For Your Eyes Only (1981)

For Your Eyes Only (1981)

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For Your Eyes Only movie stryline. When a British spy ship, which is in Greece, is accidentally sunk, the British are concerned that a piece of hardware on-board the ship can be used against them. So they need to find it. So to make sure no one knows that they are looking for it, they ask a renowned oceanographer to try and locate the ship. But before he could submit his report, he’s killed by the charter pilot who brought his daughter and wife to see him.

The daughter gives a description and it’s discovered the pilot is actually an assassin, so James Bond is sent to find out who hired him. But Bond is caught and is nearly killed, but the assassin is killed by an arrow. Bond uses the confusion to escape and discovers the one who killed the assassin; the daughter. They escape and Bond returns, and is not greeted warmly because he failed to find out who hired the assassin. But Bond informs his superiors that before the assassin was killed, someone paid him.

For Your Eyes Only (1981)

So Bond thinks if he finds out who he is, he will find out who hired the assassin. Bond discovers who the man is and that he’s in Italy, so Bond goes, and when his contact is killed, he finds something that he shows to a Greek businessman who helps him, and he tells Bond that it’s the symbol of a smuggler, so Bond sets out to find him.

Later, Bond sees the daughter is there and when he asks her why is she is there, she says he sent her a telegram, but Bond says he didn’t send it. He tells her to go back to her father’s ship and wait for him. Bond then cozies up to the mistress of the smuggler to find out what he can. But when they are attacked and the woman is killed, Bond is knocked out by men of the smuggler. He is taken to him, who tells Bond that he is not the one he should be focusing on.

For Your Eyes Only is a 1981 spy film and the twelfth in the James Bond series produced by Eon Productions, and the fifth to star Roger Moore as the fictional MI6 agent James Bond. It marked the directorial debut of John Glen, who had worked as editor and second unit director on three other Bond films.

The screenplay by Richard Maibaum and Michael G. Wilson takes its characters and combines elements from the plots from two short stories from Ian Fleming’s For Your Eyes Only collection: the title story and “Risico”. In the plot, Bond attempts to locate a missile command system while becoming tangled in a web of deception spun by rival Greek businessmen along with Melina Havelock, a woman seeking to avenge the murder of her parents. Some writing elements were inspired by the novels Live and Let Die, Goldfinger and On Her Majesty’s Secret Service.

After the science fiction-focused Moonraker, the producers wanted a return to the style of the early Bond films and the works of 007 creator Fleming. For Your Eyes Only followed a grittier, more realistic approach and a narrative theme of revenge and its consequences. Filming locations included Greece, Italy and England, while underwater footage was shot in The Bahamas.

For Your Eyes Only was released in the United States on June 26, 1981 and released to a mixed to positive critical reception; the film was a financial success, generating $195.3 million worldwide. This was the final Bond film to be distributed solely by United Artists; the company was absorbed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer soon after this film’s release. Roger Moore reprised the James Bond role in the 1983 sequel Octopussy.

For Your Eyes Only Movie Poster (1981)

For Your Eyes Only (1981)

Directed by: John Glen
Starring: Roger Moore, Carole Bouquet, Topol, Lynn-Holly Johnson, Julian Glover, Cassandra Harris, Jill Bennett, Michael Gothard, Lois Maxwell, Geoffrey Keen, James Villiers
Screenplay by: Richard Maibaum, Michael G. Wilson
Production Design by: Peter Lamont
Cinematography by: Alan Hume
Film Editing by: John Grover
Costume Design by: Elizabeth Waller
Set Decoration by: Vernon Dixon
Art Direction by: John Fenner
Music by: Bill Conti
Distributed by: United Artists
Release Date: June 24, 1981

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