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On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
18 December 1969 (USA) moreTagline:
James Bond 007 is back! morePlot:
James Bond woos a mob boss's daughter and goes undercover to uncover the true reason for Blofeld's allergy research in the Swiss Alps that involves beautiful women from around the world. full summary | add synopsisAwards:
Nominated for Golden Globe. Another 1 nomination moreNewsDesk:
(8 articles)
Michael Sheen as Blofeld for Bond 23...? (From CinemaSpy. 17 June 2009, 12:10 PM, PDT)
Rumor Alert: Is Michael Sheen Going to Star as Bond Big Bad Ernst Stavro Blofeld?
(From Manny the Movie Guy. 16 June 2009, 11:06 AM, PDT)
User Comments:
Not a Bad Deal at All. moreCast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| George Lazenby | ... | James Bond | |
| Diana Rigg | ... | Tracy Di Vicenzo | |
| Telly Savalas | ... | Ernst Stavro Blofeld | |
| Gabriele Ferzetti | ... | Marc Ange Draco | |
| Ilse Steppat | ... | Irma Bunt | |
| Angela Scoular | ... | Ruby Bartlett | |
| Lois Maxwell | ... | Miss Moneypenny | |
| Catherine Schell | ... | Nancy (as Catherina Von Schell) | |
| George Baker | ... | Sir Hilary Bray | |
| Bernard Lee | ... | 'M' | |
| Bernard Horsfall | ... | Campbell | |
| Desmond Llewelyn | ... | 'Q' | |
| Yuri Borionko | ... | Grunther (as Yuri Borienko) | |
| Virginia North | ... | Olympe | |
| Geoffrey Cheshire | ... | Toussaint |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Ian Fleming's On Her Majesty's Secret Service (UK) (complete title) (USA) (complete title)O.H.M.S.S. (UK) (promotional abbreviation)
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Parents Guide:
View content advisory for parentsRuntime:
142 minCountry:
UKColor:
Color (Technicolor)Aspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 moreSound Mix:
Mono (Westrex Recording System)Certification:
Canada:PG (Manitoba/Ontario) | Canada:A (Nova Scotia) | Canada:G (Quebec) | Iceland:12 | Brazil:12 | Portugal:M/18 (original rating) | Portugal:M/12 (DVD rating) | Argentina:13 | Australia:PG | Finland:K-16 | Ireland:PG | Netherlands:12 | Norway:16 (original rating) | Peru:14 | Singapore:PG | Sweden:15 | UK:PG | USA:M (original rating) | USA:PG (re-rating) (1994) | West Germany:16 | UK:A (original rating) (cut)Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Timothy Dalton and Roger Moore were both offered the role of James Bond in On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969), but both turned it down. Dalton felt he was too young at the time, and Moore was still under his contract in the TV series "The Saint" (1962). moreGoofs:
Revealing mistakes: Flipped shot: In one shot where both Bond and Draco are shown in the cockpit, the Huey behind them has the tail rotor on starboard but all other shots show the tail rotors on port. moreQuotes:
[first lines]Q: I've been saying for years, sir, that our special equipment is obsolete. And now, computer analysis reveals an entirely new approach: miniaturization. For instance, radioactive lint. When placed in an opponent's pockets, the anti-personnel and location fix seems fairly obvious.
M: What we want is a location fix on 007.
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Soundtrack:
We have all the time in the world moreFAQ
Is there a deleted scene in which Bond chases a man across London? It's not on the DVD.Why did Draco send his men to attack Tracy in the opening sequence?
Is SPECTRE involved in this movie?
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To understand the controversy behind `On Her Majesty's Secret Service,' one must understand the events so impacting the spy genre by the time of its production in 1969. After the back to back tremendous successes of `Goldfinger' and `From Russia With Love,' every hack producer and distributor rushed to make spy movies. There were serious ones (`The Spy That Came in From the Cold,' `The Ipcress File'), satirical ones (`Our Man Flint,' `The Man From U.N.C.L.E.,' `Get Smart' ), and incredibly silly ones (`The Silencers,' `Last of the Secret Agents,' `Casino Royale'). `Casino Royale' was especially damaging, since it was (VERY LOOSELY) based on a Fleming novel, and used the character of James Bond, 007. In fact, in `Casino Royale,' nearly EVERYBODY played `James Bond'. `If we don't know what we are doing, how will the enemy,' was the explanation `James Bond' (David Niven) gave to explain why MI6 was calling all its agents `James Bond'. To protect their franchise, the producers of the `real' James Bond movies emphasized in their promotion `Sean Connery IS James Bond.' In a demonstration of `gratitude,' Connery up and quit the series, leaving `On Her Majesty's Secret Service,' which was shortly to go into production, without a `Bond.'
Arguably the most ambitious and difficult to shoot of ALL the Bond films (at least to that time), it's a miracle ANYTHING works in OHMSS. Much of the time it works VERY well, though the shaky underpinnings of the first hour frequently threaten to undo it. There is so much choppy editing and dubbed dialogue, one begins to suspect he is watching a foreign film. The second hour plus works much better, all the more surprising since it was shot first. One reason may be that the film went WAY over both shooting schedule and budget, and there was enough made up `bad' press to put a great deal of pressure on the producers, first time director, Peter Hunt and star, George Lazenby. In the middle of it all, Lazenby's publicist announced that Lazenby was not going to do another Bond (Lazenby is credible when he says that announcement was not his idea. One suspects, from the bonus material, that Cubby Broccoli planted that story to discredit Lazenby, should the film fail). Add to all this the films' tacked-on, unhappy ending (planned to be the prologue for `Diamonds are Forever'), which plays completely against the humor of earlier moments, and it's a wonder the film was NOT a dismal failure. Quite the contrary, OHMSS is one of the BEST of the Bond films, filled with nonstop action, outstanding stunts, incredible sound, the best score (along with `Goldfinger') and a credible enough romance to lend it genuine poignancy. Lazenby overcame many tremendous handicaps: having to replace one of the best known and popular actors in the world; he was 28, younger than Connery when he made `Dr. No'; he was completely inexperienced as an actor (OHMSS was Lazenby's FIRST movie, not just his first starring role); his accent (thick Australian outback) and the INCREDIBLE physical demands (Lazenby did many of his own stunts). Considering all this, Lazenby is downright remarkable. Certainly, in my opinion he is better than either the snooty Timothy Dalton or the lightweight Roger Moore were in ANY of their outings as Bond.. The bonus feature on the DVD concludes with strong evidence that Lazenby became a scapegoat, despite the eventual financial success of OHMSS. Lazenby, refreshingly displays no bitterness that his career nearly ended as soon as it began. He's had a reasonably busy career playing character roles and we have OHMSS. Not a bad deal at all.