This (6:20) was filmed at the Dome of the Sea Restaurant at the fabulous Dunes (RIP: 1955-1993) Our Vegas history project has many items from this location, some of which will be given away during our live unboxing feeds. Come have a look! ruclips.net/p/PLq-zS2wGnJCcV0DCtQwGAq29JXtcivCUU&si=mndJ8-MUENrUDTXS
This (6:20) was filmed at the Dome of the Sea Restaurant at the fabulous Dunes (RIP: 1955-1993) Our Vegas history project has many items from this location, some of which will be given away during our live unboxing feeds. Come have a look!
This scene at 6:20 was filmed at the "Dome of the Sea" Restaurant at the fabulous Dunes (RIP: 1955-1993) Our Vegas history project has many items from this location, some of which will be given away during our live unboxing feeds.
Sammy! I do remember the exchange with Plenty O'Toole (and when I saw the movie the first time, I was a kid, and the double entendres went right over my head, lol)
And that's how you make a plot hole. They edited out the scene where Plenty O'Toole sneaks back into Bond's room and finds Tiffany Case's home address in her purse. That is why Plenty was found drowned in Tiffany's pool.
Not the only plot hole in this movie. That scene where the cops are chasing Bond through the streets of Vegas, and Bond goes into an alley while popping a wheelie on both right tires, but comes out of the alley on both left tires. They snipped out the scene where the middle of the alley had an open area where they landed on all 4's before switching to the left tires.
I just realized the terrible pun of Bond's saying, "I'll have two stacks," and the scene cutting to Plenty's buxom dress. The Bond franchise was filled with innuendos.
@@nigelgreenwood9010 Come on. The innuendo started with From Russia With Love ‘I think my mouth is too small (Tatina). ‘Not for me it isn’t ‘ (Bond with a grin on his face).
This feels very surreal to see all this extra footage. It feels natural and unnatural all at once. Really nice to see more of Plenty O’Toole. She hardly gets enough screen time.
The decade may have changed and along with it a relaxed dress code but Bond showing up to a Vegas casino wearing a white dinner jacket and a black bow tie, shows that he'll never deviate from classical style. Class and style are synonymous with the name James Bond and Connery set the standard.
Sid Haig(The Devil's Rejects) at 8:15. Also, The Hood Bond Elbows in the face is Marc Lawrence, Who appears briefly at the Beginning of the Man With the Golden Gun, Where he plays a Hitman who gets shot by Scaramanga.
When Connery starred in Dr. No, Goldfinger, From Russia With Love, Thunderball and You Only Live Twice, he was as popular as the Beatles and no doubt getting more action than them. I grew up in the 50's and 60's and remember how girls would stop whatever they were doing when the Bond soundtracks came on the radio. You could see it on the girl's faces, they were fantasizing being with Sean. What a lucky guy. Bond was the Man.
So funny the trailer she said she sells shouts the line differently but in the film she's she's the line shouting the word town on the way down, actually a lot funnier and when she lands in the pool great aim, and then that classic line my favorite line, I didn't even know there was a pool down there. With that New York / Jersey accent which is that actress actual voice, classic.
In the six degrees of separation department. Robert Wagner was married to Lana Woods' sister, Natalie. After Natalie died, Robert Wagner married Jill St. John. Lana firmly believes Robert Wagner killed her sister.
Keeping with this... Robert Wagner went on to co-star in Hart to Hart. The pilot episode also starred Jill St.John and, in a brief, cameo-esque role, Natalie Wood. Tom Mankiewicz co-wrote Diamonds are Forever and the Hart to Hart pilot... which also starred Clifton James as a Sheriff, a role he reprised in the next Bond film, Live and Let Die, also written by Mankiewicz.
Terrible continuity error to cut the scene where Plenty comes back to Bond's room after being thrown into the pool - it explains the scene where she ends up being drowned at Tiffany's address later on.
At 0:01 - the irony is that today this hotel does actually start with a W - it is the Westgate Hotel Las Vegas now (formerly Las Vegas Hilton and before that the Las Vegas International Hotel, which it was at the time this was made).
Sure this was kind of a weak Bond movie and Plenty may be a gold digger but she’s my favorite Bond girl. Lana Wood is an absolute bombshell in that purple dress! It sucks that she and Bond didn’t do the deed.
Phyllis Davis was hired to play Plenty O'Toole and had even signed a contract. However, the producers decided to give the role to Lana Wood. Because she had signed a contract, Davis received residual checks from the film, probably for the rest of her life.
And she went on to land a significant role in Vega$ (1977-81) with Robert Urich. (a series that is a endless treasure trove of quality, on-location 1970s Las Vegas footage, BTW)
I think all of these should've been left in as they seem to flow quite nicely. I especially like the jibe at Bond as he appears in his white tux, and that line from Saxby about not seeing White for three years despite running the place for him. I also like the wine snubbing however the following conversation with Plenty felt a bit awkward.
Cut scenes are 100% about runtime and importance to plot. Many movies have way more scenes shot than can fit in a decent run time. Some epics were successful (Gone with the Wind, Ben Hur for example) but most movies just couldn't run for 2.5-3 hours and sell tickets.
even in '71 as an 11 year old I noticed Bond was a bit overdressed for cheesy Las Vegas. It's also obvious that he was a snob who looked down on the place.
Agreed. And his snobbery appears to be a product of age, i.e. "this is not how we used to do it." Connery looks old and to be slowing down in these scenes. Smart editing.
@@hd-xc2lz the snobbery is not Connery's fault - he is on record as not liking the character of Bond precisely because he was written by Ian Fleming to be an obnoxious, humorless elitist. In fact, he tried to make Bond more likable by introducing humor in the movies. By the final Eon film, it was obvious on the screen that he was truly bored with playing the role. Fleming imagined Bond as a man educated in the finest English boarding schools like Eton and a member of European high society, London's gentleman's clubs and elite resorts. It would have turned Fleming's stomach to place him in crude Vegas.
@@MrEab2010 I wouldn't think to blame Connery unless I knew he had script input. And from all his reported grumbling about his final Bond projects, appears he had very little. Interesting what you say about Fleming's picture of Bond. I'd love to see at least one future Bond film go with that character description, remaking one of the early Bond films. Might bomb, but I think I'd enjoy it.
1: You need to remember to enter casinos in Europe, indeed London in this period you did need to dress. You were not getting in wearing chinos or polo tops.
They should have left the scene in where Plenty comes back and gets Tiffanys address from Tiffanys purse because later on in the movie when Bond finds Plenty drowned in a pool at Tiffanys house - there is no explanation for why she was there - only that she was mistaken for Tiffany and murdered.
I agree because it left a huge plot hole in the movie - I remember even as a kid wondering what the heck she was doing at Tiffany's house and/or how she knew where to even go.
@@walterlv01 True, but it's not much better with it in. Tiffany gets thrown out of a high window by a group of thugs... luckily survives... and then decides to go straight back up to the room. It doesn't make any sense.
@@grantmalone She is very careful when she enters in the room. She is curious about what happened, who is Bond (gave her a lot of money), who is Tiffany who is with Bond and sees her home address.
Funny thing is, these scenes probably improve the movie. They should have taken out Charles Gray’s hair, the moon buggy chase, Bloefeld in drag and the ‘climax’ on the oil rig.
The plenty of tool scene was in the original release was never deleted maybe it was deleted for laser desk as many of many movies were they have scenes, but this was definitely in the original print that I've seen anything unsettlement at the time, the appearance of Jimmy Dean had to be curtailed because of he was the face of Jimmy Dean sausages at the time but there's a cup s later released and also all of the music source music as well as you know like which is the music playing in the casino which was not in the original soundtrack album release is now available all of us up including the funeral home burn sequence and choir singing and organ music
At the airport, when Felix is searching the body for the diamonds, he can't find them and there's this great exchange with Bond... Felix: "I know the diamonds are on the body, but where?" Bond: "Alimentary, Dr Leiter." Felix: "So long, James. Keep in touch." 😂
This movie seems more and more like 1995's "Casino" - Burt Saxby is Robert DeNiro's character, Plenty O'Toole is Sharon Stone's, Shady Tree is Joe Pesci's, and the whole diamond-smuggling thing is like the robbery capers set up by Pesci's character.
I didn't know Sammy was actually supposed to be in the movie. Bond is later thumbing through a magazine, and it opens to a full page picture of Sammy. I thought they were just acknowledging the entertainer. I mean, Sammy was good.
Unbelievable that Connery would do such a stupid movie. Unflattering hairpiece, cheesy plot, horrible acting, and how Jill St John ever got to be in films I’ll never know.
Great to see. One of my fav Bonds. That scene with Sammy Davis was definitely better left out. Also the scene with Lana and Sean in the restaurant. A bit lame. Lana was disappointed that she wasn't in it more I think, and it would have been nice to see that. She is a charming actress and lovely. Also, in the released version there is a plot hole where we don't know why Plenty goes to Tiffany's house and ends up being murdered there. The last Plenty scene here explains it a bit but it still doesn't make sense. Mr Kidd and co knew who Tiffany was so why would they confuse Plenty for her and kill her? I always think the killing of Plenty made no sense. She had nothing to do with the diamonds. Oh well. Good to see these scenes.
No loose ends. One of the things 'spy' films tend to portray, is that all the players know who is in the game. She was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
They confuse Plenty for Tiffany because Plenty was wearing one of Tiffany's wig. Most likely she is there to find out about Bond who gave her a big tip.
There was more to Plenty’s character before deleting multiple scenes. Not letting Bond leave the casino alone and inviting him for a drink. At the restaurant the conversation between them is awkward. (Plenty is definitely not Bonds equal) When Bond admires the harpist which makes Plenty visibly uncomfortable. She suggests that they leave and she walk him to his door as a not so subtle way to sleep with him. She initiates the romance immediately after she enters the room. After being removed from the room and almost killed she oddly returns. This might be to show her persistence and jealousy. When she returns she sees Bond and Tiffany together. Plenty finds Tiffany’s address and is going to confront her after losing Bond and or having her thrown out the window. But Plenty is out of her element when she gets wrapped up in the diamond smuggling operation.
Regardless if the deleted scenes got reinstated, there's no getting away from the fact that Connery wasn't remotely interested, (I could be wrong) in the movie at all. Bad enough he wasn't on good terms with Saltzman and Broccoli, yet it appears he found time to 'engage" with two women at the same time - thank goodness this is his final (official) 007 movie.
Floating harp inside a restaurant has got to be the most vegas thing ever
@@bacchuslax7967 Except for Sammy Davis Jr.!
This (6:20) was filmed at the Dome of the Sea Restaurant at the fabulous Dunes (RIP: 1955-1993) Our Vegas history project has many items from this location, some of which will be given away during our live unboxing feeds. Come have a look! ruclips.net/p/PLq-zS2wGnJCcV0DCtQwGAq29JXtcivCUU&si=mndJ8-MUENrUDTXS
This (6:20) was filmed at the Dome of the Sea Restaurant at the fabulous Dunes (RIP: 1955-1993) Our Vegas history project has many items from this location, some of which will be given away during our live unboxing feeds. Come have a look!
This scene at 6:20 was filmed at the "Dome of the Sea" Restaurant at the fabulous Dunes (RIP: 1955-1993) Our Vegas history project has many items from this location, some of which will be given away during our live unboxing feeds.
Or maybe the washed up balding old comedian with no new material but still has two broads as an escort
Diamonds Are Forever was the 1st DVD i ever bought (in 2001). These deleted scenes were one of the reasons.
ABCTV played this movie back in the mid 1970s and most of these scenes were in it.
Sammy!
I do remember the exchange with Plenty O'Toole (and when I saw the movie the first time, I was a kid, and the double entendres went right over my head, lol)
Not for me. I burst out laughing.
I gave a hearty chuckle, particularly regarding the collars and cuffs.
That's my man, Connery was the best 👌
I wonder what Peter O'Toole thought of all that. Maybe he was dad. Haha.
Connery. Simply Untouchable.
The scene where Bond snubs the wine is so classic and should have been left in
I know. I did that once to get out of ordering a $300 bottle of wine. It impressed my date at the time. She thought I knew about wine
Rothschild 42 is a Clarrett. Great Line
One ONLY tastes to see if the wine has gone bad (vinegar), not to judge its suitability.
They say that Sean really was tapping both Lana and Jill while filming this movie. It's good to be the king.
Us Bond fans know he was. Because he's Sean Connery.
Same goes in goldfinger
That wouldn't surprise me at all if it was true.
Robert Wagner's ex sister in law AND future wife staring in the same movie 😂😂😂😂
Lana Wood sucked in this movie. Can’t act.
This makes infinitely more sense. Why these scenes were cut from the final print I’ll never know. Especially Plenty’s return.
Many people do not know that Leonard Barr (Shady Tree) was Dean Martin's uncle and often worked as Dean's opening ad in nightclubs.
A very funny man.
I'm 80, I remember !!
These reinstated scenes are great. Thank you!
Yes! This is my favorite James Bond film and I never knew of these scenes! Thank you for sharing them!
I enjoy them, but usually agree that they were best cut out.
And that's how you make a plot hole. They edited out the scene where Plenty O'Toole sneaks back into Bond's room and finds Tiffany Case's home address in her purse. That is why Plenty was found drowned in Tiffany's pool.
That is WELL down on the list of DAF's problems.
Not the only plot hole in this movie. That scene where the cops are chasing Bond through the streets of Vegas, and Bond goes into an alley while popping a wheelie on both right tires, but comes out of the alley on both left tires. They snipped out the scene where the middle of the alley had an open area where they landed on all 4's before switching to the left tires.
Don't care what other people say. I love this movie. And I absolutely LOVE the parking lot chase scene!
Jill St. John was incredibly beautiful and intelligent her and Sean Young have the same kind of vibe.
Jill is less of a psycho.
I just realized the terrible pun of Bond's saying, "I'll have two stacks," and the scene cutting to Plenty's buxom dress. The Bond franchise was filled with innuendos.
It was preparing for Roger Moore. Connery said "it was going that way any way".
Think Sean didn't like the innuendo.
like getting caught with more than his hands up
@@nigelgreenwood9010
Come on. The innuendo started with From Russia With Love ‘I think my mouth is too small (Tatina). ‘Not for me it isn’t ‘ (Bond with a grin on his face).
Or when Tiffany says "I'm impressed there is more to you" as Bond walks naked towards her.
Awesome. This is so Hollywood. Film a complex scene and it lands on the floor in the edit room.
Sammy Davis scene,was right to cut but Lana scene , coming back up , after being thrown out of the window into the pool no
This feels very surreal to see all this extra footage. It feels natural and unnatural all at once.
Really nice to see more of Plenty O’Toole. She hardly gets enough screen time.
It's unnatural because the film quality is different, plus I had to add the background sound effects and music myself, so it's not a professional job!
Just a shame Lana Wood couldn’t act and had to be dubbed
That's Natalie Wood's sister.
@@amazingtheatre1262 It didn't really matter though, did it!
@@aheroictaxidriver3180😮
"Hi,I"m Plenty ! Well ,of course you are! Plenty O'Toole! Named after your father,no doubt! " Great lines !!!
Mr Hendersen became Blofeld in this movie. He was killed in "You only live twice"
The decade may have changed and along with it a relaxed dress code but Bond showing up to a Vegas casino wearing a white dinner jacket and a black bow tie, shows that he'll never deviate from classical style. Class and style are synonymous with the name James Bond and Connery set the standard.
😮
The first three Bond movies of the 70s were pretty pedestrian compared to what came before and after. But there were moments of fun.
All directed by Guy Hamilton
Early Connery and all Craig worth watching, others junk.
Sid Haig(The Devil's Rejects) at 8:15. Also, The Hood Bond Elbows in the face is Marc Lawrence, Who appears briefly at the Beginning of the Man With the Golden Gun, Where he plays a Hitman who gets shot by Scaramanga.
"Hey, Al! Al, wherever you are; don't hold it against me!"
Wow I didnt know that was Sid Haig!!! Thats awesome
the guy that played Shady Tree was Dean Martin's uncle.
Shady Tree was Based on Don Rickles.
They wanted him for that role but he wasn't available at the time.
Leonard Barr 🥸
Holy shit !!! Really ???
Excellent edit! Thank you!
When Connery starred in Dr. No, Goldfinger, From Russia With Love, Thunderball and You Only Live Twice, he was as popular as the Beatles and no doubt getting more action than them. I grew up in the 50's and 60's and remember how girls would stop whatever they were doing when the Bond soundtracks came on the radio. You could see it on the girl's faces, they were fantasizing being with Sean. What a lucky guy. Bond was the Man.
So funny the trailer she said she sells shouts the line differently but in the film she's she's the line shouting the word town on the way down, actually a lot funnier and when she lands in the pool great aim, and then that classic line my favorite line, I didn't even know there was a pool down there. With that New York / Jersey accent which is that actress actual voice, classic.
In the six degrees of separation department. Robert Wagner was married to Lana Woods' sister, Natalie. After Natalie died, Robert Wagner married Jill St. John. Lana firmly believes Robert Wagner killed her sister.
Keeping with this... Robert Wagner went on to co-star in Hart to Hart. The pilot episode also starred Jill St.John and, in a brief, cameo-esque role, Natalie Wood.
Tom Mankiewicz co-wrote Diamonds are Forever and the Hart to Hart pilot... which also starred Clifton James as a Sheriff, a role he reprised in the next Bond film, Live and Let Die, also written by Mankiewicz.
Wagner got off too easily. Walken was there but claims to have seen or heard nothing
Great editing job!
8:15 that's Sid Haig, right there. He played one of the attendants riding in the hearse.
He always played the Bad Guy.
Terrible continuity error to cut the scene where Plenty comes back to Bond's room after being thrown into the pool - it explains the scene where she ends up being drowned at Tiffany's address later on.
Agreed, that scene made absolutely no sense without it!
Yes, so they delete these scene of course.
I am Plenty O'Toole... Named after your father, perhaps?
At 0:01 - the irony is that today this hotel does actually start with a W - it is the Westgate Hotel Las Vegas now (formerly Las Vegas Hilton and before that the Las Vegas International Hotel, which it was at the time this was made).
This is where Elvis performed bi annually from 1969 until his death in 1977.
Westgate the time share..
Westgate - sounds like a miserable, piss-strewn car park in a wet English town where dreams go to be asset-stripped and killed
That's coincidence, not irony.
@@peternicholas2393 Thank you! People love to use that word when it doesn't apply.
An expertly done piece of editing.
Sure this was kind of a weak Bond movie and Plenty may be a gold digger but she’s my favorite Bond girl. Lana Wood is an absolute bombshell in that purple dress! It sucks that she and Bond didn’t do the deed.
"I didn't know there was a pool down there!"
One notch he never got to add to the bedpost 😞
Only in real life 😉
"Hey ... Peter ... you had enough of this ???" I just beamed in Barbra Streisand to say those in my mind !!! Lol
The way it should've been.
Bond was so overdressed in Vegas. For a spy, he does not exactly blend into the crowd.
Yes he was way over-dressed even back in the 70s
Maybe he was intentionally drawing attention to himself to see who'd bite
@@visionist7Yep! That was the plan. And besides, he wasn’t there to spy, he was posing as Peter Franks and wanted Slumber’s associates to find him.
Technically Bond was an assassin. Not really a spy. His MO was to get his quarry to notice him and react.
4:32 lets face it, mens eyes were not directed at her face ;)
This was the first movie soundtrack I bought...still have it
Lana Wood was STACKED
Still is....
Very hot for a Grandmother
Connery was too classy for 70s Las Vegas - he really stood out...
Who's looking at Connery?
Frankly, he looked old, and of another era. Wasn't flattering.
Now, that's the Bond we know and love.
Phyllis Davis was hired to play Plenty O'Toole and had even signed a contract. However, the producers decided to give the role to Lana Wood. Because she had signed a contract, Davis received residual checks from the film, probably for the rest of her life.
And she went on to land a significant role in Vega$ (1977-81) with Robert Urich. (a series that is a endless treasure trove of quality, on-location 1970s Las Vegas footage, BTW)
She was from the same county I'm from, Jefferson County,TX.
It's easy to see why they would have wanted to have Phyllis Davis in that part she had two nice stacks as well.
@@carlmontney7916 Now, now... 😁
I think all of these should've been left in as they seem to flow quite nicely.
I especially like the jibe at Bond as he appears in his white tux, and that line from Saxby about not seeing White for three years despite running the place for him.
I also like the wine snubbing however the following conversation with Plenty felt a bit awkward.
I’m Plenty! Well of corsh you are...
Like Highlander Hi, I am Candy.
The Kurgan: Of course you are.
This was a great ,fun,movie and the song diamonds are forever is great also. So there
Cut scenes are 100% about runtime and importance to plot. Many movies have way more scenes shot than can fit in a decent run time. Some epics were successful (Gone with the Wind, Ben Hur for example) but most movies just couldn't run for 2.5-3 hours and sell tickets.
The original The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly had about 20 minutes chopped out of it by distributors so it could be show more times in the theaters.
the scene with the Rat, in the Tunnel, was/is ... one of the Best ever 😘😆🤣😜😜😜
One of us smells like a tart's handkerchief...I'm afraid it's me. Sorry old boy.
even in '71 as an 11 year old I noticed Bond was a bit overdressed for cheesy Las Vegas. It's also obvious that he was a snob who looked down on the place.
Agreed. And his snobbery appears to be a product of age, i.e. "this is not how we used to do it." Connery looks old and to be slowing down in these scenes. Smart editing.
@@hd-xc2lz the snobbery is not Connery's fault - he is on record as not liking the character of Bond precisely because he was written by Ian Fleming to be an obnoxious, humorless elitist. In fact, he tried to make Bond more likable by introducing humor in the movies. By the final Eon film, it was obvious on the screen that he was truly bored with playing the role. Fleming imagined Bond as a man educated in the finest English boarding schools like Eton and a member of European high society, London's gentleman's clubs and elite resorts. It would have turned Fleming's stomach to place him in crude Vegas.
@@MrEab2010 I wouldn't think to blame Connery unless I knew he had script input. And from all his reported grumbling about his final Bond projects, appears he had very little. Interesting what you say about Fleming's picture of Bond. I'd love to see at least one future Bond film go with that character description, remaking one of the early Bond films. Might bomb, but I think I'd enjoy it.
@@hd-xc2lz sounds like you might have liked Connery's runner-up, Patrick McGoohan. He wanted to play Bond as a by-the-book prude.
1: You need to remember to enter casinos in Europe, indeed London in this period you did need to dress. You were not getting in wearing chinos or polo tops.
great done makes it all better with the delated scens
The question is could these scenes, left in, have made the film any worse?
one of them explains how Plenty O Toole ends up dead in a different pool.
They should have left the scene in where Plenty comes back and gets Tiffanys address from Tiffanys purse because later on in the movie when Bond finds Plenty drowned in a pool at Tiffanys house - there is no explanation for why she was there - only that she was mistaken for Tiffany and murdered.
What’s with all the shadows on the crap table?
4:18 "I'll have two sshtacks now." "Hi, I'm Plenty." (perfect timing.)
Thank him “properly”? Hmmmm...
Just realized the gangster who gets his face punched was also the gangster in Scaramanga's Fun House.
Marc Lawrence yes!
@@josephvitielo1693 He shows up in Foul Play as well.
Of all the scenes they should have the scene that Plenty returns, because this explains her death.
@Christopher Smith Rather empirical opinion you have there. We never saw it from through a Darwinian prism. Cheers.
I agree because it left a huge plot hole in the movie - I remember even as a kid wondering what the heck she was doing at Tiffany's house and/or how she knew where to even go.
@@walterlv01 True, but it's not much better with it in. Tiffany gets thrown out of a high window by a group of thugs... luckily survives... and then decides to go straight back up to the room. It doesn't make any sense.
@@grantmalone Why? If she called the cops, they would have taken her back up there anyway.
@@grantmalone She is very careful when she enters in the room. She is curious about what happened, who is Bond (gave her a lot of money), who is Tiffany who is with Bond and sees her home address.
-You caught me with more than my hands up... 😅 Good one.
Why does Connery look five years younger in the floating harp scene?
Funny thing is, these scenes probably improve the movie. They should have taken out Charles Gray’s hair, the moon buggy chase, Bloefeld in drag and the ‘climax’ on the oil rig.
Bond dressing like Vegas is Monte Carlo…classic.
God Vegas was so tacky back in the '70s, watching Bond there is Iike watching Bond in a trailer court just slimy...
Vegas remains tacky
I only just realized that the Acorn in red is Cassandra Peterson, Elvira the Mistress of Darkness.
No, she was in the film, but she said her part ended up on the cutting room floor. The woman in red is apparently Jennifer Castle.
The plenty of tool scene was in the original release was never deleted maybe it was deleted for laser desk as many of many movies were they have scenes, but this was definitely in the original print that I've seen anything unsettlement at the time, the appearance of Jimmy Dean had to be curtailed because of he was the face of Jimmy Dean sausages at the time but there's a cup s later released and also all of the music source music as well as you know like which is the music playing in the casino which was not in the original soundtrack album release is now available all of us up including the funeral home burn sequence and choir singing and organ music
8:27 Stop that! I got friends in this towwwwwwwwwwn!
That fall was done by a stuntman wearing a wig.
SEAN Connery Was James Bond.The best Bond Ever😊
At the airport, when Felix is searching the body for the diamonds, he can't find them and there's this great exchange with Bond...
Felix: "I know the diamonds are on the body, but where?"
Bond: "Alimentary, Dr Leiter."
Felix: "So long, James. Keep in touch."
😂
I DIDNT KNOW THERE WAS A POOL DOWN THERE
Why they did deleted all those kwy scenes? 🤔
I forgot Sammys scene was cut out
The old man on stage, was the
Uncle to Dean Martin. , 2:05 .
Music at 5:40?
It's called "Q's Trick" it's by John Barry and is on the soundtrack album
I would just love to see some of those deleted scenes in put into the Janes Bond series'.
Sean Connery was so...cool he made it look easy James Bond
Cassandra "Eliva" Peterson was one of the "Acorns".
"Eliva?" You had one thing to say... 🙄
Met Lana and took a photo with her at a local comic con a few years back- was all I could do to avoid slipping into a Scots brogue...
One of my favorites
This movie seems more and more like 1995's "Casino" - Burt Saxby is Robert DeNiro's character, Plenty O'Toole is Sharon Stone's, Shady Tree is Joe Pesci's, and the whole diamond-smuggling thing is like the robbery capers set up by Pesci's character.
❤❤--> Willard White was supposed to be a metaphor for Howard Hughes .
I think you mean STEVE WYNN. They even look the same.
Having deleted those scenes makes no sense.
Agreed. NEVER cut a scene with Sammy Davis Jr.
I didn't know Sammy was actually supposed to be in the movie. Bond is later thumbing through a magazine, and it opens to a full page picture of Sammy. I thought they were just acknowledging the entertainer. I mean, Sammy was good.
Unbelievable that Connery would do such a stupid movie. Unflattering hairpiece, cheesy plot, horrible acting, and how Jill St John ever got to be in films I’ll never know.
Because $$$$$$ 🤑
Willard White or Howard Hughes, ? Hughes gave permission to film in his casinos, he only liked Connery as bond
Great to see. One of my fav Bonds. That scene with Sammy Davis was definitely better left out. Also the scene with Lana and Sean in the restaurant. A bit lame. Lana was disappointed that she wasn't in it more I think, and it would have been nice to see that. She is a charming actress and lovely. Also, in the released version there is a plot hole where we don't know why Plenty goes to Tiffany's house and ends up being murdered there. The last Plenty scene here explains it a bit but it still doesn't make sense. Mr Kidd and co knew who Tiffany was so why would they confuse Plenty for her and kill her? I always think the killing of Plenty made no sense. She had nothing to do with the diamonds. Oh well. Good to see these scenes.
No loose ends.
One of the things 'spy' films tend to portray, is that all the players know who is in the game.
She was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
@@Kyle-sr6jm ok, but why was she there?
They confuse Plenty for Tiffany because Plenty was wearing one of Tiffany's wig. Most likely she is there to find out about Bond who gave her a big tip.
NICE WORK
Bond...at his best....
I didn't know there was a pool down there.
There was more to Plenty’s character before deleting multiple scenes. Not letting Bond leave the casino alone and inviting him for a drink. At the restaurant the conversation between them is awkward. (Plenty is definitely not Bonds equal) When Bond admires the harpist which makes Plenty visibly uncomfortable. She suggests that they leave and she walk him to his door as a not so subtle way to sleep with him. She initiates the romance immediately after she enters the room. After being removed from the room and almost killed she
oddly returns. This might be to show her persistence and jealousy. When she returns she sees Bond and Tiffany together. Plenty finds Tiffany’s address and is going to confront her after losing Bond and or having her thrown out the window. But Plenty is out of her element when she gets wrapped up in the diamond smuggling operation.
All of Lana Wood's dialogue in the casino is also obviously dubbed - and badly, so deleting those scenes makes sense.
Would have been great to have had Sammy in the film but I can understand why they cut his scene.
well now we know why they were deleted
Es con Sean Connery que está serie Bond tiene la escencia .
Ricardo Alegria Zambrano Popayan cauca Colombia
I’m afraid you caught me with more than my hands up.
What was the cake joke about? Implying that Bond was overdressed for the casino with his black tie?
Yeah, like a groom on a wedding cake
❤❤❤10,000 dollars in 1970 is worth 82,000 in todays money
Plenty sure had plenty!
Regardless if the deleted scenes got reinstated, there's no getting away from the fact that Connery wasn't remotely interested, (I could be wrong) in the movie at all.
Bad enough he wasn't on good terms with Saltzman and Broccoli, yet it appears he found time to 'engage" with two women at the same time - thank goodness this is his final (official) 007 movie.
Excellent work. You even cut short Shady's murder which is what I was hoping for.
I keep picturing Moore in this film
The scene of Plenty stealing key is not in the real movie. Plenty entered in Miss Case house and she died instead Miss Case.
Yeah, that's why these are CUT scenes.
I always thought Bond needed to make a return to Vegas along with SPECTER. I have a Story written around that plot!
Roger Moore is 3 years older than Sean, but looked 10 years younger.
Exactly right
The "WOOD" sisters were definitely named correctly.
Because they couldn't act? Or because they floated in water?
Rip Jimmy dean