Movie Notes: Octopussy



= 3 stars
Starring Roger Moore, Maude Adams
Directed by John Glen
Moving through the James Bond films, Octopussy is the second-to-last one starring Roger Moore (the last being A View To A Kill. In this oddly named adventure, he’s older and looks more than a bit tired. Overall, the film is decent with a fair number of definite thrills, but a few minor organizational gripes harm it, and frankly, I found myself pretty bored during the first half. Maye I’ve just seen too many Bond movies (no surprise).
The film follows a fake Faberge egg (found by a 009). The real egg appears at a London auction, where prince Kamil Khan (Louis Jourdan) has been instructed to buy it at any price. James Bond is sent to figure out the reasons and possibly why 009 was killed.
There’s a sinister Soviet connection here (this film was made while the west and the Soviet Union were still in the Cold War). A Russian General Orlov (Steven Berkoff) (with fantasies of starting a nuclear war) is involved with Khan and Octopussy (Maude Adamse), a wealthy “businesswoman” based in India, in a jewel-smuggling ring.
Anyhow, Bond travels to India to figure this all out. The first half is standard Bond: sneaking around an ornate palace learning of a nefarious, world-ending plot while henchmen and stooges try to kill him (there’s one neat weapon in the form of a huge saw blade on a string, deployed like a yo-yo). Some nice parts: India makes a lush location for a Bond film. The first damsel Bond sets his eyes on (Kristina Wayborn) is quite exquisite. Also, “Q” actually gets to join Bond for the final exciting battle. Usually, he just hangs out back at home base in the gadget lab.
My small complaints: As mentioned by others, there are more than enough baddies, Orlov, Khan, and Octopussy, plus a tall henchman or two. One or possibly two could have been shelved.
Second, I would have flipped the exotic locations of India and Germany. It’s kind of a bummer to begin in sunny India with palaces, rivers, elephants, and crocodiles only to end up in Germany at a cornball circus (with Bond in both a gorilla and clown suit) of all places.
Lastly, as inevitable with later-period Bond, some scenes seem like nods to ones previous: An evil henchman crushing dice in his hands is similar to Odd Job (Goldfinger) crushing a golf ball. Bond swinging on vines to a Tarzan yell (definitely cheesy) is similar to the looping car jump in The Man With The Golden Gun (also starring Maud Adams as Andrea Anders).
Other than that, it’s a decent Bond outing and slightly above average, but that’s not saying much.
Some amusing trivia: At the time of this film’s creation, Timothy Dalton and James Brolin were already in the works as Bond successors, as Roger Moore only had A View To A Kill left in his contract.
IMDB: Octopussy
Wikipedia: Octopussy
Next Bond Movie: A View To A Kill
Previous Bond Movie: For Your Eyes Only


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November 12, 2008 at 7:47 am
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November 12, 2008 at 8:07 pm
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