The Spy Who Loved Me
The Spy Who Loved Me – 1977 | 125 mins | Action, Thriller | Colour
Plot Synopsis

Two nuclear submarines – one British and one Russian – have been stolen. A mysterious person offers the submarine detection device for sale to the highest bidder. James Bond (Roger Moore) is sent to Egypt to negotiate with businessman Max Kalba, who is known to be representing the seller, but has to go through a middleman, Fekkesh, first. Two things become very clear very quickly – first, the Russians are also bidding, in the shape of Major Anya Amasova (Barbara Bach), and secondly someone wants to frustrate the sale, and does so by killing both Kalba and Fekkesh. Bond and Anya chase the assassin – a giant of a man with metal teeth – but he escapes.
During a conference between M, General Gogol, Bond and Major Amasova, Bond realises that the small piece of the plans for the submarine detection device that they obtained from Max Kalba before he was killed contain a clue pointing to the millionaire shipping magnate Carl Stromberg (Curt Jurgens). Bond and Anya travel undercover to Stromberg’s oceanic home in Sardinia to investigate, but he sees through their disguise and tries to have them killed. Investigating more openly in an American nuclear submarine, Bond and Anya are stunned when the submarine is incapacitated and swallowed up by one of Stromberg’s oil tankers – actually a seagoing submarine stealer. Both the British and the Russian submarines are already inside her capacious body.
Stromberg explains that, tired of the corruption of civilisation, he intends using the nuclear missiles taken from the submarines to provoke a Third World War between the Soviet Union and the United States of America, devastating the land so that mankind will have to live beneath the sea. Without Stromberg’s knowledge, one of his employees had tried to sell plans of his submarine tracking equipment, and he had sent Jaws (Richard Kiel) to recover the plans and eliminate anyone involved in the foolish scheme.
Stromberg fires the missiles, but Bond has re-targeted them so that they destroy the submarines that fired them rather than their original targets of New York and Moscow. Bond follows Stromberg back to his Sardinian undersea base, where he has taken Major Amasova, and shoots him. Bond and Anya escape in a life capsule.
Production Team
Lewis Gilbert: Director
Peter Lamont: Art Direction
Claude Renoir: Cinematography
John Glen: Editing
Paul Engelen: Make-Up Department
Barbara Ritchie: Make-Up Department
Marvin Hamlisch: Music
Albert R Broccoli: Producer
Ken Adam: Production Design
Richard Maibaum: Script
Christopher Wood: Script
Gordon Everett: Sound Department
Gordon K McCallum: Sound Department
Allan Sones: Sound Department
John Evans: Special Effects
Cast
Roger Moore: James Bond
Barbara Bach: Major Anya Amasova
Curt Jurgens: Carl Stromberg
Richard Kiel: Jaws
Caroline Munro: Naomi
Walter Gotell: General Gogol
Geoffrey Keen: Minister of Defense
Bernard Lee: \”M\”
George Baker: Captain Benson
Desmond Llewelyn: Q
Lois Maxwell: Miss Moneypenny







