Wordsmith - This is bloody marvelous - deserving of a million views from grateful Bond fans everywhere. Very many thanks, Allan
@wordsmithpd8 ай бұрын
Glad to hear that you liked it. A million views would be nice... but unlikely.
@michaelgraves56864 ай бұрын
@@wordsmithpd Never say never...
@SkateSpace2012Ай бұрын
Already 300k..
@alexanderlawson16495 ай бұрын
The thing I love about these "old" movies is not just the outstanding actors but the old technology, phone box's, classic cars, clothing styles, they are all a historical snapshot of that age.
@voodoomotion58555 ай бұрын
More relaxed airport security, no need to remove your shoes and belt 😂
@carloscarpinteyro3323 ай бұрын
@@voodoomotion5855 Yes, you still do not not have to do that today, if you go to Uruguay, I've been there, and it's a fascinating country that has their act together, and values highly their personal freedom.
@frostylunetta9 ай бұрын
Sean still sounded a bit rough in Dr No By the time he starred in Goldfinger (the same year he starred in Hitchcock’s Marnie), he already had become so elegant in his delivery of speech and performance
@simoncolenutt52287 ай бұрын
I definitely think he did on location but by the time he got back to Pinewood he was pretty smooth; possibly influenced by Jack Lord's performance?
@RobertR37505 ай бұрын
I disagree. The first time he speaks in Dr. No, his delivery of "Bond, James Bond" is everything one could possibly ask for. He positively oozes masculine charisma, confidence, and power.
@JRS069 ай бұрын
This was a very interesting video. It helped me learn a lot of new things about this scene: - I didn't know that Quarrel was the guy who drove Felix's car - I missed that the photographer was hanging around in the background of some of the other scenes - Similarly, I missed that she had a conversation with Mr. Jones - Never realised that the shots of the plane and control tower shots were stock footage
@wordsmithpd9 ай бұрын
Happy to hear you found it of interest.
@ThomasMulhall6 ай бұрын
They reused the stock footage of the airport in FRWL.
@henrykujawa44275 ай бұрын
What's funny, I re-watched the film just a couple weeksd ago, and only just noticed Quarrel was driving the car. I wonder how many tmies I saw the film before that?
@BobGeogeo5 ай бұрын
Pan Am was big on providing footage of their planes to anyone who could use it.
@LPS-R-US4 ай бұрын
Well done. This mini documentary should have been included on the DR. NO dvd and subsequent digital media. Bravo!
@ltcolumbo97085 ай бұрын
I was born in 62 in the Far East. HA! I'm 62 today. Just realised it. My father used to take me to see the Bond films. My first was Thunderball. As a young bot I was terrified of Sean Connery cos he was no nonsense man and strict. Fast forward 30 years and found myself in America and in motion picture business. I was fired as a PA cos others ganged up on me complaining that I refused a walkie talkie. I hated my English, my accent and embarrased by it so screw walkie talkie. But A KIND 2nd AD somehow rehired me to be an Assistant. To? SEAN CONNERY. Sean specifically stated he did not want a personal costumer, security, publicist or a driver. But somehow I just followed Sean and just be with him for whatever he needed. It was a glorious 4 months. RISING SUN. MrConnery passed away on my birthday. We are in a curious way linked forever Rest In Peace Sir
@wordsmithpd5 ай бұрын
Great story! Thanks for sharing. My Dad took me to see a double-bill of Bond movies when I was 12-they were the first grown-up, non-Disney films I saw at the cinema. 35 years later, I ended up in the Bond archives, visiting the set, and interviewing the filmmakers to make books about it. Life has a way of surprising you.
@TradinTigerJohn5 ай бұрын
What a remarkable experience you had and thanks for sharing it! That zero prima donna factor helps explain much of Connery's on-screen brilliance. And your ability to "just be with him for whatever he needed" and not pester him with superfluities he didn't want makes both of you no-nonsense men which is why you two got along. It's evident you're Connery's kind of guy, and I can't think of a nicer compliment Sir.
@findJLF5 ай бұрын
@@TradinTigerJohn Well said.
@findJLF5 ай бұрын
I'm so happy for you to have had this unique experience. Thank you for sharing that experience with us.
@nigelcarren4 ай бұрын
Happy belated birthday. 🎂🇬🇧
@JohnL1950Ай бұрын
I was amazed as a teen in the early 60s to see Dr No and From Russia with love with my parents at an open air theater. I was soon addicted to 007 I read and reread the books several times. There was only one James Bond that was Sean Connery.
@Enid2Sacramento5 ай бұрын
I was 12 when this came out, and my mother dropped my off at the theater... having no idea the film probably wasn't quite suitable for pre-teens. I loved it!!!
@JohnFekoloid4 ай бұрын
I was very non existent in 1962. Not until 1977
@carloscarpinteyro3323 ай бұрын
Me too! i loved the gadgets, had no clue at age 7. when I saw "Goldfinger", and the pretty girlies, I was enamored by the appearance of the Ford Mustang! Ahhh....such child innocence!!!
@ScratchyBaws5 ай бұрын
Worked at Pinewood 89-91. Was great picturing and easily working out where they did some of the Bond car chases around the studios. Only ever be one James Bond and that's Sean Connery. 👍
@PeterPanPinball9 ай бұрын
good video….the highlight here is the trailer at the end. Never saw it before, the voice overdubs from Connery were a crack-up. That trailer gave away so much of the movie….crazy!
@wordsmithpd9 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it. Yes, it's like a condensed version of the movie with ironic audio commentary from James Bond.
@Dullahan1617 ай бұрын
Dr. No and Goldfinger are my favorites in the series. I love the behind the scenes look
@bodhi94644 ай бұрын
Love this era of Bond ~ Sean Connery is my no.1 Bond. 🏴
@redlightspellsdanger71774 ай бұрын
Shooper choice 😉
@davewheeler76793 ай бұрын
The only real Bond. I think the 60s era had a lot to do with it. However Connery was brilliant in the role.
@ejseabury5 ай бұрын
I love all these “behind the scenes” films and photos of “Dr. No”. It’s one of my all-time favorite Sean Connery/James Bond films.
@wordsmithpd5 ай бұрын
Happy to hear that you like it!
@JamesBondFanEvents9 ай бұрын
We've LOVED visiting all these spots on our hosted Jamaica Bond tours!
@wordsmithpd8 ай бұрын
Great to hear!
@christoph4045 ай бұрын
Jack Lord could have been Felix Leiter in the subsequent Bond films, he could have been a regular character, but Jack Lord demanded equal billing with Sean Connery and equal pay, he also wanted Felix Leiter to have more involvement in the stories, basically he wanted the films to be a double act, Leiter and Bond....Broccoli was already annoyed with Jack Lord for turning up late for the first day of filming , combined with his demands, he dropped him from any future involvement on Bond films..and so the convention of different actors playing Felix came about.
@crazyralph63865 ай бұрын
Very interesting.
@mikewa24 ай бұрын
@@crazyralph6386jack lord must have kicked himself, but probably sacked his agent rather than blame himself
@billcarson4824 ай бұрын
Oh Lord!
@psidvicious4 ай бұрын
Legend has it that Jack Lord’s ego was way over the top.
@josephvitielo16934 ай бұрын
I liked David Hedison
@KamillGran-ch5sb5 ай бұрын
That grey suit, the blue shirt and the Rolex, the best stylish outfit ever.
@kavinskysmith40945 ай бұрын
a beat up submariner that belonged to one of the camera men, with an ill fitting nato strap as the clasp had broken lol with no date and a 100 meter resistance, and radium on the dial, they did with what they had and made it work, as its the man that makes the man, not the clothes and bond's act and personality was personally based on Terrance Young, who would go on to make this, from russia with love and thunderball with his, Connery's personal favorite being from russia with love, no surprising given how grounded it was and I must wonder if him and Michael Caine talked about their performance and work with Saltzman given his work on the ipcress files, and funeral in berlin which were done in that more grounded serious style the earlier films were known for
@KamillGran-ch5sb5 ай бұрын
@@kavinskysmith4094 it took Sean Connery to carry everything with such elan, including the “ill fitting” nato strap. I like the Ipcress and the Six Million Dollar Brain a lot, but the James Bond movies were real more like fantasy/ spy genre than anything based on reality.
@kavinskysmith40945 ай бұрын
@@KamillGran-ch5sb yeah six million's the one I havent seen as I heard that one was far out, although I have both ipcress and funeral on VHS, the only way I could find them one of which was from a library lol
@KamillGran-ch5sb5 ай бұрын
@@kavinskysmith4094 there were three of the movies initially but two later in the 90’s. The later ones are pretty awful.
@kavinskysmith40945 ай бұрын
@@KamillGran-ch5sb yeah I should probably atleast see that third one atleast, as I saw it had mr ENGLISH! in it lol the general from the second movie.
@thejerseyj54795 ай бұрын
The three Bond films that started the series are my personal favorites. Dr. No, From Russia with Love, and Goldfinger in that order. After that, the gadgets started taking over and the raw masculine element in the Bond character started taking a back seat to all the toys he had to use.
@mikewa24 ай бұрын
Blame film Goldfinger for the Bond we inherited
@artiefount4 ай бұрын
It was not a good trade off was it
@davewheeler76793 ай бұрын
Interesting point.
@himcules1005 ай бұрын
The nuts and bolts that make up a classic motion picture. Bravo. Takes me back to when everyone wanted to be a secret agent.
@TalkingGIJoe5 ай бұрын
I love that all these old takes and info are still around after all these years!
@curbozerboomer17738 ай бұрын
In early 1962, my 14yo self experienced what we now call "synchronicity"!....I was in the neighborhood library, and was looking for some spy-adventure-type of book to read...I stumbled onto a few books on the shelf, all having been written by some guy named Ian Fleming. I grabbed one book-DR NO-and began to flip through the pages. My 14 year old brain was stimulated to read of some guy named James Bond, in process of seducing a woman!...Tepid stuff now, but stunning to me back then!...I proceeded to check out the book, and showed the few "hot" passages to my friends, who teased me for being too "excited" about the book. A few days later, a couple of thoughts hit me...I formed a general idea as to what this Bond dude would look like...and I also hoped, that someday a movie would be made. Imagine my happy shock, when, less than a year later, DR NO showed up on the silver screen!...I talked my buddies into attending the premiere...my amazement continued, when Sean Connery appeared, blithely saying "Bond, James Bond"...Yikes!...He looked very much like the imagined Bond in my mind....I was in a dream-like state during the whole movie--and so were my now "converted" friends! I still am bewildered, as to the sheer coincidence of my discovering the Bond books, and then later on, having a movie make my dreams come true! The 1960s truly were magical years!
@wordsmithpd8 ай бұрын
Thanks for this lovely memory.
@buffalopatriot6 ай бұрын
Dr. No was the first movie I ever saw in a theater. I was 5. Years later I found 3 Bond novels around the house - LIVE AND LET DIE / OHMSS / and CASINO ROYALE. I was confused because Fleming described Bond as looking somewhat like Hoagy Carmichael. In my mind as I read all 14 novels, though I tried, I had trouble envisioning Connery. Connery was by far the best Bond, but when I saw the Timothy Dalton movies, I thought he was the guy who mostly resembled what my adolescent mind had envisioned. But certainly never Hoagy Carmichael - who strangely looks like Fleming himself .
@lordbyron99505 ай бұрын
Miss Jamaica 61. ❤
@jacktoddy978312 күн бұрын
So wonderful to see analogue story-telling in a digital world - Excellent.
@oldscuba4 ай бұрын
First time I went to a movie theater, went with my Mom and Dad in Phoenix, Az. I was 9 or 10 years old. It was a fantastic memory.
@lordtherapeutics5 ай бұрын
That photographer girl was stunning!
@tomodonovan59315 ай бұрын
Her or the snooping secretary with the red nails. Both extremely sexy women.
@lescobrandon30475 ай бұрын
I lived on Long Island back then. My friends and I were astonished after seeing Dr. No, seeing a great cast and an exciting story. When Bond shot the man who had shown up to kill him, nobody I knew expected what happened. After the Goldfinger film, several of us wore suits and tried vodka martinis. A great series and a great Bond actor.
@carloscarpinteyro3323 ай бұрын
....and no doubt several people tried out a Ford Mustang after seeing it's debut in Goldfinger, as well.
@philip64193 ай бұрын
THIS scene was what showed Bond as a HardCore Killer. He shot the guy.. waited a couple seconds and shot him again. He did this thru the whole magazine, however, it made Connery TOO scary and sadistic to the audience, so they only showed the first couple shots.
@canweshoot5 ай бұрын
Well, done! This is quite a unique look inside the process; much more insider detail of the daily process than any typical "behind the scenes" look. Likely more recognized and appreciated by those of us who work/worked in the industry, but I like that folks that do not get a deeper look. Thanks for this. If you have others, I'd love to see them.
@wordsmithpd5 ай бұрын
Thanks. Yes, I'd love to do more, and I will when I find the time...
@howardgreenman29085 ай бұрын
I was ten years old when I saw this first in our neighborhood movie theater. I fell in love with 007 movies that day and have been ever since. Sean Connery will always be THE James Bond. All the others are just stand-ins. This is a highly interesting look at how they made films back in the day.
@artiefount4 ай бұрын
A friend invited me to see this film which I knew nothing about, along with the Fleming books. I was hooked immediately and read through all the books written up to that time and continued through the last one. What great adventures, with good establishment of the settings and interesting cultural details about the exotic locations they were set in.
@marcmeinzer88594 ай бұрын
My dad took me to see several of the Sean Connery Bond films. I was 7 years old when this one came out. It goes without saying that he was the greatest Bond of all. I later had a neighbor who was a retired Royal Navy Lieutenant Commander in naval intelligence who actually knew Ian Fleming, who of course was also in naval intelligence. It’s a small world.
@ultrablue25 ай бұрын
I like that version of “Jump Up”. I love these early Bond biographies.
@TheGodDamnJets877 ай бұрын
My second favorite bond film, after only the GOAT. Goldfinger
@HaroldBates-e7r2 ай бұрын
No one could ever replace Sir Sean Connery as James Bond.
@russellcampbell919812 күн бұрын
My first Bond film. It thrilled me as only a kid of those times could be thrilled.
@robertlehmann62815 ай бұрын
Also a wonderful lesson in both filmmaking and screenwriting from a great movie
@thejerseyj54795 ай бұрын
'62, a perfect year all around.
@HiekerMJ5 ай бұрын
Yher - it worked out: the world avoided nuclear war due to that 'small disagreement' in Cuba a 100 miles north or so later in the year.
@porterhouse_5 ай бұрын
Someone said it was the last really good year
@curbozerboomer17735 ай бұрын
@@porterhouse_ IMO...1962 was the tail end of the "1950s ethos"...The ensuing years of violence, turmoil, and social turbulence thrust most of the "world" into a future that would be both progressive and regressive, full of social flaws that were going to be addressed, one way or the other. And we "Boomers" were young, and going have our feelings validated!
@mikewa24 ай бұрын
@@porterhouse_just look at Wikipedia-1962 so much happened it was immense. Didn’t even mention Beatles and their first single Oct 1962.
@porterhouse_4 ай бұрын
@@mikewa2 who needs wikipedia... I lived it
@briangraham10243 ай бұрын
Broccoli was so mad at Jack Lord he screamed: "I'll never 'book him' again!" 😂
@GeoffV-k1hАй бұрын
The girl who played the photographer was not an actress but an attractive clerk who worked at the check in desk and was noticed by the film crew on pre-production location duty and offered a role. (The whole thing was shot on a tight budget).
@bertroost16755 ай бұрын
I do not miss the days when trailers showed you the entire movie.
@gerardmackay89095 ай бұрын
Great video really gives a flavour of the nuts and bolts of film making. I got a kick out of the fact that I read years ago the first day’s filming at Pinewood Studios for Dr No was Monday 26th February 1962, which was the day I was born.
@rasempress97245 ай бұрын
August 1962, we lowered the Union Jack n became an Independent nation with our own BLACK, GREEN n GOLD flag….Jamaica, we likkle but we tallawah…Ian Fleming’s home is still there in Jamaica….he wrote the books there…
@rickymcc8624Ай бұрын
Thanks. I saw my first '007' film, the iconic Goldfinger, in 1964 as a young boy. Loved it , followed by this first film, Dr No, outstanding in it's day, 1961, vs many other contemporary films. I later read that Sean Connery's payment for Dr No was circa £600 (quite a lot in 1961), but that SC soon became disenchanted with the producers, given the international box office commercial success and recognition for the franchise. Whilst FRWL was a big success too, I feel it's the 3rd outing, Goldfinger, that truly catapulted the franchise into what it's now become. I understand Sean wanted a £1m+ after finishing Thunderball, then YOLT. One reason why OHMSS featured Aussie, George Lazenby. I admire how the producers kept this 'golden goose' franchise alive (if not always very credible) through many decades, circa 25 films, 3 Ms, 3 Qs and 6 Bonds (excluding the unofficial Niven). I'm now taking an amateur interest in videography and production. Your BTS added a lot to my understanding of how the Jamaican scenes opened and how quick improv was necessary to stop significant delays for lack of light, talent, bad audio, retakes etc. Perhaps you have or will cover further BTS insights? Anyway I liked and subbed.
@greatlambrini8722Ай бұрын
Sean Connery was brilliant at playing Sean Connery.
@starshipcaptain47535 ай бұрын
This was a pleasure
@DavidM-mb1vx5 ай бұрын
I’ve seen dr no many times and never noticed that Quarrel was the driver.
@wimschoneveld53595 ай бұрын
Nice that after 52 years of filming you are still discovering something new
@buffalopatriot6 ай бұрын
Dr. No was the first movie I ever saw in a theater. I was 5. Years later I found 3 Bond novels around the house - LIVE AND LET DIE / OHMSS / and CASINO ROYALE. I was confused because Fleming described Bond as looking somewhat like Hoagy Carmichael. In my mind as I read all 14 novels, though I tried, I had trouble envisioning Connery. Connery was by far the best Bond, but when I saw the Timothy Dalton movies, I thought he was the guy who mostly resembled what my adolescent mind had envisioned. But certainly never Hoagy Carmichael - who strangely looks like Fleming himself.
@alfredthegreat95435 ай бұрын
Dalton was without doubt the perfect Bond. When you read the books it's he that you can see as Bond.
@collin62385 ай бұрын
Your parents let you see that at 5 ?
@buffalopatriot4 ай бұрын
@@collin6238 It was 1962!!
@frederickbanjoman94822 ай бұрын
What a gem!
@DrawnInk15 ай бұрын
Superb coverage of this historic film.
@NRTSean5 ай бұрын
Thank you. Love this sort of Film Buff. Thanks
@bdcochran015 ай бұрын
I saw the movie when it came out and went into shock. I had never seen anything like it. Years later, my late wife was Broccoli;s 5th grade teacher.
@russellcampbell91985 ай бұрын
Enjoyed it. It was my introduction to JB as a kid. The licking of the bulb was a brilliant touch of malevolent intent.
@wordsmithpd5 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@russellcampbell919812 күн бұрын
I agree. It told you so much without words.
@kerrysammy32775 ай бұрын
The first Bond Movie I saw was Thunderball. Born in 1953, I had entered secondary school in 1964. In Trinidad, all movies had to pass a Board of Censors. Dr No was passed for 14 years and over. This was indicated on the Cinema page of the newspapers. All my school friends of my age were chatty about having seen Dr No. My religious Parents who followed the rules precisely, forbade me from going to see the movie. There were 2 cinemas close to where I lived. A movie only spent a few weeks at a cinema before it was moved. Now, every time I wanted to see a Bond movie, it was always beyond my age. Gold finger was passed for 18 years and over. We live in modern times. A youth of today cannot imagine what it was like in those times. 😮
@fredkruse94445 ай бұрын
Same here --I wasn't allowed to see it, but I took a bus to the theater. It was summer, so Mom expected me to be outside playing all afternoon. As one of five children, I wasn't missed. As a kid that almost always followed the rules, Mom didn't suspect a thing.
@movid5 ай бұрын
The movie that turned my life into vibrant colors... I was 9 ❤
@BruceReynoldsMusic6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the great video! I was in Jamaica as a 3 year old kid between the 19 - 21st Jan 1962 with my parents. We stayed in Courtleigh Manor Hotel before flying to Belize. Mum told me I fell in the deep end of the pool and was rescued by one of the cast. To this day I don't now if it was a goody or a baddy who saved me.
@wordsmithpd6 ай бұрын
What a great story. Obviously, they were a goody!
@robertroberto24875 ай бұрын
Who Helped Was Jack Lord Who Had Worn Sunglasses.
@carloscarpinteyro3323 ай бұрын
I like the product placement in the Bond movies. For me, it was seeing the new Ford Mustang in Goldfinger, when I was a 7 year old boy.
@thefilmandmusic5 ай бұрын
The sets are stars as well in this movie
@Jeremy-f3s3 ай бұрын
Thanks for that, never seen a video analysis of Dr No before, its one of my fave Bond films, not least cos its the original. I dont think it gets enough love, everyone just goes straight to Goldfinger which I found too over the top personally and nonsensical in parts. Dr No is as much a 60s spy thriller as it is a Bond film.
@harrypalmer48575 ай бұрын
Never thought about them removing glass to avoid camera reflection. Thanks for that detail.
@wordsmithpd5 ай бұрын
Glad to help
@goldenpacificmedia5 ай бұрын
Film fan here... wasn't born when this film was made. Thanks for your documentation and telling the story!
@wordsmithpd5 ай бұрын
My pleasure!
@castelodeossos39475 ай бұрын
Have seen this film numerous times, but only now have I noticed Bond says 'take me for a ride', rather than 'take me for a drive'. Tongue in cheek that I missed.
@alan4yt5 ай бұрын
I was 15 and couldn't stop talking about the film to everybody. I met.
@yelloworangered3 ай бұрын
The unsung heroines of many films are the script supervisors. They are the source of these take-by-taken notes -- they were the history of the filming on set to guide film editors long after the locations were history and the sets had been dismantled.
@ruedigersonntag931510 ай бұрын
Sweet Jamaica
@mistymisterwistyjones96685 ай бұрын
This is an excellently watchable video and topic.
@wordsmithpd5 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@VincentComet-l8e8 ай бұрын
This was VERY interesting - more please!
@wordsmithpd8 ай бұрын
Thanks. When I get time, I'll make something similar on another film.
@johnschmit9984 ай бұрын
This is superb! Thanks for researching and doing this video.
@wordsmithpd4 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@mackenzie777778 ай бұрын
This is a great video. Amazing to see how it was filmed. Is it just me or did older film cameras like these used here have more atomsphere? Maybe an expert could explain.
@wordsmithpd8 ай бұрын
First, they used film. Second, there were different types of film, and developing processes. Third, the cinematographer-in this case Ted Moore-decided the amount of light, and how it was captured by the camera.
@mackenzie777778 ай бұрын
@@wordsmithpd Thanks for that :)
@peterhorah78846 ай бұрын
Wow I love this detail of the film management! It’s an extraordinary story more interesting than the film!
@wordsmithpd6 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@roybeckerman92535 ай бұрын
1962 DR.NO started the famous franchise . 1962 Ringo joined The Beatles .
@martinn40315 ай бұрын
Great observation. That's a defining year right there. The most successful British film franchise ever and the most most successful band ever both releasing their debut offerings in the UK. Amazingly 'Dr No' & 'Love Me Do' were released on the SAME day in the UK. 5th October 1962. What are the odds?
@wardarcade74525 ай бұрын
In Japane the title for 'Dr. No' wound up being called 'We Don't Want a Doctor!' (in Japanese).
@fazole5 ай бұрын
Title lost in translation I think! (No doctor)
@davebarron59395 ай бұрын
You can tell it was shot out of order, at "slate 9, take 5, Jack Lord gets a light from the car, when just a few minuets ago, he lit up with his own pocket lighter on the mezzanine in the airport. LOL Great stuff, by far one of the best films of all time, and the series. So hard to believe this was filmed when I was a year old.
@darrenkelfkens8539Ай бұрын
I saw them all...and eventually became am actor and director myself. Really fascinating to watch and the pace of the shoot was surprisingly fast. One of the few youtube videos I have watched from beginning to end.
@RighteousReverendDynamite5 ай бұрын
In the Harvard Lampoon's Ian Fleming/ James Bond parody book "Alligator" (1962), Quarrel was renamed "Squabble". It is fun read.
@andre.mateus Жыл бұрын
Fascinating video!
@wordsmithpd Жыл бұрын
Thank you. Happy to hear you enjoyed it!
@andre.mateus Жыл бұрын
@@wordsmithpd You should do more in this style. I love the early Bond movies.
@wordsmithpd Жыл бұрын
When I have time, I'll try to do some more. The information/images are not always available.
@joanne269 ай бұрын
Sean for me was my ‘bond’. Not because he was the first but I still ❤everything about the 60’s as a decade(I was born in 1965) I have enjoyed watching this video and to learn more about ‘behind the scenes’. In a number of interviews Sean gave back in the day he mentioned how long filming ran over on each one, saying 6 months spent on YOLT. That meant he could not give first call to other films. I read a book a few years ago written by Robert Sellers about Broccoli and Saltzman and I feel at the end it was not WHAT THEY KNEW about making films BUT WHO THEY KnEW Like Ken Adam Would be interested in watching similar on the other 4 films 👍 👍 😍😍❤️❤️🏴🏴
@wordsmithpd9 ай бұрын
Happy to hear that you enjoyed the video. Sean Connery was contracted to work on the movies for a number of years, and could work on other movies between Bonds, and he fulfilled his contract to the letter. The producers had many years of experience behind them, and they cast the crew and the actors very well, as well as shaping both the scripts and the final cuts of the movies, so it is unfair to think of them as being observers to the process. Also, they both put their own money into the film-a huge financial risk.
@joanne269 ай бұрын
@@wordsmithpd thinking about the huge amount of money made even back then and the money invested it was such a gamble. My late parents met and married in 1963 and were in their mid teens during WW2 and by the early 50’s rationing was still at its height. They went out to the cinema (my parents did not have a TV - not many did) or the Theatre At the Cinema and also at the Theatre every film was drab, black and white and ‘kitchen sink’ living out their own lives. They wanted colour and escapism When they went to see Dr.No they got ESCAPISM and SOOO much more. Fast cars Great food Great fashion And someone who was licensed to kill for his government 👍 👍 🏴🏴
@frostylunetta9 ай бұрын
Sean Connery ❤❤❤ is Bond
@youlllneverknow5 ай бұрын
must have been early 60s, I was working for Shell BP in Hemel Hempstead and ran the social club. Every month had a movie night and i hired Dr No. had to show it in a few reels with time to change between reels as only one projector. Great movie..
@kimballbenson81163 ай бұрын
And theres never been any movie series where it starts with some guy walking out, turning and shooting straight at you within the first few seconds. Sets the tone up perfectly
@LOGOASSASSIN5 ай бұрын
Truth on Bond. I was born the year before this movie's filming, my father (who spoke 6 languages fluently) was the son of one of the handful of people Bond was based on. He ran MI6 in Norway, he married a local girl in Bergen and was awarded the CMG and OBE, I have photos and can prove all this beyond any doubt. I held a vial of heavy water when I was a boy. My grandfather was very well connected, a chemist, a Naval Commander (I still have his hat and cut throat razor) he drank and smoked a bit too much and was very good with women. He was born in 1897 and died c1955 from heart failure. I spent my whole career filming my TV commercial ideas around the world, mostly for car brands. PS He didn't get on with my grandmother, she also had polio, I remember her well, she died c1974.
@theboofin4 ай бұрын
Jesus...
@2msvalkyrie5298 ай бұрын
Recently saw some " on set " pics taken during the shoot . Really fascinating .!
@wordsmithpd8 ай бұрын
The new book is full of them... www.taschen.com/en/limited-editions/film/08152/james-bond-dr-no/
@ashraf26615 ай бұрын
Many thanks for producing this ....very interesting !!..Connery. the best bond !!
@wordsmithpd5 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@spiritualarchitect42765 ай бұрын
My family vacationed in the Caribbean for 3 summers. I still remember sitting inside a long airport building that was bright and sunny because the whole right wall was made of windows. I suppose I remember that moment because my Dad had just bought me a small, metal British airplane toy, a white Constellation, the one with the triple tail. I had watched this film several times before it dawned on me that THAT was the airport. I was sitting below and to the left of where Jack Lord is standing @12:18. I knew we had been to Jamaca, but I never put the two together. Because of your video, I now know that it was our last vacation trip in the summer of 1961. That was the one where we moved from Maracaibo back to Huntington Beach. Thank you for that information.
@wordsmithpd5 ай бұрын
Glad to hear the video brought back some happy memories!
@TomGargiuloArtandFilm-fu2hv5 ай бұрын
Great behind the scenes look into Bond and big budget film making overall. I'd love to see a breakdown of the whole film day by day.
@wordsmithpd5 ай бұрын
I have done that in my book JAMES BOND: DR. NO , published yb TASCHEN. You can watch the unboxing here, where I talk through the making of the film, and show images and documents from the book: kzbin.info/www/bejne/sGXMfqajoq2cjrMsi=xuNdd6IyDbhD70PR
@maryhaddock91455 ай бұрын
The best true Bond aficionado video I have seen. And I have watched quite a few!
@wordsmithpd5 ай бұрын
Thanks. I appreciate the comment.
@ednammansfield8553Ай бұрын
Great video. My favourite Bond film with Sean Connery is 'From Russia with love' which was the first film I saw in the cinema when it was released. I have all the films on DVD in my collection. Can't wait for the next Bond film whenever or if one gets released especially as Bond was killed off in the last film with Daniel Craig. Thanks for posting this Wordsmith I look forward to more of these.
@TomAvitabile2 ай бұрын
I congratulate you "Wordsmith" on a wonderful, comprehensive encapsulation of what we do for a living. Excellent presentation and layout of the process and result. I love the "graded" non-printed takes. I want more from your capable compilation of these days of organic filmmaking. "Love that without video playback they did a take 7!" Keep them coming I am an instant fan.
@wordsmithpdАй бұрын
Many thanks!
@loveisall55205 ай бұрын
What I notice in the Bond/chauffeur scene was the 1960 Cadillac in the background with collapsed air bag suspension in the rear with the front end hiked up. Pity those poor buyers of those cars!
@NoName-o5q1l5 ай бұрын
If you watch to the end, notice how the original trailer gives away so many big moments in the film - I mistakenly thought this was more of a modern trend in trailers.
@standupamerica57073 ай бұрын
The 1960s were by far the greatest years the world ever had.
@richardmartins15412 ай бұрын
Swinging sixties
@standupamerica57072 ай бұрын
@@richardmartins1541 When this came out in the early 60's it was only at one outdoor theater in the town I lived in. So myself and three other young boys then, gave an older teenage with a car money to take us to see it. When it was over, he gave all our money back after saying it was the best movie he had ever seen. Thanking us for talking him into going.
@raymondfrye50175 ай бұрын
It's funny that at the time of Dr.No,1962, here, in Puerto Rico they had built a nuclear reactor on our west coast at Rincón.
@arthurdrew49339 ай бұрын
❤THIS MOSTLY ENTERTAINING ,INCREDIBLE MOVIE FRANCISE LONG LIVE BOND,JAMES BOND!!😊😊😊😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮
@JamesofQPR5 ай бұрын
Fantastic video...Thabk you so much...The Worlds biggest James Bond fan
@billwilliams58895 ай бұрын
I’ve seen several of the Bond movies, and Dr. No (for me personally) is the best. Very few special effects which allows the viewer to concentrate on the characters and the story. A bit of trivia: if you look closely at the spider crawling on James Bond’s chest, you ‘ll see that there is a piece of glass between him and the spider.
@pfcwar51505 ай бұрын
No… the spider was crawling on a projector screen with the film of bond and the bed playing on it
@billwilliams58895 ай бұрын
@@pfcwar5150 Connery was extremely afraid of spiders, and was so anxious during the scene where a tarantula crawls over him in bed, that they had to lay a sheet of glass on him for the spider to crawl up. You can see the glass flattening his skin, in the final version of the movie. For the close ups, stuntman Bob Simmons stepped in. He, too, was scared of spiders, and said it was the most terrifying thing he had ever filmed.
@tm5020105 ай бұрын
This was absolutely AWESOME! I could watch many videos like this, all about the background and process of making movies that now classics…
@wordsmithpd5 ай бұрын
Wow, thanks!
@stealthhumor5 ай бұрын
In 1963, I worked in the middle of nowhere at a test site learning Radiation Safety (a contradiction in terms). The whole place was highly contaminated and dangerous. The work environment was scary enough, but if someone had the foresight to build a sign that flashed, “ABANDON AREA,” everybody would have quit.
@wordsmithpd5 ай бұрын
LOL
@Derpy19695 ай бұрын
I’m not a huge Bond fan but I love seeing how the sausage is made.
@harikrishnan88082 ай бұрын
Well planned n executed (showed out) movie, the 1st of its kind spy thrillers, thrilled the audience. Thank u.
@udayashankar9640Ай бұрын
Nice explanation of work behind first bond Film
@ScienceTalkwithJimMassa2 ай бұрын
The first Bond movie I saw in the theaters was From Russia With Love. my dad took me to see subsequent Bond movies until I was old enough to go on my own. I was 4 or 5 when I saw FRWL. I saw Dr. No later. Connery is the best and my favorite Bond. What I love about his movies is the intrigue, suspense and believability that later entries in the series kind of pushed to the limit (the believability aspect). This was really interesting. I had no idea that Connery did a voice over narration sharing thoughts and so on. Fascinating. Is this available?
@KB-lz3gq5 ай бұрын
If I were to pick, I would go for the lass in green ...simply stunning 😊
@gregorylapointe41573 ай бұрын
Very interesting video, giving us insight into how a movie is put together. I hope you put up more of these videos!
@klaushergersheimer83155 ай бұрын
Very interesting, thanks!
@wordsmithpd5 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@r3ndos Жыл бұрын
forever my favourite well done duncan
@wordsmithpd Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@warrenbrenner49724 ай бұрын
Air induction sound from 1961 Chevy chasing 1957 Chevy identical as both had the 283 c.i. 4 bbl V-8