When Q hands Bond the underwater camera and tells him it takes 8 shots by pressing a button, the camera is plainly seen as a black Calypso 35mm camera with has black gaffers tape covering the name across the bottom. Later while on board the yacht, Domino is seen with the camera as she walks in the passageway while using it as a Geiger counter. The camera falls to the deck when Largo confronts her and the lens is seen popping off. We hear the sounds of the counter and see some type of gadgets inside just behind where the lens was.
When she bends down and picks it up, Largo takes it from her and the camera is briefly seen with the silver lens re-attached. When Bond emerges from the basement hatch at Palmyra, he leaves it open as he runs off. When Largo's henchmen chase after him, the hatch is closed. The boat captain's hat gets knocked off three times during the fight.
After the cocoon has been jettisoned, the remaining crew are seen shooting at the pursuing ships from their now-motionless craft. They should be at the rear, not the front, engaging the enemy. The Colonel throws a vase at Bond who is about to catch it on his right shoulder. When we see Bond from behind, the vase shatters on his left shoulder.
The scene with Bond underwater searching for the Vulcan bomber shows his dive cylinder as plain white, however on surfacing and handing the tank to Felix Leiter, his cylinder has a large blue manufacturer's sticker Voit Lung on the back.
When Domino asks James to kill Largo, her hands aren't touching him in one shot, then they are on his shoulder in the next, then on the side of arms in the next shot. For most of the climatic underwater battle, Bond is wearing an international orange wetsuit jacket and white shorts. But after the battle, as he takes off on the underwater sled, there's a very quick shot where you can see he has black wetsuit pants on.
During Bond's conversation with Domino on the beach, she lays down at one point and Bond grabs her shoulder. In the reverse shot, she is still sitting up. When Francois is struggling to release the safety belt to escape from the cockpit after the plane goes underwater, he is wearing a watch with a leather band on his left wrist.
Cut to the next scene where his oxygen supply is cut, he struggles once again to release his safety belt and the watchband including the face has now changed to stainless steel. At the Junkanoo the parade is shot in the leg as he escapes catch sight of the back of his trouser leg.
In The close-up shots of his legs there is a scarlet blood stain, in the long shots of him there is no blood pouring from either leg. When Bond is hiding in wait for an assailant behind a door, he has his right hand in his inside jacket pocket on his gun. A brief cutaway then shows his hand down by his side, only for the next close up to show his hand in the pocket.
After Bond enlists Domino's help on the beach he swims into the inlet barefoot but emerges from the water with shoes. When Bond is riding in the helicopter around Palmira, one shot shows him looking out of an opening on the right side of the helicopter, with the left side being a solid wall. A succeeding shot shows him looking out of an opening on the left side of the helicopter, with a solid wall on the right side.
When Bond emerges from Largo's basement into the yard he leaves the wooden door open as he makes off. In the next scene the door is closed. Is this interesting? Bond and Felix are searching for a crashed plane when Felixsuddenly changes from trousers into shorts. When Bond secretly joins Largo's operation, he emerges from the water, but his pants dry in seconds. During the Vulcan hi-jack, Angelo swaps places with the co-pilot, who stands behind the seat.
After the crew is gassed, the shot of the rear crew shows a fourth person has suddenly appeared in Angelo's back seat. The comb in Domino's hand when she meets Bond for the first time. When Q is showing Bond his new gear in Pinter's shack, he has a watch on in the close up's, and no watch in the wide shots. When Bond first arrives in the jet pack, the cloud of dust covers the car and Madame LaPorte. In the next shot, it does not cover the car. Bond is shown walking down the stairs to Largo's divers launch point wearing only his Rolex Submariner on his left wrist.
In the continuation of that scene he suddenly has his Breitling, which Q handed him earlier, on his right wrist too. After Bond has escaped Largo's sharks, lighting equipment is reflected in the car door as he opens it. When Domino takes James to the beach in her boat after first meeting him, a crew member is visible crouching down inside the boat as it's being turned around.
When the cars arrive at the mansion after attending the funeral, they enter through the front door. While it's opening the film crew's lighting equipment is reflected in the door. As Bond climbs the hydrofoil plane to enter the Disco Volante, a rope and wood ladder can be seen conveniently strapped to the plane. The ransom drop, mentioned twice in dialogue, is supposedly "Precisely 20 degrees north, 60 degrees east" off the Mergui Archipelago. These coordinates are actually in the Arabian Sea off Oman.
In round numbers to be at the named location it would be about 15 degrees North, 95 East. When the Royal Air Force officer is briefing the Double-Ohs about the Vulcan bomber's flying range using the large map on the wall, a close look at the United States portion of the map reveals that the map is not drawn correctly. The southeastern part of the states from Florida to about Virginia and across the Gulf states Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and the southern part of Texas , as well as much of Mexico, are inexplicably covered by water.
When Bond is being held in the car, a drunk comes along and offers a bottle of rum. Bond spills the rum over the back of the front seat and ignites it.
The fluid flashes and burns with a bright orange flame. Rum will not flash and only burns with a cool, dim blue flame. It would not be hot enough to immediately set the car seat alight. When Bond dives the sunken Vulcan bomber, he enters the cockpit through a small door via the bomb bay. It is not possible to access the bomb bay from the cockpit due to being separated by bulkheads, the nose gear and a fuel tank.
There is absolutely no way a V bomber training flight would carry two real nuclear weapons. When Bond drops his gun off the roof, it fires. It would be very rare for that to happen. When speaking to Fiona in the hotel room, he mentions what he did was for King and Country, when at the time of filming Queen Elizabeth II was on the throne, so he should have said Queen and Country. When they are searching for the Vulcan, Bond tells Leiter to set the helicopter down in the Golden Grotto so he can look for the plane.
The place that they set down is very light blue, indicating very shallow water, too shallow to hide the plane in. When looks directly beneath the helicopter, there's the plane, too far down for where they landed. A motorized traction table such as the one that Bond uses at the health retreat would obviously not have had settings that would have been dangerous to the patient.
The plane's depressurization warning light comes on, even though the cabin pressure does not fail, a poisonous gas is fed into the crew's oxygen supply. When Bond first meets Domino he pretends the boat won't start and then tells Paula to do the same. The boat engine does not start and this takes place before he pulls a cable from it to disable it. Nuke-carrying Vulcan bombers were painted white, unlike the one in the movie. The paint scheme in the film is correct.
As part of that change the camouflage paint scheme was adopted. With the exception of Goldfinger, all of the Bond villains from came from this organization. Blofeld gave MI6 specific instructions to make Big Ben strike seven times at 6 PM if they agree to meet their demands, but the striking is not actually shown.
However, at Pinder Earl Cameron 's place in Nassau, Bond hears a news bulletin on the radio that says it did happen. The misstrike was attributed to mechanical failure. Connery has a tattoo on his right forearm, dating from his youthful service days in the Royal Navy. The tattoo reportedly reads "Mom and Dad" and "Scotland Forever. The game is featured several times throughout the run of the Bond series.
In the film the game is changed to Texas Hold 'Em poker to reflect more modern times. The best explanation is that the character didn't seem particularly menacing, so the eyepatch was added to make him look like a dangerous master criminal instead of a middle-aged man that could beat up in less than ten seconds.
Bond's other signature drink is a vodka martini, shaken not stirred. That was Junkanoo, a Bahamian street parade that occurs in Nassau and many other towns across The Bahamas during the dark hours on Boxing Day 26 December and again in the early morning hours on New Year's Day.
In the movie, however, some of the marchers are carrying signs saying Happy Easter. Blofeld No. Blofeld kills one operative for having had sex with a hostage, instead of as punishment for embezzlement.
Largo is a young, fit, brown-haired man with both eyes. Domino is Italian and her full name is Dominetta Vitali. The pre-credits sequence, shark pool and clay-pigeon shooting scenes, MI6 agent Paula and villains including Fiona Volpe, Vargas and Janni are also not in the book; nor is Q or the Aston Martin.
Updating means the plane featured in the film is a real-life Vulcan bomber. Leiter in the novel has his disabilities including a hook hand from the shark attack in Fleming's Live and Let Die, and he and Bond explore in a seaplane not a chopper.
A single US Navy submarine conducts the final assault on the Disco, rather than a fleet of ships and paratrooper-frogmen as seen in the film, with Bond and Leiter leading only a small group of volunteer divers armed only with makeshift spears. When Domino shoots Largo with the speargun at the end, they are underwater in the book and she shoots him in the neck rather than the back. However, when Fleming wrote the book on which the film is based, the latter two got no credit. McClory sued the film's producers and Fleming.
Playing online, prizes will automatically be credited to your account. If you wish to play for a number of draws consecutively, you can play up to four weeks in advance at a retailer or continuously by Direct Debit. There are nine different ways to win on Thunderball, providing excellent 1 in 13 odds of receiving a prize:. Visit the Odds of Winning Thunderball page to find out the chances of winning each different prize tier. The method for claiming a Thunderball prize depends on how you played.
If you joined an online syndicate, winnings will be paid into your online account and the syndicate provider will then help to process transfers for larger amounts. The table below shows how prizes must be claimed if you bought a Thunderball ticket either online or in a shop.
All prizes must be claimed within days. If you are claiming your prize by post it is recommended that you use recorded or tracked delivery, as the National Lottery takes no responsibility for tickets lost in the mail. The address is:. Main Menu Lottery. He speaks just about every language you can think of, skis like a native of the Alps, is almost unbeatable when it comes to hand-to-hand combat and is a sharpshooter with a rifle. He knows the best vintages for Bollinger and Bordeaux, can outmanoeuvre anybody in a car and is pretty nifty in a tank as well see Goldeneye.
Card games and casinos feature in several Bond films and of course books and the former Royal Navy Commander invariably cleans up, much to the chagrin of the beautiful yet flawed woman, or evil and maniacal man he is playing against. But what game is Bond always playing?
But why does Bond always play baccarat? Or should we ask, does he always play baccarat? Either way, it is the films that are our focus in this piece and the eponymous hero plays cards or enters a casino in a huge number of them. He plays a range of games across these films. In Never Say Never Again he even, somewhat bizarrely, plays a variation of a video game in which the loser receives an electric shock. But the game that features most often is indeed baccarat. The first Bond film released came out four years after the book of the same name and sees Sean Connery in the lead role.
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