Casino Royale 1967 End Credits
2021年7月25日Register here: http://gg.gg/vi1lp
Casino Royale (1967) Full Cast & Crew. Directed by (6) Writing credits (11) Cast (130) Produced by (3) Music by (1) Cinematography by (1) Film Editing by (1) Casting. Casino Royale, British-American spy film, released in 1967, that is a parody of Ian Fleming’s first James Bond novel (1953). Plagued by a chaotic production, the movie is notable for being largely incoherent. Bond (played by David Niven) is living in opulence after his retirement from MI6. The two films ended up competing head-to-head, seeing as how You Only Live Twice was released in June 1967, a mere two months after Casino Royale. Casino Royale was still being reworked and finished during its premiere in London, where apparently final cuts were being made in the projection room. Upon the film’s worldwide release, mass.Soundtrack Information
Limited Edition of 1,000 Copies
Kritzerland (KR20017-6)
Release Date:January 18, 2011
Conducted by Burt Bacharach
Format: CDMusic ByPurchase SoundtrackTrack Listing1.Casino Royale Theme (Main Title)02:392.The Venerable Sir James Bond02:333.Agent Mimi01:354.Little French Boy02:255.Money Penny Goes for Broke01:376.The Look of Love (instrumental)02:487.The Look of Love04:118.The Indian Temple00:529.Sir James’ Trip to Find Mata02:1610.First Stop Berlin01:5511.Home James, Don’t Spare the Horses01:3112.Hi There Miss Goodthighs01:1613.Dream On, James, You’re Winning01:1814.Le Chiffre’s Torture of Mind02:1315.Flying Saucer01:0616.The Big Cowboys and Indians Fight at Casino Royale / End Credits (vocal version)05:1217.Keystone Kops00:1118.Casino Royale Theme (Main Title)02:3719.The Look of Love04:0720.Money Penny Goes for Broke01:3921.Le Chiffre’s Torture of the Mind02:1322.Home James, Don’t Spare the Horses01:3123.Sir James’ Trip to Find Mata03:4824.The Look of Love (instrumental)02:4625.Hi There Miss Goodthighs01:1526.Little French Boy02:2427.Flying Saucer - First Stop Berlin02:5928.The Venerable Sir James Bond02:3229.Dream On, James, You’re Winning01:1830.The Big Cowboys and Indians Fight at Casino Royale / Casino Royale Theme04:49Total Album Time:69:36Related Albums
*
Casino Royale - 50th Anniversary EditionLimited Edition of 2,000 Units
Quartet Records
Released: December 7, 2017
Format: CD (77 min)
*
Casino Royale - 45th Anniversary EditionLimited Edition of 1,500 Copies
Quartet Records
Released: February 28, 2012
Format: CD (92 min)
*
Released: 1968
Formats: CD, Vinyl (34 min)
The concert experience at Q Casino can’t be beat. We bring incredibly talented and entertaining acts right to you! Check out who is coming soon. If you want to be part of the action, Q rewards is the best way to make Q Casino your own! Q casino outdoor concerts tickets. Q CASINO More than just fun & games. Q Casino is an entertainment and gaming complex that incorporates both greyhound racing and casino gaming located in Dubuque, Iowa. The casino is owned by the City of Dubuque, and operated by the non-profit Dubuque Racing Association, its license holder.
*
Released: November 12, 2012
Format: Digital (84 min)
*
100 Greatest Movie ThemesZYX Music
Released: October 26, 2012
Format: CD (528 min)
*
James Bond: 50 Years AnniversaryTrigger Records
Released: September 14, 2012
Format: Digital (65 min)
*
The Best of James BondSeyffert Music
Released: June 1, 2012
Format: Digital (75 min)From the Manufacturer
In 1953, British author Ian Fleming created one of the most enduring cinematic characters with the publication of his first 007 novel, Casino Royale. Thirteen years later, producer Charles K. Feldman (of What’s New Pussycat? fame) reimagined Fleming’s story as a large-scale, star-studded spy spoof inspired by the Bond mania that swept across the world in the 1960s. While not exactly delivering the kind of James Bond films audiences had loved and come to expect, Casino Royale has became a cult classic in the ensuing decades, a colorful addendum to the history of the 007 legacy. With an all-star cast that included David Niven, Deborah Kerr, John Huston, Woody Allen, Peter Sellers, cameos by Jean-Paul Belmondo, David McCallum, and Peter O’Toole, and even featuring an authentic Bond girl, Ursula Andress (from Dr. No), the rag-tag craziness on view was directed by several different directors—John Huston, Joseph McGrath, Robert Parrish, with Val Guest overseeing the entire production. As would be expected, the end result was eclectic, sometimes very funny, and sometimes just plain weird.
One person who immensely helped tie the whole thing together was the brilliant Burt Bacharach, who provided one of the most popular and universally applauded features of Casino Royale: its musical score. Hired on the strength of his music for What’s New Pussycat?, the composer was expected to bring the same kind of cheek to Feldman’s latest picture, offering a colorful kaleidoscope that went on to define the Swingin’ Sixties without referencing the typical musical spy vernacular. In fact, Bacharach’s approach is much closer to the Henry Mancini/Blake Edwards song scores such as The Pink Panther or The Party, which may explain the soundtrack’s extraordinary success on its own. The score was nominated for a Grammy and ’The Look of Love’ received an Oscar nomination. Bacharach had, of course, had countless hits by the time of this film, and would go on to have countless more (one of the only pop song composers to have hits in every decade since the 1950s), as well as providing the soundtracks to Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Arthur, and many other films.
This is the third CD release for Casino Royale (although both releases on Varese Sarabande were pretty much identical)—the original LP has long been considered one of the great audiophile releases, thanks to a nod in The Absolute Sound. But due to an unfortunate accident, just prior to the transfer of the master tape, the tape was rewound too quickly and stripped of iron oxide, thereby compromising and damaging the tape. The transfer could still be made and the CD came out—but anyone expecting it to sound like the LP was disappointed, and for obvious reasons.
For this release, we have spent much time in trying to alleviate some of the effects of the tape damage—our mastering engineer, James Nelson, has painstakingly and lovingly repaired numerous dropouts and other anomalies and we’ve worked very hard to get this to sound as good as it ever has or will, and the result is pretty amazing.
We’ve also added three short bonus cues, available on CD for the first time, including the original end credits vocal. And, of course, we get the great performances of Dusty Springfield and Herb Alpert and The Tijuana Brass.
But one of the main reasons for doing this third CD release was to offer as a bonus a straight transfer of that original record—done from several pristine copies of the LP—so that the original sound, with no additional processing or EQ, is captured on CD for the very first time. We leave it for others to judge whether that sound holds up for today’s listeners. Given what happened to the master tape, this is as close to that original LP sound as we’re ever going to get.
This very special release is limited to 1,000 copies only.
*Click stars
to rate.
If any information appears to be missing from this page, contact us and let us know!
PART ONE
INTRODUCTION AND TWO
VERSIONS OF CASINO ROYALE
(Note: All timings quoted refer to the PAL releases, unless otherwise stated)
To date, there have been an almost-countless number of releases of the James Bond films, on just about every home video format, from VHS to Laserdisc, from VCD to DVD, often with multiple releases in each format. No doubt we will soon see them make their debut in High Definition.
After studying the films’ home video history two things have become apparent. Firstly, some of the films have been treated better than others over the years, and secondly, many of the films have been released in such a variety of cuts, that it is hard to determine which - if any - are the definitive versions.
This guide does not pretend to be the last word on the subject, but it does attempt to provide some information about each film, and how they have been treated over the years. It also provides information about the variant cuts of some of the films which have appeared over the past five decades. Hopefully the Guide will provide answers to some long-standing questions, and even offer some information you never thought you’d need to know! Along the way we shall also be taking in the first ever live-action depiction of James Bond, in the 1954 TV adaptation of Casino Royale, and the two “unofficial” James Bond movies (the 1967 version of Casino Royale and Never Say Never Again).
CASINO ROYALE - 1954
We start with the television adaptation of Casino Royale, first broadcast as part of the Climax Mystery Theater series, on the 21st October 1954. Barry Nelson starred as James Bond, and Peter Lorre played his nemesis, Le Chiffre.
Although long thought lost, this has since been released all over the world, in a variety of different prints. The version that most people will be familiar with is the one included as an extra on the Region 1 release of the 1967 film version of Casino Royale (see below). This version on this disc, as with most other versions in circulation, is missing the very ending of the show, and cuts to the end credits just as Bond asks Valerie to telephone the police.
The most complete version to date would appear to be an American VHS released by Spy Guise Video in 1998. This version includes the whole of the final scene. Spy Guise announced that they had plans to release the same uncut print on DVD, but it has yet to appear.
It should be noted that none of the versions available in any format are in particularly great shape, but we should be grateful that it exists at all.
CASINO ROYALE - 1967Casino Royale 1967 online, free
Upon securing the film rights to the novel Casino Royale (which, because of the 1950s TV adaptation, were still up for grabs, unlike the rest of Fleming’s novels) noted film producer Charles K. Feldman initially tried to interest Harry Saltzman and Cubby Broccoli in co-producing a new version of the tale, this time for the big screen. However, they turned his offer down.
Colombia, however, jumped at the chance, and decided to press ahead with their own version. Initially, the film was to be a very serious adaptation, one very faithful to the source material. Feldman even approached Sean Connery to see if he’d be interested in taking the lead role. Connery also turned him down, however. It was at this point that Feldman decided that the only way to approach the material was to make it a spoof of the “official” Bond series.
In the end, the film, beset with production problems, wound up costing between twelve and thirty-four million dollars to make (depending upon which sources you believe), making it by far the most expensive Bond film produced to that point, and quite some time after, come to that.
In the end, at many as five directors and at least ten writers contributed to the final product, which, perhaps understandably, was more than a little difficult to follow in places, not least because Peter Sellers, finding it impossible to work with Orson Welles, walked off the film before he’d finished shooting all his scenes.Casino Royale 1967 End Credits Full
Nevertheless, the film does have a special place in many fans’ hearts.
A neglected gem, this film, starring Barbara Bouchet and, er, some other people, presents us with what is, without a doubt, one of the most perplexing mysteries surrounding any of the Bond films.
The theatrical running time of Casino Royale was, according to the BBFC, 142m 29s (at 24fps). The longest video/DVD running time is 125m 38s at (25fps). Even accounting for PAL speed up (which would make the theatrical cut come in at around the 138m mark), that’s still a shortfall of about quarter of an hour. Intriguingly, on the back of the R1 DVD, the length is clearly listed as being around two-and-a-quarter hours (which would almost tally with the BBFC listing of the theatrical cut). The DVD itself is, sadly, the same cut we’ve all been used to for years.Casino Royale 1967 Theme Song
The premiere and press screenings of the film contained a “comedic” gunbarrel sequence at the start of the film, involving a champagne bottle that disappeared by the time the film premiered to the public, but that would hardly account for a fifteen minute discrepancy. So, the question is, what happened to that 142 minute version?
Onto the various DVD releases of this film, and, perhaps not surprisingly, Casino Royale has never really been given the sort of tender, loving care it deserves, with neither the Region 1, nor the Region 2 releases distinguishing themselves.
The anamorphic R1 release contains both the original mono mix, and a new, 5.1 Dolby track and, generally speaking, looks very nice indeed. However, the original Columbia logo is replaced by a modern day MGM one, and moments of (easily repairable) film damage make their presence felt, as if to remind you of the film’s bastard status. One particular sequence, in which Evelyn Tremble is talking to Vesper, whilst performing press-ups, suffers from a gigantic tear during one shot (at 52’ 29”). This tear is not in evidence in the R2, though, interestingly, the footage from some of that sequence on the R2 does look to be slightly faded and pinkish in tone, possibly indicating that they lifted sections of the scene from another, inferior, print to cover similar, or perhaps even the same, damage. It is down to personal taste which is more objectionable; the tear, or the badly colour-timed replacement footage. Casino Royale 1967 End Credits Video
The R2 also retains the original Columbia logo at the start, but, unfortunately, is non-anamorphic. It is also missing the 5.1 remix, a Val Guest interview, and the TV edition of Casino Royale, all of which can be found on the R1. Casino Royale 1967 Movie Cast
The R2 release does, however, contain two trailers to the R1’s one. The Theatrical Trailer (which urges the audience to “Join the Casino Royale Fun Movement!”) is common to both regions, though whilst the R1 version is in widescreen and taken from a decent source, the R2 is in far rougher condition, and cropped to 4:3, resulting in some painfully bad compositions. For instance, it takes whoever is in charge of the transfer two attempts at getting Barbara Bouchet’s name on screen without cropping it. Perversely, the second, “teaser” trailer on the R2 copy is presented with anamorphic enhancement, unlike the film itself. Both trailers contain footage that didn’t make it to the final cut, which makes them both invaluable to completists.Casino Royale 1967 Full Movie
PART TWO - THE SEAN CONNERY MOVIES
Register here: http://gg.gg/vi1lp
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
Casino Royale (1967) Full Cast & Crew. Directed by (6) Writing credits (11) Cast (130) Produced by (3) Music by (1) Cinematography by (1) Film Editing by (1) Casting. Casino Royale, British-American spy film, released in 1967, that is a parody of Ian Fleming’s first James Bond novel (1953). Plagued by a chaotic production, the movie is notable for being largely incoherent. Bond (played by David Niven) is living in opulence after his retirement from MI6. The two films ended up competing head-to-head, seeing as how You Only Live Twice was released in June 1967, a mere two months after Casino Royale. Casino Royale was still being reworked and finished during its premiere in London, where apparently final cuts were being made in the projection room. Upon the film’s worldwide release, mass.Soundtrack Information
Limited Edition of 1,000 Copies
Kritzerland (KR20017-6)
Release Date:January 18, 2011
Conducted by Burt Bacharach
Format: CDMusic ByPurchase SoundtrackTrack Listing1.Casino Royale Theme (Main Title)02:392.The Venerable Sir James Bond02:333.Agent Mimi01:354.Little French Boy02:255.Money Penny Goes for Broke01:376.The Look of Love (instrumental)02:487.The Look of Love04:118.The Indian Temple00:529.Sir James’ Trip to Find Mata02:1610.First Stop Berlin01:5511.Home James, Don’t Spare the Horses01:3112.Hi There Miss Goodthighs01:1613.Dream On, James, You’re Winning01:1814.Le Chiffre’s Torture of Mind02:1315.Flying Saucer01:0616.The Big Cowboys and Indians Fight at Casino Royale / End Credits (vocal version)05:1217.Keystone Kops00:1118.Casino Royale Theme (Main Title)02:3719.The Look of Love04:0720.Money Penny Goes for Broke01:3921.Le Chiffre’s Torture of the Mind02:1322.Home James, Don’t Spare the Horses01:3123.Sir James’ Trip to Find Mata03:4824.The Look of Love (instrumental)02:4625.Hi There Miss Goodthighs01:1526.Little French Boy02:2427.Flying Saucer - First Stop Berlin02:5928.The Venerable Sir James Bond02:3229.Dream On, James, You’re Winning01:1830.The Big Cowboys and Indians Fight at Casino Royale / Casino Royale Theme04:49Total Album Time:69:36Related Albums
*
Casino Royale - 50th Anniversary EditionLimited Edition of 2,000 Units
Quartet Records
Released: December 7, 2017
Format: CD (77 min)
*
Casino Royale - 45th Anniversary EditionLimited Edition of 1,500 Copies
Quartet Records
Released: February 28, 2012
Format: CD (92 min)
*
Released: 1968
Formats: CD, Vinyl (34 min)
The concert experience at Q Casino can’t be beat. We bring incredibly talented and entertaining acts right to you! Check out who is coming soon. If you want to be part of the action, Q rewards is the best way to make Q Casino your own! Q casino outdoor concerts tickets. Q CASINO More than just fun & games. Q Casino is an entertainment and gaming complex that incorporates both greyhound racing and casino gaming located in Dubuque, Iowa. The casino is owned by the City of Dubuque, and operated by the non-profit Dubuque Racing Association, its license holder.
*
Released: November 12, 2012
Format: Digital (84 min)
*
100 Greatest Movie ThemesZYX Music
Released: October 26, 2012
Format: CD (528 min)
*
James Bond: 50 Years AnniversaryTrigger Records
Released: September 14, 2012
Format: Digital (65 min)
*
The Best of James BondSeyffert Music
Released: June 1, 2012
Format: Digital (75 min)From the Manufacturer
In 1953, British author Ian Fleming created one of the most enduring cinematic characters with the publication of his first 007 novel, Casino Royale. Thirteen years later, producer Charles K. Feldman (of What’s New Pussycat? fame) reimagined Fleming’s story as a large-scale, star-studded spy spoof inspired by the Bond mania that swept across the world in the 1960s. While not exactly delivering the kind of James Bond films audiences had loved and come to expect, Casino Royale has became a cult classic in the ensuing decades, a colorful addendum to the history of the 007 legacy. With an all-star cast that included David Niven, Deborah Kerr, John Huston, Woody Allen, Peter Sellers, cameos by Jean-Paul Belmondo, David McCallum, and Peter O’Toole, and even featuring an authentic Bond girl, Ursula Andress (from Dr. No), the rag-tag craziness on view was directed by several different directors—John Huston, Joseph McGrath, Robert Parrish, with Val Guest overseeing the entire production. As would be expected, the end result was eclectic, sometimes very funny, and sometimes just plain weird.
One person who immensely helped tie the whole thing together was the brilliant Burt Bacharach, who provided one of the most popular and universally applauded features of Casino Royale: its musical score. Hired on the strength of his music for What’s New Pussycat?, the composer was expected to bring the same kind of cheek to Feldman’s latest picture, offering a colorful kaleidoscope that went on to define the Swingin’ Sixties without referencing the typical musical spy vernacular. In fact, Bacharach’s approach is much closer to the Henry Mancini/Blake Edwards song scores such as The Pink Panther or The Party, which may explain the soundtrack’s extraordinary success on its own. The score was nominated for a Grammy and ’The Look of Love’ received an Oscar nomination. Bacharach had, of course, had countless hits by the time of this film, and would go on to have countless more (one of the only pop song composers to have hits in every decade since the 1950s), as well as providing the soundtracks to Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Arthur, and many other films.
This is the third CD release for Casino Royale (although both releases on Varese Sarabande were pretty much identical)—the original LP has long been considered one of the great audiophile releases, thanks to a nod in The Absolute Sound. But due to an unfortunate accident, just prior to the transfer of the master tape, the tape was rewound too quickly and stripped of iron oxide, thereby compromising and damaging the tape. The transfer could still be made and the CD came out—but anyone expecting it to sound like the LP was disappointed, and for obvious reasons.
For this release, we have spent much time in trying to alleviate some of the effects of the tape damage—our mastering engineer, James Nelson, has painstakingly and lovingly repaired numerous dropouts and other anomalies and we’ve worked very hard to get this to sound as good as it ever has or will, and the result is pretty amazing.
We’ve also added three short bonus cues, available on CD for the first time, including the original end credits vocal. And, of course, we get the great performances of Dusty Springfield and Herb Alpert and The Tijuana Brass.
But one of the main reasons for doing this third CD release was to offer as a bonus a straight transfer of that original record—done from several pristine copies of the LP—so that the original sound, with no additional processing or EQ, is captured on CD for the very first time. We leave it for others to judge whether that sound holds up for today’s listeners. Given what happened to the master tape, this is as close to that original LP sound as we’re ever going to get.
This very special release is limited to 1,000 copies only.
*Click stars
to rate.
If any information appears to be missing from this page, contact us and let us know!
PART ONE
INTRODUCTION AND TWO
VERSIONS OF CASINO ROYALE
(Note: All timings quoted refer to the PAL releases, unless otherwise stated)
To date, there have been an almost-countless number of releases of the James Bond films, on just about every home video format, from VHS to Laserdisc, from VCD to DVD, often with multiple releases in each format. No doubt we will soon see them make their debut in High Definition.
After studying the films’ home video history two things have become apparent. Firstly, some of the films have been treated better than others over the years, and secondly, many of the films have been released in such a variety of cuts, that it is hard to determine which - if any - are the definitive versions.
This guide does not pretend to be the last word on the subject, but it does attempt to provide some information about each film, and how they have been treated over the years. It also provides information about the variant cuts of some of the films which have appeared over the past five decades. Hopefully the Guide will provide answers to some long-standing questions, and even offer some information you never thought you’d need to know! Along the way we shall also be taking in the first ever live-action depiction of James Bond, in the 1954 TV adaptation of Casino Royale, and the two “unofficial” James Bond movies (the 1967 version of Casino Royale and Never Say Never Again).
CASINO ROYALE - 1954
We start with the television adaptation of Casino Royale, first broadcast as part of the Climax Mystery Theater series, on the 21st October 1954. Barry Nelson starred as James Bond, and Peter Lorre played his nemesis, Le Chiffre.
Although long thought lost, this has since been released all over the world, in a variety of different prints. The version that most people will be familiar with is the one included as an extra on the Region 1 release of the 1967 film version of Casino Royale (see below). This version on this disc, as with most other versions in circulation, is missing the very ending of the show, and cuts to the end credits just as Bond asks Valerie to telephone the police.
The most complete version to date would appear to be an American VHS released by Spy Guise Video in 1998. This version includes the whole of the final scene. Spy Guise announced that they had plans to release the same uncut print on DVD, but it has yet to appear.
It should be noted that none of the versions available in any format are in particularly great shape, but we should be grateful that it exists at all.
CASINO ROYALE - 1967Casino Royale 1967 online, free
Upon securing the film rights to the novel Casino Royale (which, because of the 1950s TV adaptation, were still up for grabs, unlike the rest of Fleming’s novels) noted film producer Charles K. Feldman initially tried to interest Harry Saltzman and Cubby Broccoli in co-producing a new version of the tale, this time for the big screen. However, they turned his offer down.
Colombia, however, jumped at the chance, and decided to press ahead with their own version. Initially, the film was to be a very serious adaptation, one very faithful to the source material. Feldman even approached Sean Connery to see if he’d be interested in taking the lead role. Connery also turned him down, however. It was at this point that Feldman decided that the only way to approach the material was to make it a spoof of the “official” Bond series.
In the end, the film, beset with production problems, wound up costing between twelve and thirty-four million dollars to make (depending upon which sources you believe), making it by far the most expensive Bond film produced to that point, and quite some time after, come to that.
In the end, at many as five directors and at least ten writers contributed to the final product, which, perhaps understandably, was more than a little difficult to follow in places, not least because Peter Sellers, finding it impossible to work with Orson Welles, walked off the film before he’d finished shooting all his scenes.Casino Royale 1967 End Credits Full
Nevertheless, the film does have a special place in many fans’ hearts.
A neglected gem, this film, starring Barbara Bouchet and, er, some other people, presents us with what is, without a doubt, one of the most perplexing mysteries surrounding any of the Bond films.
The theatrical running time of Casino Royale was, according to the BBFC, 142m 29s (at 24fps). The longest video/DVD running time is 125m 38s at (25fps). Even accounting for PAL speed up (which would make the theatrical cut come in at around the 138m mark), that’s still a shortfall of about quarter of an hour. Intriguingly, on the back of the R1 DVD, the length is clearly listed as being around two-and-a-quarter hours (which would almost tally with the BBFC listing of the theatrical cut). The DVD itself is, sadly, the same cut we’ve all been used to for years.Casino Royale 1967 Theme Song
The premiere and press screenings of the film contained a “comedic” gunbarrel sequence at the start of the film, involving a champagne bottle that disappeared by the time the film premiered to the public, but that would hardly account for a fifteen minute discrepancy. So, the question is, what happened to that 142 minute version?
Onto the various DVD releases of this film, and, perhaps not surprisingly, Casino Royale has never really been given the sort of tender, loving care it deserves, with neither the Region 1, nor the Region 2 releases distinguishing themselves.
The anamorphic R1 release contains both the original mono mix, and a new, 5.1 Dolby track and, generally speaking, looks very nice indeed. However, the original Columbia logo is replaced by a modern day MGM one, and moments of (easily repairable) film damage make their presence felt, as if to remind you of the film’s bastard status. One particular sequence, in which Evelyn Tremble is talking to Vesper, whilst performing press-ups, suffers from a gigantic tear during one shot (at 52’ 29”). This tear is not in evidence in the R2, though, interestingly, the footage from some of that sequence on the R2 does look to be slightly faded and pinkish in tone, possibly indicating that they lifted sections of the scene from another, inferior, print to cover similar, or perhaps even the same, damage. It is down to personal taste which is more objectionable; the tear, or the badly colour-timed replacement footage. Casino Royale 1967 End Credits Video
The R2 also retains the original Columbia logo at the start, but, unfortunately, is non-anamorphic. It is also missing the 5.1 remix, a Val Guest interview, and the TV edition of Casino Royale, all of which can be found on the R1. Casino Royale 1967 Movie Cast
The R2 release does, however, contain two trailers to the R1’s one. The Theatrical Trailer (which urges the audience to “Join the Casino Royale Fun Movement!”) is common to both regions, though whilst the R1 version is in widescreen and taken from a decent source, the R2 is in far rougher condition, and cropped to 4:3, resulting in some painfully bad compositions. For instance, it takes whoever is in charge of the transfer two attempts at getting Barbara Bouchet’s name on screen without cropping it. Perversely, the second, “teaser” trailer on the R2 copy is presented with anamorphic enhancement, unlike the film itself. Both trailers contain footage that didn’t make it to the final cut, which makes them both invaluable to completists.Casino Royale 1967 Full Movie
PART TWO - THE SEAN CONNERY MOVIES
Register here: http://gg.gg/vi1lp
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
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