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Moonraker

From Russia with Love and Moonraker. Ashland, OR Blaekstone Audiobooks. Read by Simon Vance Available as 12 compact discs or 11 cassettes. [Pg.43]

Moonraker. Bath, UK Chivers Press Audio. Read by David Rintoul Available as 6 cassettes. [Pg.45]

Moonraker. New York Simon Schuster Audioworks. Read by Roger Blake Available as 1 cassette. [Pg.45]

Moonraker. London Penguin. Read by Rufus Sewell Available... [Pg.45]

Moonraker. Ashland, OR Blackstone Audio. Read by Simon Vance and Robert Whitfield Available as 6 compact discs, 5 cassettes or audio download. [Pg.45]

Fleming, Ian. 1955. Moonraker a James Bond novel. New Yoik Penguin Books, 2003. [Pg.58]

No doubt aware that such overtly fetishizing attitudes toward women could alienate a portion of the public. Binder relied heavily on ambiguous choreography for the titles of two key 1970s Bond films, The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) and Moonraker (1979). These sequences deviate from Thunderball s pattern of veiled adversarial relationships between Bond and his female companions, opting instead for a playful allegiance between Bond and the ubiquitous female silhouettes. This shift in choreographic form allows for a more liberated view of the women represented in the titles, but retains the sexually provocative quality of the earlier sequences. [Pg.66]

Gilbert, Lewis, director. 1979. Moonraker. United Aitists/EON Productions and Les Production Artistes Associes. [Pg.74]

Moonraker (1979) offers a similar theme of love found in dreams. Both songs share similarly lush, sensuous orchestration, and dreamy vocal performances. If they have any relation to the Bond movies, perhaps it could be as unintended meta-textual commentaries on the dreamlike quality of movies themselves. Coincidentally, for both movies, Saltzman and Broccoli apparently tried hard, but failed, to get their acquaintance Frank Sinatra to sing the theme songs. [Pg.109]

Moomaker. Shirley Bassey. Moonraker soimdtrack. United Artists LP LA971-1. [Pg.116]

Moonraker - Bany/David, sung by Shirley Bassey, from Moonraker (1979). [Pg.123]

Fleming, Ian. 2003. Casino Royale, Live and Let Die, Moonraker. London Penguin. [Pg.395]


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