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Casino Royale - BLU-RAY Version (2006) Certificate 12

Casino Royale - BLU-RAY Version
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Rated 4.0 stars
Average rating
(80%)
 
Starring: Daniel Craig | Judi Dench | Jeffrey Wright | Eva Green | Mads Mikkelsen | Giancarlo Giannini | Ivana Milicevic | Simon Abkarian | Isaach De Bankole | Claudio Santamaria | Jesper Christensen
Director: Martin Campbell
Run time: 144 mins
Genres: Action/Adventure | Audio Descriptive | Thriller
Languages: English, English Audio Description
Released: March 19, 2007

CASINO ROYALE introduces JAMES BOND before he holds his license to kill. But Bond is no less dangerous, and with two professional assassinations in quick succession, he is elevated to "00" status.Bond's first 007 mission takes him to Madagascar, where he is to spy on a terrorist, MOLLAKA (Sebastien Foucan). Not everything goes to plan and Bond decides to investigate, independently of MI6, in order to track down the rest of the terrorist cell. Following a lead to the Bahamas, he encounters DIMITRIOS (Simon Abkarian) and his girlfriend, SOLANGE (Caterina Murino). He learns that Dimitrios is involved with LE CHIFFRE (Mads Mikkelsen), banker to the world's terrorist organizations.Secret Service intelligence reveals that Le Chiffre is planning to raise money in a high-stakes poker game in Montenegro at Le Casino Royale. MI6 assigns 007 to play against him, knowing that if Le Chiffre loses, it will destroy his organization.'M' (Judi Dench) places Bond under the watchful eye of the beguiling VESPER LYND (Eva Green). At first skeptical of what value Vesper can provide, Bond's interest in her deepens as they brave danger together and even torture at the hands of Le Chiffre.In Montenegro, Bond allies himself with MATHIS (Giancarlo Giannini), MI6's local field agent, and FELIX LEITER (Jeffrey Wright), who is representing the interests of the CIA. The marathon game proceeds with dirty tricks and violence, raising the stakes beyond blood money and reaching a terrifying climax.

Highest rated reviews

12 out of 19 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4.0 stars
Ignore the critics...

andbev0402 from from Greenock, 13th March, 2007

and everyone else who says something negative about this film. Those who opposed the appointment of a 'blond bond' should be thoroughly eating their words now. I was so engrossed in this film that I never even noticed his hair colour, so gripped was I by Daniel Craig's spectacular performance. His Bond is one that still retains the charm and sophistication but this time it is employed only under the correct circumstances and in a clever manner, as opposed to the smart remarks that would come from the likes of Roger Moore's Bond even in the most dangerous of situations. Faced with danger this new Bond becomes the man he was designed to be and is utterly ruthless in the undertaking of his new job. I have been a fan of Bond for as long as I can remember, even the crazy ones like Moonraker. However, while they were brilliant, I had always found them to be a comic experience, a good natured good nights viewing. This was the case with almost all of them with the exception of some of the later ones like License To Kill and The World Is Not Enough for example. They moved toward a far more serious genre using more serious subject matter but retained an element of the old charm. Casino Royale is one of the best mixes of the 2. My only criticisms and the reasons I didn't give this film 5 stars is because of the alteration of one small Bond trademark line, the fact that the twist at the end, while brilliantly unexpected, seems to have been done just for the sake of a big climactic fight scene and that this film HAS to be seen as starting the Bond franchise anew due to the messing up it does of the Bond time line. Funny thing is, even if you're the strictest form of viewer, I can't see how any of these points would do more than bug you in the minutest ways possible, such is the absolute quality of this picture.

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9 out of 9 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 2.0 stars
JUST OK

michael turner from Wolverhampton, 17th December, 2007

Right ok film not enough gadgets for bond lovers not a bad film just ok..

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8 out of 10 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 5.0 stars
Brilliant

nated23 from from Birmingham, 28th April, 2007

The only thing missing from Casino Royale is a truly memorable theme song. Otherwise, this has almost everything you could want from a Bond movie, plus qualities you didn’t expect they’d even try for. It does all the location-hopping, eye-opening stunt stuff and lavish glamour expected of every big-screen Bond, but also delivers a surprisingly faithful adaptation of Fleming’s short, sharp, cynical book with the post-WWII East-vs.-West backdrop persuasively upgraded to a post 9/11 War on Terror. From Goldfinger on -- especially in the Roger Moore and Pierce Brosnan films -- the usual gambit has been to open with a pre-credits sequence highlighting amazing stuntwork and a larger-than-life exploit. Here, with a new actor cast as a Bond only just issued with his license to kill, we get an intense, black and white scene set in an office in Prague. Bond has just killed his first man – as shown in brief, brutal fight flashbacks which strain the 12A rating – and confronts a traitor in British Intelligence, exchanging pointed dialogue which leads to the ice-cold agent’s demonstration that the second killing is easier (‘Considerably’). The famous iris pose brings in colour, and a brilliantly-designed (shame about the song) titles sequence that highlights not an anonymous beauty but the silhouette of Daniel Craig himself. For a few reels, Casino Royale lets the new boy settle in to what could almost be a Brosnan or Dalton movie – hard-hitting, but tinged with the fantastical. Bond goes off the map to harry the organisation of ‘banker to the world’s terrorists’ LeChiffre, with a beddable beach beauty along the way, and a thwarted attack on a super-sized jet aeroplane which could have been the climax of any other adventure. Then, with a notable click into focus, the movie segues into Fleming’s tight, twisted plot. Readers will be amazed to find the book’s most memorable scene (involving a wicker chair with the bottom cut out) is included, as is Bond’s brutal Mickey Spillane-ish last line (though, here, he doesn’t quite mean it). Director Martin Campbell, who set a high mark in GoldenEye that subsequent craftsmen haven’t matched, returns, and regular scripters Neal Purvis and Robert Wade get Oscar-polishing assist from Paul Haggis. There are nods to tradition, with respectful Aston-Martin product placement, but also refreshing breaks from established practice. Judi Dench’s imposing M is held over, but supporting comedy characters like Q and Miss Moneypenny sit this one out. Mads Mikkelsen’s LeChiffre has a physical tic and a lethal girlfriend, but this villain interestingly has as much to lose as the hero, playing cards because he lost terrorist money and needs to make up the shortfall before his clients kill him. There are miscalculations (a collapsing building in Venice is a gimmick too many in an emotional finale which would play better without all the noise) and audiences who just want a handsome fantasy figure might find a muscular Bond with perpetually bruised knuckles and the beginnings of a drink problem too much of a stretch. But long-running series can only survive through constant renewal. Casino Royale is the most exciting Bond film, in conventional action terms but also in dramatic meat, since On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, with the added advantage of a star who finally delivers what the credits have always promised: ‘Ian Fleming’s James Bond’. Contrary to pre-release nay-sayers, Daniel Craig has done more with James Bond in one film than some previous stars have in multiple reprises. This is terrific stuff, again positioning 007 as the action franchise to beat.

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4 out of 5 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 5.0 stars
Best Bond

David Morgan from Rhyl North Wales, 20th April, 2007

I think we have have discovered the Best Bond since Connery, dare I say even cooler than Connery. At last we have a Bond film that doesn't rely on gadgets, crass one liners and crude inuendo, it relies on a good story and fine acting, I hope Daniel Craig continues to play Bond for a long time. Just to add, the entire film looks amazing on Blu-Ray !

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Most recent reviews

Rated 4.0 stars
Casino Royale

bondman from , 5th March, 2010

Daniel Craig issuperbb the whole film excellent from start to finish

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Rated 5.0 stars
The best Bond film ever

A Customer from Port Talbot, 15th January, 2010

Daniel Craig is awesome as Bond - not a tongue in cheek spy movie as all the Bond predecessors and all the better for it. Stunning on blu-ray - bought it the day after renting it !

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Rated 4.0 stars
Casino Royale

Julie23 from , 13th October, 2009

Daniel Craig is the perfect Bond and he doesnt disappoint. The opening scene where he is chasing the guy through the building site is fantastic - basejumping at its best. This is the second time I have seen this film and I would recommend it completely.

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Rated 2.0 stars
Dullsville

JJBurnel from , 13th October, 2009

All the worthwile action is in the first 15 minutes and the end action scene looks too obviously like a studio set. Daniel Craig is good, but this is the worst Bond film ever !

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