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  4. Moonraker Dubbed Hindi Movie Free Download Torrent
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  44. James Bond is back for another mission and this time, he is blasting off into space. A spaceship traveling through space is mysteriously hi-jacked and Bond must work quickly to find out who was behind it all. He starts with the rockets creators, Drax Industries and the man behind the organisation, Hugo Drax. On his journey he ends up meeting Dr. Holly Goodhead and encounters the metal-toothed Jaws once again.
  45. James Bond Adventure. A space shuttle is stolen enroute to London and M sends 007 out to apologize to the shuttle creator - billionaire Hugo Drax. While visiting Drax's estate several attempts are made on Bond's life, making Drax himself the number one suspect. Bond also meets Dr. Holly Goodhead, a NASA scientist who is also a CIA agent investigating Drax. Their investigations lead Bond to discover a plot to murder the world's population so that Drax can repopulate the planet in his image. The chase takes Bond all over the world - California, Brazil, the Amazon Jungle and, finally, to Drax's huge space-city over the Earth. Drax, meanwhile, has hired a old friend of Bond to take care of any problems - the steel-toothed killer Jaws......
  46. MOONRAKER is so far from being a dud Bond, its not funny! THUNDERBALL undoubtedly holds that honor, with THE WORLD IS NOT ENOUGH a close second! Never developed a taste for THE LIVING DAYLIGHTS either!<br/><br/>MOONRAKER is a totally fun experience - precisely what a BOND film is supposed to be. Never have the innuendo&#39;s flowed better...DR Holly GOODHEAD? - u gotta be kidding! is THAT risque enough for you or not? It also boasts the greatest and most subtle of villains, DRAX - Michael Lonsdale&#39;s finest cinematic moment, especially when he delivers the two greatest lines in all BONDom. &quot;Please take Mr Bond away and see that some harm comes to him!&quot; and the all time classic &quot;Would you please put Mr Bond out of my misery!&quot; Those two alone rate this up in the top half a dozen Bond capers.<br/><br/>So what if it&#39;s stupid? You want Shakespeare, go watch HENRY V! You want method acting? go catch ON THE WATERFRONT...you want subtle brilliance - watch SLEUTH, but if you just want a good time with a spot of action, pretty girls, and the only opportunity you&#39;ll ever have to see JAWS in love - stick with MOONRAKER! and lay off this flick wouldja!<br/><br/>Oh, by the way, it&#39;s a 6.9!
  47. This one ignores about 99.9% of one of Ian Fleming&#39;s best novels, and emerges as being nothing more than a silly Star Wars rip-off, as Bond tries to locate a downed space shuttle after an alleged accident, and stumbles on to a plot to annihilate the human race.<br/><br/>The modelwork during said hijacking of the Moonraker is well done, and the opening free-fall is quite well done, until Jaws starts flapping his arms trying to fly, in a really lame comedy attempt. After that dynamite opening, the film is carried through its first half almost completely on the strength of Roger Moore, and some incredible sets, and spectacular on-location photography in Venice.<br/><br/>The only elements of the book which make their way into this film are the title Moonraker, and the names of the characters Hugo Drax and James Bond, (but the characters themselves are completely different) and one vague reference to playing bridge with Drax.<br/><br/>The leading lady&#39;s name is different, but the character actually seems a bit similar to the character in the book, being very cold, or at least indifferent, especially towards Bond. This was both beneficial, and detrimental to the film.<br/><br/>The boat-which-turns-into-a-hovercraft was a needless gimmick, followed by an even lamer double-taking-pigeon. Several kung-fun elements appear, and feel like hangovers from 1974&#39;s The Man With The Golden Gun, and the brief boat chase and hang gliding scene are remnants of 1973&#39;s Live And Let Die. Bond&#39;s fight in the glass museum is like something out of an old Three Stooges short film from the 1930s, but that&#39;s NOT compliment in this case. But the following fight in a clock tower was considerably better. One of the few highlights to this movie.<br/><br/>Mostly this film manages to coast along as far as it does on Roger Moore&#39;s charm and some spectacular on-location photography.<br/><br/>Jaws was just ... I mean, ... what the bloody hell were they thinking with that character this time around? Turning him from villain&#39;s henchman into an ally was an interesting idea, and his fight with Bond on top of the cable car was another highlight of the movie for me, but for most of the rest of the character&#39;s screen time is nothing more than unfunny comic relief.<br/><br/>Some of the most obvious product placement (Marlboro, British Airways, and especially 7up) is crammed in here, with all the subtlety of a rat jumping out of your underwear drawer.<br/><br/>By the second half, my interest was waning. One of the lesser Bond films in the series.
  48. Broccoli serves the audience a space-shuttle hijacking, a jumbo-jet explosion and a protracted wrestling match between two men who are falling from the sky without parachutes. All this happens before the opening credits. From there, it's on to gondola chases in Venice, funicular crashes in Rio and laser-gun shootouts and lovemaking in deep space. Meanwhile, beautiful women come and go, talking (ever so discreetly) about fellatio. When Broccoli lays out a feast, he makes sure that there is at least one course for every conceivable taste...The result is a film that is irresistibly entertaining as only truly mindless spectacle can be.
  49. When the space shuttle Moonraker is hijacked in midair while being transported to the United Kingdom, MI6 director M (<a href="/name/nm0496866/">Bernard Lee</a>) assigns his best agent 007 James Bond (<a href="/name/nm0000549/">Roger Moore</a>), to investigate, starting with the shuttle&#39;s creator Drax Industries, headed by billionaire Hugo Drax (<a href="/name/nm0003909/">Michael Lonsdale</a>). Aided by NASA astronaut/scientist and CIA agent Dr Holly Goodhead (<a href="/name/nm0001042/">Lois Chiles</a>), they uncover a genocidal plot to destroy the Earth&#39;s population and repopulate it with selected couples currently being housed in an undetectable space-city hovering over the Earth. All of the James Bond movies are based, in some part, upon novels by British author Ian Fleming [1908-1964]. Moonraker is based on Fleming&#39;s 1955 novel of the same title. It was adapted for the screen by English screenwriter Christopher Wood. Wood, in turn, novelized the movie in James Bond and Moonraker, published the same year in which the movie was released (1979). Moonraker is the eleventh film in the EON Bond franchise and the fourth movie to feature <a href="/name/nm0000549/">Roger Moore</a> as James Bond, 007. Moonraker is sung by Welsh singer Shirley Bassey, who is the only performer to date that has done more than one Bond theme. She also did the themes for Goldfinger and Diamonds are Forever. Bond starts out on an airplane returning to London from Africa, where he was just finishing the last leg of another mission. He is then sent to California in order to talk with Hugo Drax, the builder of the Moonraker that was hijacked in midair. There he meets Dr Holly Goodhead for the first ime. When Bond learns that some of the parts for Drax&#39;s Moonrakers are being made at the Venni Glassworks in Italy, he flies to Venice where he encounters Holly Goodhead again. Bond figures out that Holly is a CIA operative, and they decide to work together. They learn that Drax is moving his operation to Brazil, so they fly to Rio. After Bond discovers Drax&#39;s base in the Amazon jungle, he and Holly commandeer a Moonraker and end up in outer space. Drax is playing Raindrop Prelude, opus 28, number 15 in D flat Major, composed by Frédéric Chopin. In the DVD commentary, it says that the effect was created with high-pressure air jets through a thin nozzle on a tube held off camera by Roger Moore himself. Moore suffered bruising to his cheeks afterwards.As he explains to Bond, one of the six Moonrakers that were needed for him to complete his mission developed a fault during its assembly. He needed to get back the one that was on the way to England because he was breaking down his operation on Earth and didn&#39;t have time to fix the ship that developed the fault or build another Moonraker. According to a commercial raiser of snakes, it&#39;s a reticulated python, native to Africa. It&#39;s the theme song from <a href="/title/tt0054047/">The Magnificent Seven (1960)</a> (1960). During his fight with behind the glass-faced clock, Bond spots some large crates with the Drax Industries logo and Rio de Jainero stenciled on them. One of the crates is partially broken open and Bond spots one of the globes he saw in the laboratory inside it. Bond and Holly knock out the pilots for the sixth Moonraker and take their place. Flying on a preset course, they eventually rendezvous with the other Moonrakers at a radar-cloaked space station where Drax has assembled numerous pairs of perfect people whom he intends to use to restart the human race. Bond and Holly disable the radar jammer in order to make the station visible from earth. The U.S. subsequently sends a military shuttle to investigate. Meanwhile, Drax has launched the first three of 50 globes carrying the deadly nerve toxin to earth in his attempt to wipe out the imperfect human race. A laser battle in space takes place when the military shuttle arrives, and Bond manages to eject Drax into space after shooting him with a cyanide-tipped dart. The space station begins to break up, so Bond and Holly attempt to get away in Drax&#39;s personal Moonraker, but they can&#39;t get the release work. Jaws (<a href="/name/nm0001423/">Richard Kiel</a>), having been convinced to turn sides when Bond points out that Drax won&#39;t allow him and Dolly (<a href="/name/nm0712255/">Blanche Ravalec</a>) to live in his perfect world, agrees to help and frees the Moonraker. As the space station begins to disintegrate around Jaws and Dolly, their module also detaches from the station; they go floating into space just before the space station explodes. Bond and Holly track down the three globes and destroy them. In the final scene, M has gotten visual contact with Bond&#39;s Moonraker. Bond and Holly are seen floating in space with only a sheet to cover their naked bodies. &quot;I think he&#39;s attempting re-entry,&quot; says Q. Bond flicks off the camera, and Holly asks him to &quot;take [her] around the world one more time.&quot; After Bond destroys the last globe, a Houston controller states that the American shuttle rescued two survivors &quot;a tall man and a short, blonde woman&quot;, indicating that Jaws and Dolly did indeed survive. Bond comes across Drax when M has Bond expose him as a card cheat. Drax has a red beard that covers scarring on his face. The Moonraker is a missile instead of a space shuttle. Jaws and Chang aren&#39;t in the book. Dr.Holly Goodhead is instead a Scotland Yard agent named Galatea &quot;Gala&quot; Brand. Drax turns out to be a Nazi named Graf Hugo von der Drache and the Moonraker is secretly aimed to hit London. Drache captures James and Gala and plans to cook them with the Moonraker&#39;s rockets. They escape and James changes the gyros then he and Gala hide in the shower turned on full blast. Drache escapes in a Russian submarine but a reprogrammed Moonraker blows him out of the water. Bond and Gala are exiled to France until the event blows over but Gala reveals to Bond that she&#39;s engaged to marry another man. Including Moonraker, Moore made seven movies in which he played James Bond: <a href="/title/tt0070328/">Live and Let Die (1973)</a> (1973), <a href="/title/tt0071807/">The Man with the Golden Gun (1974)</a> (1974), <a href="/title/tt0076752/">The Spy Who Loved Me (1977)</a> (1977), Moonraker (1979), <a href="/title/tt0082398/">For Your Eyes Only (1981)</a> (1981), <a href="/title/tt0086034/">Octopussy (1983)</a> (1983), and <a href="/title/tt0090264/">A View to a Kill (1985)</a> (1985). a5c7b9f00b
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