible bond movie was Diamonds are forever. You only live twice was pretty close to beeing the first horrible Bond movie but the ending volccano scene safes it
Oh James, take me around the world, one more time.
Moonraker's score is classed as one of Barry's strongest and came from the same period as the Raise the Titanic score which is utterly astounding and one that even Barry considered his best but was lost fo a number of years. They're both quite strangely familiar in places too certainly in style.
Have to agree, both films feature a great deal of special effects, many times times the score is both the guide and the glue for the entire piece; particularly in Moonraker the score that accompanies the entry to Drax's space-age lair, takes the entire ensemble, and every viewer, into a seemingly real space that can only be described as being truly out of this world!
I used to lull my son to sleep listening to ShirleyBassey sing MOONRAKER! Great John Barry work!!! Love all of it! I often think it is the best part of the film!!
Totally agree. Scene where dogs are chasing in the woods, the score is haunting. Also all The space scenes John Barry's score might be the most beautiful in the whole francise.
@@mark-andrews yeah it's strange how sad and mournful the score for the final space flight is, rather than a Williams score that would have been more uplifting in style.
I was 15 when this came out - it was awesome.
Me too
This was by far my favourite film in the mid 1980s when I was less than ten years old. Make of that what you will. I’ve been distrustful of hexagonal drinking glasses my whole life.
Has to be said also, that the visual effects really hold up. As ludicrous as the third act is, they really held it down with long, slow quiet shuttle sequences and took their time with the spacewalks, which really helped differentiate it from Star Wars (in my opinion) - and to this day a lot of the matte/model work of the shuttles really really holds up, both in the space sequences & as a spectacular behemoths dwarfing the action at the South American base before take-off.
Got so much love for Moonraker & The Spy Who Loved Me - both absolute gems.
Moonraker (1979) is such an entertaining fun watch with Roger Moore at his charming best in the role of 'James Bond' and 'Hugo Drax' is a brilliant villain !
Really great overview. Moonraker is my favorite Roger Moore Bond movie, edging out both The Spy Who Loved Me and For Your Eyes Only which were both really good as well. Moonraker is more grounded than it was given credit for and Drax is a shockingly prescient villain. The death by dogs has to still be the worst fate a Bond girl has ever met in any of his movies and I absolutely LOVE Lois Chiles as Dr. Holly Goodhead. Even now over 40 years later, I find her to be far more beautiful than many of the Bond girls that came before and after her.
I actually love all Moore movies.
I agree. I also love all of Roger Moores Bond movies. Best Bond ever.
The shuttle launch sequences, done without CGI, were absolutely realistic! And to think this was before we had ever seen a real shuttle launch.
I recently read the Moonraker book because I was curious how the movie could be developed from a book with a 1955 copyright. The similarities that I saw in the two was (1) the villain was a rich man named Drax, and (2) there is a rocket named Moonraker.
And, in my opinion, For Your Eyes Only was Roger Moore's best Bond performance.
There is also another book written by Christopher Wood titled The Moonraker which replicates the movie plot. Hard to find...
Best funniest Moore Bond is Octopussy. I love it!!! Shits on most Daniel Craig's Bonds.
@@davids.8348 I had that novel - it was excellent, I read it before I saw the film.
If anything, Goldeneye is the closest 007 movie adaptation of Moonraker the novel. Both antagonists are former war heros to Great Britain who want revenge and destroy Great Britain using a space weapon. Now Trevelyn differs in that he has a personal relationship to 007, but still the plots are similar.
Moonraker contains the best and most accurate rendition of a space shuttle launch in the movies, and the EVA battle between the astronauts is both brutal and utterly unique.
Hugo Drax's "First there was a dream..." speech is epic Bond bad guy...
How is Bond a misogynist?
Many women adore the bond character, even today, so I'm not convinced the overall portrayal , 'hasn't aged well.'
Yeah that line annoyed me.
Bond uses _everyone._ The mission always comes first.
There is an axiom in intelligence work: Never have anything in your life you can't walk away from in a second. The one time Bond ignored that axiom (in OHMSS), it did not end well.
@@the_once-and-future_king.
Exactly.
But even ordinary people acted similarly toward each other during WW2. the uncertainty of tomorrow and all that.
@@the_once-and-future_king.
wasnt there also some odd line about nazis?
I guess my post is not needed. You hit the nail on the head. It aged well for me. I never saw Bond as a misogynist. So the guy lived women. He did not pretend to be this White Knight while being a secret creep and hoping to be liked by kissing ass. He was a straight forward man with no fuss.Nothing more, nothing less.
All this pandering now a days is beyond lame and ends up killing a movie by straying away from the plot and making the movie a political statement. Cheers mate.
Thanks, I just posted the same thing before i saw your comment. It's absurd to call Bond a misogynist.
I saw Moonraker last night (for the second or third time), and I was surprised at how much I liked it - it was stupid in places, yes, but very entertaining!
While Moonraker has many moments that are more fiction than science it also has of of the most realistic quips in the entire series when Bond and Goodhead are dangling from the gondola. She tells Bond to hang on to which he replies "The thought had occurred to me."
A lot of Roger's quips are terrible but that is a great one.
The sad fact is that JAMES BOND actually flew on our SPACE SHUTTLE before the REAL one actually did!
its the usa, is that so surprising?? pretty much everything happened elsewhere by someone else and the usa made a film where they did it first lol
fifth
also Moore is underrated especially in For Your Eyes Only
Absolutely! FYEO rules
@@FilmSpeak
Yes, the late Sir Roger Moore's first appearance as James Bond in Live and Let Die did put the franchise on solid footing. And like his predecessor, the late Sir Sean Connery, it was the following films which elevated his portrayal of Ian Flemings' eponymous character; The Spy Who Loved Me, and For Your Eyes Only.
Candidly I had put Moonraker in the lower tier of Roger Moore's 007 outings along with Octopussy and View To A Kill. But, I will take another look.
Moore is the coolest. I don’t care if isn’t like the book bonds.
Idk why but I've always had a soft spot in my heart for this movie and I enjoy watching it more than several others.
Moonraker was the very first Bond movie that I ever saw when it came out in 1979. I was 16, and enjoyed it tremendously. I've never understood the hate some people have for it. While not in the top 8 of my favourite Bond films, it isn't in my bottom 8 either (I put it at #11 of the 24 'official' Bond films). Thank you for this inciteful commentary!
There's an awesome scene on the ship when where Michael Lonsdale (Drax) is threatening Bond and Holly and he laughs during his line. I don't know how it made the final cut, but it always makes me laugh. I've always loved Moonraker. I can recite each line by heart.
The lines are like a rich Victorian novel, something out of Dickens or Eliot.
@@alfredvalrie5541 "James Bond. You appear with the tedious inevitability of an unloved season". Poetry !
@@chrisf1600 lYou arrive at a propitious moment, coincident with your country’s one indelible contribution to Western civilization: afternoon tea. May I press you to a cucumber sandwich?”
I've always been a huge fan of Moonraker. Released almost 2 years before the first space shuttle launched, it had decent special effects considering no one had actually seen a shuttle flight. Some may think the end is over the top but having space marines battle on James Bond's side only seems appropriate.
I watched Moonraker for the first time in years a couple of months ago, it just has so much entertainment value. If you can't enjoy a movie like that then check your heartbeat, because you might not be alive.
So happy to see it’s not just me that enjoyed this movie.
I still remember going to see this at our local movie theatre when it opened, with my Dad and brother.
We waited a long time in line, and right after they sold us our tickets, the manager came out and apologized that they’d oversold the show.
Thinking we’d missed out, my dad had a quick chat with the manager, and next thing we know, we are the only 3 people in the biggest theatre they had, with our choice of any seat, for a show that started half an hour later.
Best seats in the house, a fun bond movie, and a day out I won’t forget.
😃
Gotta say, I’ve been re-evaluating Moonraker. Loved it until I hit age 14- then my space nerdity kicked in by it’s whole lack of orbital realism and other comedy effects.
But as I approach the downslope toward 50 there’s something here to really enjoy.
Bond films? Realism? That’s not what we’re here for. And Moonraker delivers escapism in spades.
Don't know what you're talking about. Who says Moonraker is crap? One of the best Bond movies and still very watchable today.
Yes. It is a very underrated Bond film and also a lot of fun. Was very fortunate to find two 007 16mm MINT prints on low fade stock. The Kodak LPP film stock did not exist in 1979. Both from Australia. The second title was '"Octopussy" which I also like very much. Like Louis Jourdan and Maud Adams as the title actress named after her. These mean a lot to me too since my late Father and I went to them when he was well. His ten year battle with cancer was horrible. Thinking about these film's with my Father present and being well makes me feel happy. I was very glad to be able to share them with him. Entirely a completely different world now unfortunately.
I never got the argument that it's too far-fetched, have people watched the rest of the franchise? That's the whole point! Moonraker is solidly in the top third of bond movies imo
Moonraker was the first Bond film I saw in the theater. I'd seen a few other Bond films starting with From Russia With Love when I was a kid but I wasn't really a fan. I was however a fan of Star Wars so the movie posters for Moonraker caught my eye and since it was a rainy day in Honolulu where I was vacationing with my parents it seemed like a good diversion. Since then I have seen every Bond film but Spectre (I'm not a Daniel Craig fan and couldn't get excited about it) in the theater including seeing License to Kill on opening day in Gothenburg Sweden while on vacation. So Moonraker accomplished what it set out to do, bring in new younger fans and get them hooked on James Bond, or at least it did in my case.
YOu didn't miss much with Spectre.
@@mikearchibald744 Agree. I still think its good and I find it enjoyable. The flaws are big though.
@@Zack_410 Thats the thing about bond, even when the flaws are big its formulaic enough that its usually enjoyable. Its pretty much a cartoon meant for adults. Casino Royale sort of deviated a bit to 'shake things up'. I'm going to give Moonraker another shot just for fun, I did quite like The Man with the Golden Gun until that cheesy ending, and Live and Let DIe. Even Sean Connery kind of had an 'edge' to him that made you kind of wary, but Roger just always seemed like such a nice guy that he pulled off those plots, the cheezier the better. The worst thing about Bond was those womens names, that was just brutal, it was like they were DARING you to break that suspension of disbelief.
Timothy Dalton is still my favourite Bond, and wish they didn't have the legal problems and he would have done more.
God I miss when we used to make good James Bond movies.
MOONRAKER is amusingly underrated and is Moore's biggest hit Bond, if not his best.
Roger Moore was definitely my favorite James Bond. The guy was just SOOO smooth and suave even though he is constantly in goofy over the top situations. Moonraker is the movie that really put his comedic talents to work.
One of my favorite bond films, first time bond in space, the special effects are fantastic and look so real and the film has a continuous fast action pace to it. Also the action scenes are pretty amazing and unique
_Moonraker_ always gets a lot of hate, but I've always loved it. It's no more batty than the rest of the franchise, and being the clearest "emergency studio response" to the brand new/revived _Star Wars_ and _Star Trek_ franchises just makes it better. Sure -- the space battle is pure Velveeta...but no more so than _lightsabers,_ and _Moonraker_ actually tried to portray a space environment with at least a nod to realism -- Stackpole had to shoehorn the whole _"aether rudder"_ thing as a way to make SW space fighters banking in combat be somewhat realistic. That, and the movie version of Hugo Drax was infinitely scarier than Fleming's original......This, _The Spy Who Loved Me,_ and _For Your Eyes Only_ are three of the best Bond films, and yes - mostly because Roger Moore was _exactly_ the right blend for a movie-Bond.
Drax was a cool Bond villain, definitely ranks up there with Zorin and Silva, yes it gets hokey when they’re on the space station but Michael Lonsdale owned that role right until the moment he got blown out the airlock.
Lonsdale was excellent in "Day of the Jackal," along with future M, Edward Fox.
Personally, I think Zorin needed more cowbell.
Great stuff, thank you! I loved this when it came out and the effects still stand up -- if anything look far better than today's CGI.
This film has the best intro. The free fall being chased by jaws
Oh he falls from the sky lands on a house and walks off WTH ?
@@speedracer1945bond steals some random bad guys parachute whilst falling from a plane. Jaws lands on a circus teepee. Lucky really
@@leonardmccoy9178 nice stunt . I heard they had parachutes to look like clothes as they fell . I'm one who didn't like jaws. Liked him better in the Wild wild West.
@@speedracer1945 I think they had parachutes sewed into there clothes
Ah, Drax!! The predecessor of Elon Musk... Billionaire planning to colonize space... should we be worried? (Just kidding!)
Musk? Don’t you mean Bezos?
Musk just wants taxpayers to pay him for his rockets. He saw Trump for a rube and tried especially hard when he was in office.
@@Morotr75 Bezos funded his own space program. In that sense he is the first private space entrepreneur. Musk used taxpayer's money.
@@Morotr75 you mean the way he treats Biden and treated Obama like a Rube with his electric cars? 😂🤣😂🤣🖕
Pretty sure all billionaires are megalomaniacs by default and should all be put to the guillotine. You all fighting between your favorite billionaires is like looking at either side of bootlicker coin.
Jaws flapping his wings to survive the fall was great hahahah
After this film, I think the film makers must have had a little rethink about where the franchise was going and decided they had gone a bit far with this one.
I do daydream of the idea of Timothy Dalton being Bond throughout the 80s. Moonraker does seem like a natural culnination of Moore's run.
This movie also inspired one of the hardest levels in GoldenEye. Good ol' Aztec. It's a bastard to unlock but it's fun as hell when you're able to master it.
I speculate those who grew up on Rodger Moore's Bond would only believe he had the best Bond betrayal
Over the years, I have unfortunately forgotten the relentless joy I experienced from watching 'Moonraker' at the Drive-in as a young kid! Being newly exposed to James Bond by my Dad, and catching a triple-bill that night of 'The spy who loved me', 'Moonraker' and 'For your eyes only' (Moonraker being my fav of the night!) I now look at the film with fresh eyes again following this accurate dissection of its' more intrinsic aspects. Just watched it again as you advised, and had a load of fun, and developed a new respect for it in the James Bond cannon. Thanks for that!!
Moonraker was awesome.. it has everything you want from a Bond movie. The mid air fight with Jaws, the scenes in Venice / Rio / Amazon / the Space station. The cool villian who feeds his foes to an anaconda. Some brilliant scenes too. The cable car fight, the venice fight inside the clock, the cool jungle base. might be a bit cheesy, but one of the most enjoyable ones out there
and cool gadgets
Well, I mean, no. Bond doesn't go into space, he goes into sci-fi. The tragedy of Moonraker is that it only needed a bit of tweaking and it'd be good.
He doesn't even have his PPK.
Lonsdale was also an excellent hero in "The Day Of The Jackal."
Spot on!
So rare that you can agree with almost every word.
Some of the best movies have always been punching bags for the literal minded. Moonraker got back to the experiential, travelogue feel of the novels, Connery’s Thunderball and You Only Live Twice, and perfected in Octopussy.
Bond is a formula rather than formulaic. Change it too much, and you lose cohesion.
1979 was a brilliant year. Moonraker is a very enjoyable film. Much better than many of the recent ones.
The one thing I really liked about Drax as well is that while yes a lot of bond villains also get close, Drax was one of the villains who got closest to his final plan.
Moonraker's cinematography is so incredibly stylish
It's about time this movie got the appreciation it deserves.
Moonraker is simply the quintessential Roger Moore Bond film and you have to take it for what it is.
I still don't think I'll ever be able to watch the sword fight scene with out laughing hysterically because the guy attacking Bond is in Kendo equipment; it's the same as if someone attacked you in fencing gear, stabbing at you with an épée or a foil. I can't help but laugh.
I watched Moonraker a few weeks ago for the first time in quite a while and noticed it clearly had quite a lot of money spent on it. The meeting room / launch pad / crematoriam was obviously intended for something bigger as that set was pretty impressive. The space scenes were really as good as anything else at the time and the laser battle was quite brutal. Barry's score is fantastic and it's a shame that the full double album score has been lost.
I just went on a Bond binge on Amazon Prime, never seen Moonraker before and watched all of the films from Dr No up until the end of Licence to Kill......Moonraker is the most memorable for me personally. Great film and fun to watch. The Living Daylights was also a memorable one for me, as was Octopussy, Man with the Golden Gun, Goldfinger and You Only Live Twice. Moore was the best Bond imo, but Connery my favourite.
In 79 I was a 7 year old Sci-Fi kid(SW,Galactica,Superman) and my aunt took me to see Moonraker at The Kings Plaza theater in Brooklyn. My first Bond movie and it blew me away.
Moonraker is in my top 3 bond films.
Moonraker was the first Bond film I saw as a kid. Was it a bit silly and tongue-in-cheek in places? Yes. But I love Drax's quiet and understated villainy, the women and their outfits, and the action set pieces. The Space Marines invading Drax's Space Station is perfect blend of 2001 and Star Wars.
What if Moore retired after Moonraker and Brosnan became Bond 15 years earlier? His first wife introduced him to Cubby Broccoli during the filming of For Your Eyes Only and Cubby saw his potential.
This means that he would never have played Remington Steele or Ian Dunross in Noble House. He was young enough that he could have played Bond for the eight films that followed ending with the World is Not Enough. An almost twenty year run.
What do you think? Share your thoughts!
Basically it is “The spy who loved me” … just swapped submarine for a space station.
And Spy was just a remake of You Only Live Twice, both directed by Lewis Gilbert.
Moonraker is pure goofy fun. There are elements in this movie to which I feel are an improvement over The Spy Who Loved Me. I prefer Moonraker's score by John Barry, Hugo Drax is a much more interesting and witty bad guy than Stomberg ever was, and I felt the actress who portrayed Dr. Goodhead was stronger than Agent Triple X. Also, Roger Moore in a jungle / safari suit just pure camp fun. It may not have a good a theme song, but some of the actions sequences, including the excellent skydiving opening for the pre-title sequence are awesome.
The movie is two hours long...the 'goofiness' is confined to a couple of specific scenes...meanwhile, we see a lovely girl torn to pieces by Dobermans...Bond nearly having a brain hemorrhage in a flight simulator(and actually looking scared)...Bond being tossed out of a plane without a parachute...a villain who speaks openly about spawning a superior race...Bond nearly swallowed by a python....Bond nearly incinerated underneath a rocket....And look at those closeups of Roger Moore when he has the fate of the planet in his hands, and he must use his skill as a marksman to destroy the Earth-bound pods...has Eastwood ever looked any steelier? When he chose, Moore could play the serious moments quite well. The reputation that Moonraker has for silliness has always been way overblown.
I do think that Moonraker is the best *Roger Moore* Bond movie--it takes the arch and silly formula of Roger Moore-era Bond and pushes it as far as it'll go without breaking. I'd have liked it more if its portrayal of space owed more to real physics, but in a Moore Bond, nobody's going to pay much attention to that--it's just not happening.
Best Bond film ever. Kept going back to the cinema to see it.
Jaws biting through a cable car cable is one of the greatest moments in action cinema history in my opinion. Absolutely unforgettable. I’ve never been able to look at cable car cables the same way since
Moonraker is over the top, silly, makes no sense most of the time and is just utterly absurd. In other words, absolutely everything a good Bond movie should be, and it'll always be a favourite of mine.
Drax miserable? He's king of the one liners!
Moonraker was spectacular & what the public wanted in 1979. Not much more outlandish than YOLT & TSWLM.
I thought that the budding romance between Jaws & the little blond gal was kind of amusing.
Even though the special effects are dated, I find the space battle at the end of the movie to be horrifying. Aside from laser fire, the slow, ponderous movement of the combatants looks pretty accurate as to how astronauts movie in space today.
How terrible would it feel to be part of a space marine unit slowly advancing on your enemy - with absolutely no cover - in the cold, emptiness of space. What an awful way to die.
I always find it horrifying with men spinning off into space screaming and more so after my husband and son both said they would of been screaming the same if it was them spinning off with all their oxygen hissing out of their suits, the guy heading towards the sun always sends a shiver through me.
Without Star Wars, Moonraker would not be made.
R.I.P. Sir Roger Moore, Richard Kiel(as Jaws) and other actors & crew who made this film. ♥️♥️♥️
I’m so glad I watched this video! I’ve loved Moonraker since it came out in the late 70s and thought it was fantastic fun! Everyone I knew back then loved this James Bond outing. Young and old, and especially both of my parents, who were serious Bond fans! It made more money than any other previous Bond movie by far at the time. It was a big hit, and caused a lot of excitement when it came out. People take it out of its historical context and that’s always a mistake to do. Moonraker was and is great entertainment! Thank you for your work!
My parents were very keen Bond fans and good memories of seeing it at the cinema with them around 1980 moonraker is now one of our favourites. I remember my mum being happy that Jaws fell in love and her with her hands over her ears during the space battle.
There's actually more to this film than meets the eye. Yes, it's incredulous but there are some interesting ideas expressed within it.
My favorite Moore Bond. Yeah, it's silly, but it's very entertaining :) Technically the Best Moore Bond movie is "The Spy Who Loved Me", but Moonraker is still my personal fav
Moonraker has everything: artfulness, silliness, stoicism, ms. Goodhead, incredible stunts, sci-if, awesome villain, etc, etc. It is absolute awesome Bond Entertainment!!!
only name better than Ms. Goodhead was Pussy Galore.
Moonraker is great. I love this movie. Roger is my favorite bond and Moonraker is on my top 5.
Great review! I think the best James Bond films are: 1965, 1967, 1977, 1979, 1981, 1983, 1985, 1987, 1989, 1995. *** And yes, "Moonraker"(1979) is a great Bond film with the greatest James Bond ever: Roger Moore!!! By the way, Moonraker had a bigger budget than Star Wars... Well, that's something! *** Sadly, the first 2 Roger's films were weak, mainly because of Guy Hamilton! I think that scene with Bond and Andrea Anders in Peninsula hotel room was disgustinly bad/wrong! But later films, since TSWLM, were all great! Lewis Gilbert and Roger Moore: 2 greatest gentlemen in movie history!!! R.I.P. both in heaven!!!
Another great video. Moonraker has always been towards the bottom for me mostly due to the absurd moments. However, your brother in arms, Calvin Dyson, in your shared opinion of Moonraker has given me enough new perspective to give it another try.
Hell yeah! It's definitely worth a rewatch. I get why people tend to write it off, but idk I think if you ignore the ridiculousness and go with the ride it's pretty compelling.
@@FilmSpeak here’s how you enjoy the movie: watch the face of Jaws when he sees James Bond escape the boat in a hang glider before going over the water fall... He has the absolute ultimate “WTF” face! - TWICE! Once you laugh at that, you will forever enjoy the entire movie! Mark my words, you’ll get why it all works! 👍🏽
here’s how you enjoy the movie: watch the face of Jaws when he sees James Bond escape the boat in a hang glider before going over the water fall... He has the absolute ultimate “WTF” face! - TWICE! Once you laugh at that, you will forever enjoy the entire movie! Mark my words, you’ll get why it all works! 👍🏽
I loved Moonraker - Jaws met his true love 🤪
Couldn't finish this due to awful background music
It could have used a massive volume decrease for sure lol
@@sleepycharlie673Just about had to do the old 'volume off/captions on' routine.
To be fair to narrator/producer: good speaking voice and voice audio saved it.
The scene with Moore driving the gondola out of the water in Venice was so campy. I cringed when that scene comes around. For a spy, he does attract a lot of attraction
Ironic isn't it, he's the world's most famous Secret Agent..
When Bond shoots 🔫 the guy out of the tree 🌳 is frigging PRICELESS and Moore played it off BEAUTIFULLY and the opening scene stunt Bond and Jaws skydiving was amazing 👏
Somehow I saw this in theatrical release (my very first Bond film on the big screen, every other before was just the pan & scan of TV) - they let me & a friend in at the age of 10!
I saw this movie in Honolulu, Hawaii, in 1979, on the last day of a Hawaiian vacation & loved it! From the
opening 'action' scene to the wonderful locations, to the unexpected finale in space, it was one of the best
"Bond" films, of all times! Fast forward to 1999, I was taking a yoga class in Santa Monica, Ca.,with some
actors & at the end, realized that Lois Chiles, "Holly Goodhead" was right behind me & had hardly changed! Wow!
I remember, being in the living room, writing an essay or something. Something I wasn’t really enjoying, but the thing that made it bearable, was that my dad was watching this movie while I was working on it. I’m not gonna say it helped me go any faster, it definitely slowed me down a bit, but it did ease my boredom quite a bit. I’d love to see it again one day.
I remember seeing Moonraker in the theater, it is my favorite Bond film. One thing I can say about it at the time it was a face in the crowd. It is Bond, it will be near the front of the crowd. But sci-fi was everywhere.
Star Wars was the point where so many things changed in pop culture. Unless you lived through it, and knew what sci-fi was like before it. After the Star Wars craze kicked in(it took a while), everybody and everything was space happy. That's why I said you had to live through it, I've never seen anything like it since. It was coming at you from all sides, people, products, even just everyday life. You cited how bad things were, I'm afraid that just wasn't the case back then. In hindsight of history all of the things you stated were history by that point. Nor could they be compared to today, at the time there was an optimism in everything. Politics was there, but wasn't in your face. Entertainment then was escapism from everything else. In the face of (now old) media driving the point home, we are all going to get vaporized at any moment. Facing something that grim, the reaction was to live for today, have fun. That's why Disco was a thing. Things were on an upswing from the late seventies to the eighties, even into the 1990's. It was the reason we had the greatest period of pop culture we will ever see.
"They're going to send bond to the one place on earth they haven't sent him....... space!" Ffs, lol.
Moonraker my absolute favourite Moore Bond movie. Silly but good also. Watched in the cinema.
I saw this movie as a child in the theater, and I really like it.
I still consider Roger Moore as the second best Bond next to number 1 Sean Connery of course, and he made the most 007 films out of all 26...!!!